Brumbies tweak two for Waratahs

Brumbies head coach Dan McKellar has made two changes to his starting XV for the trip to Sydney to tackle the Waratahs this weekend.

McKellar has selected Scott Sio at loosehead prop and paired Richie Arnold with twin brother Rory for the first time in Super Rugby, as the Brumbies go looking for the bonus-point win that would give them a chance of playing in the playoffs.

Sio will team up with fellow Wallabies international Allan Alaalatoa either side of the impressive hooker Folau Fainga’a in the heart of the engine room in what is sure to be a colossal front-row battle with the club’s perennial rivals from New South Wales.

Blake Enever shifts from lock to flanker to compensate for the inclusion of Richie Arnold, with Tom Cusack unavailable, after the flanker suffered a head-knock in Hamilton against the Chiefs in Round 18. David Pocock and Isi Naisarani join Enever in the back-row.

The backline remains unchanged for the sixth straight game having crossed for a combined total of 15 tries in that time-frame between them.

Joe Powell and Christian Lealiifano will continue to provide quick and decisive ball with the centre pairing of Kyle Godwin and Tevita Kuridrani creating ample space for the back three.

Leading scorers Tom Banks (eight tries) and Henry Speight (seven tries) are joined by Andrew Muirhead who has crossed for three tries in his last four outings, creating plenty of problems for opposition defences with his pace and electric footwork.

Co-captain Sam Carter meanwhile is recalled to the squad and is on the replacements bench where he is joined by prop Nic Mayhew who started the match in New Zealand, hooker Connal McInerney, prop Leslie Leuluaialii-Makin and flanker Lachlan McCaffrey in a 5/3 split.

Matt Lucas, Wharenui Hawera and Lausii Taliauli are named as the backline finishers as the Brumbies aim to get the win that would see them retain the Dan Vickerman Cup.

Brumbies: 15 Tom Banks, 14 Henry Speight, 13 Tevita Kuridrani, 12 Kyle Godwin, 11 Andrew Muirhead, 10 Christian Lealiifano, 9 Joe Powell, 8 Isi Naisarani, 7 David Pocock, 6 Blake Enever, 5 Richie Arnold, 4 Rory Arnold, 3 Allan Alaalatoa, 2 Folau Fainga’a, 1 Scott Sio
Replacements: 16 Connal McInerney, 17 Nic Mayhew, 18 Leslie Leuluaialii-Makin, 19 Sam Carter, 20 Lachlan McCaffrey, 21 Matt Lucas, 22 Wharenui Hawera, 23 Lausii Taliauli

Date: Saturday, July 14
Venue: Allianz Stadium, Sydney
Kick-off: 19:45 local (10:45 BST, 09:45 GMT)
Referee: Angus Gardner
Assistant Referees: Will Houston, James Leckie
TMO: George Ayoub


Blues make one change for Crusaders

Blues head coach Tana Umaga has made just one alteration to his starting line-up to take on the Crusaders in their Super Rugby derby in Christchurch on Saturday.

The only change from the pack which lost to the Hurricanes in Wellington last week is a start for Ben Nee-Nee after an injury to Matiaha Martin ruled him out, while the backline remains the same.

The Blues will aim to give long-serving star Jerome Kaino a fitting send-off in his final game for the Auckland-based club.

Kaino, who heads to France after the season, will play his 139th game for the Blues, to sit second on the all-time Blues list behind Keven Mealamu.

Blues: 15 Matt Duffie, 14 Melani Nanai, 13 Michael Collins, 12 Rieko Ioane, 11 Caleb Clarke, 10 Stephen Perofeta, 9 Augustine Pulu (c), 8 Akira Ioane, 7 Blake Gibson, 6 Jerome Kaino, 5 Ben Nee-Nee, 4 Gerard Cowley-Tuioti, 3 Ofa Tuungafasi, 2 Matt Moulds, 1 Alex Hodgman
Replacements: 16 Ross Wright, 17 Pauliasi Manu, 18 Sione Mafileo, 19 Jacob Pierce, 20 Murphy Taramai, 21 Sam Nock, 22 Bryn Gatland, 23 Tamati Tua

Date: Saturday, July 14
Venue: AMI Stadium, Christchurch
Kick-off: 19:35 local (08:35 BST, 07:35 GMT)
Referee: Federico Anselmi
Assistant Referees: Jamie Nutbrown, Mike Fraser
TMO: Shane McDermott


Jeff Toomaga-Allen to hit 100 for Hurricanes

Hurricanes prop Jeff Toomaga-Allen will make his 100th Super Rugby appearance in Friday’s highly anticipated quarter-final against the Chiefs at Westpac Stadium.

