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The Wallabies do have the best centre in the world

Joseph?Aukuso Sua’ali’i of the Wallabies looks on during The Rugby Championship match between Australia Wallabies and Argentina Pumas at Queensland Country Bank Stadium on September 06, 2025 in Townsville, Australia. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

From the moment Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii made his debut against England at Twickenham, you knew that the Wallabies had something special.

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After just 11 Tests, it is clear now. The 22-year-old is the best centre in the game. There are really good centres, there are some world-class centres, and then there is Joseph Suaalii.

From a technical perspective, he is still learning the intricacies of areas like the breakdown and clean-out work that can only come with experience. He’s not perfect in that part of the game.

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Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus masterfully sidesteps a tricky question about match officials

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Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus masterfully sidesteps a tricky question about match officials

But what Suaalii brings to the table is unique, a game-changing attacking skillset combined with special athleticism that propels him to the top of the list.

The offloading skills, passes laced with soft touches and fast hands, were visible immediately when he took apart England. It’s AFL-like, the disposals are quick and open up opportunities for others. They used him as an aerial fetcher, from chip kicks and restarts, where Suaalii was sent to climb above all and bring in a ‘speccy’.

For his first international try assist, he bounced outside his man, Ollie Sleighthome, with a quick stutter and basketball-passed the ball over the top of English fullback George Furbank, who was biting in hard.

This play was replicated in the third and final British & Irish Lions Test to set up Dylan Pietsch in the corner for the opening try. He bounced outside, forced Tommy Freeman to bite, and shovelled a no-looker to his wing. The delivery on the pass wasn’t perfect, but he gave Pietsch something more valuable, the space.

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So many players can deliver a ball wide perfectly on the chest to their wing, and so few can give their wing outside space. That’s the talent of Suaalii. The vision and sixth sense for the way the play will unfold are out of this world.

Despite being 6’5, what makes Suaalii dangerous is that he is a creator first, not a ball-hogging runner. There is a midfield crisis around the international game where most are completely devoid of this creative instinct.

Over-programmed into robotic line runners, many possess tunnel vision and make a living carrying and recycling possession. They have no feel for the pass nor the skills to make a variety of them. They don’t understand the nuance of baiting a tackle and giving the next man ball and space.

Suaalii is smooth like water, adapting all the time to the shape of the defence and looking to promote. It can be rapid or it can be slow. You go to him, he doesn’t come to you. He’ll bounce around you and tease the next man. Then he makes you both pay.

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In the second Lions Test, after he broke through the Lions’ defence into the open back field, his first instinct was to look for support and find the right option. He put Tom Wright away untouched for the final 60 metres after beating no less than three Lions. He wasn’t trying to overplay the situation and see if he could do it all himself. There was calmness.

In his first Test against the Springboks in the historic Ellis Park Test, there were multiple plays by Suaalii that shaped that game.

Down by 22-0 early, the Bok edge rush defence forced Suaalii to step back inside and throw the left foot step a couple times. With a prop hanging off his boot lace, Suaalii popped a one-handed pass with nonchalance to his midfield partner Len Ikitau.

The Bok defence thought the play was over. The rush was spent. They were retreating and disjointed, and all of a sudden, Ikitau created a 1-2 return pass with O’Connor to give Pietsch an open passage to the line.

It was a simple second-chance opportunity created by Suaalii to catch South Africa napping after the sting was taken out of the tail.

His intercept of Mannie Libbok was the play that really gave the Wallabies momentum. Scoring his first Test try, he burnt away from Edwell van der Merwe, making him look like a slouch.

In the Wallabies’ 28-24 comeback win over Argentina, he had two tries, one from a brilliant Ikitau offload and the second from his trademark bounce to the outside.

But it was Suaalii’s defence that was arguably more important. Down by 21-7, he produced two massive defensive efforts. One of his tackles around his own 22 forced an attacking penalty. In another on halfway, he forced a strip that was hacked ahead and pinned Argentina in their in-goal.

He forced the momentum shift through defence first, and that led to the first try in the comeback.

He is putting together a World Player of the Year campaign in 2025, and the Wallabies might have the toughest international calendar ever put together.

