Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Reds bouyed despite McReight injury after dispatching 'soft' Tahs

Fraser McReight of the Reds takes on the defence during the round five Super Rugby Pacific match between Queensland Reds and NSW Waratahs at Suncorp Stadium, on March 15, 2025, in Brisbane, Australia. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Tate McDermott has backed his Queensland Reds to power on without the likely absence of star flanker Fraser McReight after his side left the NSW Waratahs chastising their softness.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Reds overcame a slow start to win 35-15 on Saturday at Suncorp Stadium, McReight finishing with his shoulder in a sling after falling awkwardly as he scored a fantastic second-half try.

Reds coach Les Kiss, who had planned to rest McReight for next week’s game against the Highlanders in New Zealand, confirmed it was an AC joint injury but he’s hopeful the issue will not be a long-term one.

Video Spacer

Video Spacer

Points Flow Chart

Reds win +20
Time in lead
61
Mins in lead
20
73%
% Of Game In Lead
24%
37%
Possession Last 10 min
63%
0
Points Last 10 min
7

The Reds, who are now 3-1 after a tough start that’s included games in Perth and Christchurch, are already without one-time Wallabies captain and fellow backrower Liam Wright.

He’ll see a specialist about his own recurring shoulder injury that saw him miss Saturday’s game.

The side was also without lock Lukhan Salakaia-Loto, centre Josh Flook and fullback Jock Campbell, while hooker Matt Faessler left Saturday’s game with a leg issue.

But captain McDermott said their depth, particularly in the backrow, had already been proven in 2024 when Harry Wilson broke his arm and Fraser McReight served a suspension.

“It’s a challenge, but we saw the same thing kind of happen last year and Johnny Bryant stepped up massively,” the scrumhalf said.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Joe Brial coming in there (to replace McReight); we’ve got the depth and we back whoever steps in, because we saw last year those guys are bloody good players.

The fiery clash saw Wallabies teammates Andrew Kellaway and Wilson exchange words after the Waratahs fullback up-ended Test skipper Wilson in a crunching tackle and was yellow-carded.

Attack

192
Passes
173
164
Ball Carries
128
406m
Post Contact Metres
315m
8
Line Breaks
4

That incident triggered the Reds’ resurgence, their dominance summed up in a 20-metre driving maul try while a host of Waratahs stood and watched.

ADVERTISEMENT

“It was a big moment; I think the whole game emotionally was a battle and we knew it would be,” McDermott said.

The rolling maul try infuriated Waratahs coach Dan McKellar, who had a week earlier copped some flak for labelling the Reds “the best team in the comp”.

“It’s hard to stop a rolling maul if you stand there and watch it,” he sneered, describing that effort as “border-line embarrassing”.

McKellar lamented his team’s “soft moments” and said he meant what he’d said about the Reds a week earlier.

“Everyone sort of thought that was a bit of tongue in cheek,” he said.

“I was being honest; when they get their game going, they’re dangerous, as good as anyone and they showed that.”

RugbyPass App Download

News, stats, live rugby and more! Download the new RugbyPass app on the App Store (iOS) and Google Play (Android) now!


Whether you’re looking for somewhere to track upcoming fixtures, a place to watch live rugby or an app that shows you all of the latest news and analysis, the RugbyPass rugby app is perfect.

ADVERTISEMENT
Play Video
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Long Reads

Comments on RugbyPass

S
SK 1 hour ago
Why England may be in better shape to win the 2027 Rugby World Cup than France

This is all very glass half full but when you look at the cold hard facts you have to ask yourself where Englands defence will develop in the next 18 months? You also have to ask if 18 months and 15 or so matches is enough time to develop their attacking game under Borthwick. Clive Woodward had an awesome top class coaching staff with a squad that included top of class players right through the backs and forwards and world beating leaders. They were the envy of the World for the 2 or 3 years leading up to the 2003 world cup and scored wins in NZ and Australia before the tourney and away to South Africa a couple of years prior to that. This England side has no big match temperament, have not won away from home against any of the big sides including in France where they butchered 2 games in a row in the last 3 years. In NZ they also butchered a chance to win. When the pressure comes this team rarely finds a way to win. France have at least picked up wins in Ireland and at Twickenham. They havent covered themselves in glory on their southern tours but their impressive home record is in tact bar the loss to South Africa last year and the terrible loss to Ireland in 2024. France have an awe inspiring backline with magicians right through, they have plenty of power in forwards and world leading coaches. Add to that the brilliant Top 14 and I rate they are better off than the English. Sure they have their problems but I aint buying even the suggestion that England are better placed to win the showpiece than them.

19 Go to comments
Close
ADVERTISEMENT