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Super Rugby Team of the Week - Round One

As Eric Rush once said, this is just one mans opinion. Please add your picks and your favourites in the feedback box below.

15. It was a ding dong battle between two gifted fullbacks at Manly. In the end I went with Israel Folau (Waratahs) over Jordie Barrett (Hurricanes) as Folau offered more of a threat in attack.

14. Jack Maddocks (Rebels). He scored two impressive tries and was much more involved in the game than another brace scorer Manasa Mataele (Crusaders).

13. Braydon Ennor (Crusaders). Great to see the young prospect get a start in his favoured position and he made the most of it.

His pace indicated that he is in good knick physically, add to that good lines, beautiful linking and strong defence showed it will be an interesting battle between him, Crotty and Goodhue for starters positions this season. Jesse Kriel (Bulls) was on fire in Pretoria as well.

12. Billy Meakes (Rebels). When you have Quade Cooper defending inside you can expect a big day in the defensive office. Meakes defended like a demon and showed some outrageous skill (kick pass to Maddocks for winning try) and impressive decision making.

He is a Kiwi-type second five rather than your traditional Aussie inside centre but could be some important glue for a RWC squad. Big ups to Anton Lienert-Brown who stepped up in an inexperienced Chiefs backline.

11. Rosko Specman (Bulls). it didnt take long for the BlitzBok 7s star release the specmagic” on Super Rugby. minutes in fact and another soon after. A head cut slowed him down but opponents will be on high alert to combat his dancing feet.

Rieko Ioane (Blues) looked menacing but the Blues just could not get him the ball, the Crusaders twice getting the referees rub of the green with knock-ons to stop the last pass.

10. Handre Pollard (Bulls). On a day where a lot of kickers radars were out of order Pollard had a perfect day at the office from the kicking tee. He loves taking the ball to the line and his game management was magnificent as the Bulls spanked the Stormers.

Quade Cooper (Rebels) showed hes not a spent force yet with a typical Cooper game. As one of my Aussie mates commented its good to see an Aussie 10 square up and take the ball to the line.

9. Aaron Smith (Highlanders). The All Black star may have had less than half a game but he whipped his team into shape in short time to take the win v Chiefs.  It was GREAT to see  him snipe from the base. He needs more breadth to his game in terms of threat to the opposition and he chose his sorties judiciously. Will Genia was sparkling as well for the Rebels.

8. Akira Ioane (Blues). Shame he couldnt get his team across the line in his 50th Blues game. Well involved in the game for 80 and is a huge threat with ball in hand and on defence. I am not sure if Matt Todd has ever been picked up and carried back like a rag-doll like he was by the man-giant.

Duane Vermeulen (Bulls) showed he was a good buy for his new franchise and Dan du Preez (Sharks) was superb in Singapore against the Sunwolves.

7. Ardie Savea (Hurricanes). His battle with Michael Hooper turned out to be the individual match up of the round with two of the best motors in Super Rugby. What a passionate player Ardie is, I wanted to get off the couch and play for this guy! Should have had two tries if not for a silly piece of overzealous play from DuPlessis Kirifi. Was everywhere.

Michael Hooper was great as well and I feel for him having to do so many losing captain interviews. Special mention of Marnus Schoeman with a hat-trick in Buenos Aires.

6. Tom Robinson (Blues). The Son of Big Redunderlined his potential by outplaying his opposite Jordan Taufua; solid in close play and showing his running ability in open spaces. Still getting used to lines and duties with 6 on his back but looks like a star in the making. It should be noted that Dalton Papaliis work rate allows players like Ioane and Robinson to stand out.

5. Lood de Jager (Bulls). The Bulls pack led by captain de Jager broke down the line out supply line for the Stormers, the Capetonians lost their first five line out throws and this led to the brutal thumping. Has created serious concerns around Springbok Bongi Mbonambis throwing. Matt Philip (Rebels) was a workhorse as well.

