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LONG READ ‘There’s an argument that the form Australian team right now is the Western Force’

‘There’s an argument that the form Australian team right now is the Western Force’
2 weeks ago

After their well-earned 31-26 win over the Crusaders, the Western Force and their supporters would be excused this week for thinking back to that missed penalty goal attempt late in the Drua game in Fiji the week before last.

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Ben Donaldson had been kicking at 90% leading into the Round 9 clash, but a rough night off the tee in Lautoka saw him return one from four, including the 78th-minute penalty attempt that he pushed across the face of the posts. Had he hit it straight, the Force would have led by one going into the last minute, but instead went down 24-22.

That scoreline hurts a little more this week, because that late missed penalty has now denied them what would have been a three-game winning streak, after beating the Reds in Brisbane and now the Crusaders in Perth, either side of the Drua near-miss.

Victory there might have had them within spitting distance of the top six and with Australian derbies and a return clash with the Drua back in Perth to come after this weekend’s bye, plenty of confidence of making a charge for a maiden finals campaign.

Western Force celebrate
The Force were able to celebrate Harry Johnson-Holmes’ 100th game in style after the prop scored the winning try against Crusaders (Photo Janelle St Pierre/Getty Images)

They may of course still make a run, and I can’t imagine confidence is going to be an issue after the way they overcame the Crusaders, but still, those four points would have been very handy. In a competition of tight margins, you can’t help but lament the really close ones.

After Round 10 last weekend saw three games decided by five points, and one more by seven, it was another rough one for the tipsters and fantasy selectors, underlining why Super Rugby Pacific is in for one hell of a run home to this year’s finals series.

Australian form line shifts west

There’s an argument to be that the form Australian team right now is in fact the Western Force. Current form is obviously different to perceived quality overall, but the Force look to have a decent claim with their two wins and narrow loss in the last three weeks.

In that same time, the Queensland Reds lost heavily at the Hurricanes, lost to the Force at home and beat the Crusaders before last weekend’s bye.

The NSW Waratahs beat the ACT Brumbies in Canberra, lost heavily to the Chiefs, had their second bye, and then took a large chunk of the game to become comfortable in beating Moana Pasifika. The Brumbies lost at home to the ‘Tahs, had their first bye, scraped home against the Highlanders and then lost a second-straight game at home, this time to the Fijian Drua.

After the Crusaders got out to a 19-0 lead in Perth, you might have feared for what was to come for the Force in years gone by, but this was a very different Crusaders team and it’s a very different Force team, too. The composure they showed to score 19 unanswered points of their own to draw level with 25 to play was super impressive, and it was hard to imagine they wouldn’t keep scoring if they could get themselves into position.

They were able to do that, even after Crusaders re-opened a lead, and the Force stormed home over the last 15 minutes to secure the win that keeps them just about within reach of the play-offs. After Round 10, eight points separate the Reds in fifth from the Force in 10th, with a lot of those teams in between set to play each other over the coming weeks.

With road trips to Sydney and Canberra to come, followed by a run of three home games to finish the season, the ball is in the Force’s court as to how well they can finish the year

“Defensively the boys were fighting right to the last minute, didn’t give away any penalties, were really composed and got on ball, got the jackal and ended the game,” noted Force coach Simon Cron about his side’s composure down the stretch.

“There’s a lot of those scenarios those guys train every week to work on and it’s a lot of heart and composure shown, which was critical to be able to get that win because you know as well as we do that the Crusaders will win a lot of games in that last 10 minutes.

“We still had 10 minutes to go when we scored that try and as a coach, you’re just happy for the players that they experience a win like that.”

The Force would probably prefer to be playing this weekend’s Super Round in Christchurch, rather than sitting at home with the bye. But with road trips to Sydney and Canberra to come, followed by a run of three home games to finish the season, the ball is in the Force’s court as to how well they can finish the year.

Are Brumbies regressing, or just at their expected level?

At the end of 10 rounds, only two teams have been inside the top six for all 10 weeks: the Chiefs, who after rising to top spot this weekend have now occupied each of the top six positions, and the ACT Brumbies.

After leading for the first four rounds, the Brumbies spent the next three weeks in third spot, and now the last three weeks in fourth. In the six weeks since they lost top spot, they’ve won just twice in five starts and with a bye in the middle, with two of those losses to the Fijian Drua, who were ninth going into both matches.

Corey Toole
Last-quarter tries from Tane Edmed and Corey Toole threatened a comeback win for ACT before a late penalty sealed a Drua victory in Canberra (Photo Mark Nolan/Getty Images)

But considering the Brumbies were expected to maybe finish just inside the top six, or even narrowly miss out, it feels a bit weird to be overly critical of their slow slide down the standings. If the general consensus over the first month was that they’d significantly over-achieved, then can we really be too down on them for suddenly playing like the mid-table team they were expected to be in 2026?

