Sons of guns shine, suspect try seals Tahs win over Reds
Sons of guns Tom Lynagh and Max Jorgensen strutted their stuff before a blatant knock-on was confirmed as a try to hand the NSW Waratahs a 33-32 Super Rugby Pacific trial game win over the Queensland Reds.
The Waratahs won in Narrabri on Saturday night, Nemani Nadolo's late five-pointer the difference in the sides' traditional pre-season hit-out that carries a $25,000 prize.
That's why the Reds were smarting when referee Nic Berry was unable to utilise any replays before awarding Nadolo a try, when vision would have shown the hulking Fijian recruit spilling the ball as he went to plant it in the corner.
The Reds still had plenty to celebrate as Lynagh, the son of World Cup-winning Wallaby Michael, played almost 60 minutes at five-eighth and controlled the game well with hand and foot.
The 19-year-old joined the Reds from England last year and his long stint in the saddle ahead of Lawson Creighton, who scored a try after entering for the final third of the g ame, indicated he may not be far off a fully fledged debut if James O'Connor (ankle) remains sidelined.
For the Waratahs it was centre Max Jorgensen who shone, his first-half try a dazzling combination of acceleration and angle that left Filipo Daugunu in his dust.
The son of former Wallabies and NRL talent Peter was a recruitment victory for rugby last year and the 18-year-old showed he could handle the step-up after already impressing on the end-of-season Australia A tour.
Reds No.8 Harry Wilson would have been hard to ignore for new Wallabies coach Eddie Jones, particularly in the crucial first 20 minutes when the flanker was heavily involved.
He finished a long-range try started by the also-impressive Isaac Henry and returned the favour with a neat offload to put the outside centre through a gap in the second half.
Emerging Reds winger Floyd Aubrey scored the first try, finishing well after Tate McDermott's cross-field chip bounced behind him.
But he handed that back when spilling a bomb, Mosese Tuipulotu running away for an easy try.
Mahe Vailanu showed his power with two barging first-half tries for the hosts as temperatures remained in the mid-30C after 8.30pm in the regional NSW town.
Taj Annan and Creighton scor ed to put the Reds ahead, before Nadolo showed his experience with a calm post-try celebration to fool the obscured officials.
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No, bugger off Schmidt, stop interfering in Australian rugby to keep us down
Your selections are rubbish and your game plan is unAustralian. Go back to NZ. Oh wait, you're actually still there ......
Go to commentsWhich is why more depth needs development. There are are several players waiting in the mix who will be good to great ABs. Our bench replacements this year were not always up to the mark
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