The British & Irish Lions in July, two Tests against South Africa away, Argentina at home, before a trip to Eden Park for the first of two against the All Blacks.

Five more Tests through November include England in London, Ireland in Dublin and France in Paris. They will end up playing every top-five-ranked nation in rugby in their own backyards by the end of the year.

If they continue winning, the Wallabies should have multiple players nominated for World Player of the Year, given how tough this slate was.

Suaalii’s deal with Rugby Australia was made out to be all about money. There was a high price tag, but the deal was more than that.

After signing, he spoke about always wanting to be a Wallaby and play the Lions, about it being a lifelong goal. He gave up his NRL career at just age 21 to do so. That was a big sacrifice, and so the decision to switch codes by Suaalii put incredible value on the Wallabies jersey. This has been priceless.

Since the day of his arrival, the Wallabies have been different. He brought confidence and swagger with him that has lifted the squad. So many players are playing their best rugby of their careers. Of course, the coaching staff are brilliant, but the belief is new.

The Wallabies are selling out. Australians can sense this team is different. The Wallabies are back, and the Suaalii deal was worth every cent.

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Comments

35 Comments
f
frandinand 8 days ago

Amazing how a comment can date. You have put yourself in the same category as Gregor Paul.

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Ninjin 68 days ago

No MR Smith, not yet.

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AllyOz 80 days ago

I wonder in the longer term if he would make an even better 12. I am not sure how often he talks to his girlfriend’s dad, Jason Little but he could certainly share a few tips.

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B 85 days ago

Hes a natural athlete and with Joe Schmidt coaching him he'll only get better…and so are the rest of his Wallabie team mates…

A game changer the AB’s will need to shut down when they meet at the Fortress of Eden Park, for game1 Bledisloe Cup…


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PA 85 days ago

Ben Smith, I should have known. Sualii (sp?) is the weak link in the Wallabies back line!

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Toaster 85 days ago

He’s definitely talented

Suspect tackling technique at times though

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Wagga wagga 86 days ago

It seems that most are overlooking, conveniently, that he turned just 22 years of age, 5 weeks ago

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OutRun22 86 days ago

I think so he and his partner play together and the wobs set up for that. Proctor would look better if Jordie was setting him up but the way the ab’s play now it isn’t like Nonu conrad smith.all blacks don’t do this, they don’t set up for the centres, whatever robertson is doing its about very basic forward play mixed in with some 1 off runner like Jordan to play off the forwards or bb to chip kick across field. Since mike cron has moved to aussie the wobs scrum has improved but the ab’s one has gone backwards imo.

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RC 86 days ago

Absolute nonsense. He was made to look a fool plenty of times in the lions series.


He has potential, but wouldn't even put him above Reiko (who is now a winger lol)

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OutRun22 86 days ago

lol you were doing alright until you mentioned the non existent riko, hes made 1 good move in 30 tests bud. riko has to get booted once and for all hes been babied way too long, worst player in the all blacks by miles.

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MB 86 days ago

He's pretty good so far. Great at tackling, not so good at positional play yet - but improving every game.


He's definitely not the best centre in the world though! Not even the best in his team - Ikitau is more valuable to the Wallabies than him (for now…).

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Mzilikazi 86 days ago

“The 22-year-old is the best centre in the game. There are really good centres, there are some world-class centres, and then there is Joseph Suaalii.”


In my view, there is no way Joseph Suaalii can be elevated yet to that position. What are you basing your claim on, Ben ? The fact he scored two(good) tries last weekend ?


He may become the best in the world, but atm he is still a talented apprentice. I would rate several above him. Fickou and Dante of France, Ringrose of Ireland, the Scottish pair, Tuipolotu and Jones, Chocobares of Argentina, de Allende of SA, our own Len Ikitau. All of those are far more rounded and complete centres.

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Mark 86 days ago

The lads a talent that’s for sure, has all of the skills required to thrive at the very top level.

What impresses me most is his composure, he never looks anything less than fully in control.

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Mzilikazi 86 days ago

“What impresses me most is his composure”. Yes, that shines through, and his humility. There is no hint of arrogance. Comes over a sa really nice person.