That’s not to excuse the way they’ve played in the last few weeks. They will admit they have significant work to do to regain their early-season form. The 29 turnovers conceded against the Drua in Canberra on Saturday – 19 of them in the first half – is well below par, and converting only four of 14 entries into the Drua 22 is a long way from their own benchmarks.

The Hurricanes this weekend looms as their toughest test on an otherwise helpful run home, with the three other Australian sides and Moana Pasifika to come over their remaining five games.

It’s up to them how they answer the question from here. Do they want to finish the year as over-achievers, or fade out into the mid-table mess that is emerging?

Waratahs winning, but current error rates not sustainable

Over the last four games, New South Wales have averaged 17.3 turnovers conceded, and 26.3 missed tackles per game. Those numbers don’t paint the complete picture of everything in need of attention, or everything being worked on in the background, but they are indicative of their current form line.

The good news is they have won two of those four games, including against the Brumbies in Canberra, one of – if not their best – performance of the season, and the one game in the last month to bring those averages down from where they otherwise might have been.

But they surely can’t keep handing over possession or conceding gain-line ground at this current rate.

Sid Harvey
Full-back Sid Harvey scored two of the Tahs’ five tries against Moana but it was an error-ridden display (Photo Jason McCawley/Getty Images)

Again on Friday, some of the Waratahs players’ decision-making under pressure was simply not good enough, with passes being pushed, offloads being thrown to no-one and numerous other instances where just taking a tackle and resetting is going to be the best decision every day of the week. Especially game days.

Moana were always going to be hard to handle, given the news of their impending demise last week, but the Waratahs kept them in the contest longer than they otherwise would have been simply because of the error rate.

Incredibly, NSW are only two points behind the Crusaders in sixth and three behind the Reds in fifth, and their record is not too dissimilar to either side.

They can force their way into finals contention mathematically, but from a pure rugby sense, they will need to be playing a lot better than they are currently to get there.

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Comments

27 Comments
r
rs 13 days ago

Force have had a lot of new joiners, so it took em time to gel, especially in defence, but until a couple of rounds ago, they were one of the top scores in the comp. Cron has done a good job to get them playing an attacking style of rugby. The tahs have the best potential to play for expansive counter-attacking rugby that’d suit their outside backs, but it’s a shame they don’t.

F
Footy Franks 16 days ago

The business end of the season is showing that the Oz sides can’t compete against even a depleted and reduced skilled NZ teams. The Aussie crowds are pathetic.

F
Footy Franks 16 days ago

Let’s face it if the Force are the best we have Oz rugby is screwed.

D
Derek Murray 19 days ago

It’s not pretty right now. I agree that the Force are in the best form of any Oz team.


Brumbies aren’t getting better as AAA, Frost and Wright return, on the contrary it’s going the other way. They’re missing Cale, and Meredith, Feliuai, Pritchard and Sapsford need to either discover the form they left a few rounds back or have a rest. The try that Sapsford and Meredith butchered late in the game was world-class rubbish and simply wouldn’t have happened a month back.


The Reds haven’t put in a full 80-minute performance to convince they’re likely to win any games when it counts - missing lock depth badly.


And my Tahs are all over the shop. The first ten minutes last weekend were a horror show, and I worry about our scrum in big games. Gamble, Halaholo and Samu are a very well balanced backrow and we’ve got three locks in form however. The starting front row works their butts off but scrummaging matters. Joey Walton is a fine 13, and we had no luck with the early game HIA for Creighton that meant he needed to switch to 12 but our 10/12/13 are simply not SR quality. There’s a reason Jake played off the bench, if at all, whilst at the Brums. Season on the line this weekend in Christchurch. I’m not very confident.

J
JD Kiwi 20 days ago

I was trying to figure out why the Canes hadn't been in the top 6 every week then realised they started with a bye😂

B
Brett McKay 20 days ago

😆😂

S
SM 20 days ago

“Brumbies were expected to maybe finish just inside the top six, or even narrowly miss out”


Who expected that? They're historically the best Aussie team.

B
Brett McKay 20 days ago

Historically SM, yes, but coming into this season, with the players they lost from last season, there was plenty of discussion and expectations coming into this season around them slipping back a little - hence the point that they overachieved hugely in starting the season so well..

M
Mzilikazi 20 days ago

With all of the Reds, Waratahs and Brumbies playing their next round games in NZ, I can’t see a clean sweep for our sides, as someone was hoping for in a comment I read yesterday. Indeed three losses could be looming.