Toomaga-Allen, who brought up his 100th match for the club last week in Hamilton, will become just the 15th Hurricanes player to reach the milestone.

The 27-year-old made his debut for the Hurricanes in 2012 against the Stormers alongside long-time team-mates Ben May, TJ Perenara and Brad Shields.

He will be the fourth player this season to reach the mark after Beauden Barrett, Perenara and Shields.

Hurricanes head coach Chris Boyd has named a largely settled squad for the quarter-final.

Captain Shields has been bracketed to allow him as much time as possible to get over a rib injury while Gareth Evans will start in the number seven jersey in place of Sam Henwood.

There are minimal changes in the backline, although Boyd has moved Jordie Barrett to centre to allow the return of crowd favourite and centurion Julian Savea to the starting XV.

Savea will be on the right wing with Ben Lam on the left as Nehe Milner-Skudder moves to full-back as the Hurricanes prepare to face the Chiefs for the second straight week after the two sides played out an exciting 80 minutes in Hamilton.

Wes Goosen, who has been recovering from the head knock he suffered last week, has been bracketed on the bench with Jonah Lowe while the squad has been further strengthened by the return from injury of All Black Vaea Fifita.

Boyd said the squad was delighted to have another opportunity to play in front of their home fans and believed the Hurricanes could deliver a performance good enough to keep their season and title hopes alive.

He has been impressed with the way the squad has prepared in the build-up to the match and could sense the excitement levels growing by the day.

Hurricanes: 15 Nehe Milner-Skudder, 14 Julian Savea, 13 Jordie Barrett, 12 Ngani Laumape, 11 Ben Lam, 10 Beauden Barrett, 9 TJ Perenara, 8 Blade Thomson, 7 Gareth Evans, 6 Brad Shields (c)/Reed Prinsep, 5 Sam Lousi, 4 Michael Fatialofa, 3 Jeff Toomaga-Allen, 2 Ricky Riccitelli, 1 Toby Smith
Replacements: 16 James O’Reilly, 17 Chris Eves, 18 Ben May, 19 Vaea Fifita, 20 Reed Prinsep/Sam Henwood, 21 Jamie Booth, 22 Ihaia West, 23 Wes Goosen/Jonah Lowe

Date: Friday, July 20
Venue: Westpac Stadium, Wellington
Kick-off: 19:35 local (08:35 BST, 07:35 GMT)
Referee: Glen Jackson
Assistant Referees: Nick Briant, Paul Williams
TMO: Glenn Newman


Post-surgery Jack Nowell eyeing Premiership opener

Jack Nowell is determined to go one better this season as Exeter Chiefs look to bounce back from their Premiership final loss to Saracens.

The Chiefs suffered a 27-10 negative to their rivals at Twickenham and since then Nowell has undergone surgery on damaged ankle ligaments, this after his partner Zoe gave birth to their daughter, Nori.

Now new father Nowell is looking to get back to full fitness during the off-season.

“It’s going very well,” he told Exeter’s website. “My operation actually got put back a week because my daughter was born the day I was due to have surgery, so I had it the week after instead.

“Now, we’re ticking along nicely and I’ve got the physios looking after me. For the first couple of weeks it was a bit tough, I was in a cast and I wasn’t actually allowed to do anything, but it kind of really gave me the chance to sit down, relax and take my mind off everything.

“I’ve now had a few weeks of training and I’m back into it. I’m really looking forward to getting the protective boot off and then getting back fit again and giving it a good go. I am doing everything I can to try and be available for that first game, but we’ll just have to wait and see how things progress.”

Exeter kick off their Premiership campaign at home to Leicester and when looking back to their final defeat, Nowell maintains the club are in an excellent position to move forward this season.

“If we compare ourselves to two years ago, when we lost to Sarries in the first final, the look of the boys in the changing rooms after the game in May was much different. We were all absolutely gutted and I’ve never looked at our squad and seen us in that position before. It hurt us a lot,” he said.

