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Waratahs' tough start to season continues with loss to Hurricanes

(Photo by Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)

Another eye-catching display from teenage son of a gun Max Jorgensen hasn’t saved the NSW Waratahs from a worrying third Super Rugby Pacific defeat from four starts to open the season.

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With destructive, inspirational skipper Ardea Savea on a mission in his return from suspension, the Hurricanes kept the Waratahs scoreless for much of the second half en route to a 34-17 victory in windy Wellington on Friday night.

But 18-year-old Jorgensen certainly couldn’t be blamed for the Tahs’ latest loss, which leaves Darren Coleman’s 2022 quarter-finalists behind the eight-ball early in the race for the playoffs.

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Thrust into the fullback hot seat after debuting on the wing, Jorgensen posted his fourth try from as many games with a powerful finish late in the first half to give the Tahs hope after 35-year-old Nemani Nadolo opened the scoring at Sky Stadium.

But two tries in five minutes from winger Kini Naholo and halfback Cam Roigard and another from veteran All Black hooker Dane Coles left the Waratahs playing catch-up from 22 points down.

Capping an impressive performance, busy No.8 Langi Gleeson bagged a consolation late five-pointer in what would have given new Wallabies coach Eddie Jones more food for thought ahead of this year’s Rugby World Cup in France.

The Waratahs led early but goalkicking proved the difference at halftime as the Hurricanes went to the sheds leading 17-12.

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While Waratahs five-eighth Ben Donaldson managed only one from two difficult shots in the opening 40 minutes, All Blacks superstar Beauden Barrett slotted a penalty and converted both of the Hurricanes’ tries – from Kini Naholo and halfback Cam Roigard, who both ended the match with doubles.

ā€œLook, I thought the effort in our first half was really up there. We probably weren’t clinical enough around our exits, which was was disappointing,ā€ said Waratahs captain Jake Gordon.

ā€œThen in the second half, much of the same.

ā€œOur bench did a great job with two tries putting us back into the game, but definitely not clinical enough tonight.ā€

The Waratahs’ road doesn’t getting any easier. They host unbeaten table-toppers the Chiefs next week at Allianz Stadium.

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Comments

4 Comments
N
Nice One Bruvva 815 days ago

Jordie. Barely noticeable at 6 feet 5 inches player at fullback for Hurricanes from Wellington. Beauden, his brother, plays at number 10 for Blues from Auckland. Simple mistake ... 🤪

j
jonathan 816 days ago

This article has mistaken Jordie for Beauden. They do look alike to be fair!

j
jonathan 816 days ago

APP - you have mistaken Jordie for Beauden in this article

j
jonathan 816 days ago

APP - you have mistaken Jordie for Beauden in this article

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SK 1 hour ago
The Reds' 'whimpering' exit shows Super Rugby scrums still matter

The Scrum remains a key platform in the game. There may be fewer set in SR Pacific and fewer penalties given but you cannot escape its importance and that is how it should be. The scrum cannot become an irrelevant thing in Rugby. It deserves its own space in the game however too much time is spent setting a scrum and thats where the refs need to be more strict. They need to demand effort from players and award 10metres or penalties if the scrums are not set fast enough by one team or the other. The sixty seconds to set will only help if its enforced strictly. The Refs in the Top 14, URC, Champs Cup and Prem have been too slack in adequately policing the times setting scrums. Too many teams simply dawdle at scrum time because they are on the back foot. Theres nothing more frustrating than watching a clock count down and players having a chat with the ref at scrum time or stand up because they packed in badly. Refs need to get serious on it. In 1995 scrums were set in seconds. The laws came in to make them safer but now its way too time consuming. I feel like too often refereeing is done according to feeling and not mandate. There needs to be consistent standards across the game. While SR referees will penalise a 9 for not using it in the 5 seconds it rarely happens in Europe. Andrew Brace did it this weekend to Embrose Papier but that was after like 10 seconds. The Refs need to get more assertive about time wasting and following the time limit guidelines and this needs to happen across all leagues at once. Only then will we have a game for all refereed at the same standard.

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