The Waratahs would be the safest bet against a now very depleted Crusaders. They just have to play to their strengths, and as you say Brett, “some of the Waratahs players’ decision-making under pressure was simply not good enough…” Get that closer to 90% plus and they can win.


In Auckland I would hope the Reds can play to their potential a lot more than they have done so often this season. If I were Les Kiss, I would be asking the referee to watch how the Blues set up for a maul drive. They are often regarding actually being in the lineout when the ball is still in the throwers hands as an option. It is not !


The Brumbies will hit a stung and angry Hurricanes, who if they live up to their name, may decimate this error prone Canberra side. Priority, I would start Luke Reimer, and if need be keep for the full 80 mins. He would have to be one of the best jackal 7”s in the world this year. I watched him a lot in that last game, and his decision making when to go for the ball is very good indeed. The Brumbies must just make sure they profit from his work.

T
Two Cents 20 days ago

And the Brumbies haven't also been stung and angry, losing for the first time in forever to the Drua at home and going back to back in defeat at home?

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Brett McKay 20 days ago

All great points Mizz.


The Reds and Tahs are both still missing a few key players, but the Brumbies are getting awfully close to full noise and simply must respond this weekend..

u
unknown 20 days ago

The Force have lost early games closely.

They are well coached , in form and have a good cadre of players.

Ben Donaldson is at last playing well . He can’t tackle but they hide it well .

T
The Late News 20 days ago

Well Brett its been interesting. The mighty FORCE have two games to come against the Tahs.

B
Brett McKay 20 days ago

WAR BRU RED DRU WAR to come after their second bye this weekend. It’s not the worst run home..

B
Bazzallina 20 days ago

Does the team being tight hold much weight ? looking at body language on the paddock and sideline even when they have lost ( but especially when they have won) and watching some of Tizzano socials Force look like a rag tag bunch of dudes who enjoy each others company

B
Brett McKay 20 days ago

Bazz, right at the moment, the Force look like a team that’s enjoying playing together. That’s about the best compliment we can give them..

T
Two Cents 20 days ago

If 3 Australian teams make it into the finals, from an Australian point of view that should be considered a sign that the Super sides are finally becoming more competitive.


But that says nothing about the quality and ability of Australian rugby which, judging from the relatively disappointing results from Hong Kong in the 7s and the disastrous Pac4 campaign for the Roos, is not enjoying quite the same purple patch.


Whether that's a good thing overall for SH rugby remains to be seen and there's obviously a lot of consternation in Kiwiland that continuing with SR is weakening them as a rugby nation which they'd take the apparent better win/loss records of Australian teams as an alarming proof of.


It would be great for the Force if they really have turned a corner this year and they manage to get themselves into the top 6. Great for them and great for WA rugby because it will confirm at last their status as a genuine contender.


The Tahs simply must make the finals for RA and Australian rugby to have genuine credibility given the amount of resources that have been directed into the side.


And the Reds also must make the finals because their coach needs to prove himself before he takes over at the helm of the Wallabies given his relatively rough start so far in the international arena.


As much as I would love for the Brumbies to win SR again it might actually be better for Australian rugby if they missed the finals this year. They're the only side with credit in the bank to be able to handle such a failure.


There's very little chance that the Blues, Canes and Chiefs won't all comfortably make the finals and so there's really only 3 places in the finals up for grabs which means one of the Aussie sides will miss out.

B
Brett McKay 20 days ago

I take your point TC, but I won’t see the Tahs missing the top six as an reflection on Australian rugby as a whole. Certainly on the Waratahs themselves, and RA by extension, but the other teams and the game beyond that won’t lose sleep..

u
unknown 20 days ago

The Waratahs attack appears to need an uplift in tactics- too little reward to date- fr a committed long term supporter

R
Rugby3 18 days ago

English attack coach. What do you expect ? Campese would be having kittens.

W
Worn old prop 20 days ago

Hopefully Suaalii will be back and that might help things.

S
SB 20 days ago

Really enjoyed watching the Force. Shame they lost in Fiji but their fate is in their hands looking at the games ahead.


The Waratahs will need to improve a lot if they are to win against the Crusaders, who will no doubt be up for it in their new stadium.


The Brumbies poor start cost them on the weekend, playing the Hurricanes is a huge test but not beyond them if they get back to their normal standards.


The Reds also have a chance against the Blues, it wouldn’t surprise me to see 2 Australian wins this weekend.

B
Brett McKay 20 days ago

Couple of fascinating contests this weekend SB, for all the reasons you mention.


Hope you’re right about two Australian wins!

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