“Already this year you can really feel a sense of urgency from the boys. We are ready to go again. Even though we’ve just started pre-season, the boys are training hard and they’re really flying into it. We’re excited for the games to come.”


Season over for Nic Groom

The Lions have suffered a setback ahead of this week’s game against the Jaguares after Nic Groom was ruled out for the rest of the season.

Groom, 28, requires surgery on an injured hand he sustained against the Bulls over last weekend, with Ross Cronje likely to come into the XV.

The inexperienced Marco Jansen van Vuren is set to be named on the replacements bench for Saturday’s match at Ellis Park in Johannesburg.


Johnny Fa’auli to leave Chiefs for Japan – report

Suspended centre Johnny Fa’auli appears to have played his last game for the Chiefs after a report emerged that he’s signed a deal to play in Japan.

Fa’auli, 22, was handed a six-week suspension on Sunday for his dangerous tackle on Wes Goosen during their 28-24 win over the Hurricanes.

And according to Stuff, that’s set to be his last act in a Chiefs jersey as the physical inside centre has agreed a two-year contract with Toshiba.

Due to his suspension, however, Fa’auli miss Toshiba’s opening fixture of the Top League season as it takes place on the final day of his ban.


Loose Pass: TMOs, Germany and half-empty stadiums

This week we will mostly be concerning ourselves with TMO stuff, the curious situation in Germany, and an extraordinary lack of bums on seats…

Video nasties

So while soccer lauds – mostly – and champions its shiny new Video Assistant Ref during its global showpiece tournament, rugby once again is rumbling with discontent about its own replay officiating. A sad state of affairs indeed.

But in a bizarre break with tradition, soccer does seem to be able to claim the high ground in this particular situation. It quite clearly states when the VAR can call for something, what infringements it can call for, and how the referee should react.

Rugby seems at the moment to have no such clarity. Perhaps the biggest problem we have at the moment is what seems to be conflicting guidelines in the protocols, which SANZAAR have this weekend decided to contest and voice need for approval.

For example, in the opening guidelines is the very – to use protocol language – clear and obvious statement: “The referee should not be subservient to the system.”

Yet later on we have a paragraph that states: “When the TMO has concluded his analysis, he will provide the referee with his advice and recommendations….the TMO will then advise the referee as to when he may go ahead and signal his decision.”

This seems to be the problem. It seems that the act of the TMO advice is clouding the issue in an age where big screens abound and/or where it would not be a big problem to have a screen or screens at the side of the pitch as they now seem to have in soccer where referees are able to make their own advice. Some referees are good at looking at screens and making up their own minds – Nigel Owens is the best example. Others seem to rely too much on the TMO advice.

The problem with TMO advice is that it is very much removed from the intensity and speed of the game on the pitch. Our favourite Owens TMO moments are always the ones where he insists that a potential foul is replayed at match speed so he can get a feel for exactly how instinctive or not a potential foul might be, meaning he is making his own decision under his own criteria. But those referees who are more subservient to the system seem loathe to do this and far happier to rely on advice without really examining it in the context of the flesh and blood thundering before their eyes, which in our opinion is creating the largest number of inconsistencies.

“A major concern for us at present is the practical implementation of the Television Match Official (TMO) protocols. The protocols are clearly not working and a specific review is required in this area,” said SANZAAR’s statement on Monday.

“SANZAAR believes the appointed referee needs to remain the key decision maker on the field and that TMO interventions only provide context to the match officials’ decision making.

“We need better consistency in the application of the protocols and most would agree that perhaps this is not the case. The aim of the review will be to drive some operational changes to the protocols to ensure this consistency so that better outcomes are delivered.”

Yes, these would be welcome. Power back to the referees please – we have the technology to empower them properly now and we need to use it, as there have been too many TMO howlers and too many bizarre decisions made from people nowhere near the action this past couple of years. And if we may make so bold: Get Owens to coach the referees in decisiveness…

He’s back…

Although the result was eventually a fairly resounding 42-28 defeat, Germany were within an ace of upsetting Samoa on Saturday.

In itself a huge achievement, but German rugby has even more cause for hope after Saturday’s belting game: namely the return of its benefactor.