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CO 86 days ago

One hundred percent correct, as a long term Allblacks supporter this is the best centre I've ever seen touch a rugby ball. Him with Lomu, Cullen and Campese outside him would've been devastating. He's been a massive part of the Wallaby turnaround.

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MB 86 days ago

You’re kidding right? Nonu, Horan, O’Driscoll, Umaga, Conrad Smith, de Villiers - that’s just off my head now - I’m sure there are dozens of other inside and outside centres ahead of him. Ikitau is by far the more valuable of the pair too.


Anyway - this might all change in 3-4 years time - I hope you’re right by then! But for now, curb the hyperbole I reckon!

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tf 86 days ago

He is great but this is his first real year in union. He is learning quick, but the longer he is there the better other teams and players will get at playing against him.

If you compare him to some old veterans how does he match up. Kriel and Fickou have been immense over the past 7 / 8 years. Fickou is similar in stature and also the indecision over where he should play to start. Been injured a bit lately, but be great to see if they match up in Nov both fully fit.

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PM 86 days ago

A few years back I rated him as the best centre but he's had an interrupted few years.

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Bazzallina 86 days ago

He was handy off the tee in NRL like 77-78% and they have lots of sideline conversions ..it is truly unique to have a dude with such a fullhouse skillset that includes all the athletic stuff speed agility hops power loves to tackle hard enjoys ruff stuff but has the soft skillful hands and can kick goals , albeit all still developing but already displayed …name another..at his best another League dude Latrell Mitchell maybe another Greg Inglis ( but his kicking for goal was not a regular thing )…any Union guys past/present anyone else thinks can cover all these bases so realistically? Jordie Barrett?

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CO 86 days ago

No way is Jordie half as dangerous as Suaalii

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SB 86 days ago

Would slot into nearly every starting lineup in the world at 13.

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CO 86 days ago

Name one where he'd not?

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TokoRFC 86 days ago

The Wallabies vs Argentina is some of the best, positive rugby we’ve seen this year. Are the ARG and AUS centre partnerships the best two going at the moment? Maybe Scotland, South Africa and Ireland could stake a claim to that, but it sure is fun to watch.

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beaudy 86 days ago

Chocobares at 12 and ikitau/joseph at 13 would be one hell of a pairing

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PM 86 days ago

I like JAS ability and even performance but if we have an article with this title it should be about Len Ikitau.

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Mzilikazi 86 days ago

Spot on, PM !

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mJ 87 days ago

Many thought he was the second coming of Folau, they might be very similar in build and athletic ability but they are very different players. It is amazing how quickly the chat has stopped about 13 being the most difficult position to defend and therefore he should be on the wing. The guy is learning the game at the top level against the best centres and certainly holding his own and improving. Him and Ikitau are fast becoming the best centre combo we’ve had in many years and the more they play together the better. RA should be looking at getting them playing together at Super Rugby level.

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OutRun22 86 days ago

thats what I said he looks like folau but with better defence and actually better attack but hes at least as quick as folau actually hes quicker than him I think. I remember ben smith and bb catching folau like quite easily lol quite embarrassing actually

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JW 1 hour ago
Everyone knows Robertson is not supposed to be doing the coaching

Yeah it’s not actually that I’m against the idea this is not good enough, I just don’t know whos responsible for the appalling selections, whether the game plan will work, whether it hasn’t worked because Razor has had too much input or too little input, and whether were better or worse for the coachs not making it work against themselves.

I think that’s the more common outlook rather than people panicking mate, I think they just want something to happen and that needs an outlet. For instance, yes, we were still far too good for most in even weaker areas like the scrum, but it’s the delay in the coaches seemingly admitting that it’s been dissapoint. How can they not see DURING THE GAME it didn’t go right and say it? What are they scared of? Do they think the estimation of the All Blacks will go down in peoples minds? And of course thats not a problem if it weren’t for the fact they don’t do any better the next game! And then they finally seem to see and things get better. I’ve had endless discussions with Chicken about what’s happening at half time, and the lack of any real change. That problem is momentum is consistent with their being NO progress through the year. The team does not improve. The lineout is improved and is good. The scrum is weak and stays weak. The misfires and stays misfiring. When is the new structure following Lancasters Leinster going to click?



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