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Wallaroos' woes against Canada continue despite brave display


Laetitia Royer #5 of Canada and Samantha Wood #9 of the Australia Wallaroos go for the ball during the first half of their match in the Pacific Four Series at Heart Health Park on April 11, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)
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The Wallaroos have fallen short in their quest for a breakthrough victory over Canada, but can take heart from a 24-0 defeat in their opening match of the Pacific Four rugby series.

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After conceding more than 40 points in their past two meetings against the world No.2 side, the Australian women delivered an improved performance in tough conditions in their Sacramento clash on Sunday.

Australia’s match was delayed more than an hour because of lightning, with heavy rain still falling in the opening quarter.

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The wet conditions helped the Wallaroos put the brakes on Canada’s formidable attack, keeping their rivals from crossing until the 19th minute.

Picking up the ball at the back of the ruck, Saracens lock Julia Omokhuale dived over the line to open the scoring.

It looked like the Wallaroos would go into halftime down just the one try, but they gave up another at the 40-minute mark when a turnover was scooped by Canada’s skipper Justine Pelletier. The scrumhalf darted through a hole before offloading to flanker Pam Buisa for a 12-0 lead.

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Starved of ball and field position through some sloppy handling, Australia struggled to build momentum, although scrumhalf Sam Wood and winger Desiree Wood did their best to kick-start the attack.

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They were also let down by poor discipline, giving up 17 penalties, and had to play out the final five minutes with 13 players, with centre Celia Smith (high tackle) and replacement hooker Brittany Merlo (side entry) both given yellow cards.

They continued to show up with some steely defence, but the patient Canucks finally broke through in the 66th minute when winger Asia Hogan-Rochester dived across in the corner.

Debutant hooker Kiki Idowu bagged her team’s fourth try in the 73rd minute, the Canadians savouring a shut-out of the Aussies.

Wallaroos skipper Siokapesi Palu Sekona said there were positives to take away from the result.

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“Although we didn’t get on the scoreboard, we applied a lot of pressure,” she said.

“You can see with the scoreboard, there’s a huge shift from that last quarter-final game back at the World Cup.”

New Zealand earlier downed USA 48-15 in the other fixture in the four-team tournament.

The Wallaroos face the USA in Kansas City, Missouri, in round two next weekend.

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Two Cents 46 days ago

Not sure you can say with any confidence that was a genuine improvement rather than Canada having enough rust that meant they couldn't completely capitalize on their dominance.


Bit generous to the Aussie women and while it always feels good to back in the underdog and to try to find platitudes to make the comprehensive defeat easier to accept, the truth is the Canadians are still leagues ahead of the Australians.


That said, it shows in stark detail exactly where the Australians are still well behind their competition, possessing neither the muscle, the temperament nor the skill level to actually present a consistent challenge.


Very much a second tier team doing their best to battle against top tier opposition, commendable but only going to produce one outcome.


Which is disappointing because we have been sold over the previous cycle that there was genuine systemic improvement in the program yet this result somewhat disproves that narrative.


Based on what we saw, this is going to be a very rough Pac4 series for the Aussie women and they'll be lucky if they win a single game. I suspect they'll get flogged by the US next week.


Once again the O’Reilly Cup is going to reside comfortably on the wrong side of the Tasman and the end of year tour will present yet more lessons for the women in how far they still have to get just to be genuinely competitive let alone become regular winners.

C
Cantab 46 days ago

Suffice to say that though the Aussies defended stoically they showed nothing on attack and never looked to have the ability to score.

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