We’ve covered the saga of Dr. Hans-Peter Wild in these columns a couple of times recently; a month or so ago, it seemed as though the man behind Capri-Sun really had walked out on the German rugby XV for good after European Rugby refused to let his Heidelberg team play in the European Challenge Cup (because Dr. Wild would have owned two teams in the same competition: Heidelberg RK and Stade Francais). This after one false exit already last year in a dispute over fund mismanagement.

But in Heidelberg’s sunshine on Saturday, Dr. Wild had his Capri-Sun flags flying alongside the pitch, had a banner of gratitude unfurled to him by the German fans and slipped into the ground more or less incognito shortly before kick-off.

The repechage tournament, featuring Canada, Hong Kong, Germany and the runners-up from the African Cup of Nations currently taking place, will be a close-run thing. Germany’s chances surely hinge on Dr. Wild relenting and putting his backing back in place. If he does – the vital signs since Saturday have been good as well – don’t bet against Germany taking their first World Cup place. They really were terrific on Saturday.

Quo Vadis Super Rugby?

The Sharks-Jaguares match was a do-or-die affair for the home team, but you’d never have guessed it from the crowd. Rain be blowed, this should have been at least a half-decent Kings Park occasion.

The popularity of the tournament is at an all-time low, going on the vast swathes of empty seats all over the participating countries.

SANZAAR’s attempts to get the TMO right are laudable, but some energy needs to be spent on sorting out the current convoluted mess of a conference system. It’s making nobody happy.

Loose Pass compiled by Lawrence Nolan


VIDEO: Fiji win 2005 RWC Sevens

Ahead of the Rugby World Cup Sevens which kicks off in San Francisco this weekend, here’s a look back at a classic final from 2005.

Fiji lifted the trophy that year as a team coached by soon-to-be Wales boss Wayne Pivac that starred Waisale Serevi, Sireli Bobo, Apolosi Satala and Marika Vunibaka beat a New Zealand side that included Liam Messam, Tanerau Latimer, Josh Blackie and Tamati Ellison 29-19.

This was a wonderful match and is well worth taking a trip down memory lane for.

Video credit: World Rugby


Ellis Genge to miss rest of 2018

Leicester Tigers prop Ellis Genge will only return in 2019 after undergoing surgery on a knee injury suffered on international duty in the summer.

Front-rower Genge was part of the England squad on tour in South Africa but returned home before the third Test after picking up the injury.

Tigers head coach Matt O’Connor confirmed the news, saying: “Gengey has had the operation and everything went well from that point of view. He’s well into his rehab work now and then he’ll start fitness work and building up to play again.

“But he will miss the first phase of the season and we’re probably looking at him playing again in the new year at this stage. But he’s working hard on his recovery and will be god to go when he comes through that rehab.

“It is obviously very disappointing for him and for us, but I’m sure he’ll be raring to go once he gets back to full fitness and we know there’s still a lot to come from him.”


Mourad Boudjellal defiant in face of EPCR fine

Toulon president Mourad Boudjellal is refusing to pay an EPCR fine of €75,000 for homophobic comments made during last year’s European Champions Cup.

Boudjellal was responding at the time to the alleged homophobic remarks of Toulon centre Mathieu Bastareaud, which were captured on camera during that match against Benetton. He told reporters: “At no point did Mathieu Bastareaud make a judgement on the sexual orientation of the player in question.

“I am not homophobic but I have already called someone a fagg*t. It’s become customary, it’s the first thing that comes to mind in an altercation.

“I am worried. What I fear is the mormon side of EPCR with the Welsh and the Irish.”

In addition to the €75,000 fine, Boudjellal also received a warning of a further €25,000 fine, and a ban from all EPCR competitions for three years following any similar offence. Toulon would also be subject to a deduction of five match points in their next EPCR competition.

In an EPCR statement referencing Boudjellal’s comments (following his team’s Champions Cup encounter against Benetton last January) it was explained that he had, “made comments that among other things allegedly condoned homophobic conduct, discriminated against and insulted various groups, and brought the game of rugby into disrepute by attacking, disparaging and criticising EPCR”.

The EPCR committee also noted aggravating factors which contributed to their decision, “including poor disciplinary records and poor conduct during the disciplinary process, and that these increased the severity of the sanctions imposed”.

However, Boudjellal was defiant when he spoke to French publication Midi Olympique: “I will not appeal, I will not pay and I will lodge a complaint for defamation.”