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Downcast Brumbies coach Larkham's final warning for the Chiefs

Tom Hooper of the Brumbies reacts to the loss (C) during the Super Rugby Pacific Semi Final match between Chiefs and Brumbies at FMG Stadium Waikato, on June 14, 2025, in Hamilton, New Zealand. (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

Frustrated ACT Brumbies coach Stephen Larkham will go back to the drawing board after his team fell short in their Super Rugby Pacific semi-final against the Chiefs, continuing the horror record for Australian teams in New Zealand.

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The Brumbies went down 37-17 in Hamilton, which was the third successive time under Larkham they’ve reached the last four but failed to make the title match.

It stretched the run to 0-21 for Australian teams in Super play-off matches across the ditch.

Despite Wallabies playmaker Noah Lolesio being an early casualty after a head knock, the Brumbies only trailed 19-12 at halftime.

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They closed the margin to two points, with winger Corey Toole putting his hand up for Wallabies selection by showing his finishing prowess in his second try of the night.

But on the back of a slew of penalties, which star flyhalf Damian McKenzie guided through the posts, momentum swung to the Chiefs.

McKenzie finished with six penalties, two conversions, one try-assist and a miracle try-saving tackle on Tom Wright.

Larkham said his team had the right game plan but their execution and discipline let them down, particularly in the second half.

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“It sort of went back and forth for the first 50 minutes there and I thought our physicality was outstanding,” Larkham said.

“Then in the second half, there became a point there where we’re obviously chasing the game and we’re trying to hold the ball to score and it’s tough conditions to do that in.

“There’s frustration because it’s the same story as last year and we’ve had this story for more than two years in a row now and it’s not a good feeling, obviously, getting this far in the competition and not getting to the final hurdle.”

The Wallabies great said they would go through the same reflective process as they did last year to try to ensure a better outcome in 2026.

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“There’s lots of areas that fell down – set-piece, kick-off receipt exits, things that we’ll look at.

“We’ll go through the process of identifying, particularly in these last two games, what wasn’t robust, what wasn’t good enough, and then just spend enough time in the pre-season and in-season to put us in a better position next year.

“Hopefully put in a better performance, a more consistent performance for 80 minutes, next year.”

Larkham, who was part of the Brumbies’ title wins in 2001 and 2004, said his team arrived in New Zealand with belief they could be the team to end the hoodoo.

“Psychologically, I thought we were in a good place, I thought that our preparation was really good,” he said.

“It’s hard to play away from home, whether it’s in Australia or New Zealand, it’s hard to play away from home.”

The Chiefs will face the Crusaders in the final in Christchurch, losing their home advantage after their shock qualifying final defeat by the Blues.

While he thought the Chiefs were playing well, Larkham felt the Crusaders could be tough to topple at home.

“The home crowd advantage, the hometown advantage for the Crusaders might be too much,” he said.

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H
Hellhound 2 hours ago
Pat Lam blasts 'archaic' process that lost the All Blacks Tony Brown

Now you are just being a woke, jealous fool. With the way things are run in NZ, no wonder he couldn't make a success there. Now that he is out shining any other New Zealanders, including their star players, now he is bitter and resentful and all sorts of hate speeches against him. That is what the fans like you do. Those in NZ who does have enough sense not to let pride cloud their vision, is all saying the same thing. NZ needs TB. Razor was made out to be a rugby coaching God by the fans, so much so that Foz was treated like the worst piece of shitte. Especially after the Twickenham disaster right before the WC. Ad then he nearly won the WC too with 14 players. As a Saffa the way he handled the media and the pressure leading up to the WC, was just extraordinary and I have gained a lot of respect for that man. Now your so called rugby coaching God managed to lose by an even bigger margin, IN NZ. All Razor does is overplay his players and he will never get the best out of those players, and let's face it, the current crop is good enough to be the best. However, they need an coach they can believe in completely. I don't think the players have bought into his coaching gig. TB was lucky to shake the dust of his boots when he left NZ, because only when he did that, did his career go from strength to strength. He got a WC medal to his name. Might get another if the Boks can keep up the good work. New exciting young talent is set to join soon after the WC as dangerous as SFM and Kolbe. Trust me, he doesn't want the AB's job. He is very happy in SA with the Boks. We score, you lose a great coach. We know quality when we see it, we don't chuck it in the bin like NZRU likes to do. Your coaching God is hanging on by a thread to keep his job🤣🤣🤣🤣

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