4. Scott Barrett (Crusaders). We saw Barretts angry side as he did an Incredible Hulk impersonation when the Crusaders fell behind 2nd half at Eden Park. Big hits, clean-outs and even helping Michael Alaalatoa scrum from blindside flanker against big Karl Tuinukuafe for the champions second penalty try, he was irrepressible.

3. Tyrel Lomax (Highlanders). The young 130kg bud is blooming into a beautiful flower. Rooted the scrum and some lovely hands in the open.

2. As well give this gong to Malcolm Marx many times before the end of the Super season lets go with Akker van de Merwe (Sharks). Two tries in sultry Singapore as the Sharks went into a feeding frenzy. Perhaps the ARU is checking Anaru Rangis (Rebels)  passport as well as he was the best from their teams.

1. Dylan Smith (Lions) was impressive against the Jaguares. Will have to continue this form for a while to vault himself into Springbok contention but he stood out against the South Americans. Karl Tuinukafe came on and made a palpable difference at Eden Park but his effect was blunted with the introduction of Luke Romano at tighthead lock for the Crusaders.

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Zachary Noah 10 minutes ago
‘There’s a little bit of danger’: Force captain confident after bye week

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RedWarriors 7 hours ago
Joe Schmidt 'a little bit intimidated' ahead of brutal 12-game Wallabies run

I flagged this issue before.


It is not just the danger of facing a big team in the round of 16: you might also get one of them in your pool. That would be two extra massive matches. No team in that scenario is winning any world cup. Its as simple as that.

Currently Argentina are 5th, England 6th, Scotland 7th and Australia 8th. With a spread of 3.5 ranking points between those 4.

Playing SA first is not bad as it means losing points at the right time. They must beat Argentina twice in subsequent matches and will gain more there. They have England away and may need to win that and another high value win over: NZ in Perth, Ireland in Dublin or France in Paris will certainly help.


Some sympathy for 7th placed Scotland is required. Scotland were eliminated in Pool stage in 2019 and as rankings were frozen at end of RWC 2019 for RWC 2023 draw, Scotland were ranked 9th. They made massive progress to be ranked 5th before 2023 but it didn’t count and they were drawn in their group of death with Ireland and SA and more or less eliminated by the draw. Compare with England who were terrible between world cups but were top 4 ranked in 2019 which gave them a quarter final against Fiji in 2023 to make a semi final.

The swing in ranking points between Scotland to England before and after RWC 2023 was a massive 6.5

Scotland should be sitting comfortably in 5th but are now 7th and will struggle to make top6. If they don’t make top 6 and get an unlucky draw they could be out at the last 16 stage. In other words the farcical draw in 2023 means that Scotland are still being punished for their showing in RWC 2019 and this may last at least until 2027.

I hope for Justice sakes they make the top 6.

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BigGabe 7 hours ago
'Rugby is kind of at a junction here': Henry Pollock on rugby values

I never said that you can’t have an opinion, please go back and read carefully what I have said. I disagree with your opinion, as I disagree with your response. Again, and I emphasise this point, I do not equate Pollock’s actions with abuse and humiliation. You’re using very strong words and I cannot see his actions being humiliating or abusive. Now if he called him names and told him to go the f*** back home, then that’s a different story. But he didn’t, he just gave a celebration like many players around the world do.


Of course, there is the slippery slope argument - which is fair, there can and probabl should be be limits on what a player should be able to do. But winding people up? That’s sport. It always has been and always will be - emotions can and will be manipulated. If we can’t do that, then it’s not sport. It’s called gaining a psychological edge. We are all well aware of the dark arts of rugby and it’s an accepted part of the game. There is no reason a celebration cannot be either.


My belief is that you’re immediately going to a worst case scenario and trying to nip this behaviour in the bud, which is unnecessary. He’s having fun and kids look up to that. Combine that with the respect that the vast majority of professional rugby players show, and you have a winning formula. See my original comment regarding him getting his ass handed to him at some stage or another. Maybe even this very weekend. But to say that Pollock is abusive and humiliating? Calm down, he’s just a talented kid having a good time.

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