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Brumbies stay patient to secure victory against the Force

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Brumbies stay patient to secure victory against the Force

ACT Brumbies 22 Western Force 19

In a nail-biting Super Rugby Pacific showdown at Canberra’s GIO Stadium, the ACT Brumbies demonstrated remarkable patience, overcoming a lackluster first-half performance to clinch a hard-fought 22-19 victory against the Western Force.

The opening exchanges saw the Force capitalizing on defensive lapses, racing to a commanding 14-0 lead with tries from Hamish Stewart and Michael Wells. As the Brumbies grappled with uncharacteristic errors and struggled to find their rhythm, doubts lingered among the home fans following their disappointing defensive outing in the previous match against the Chiefs.

Despite the early setbacks, the Brumbies remained composed and focused on their game plan. Tamati Tua’s moment of brilliance created an opportunity for Ryan Lonergan to breach the Force defense, injecting a much-needed spark into the Brumbies’ performance. Noah Lolesio’s precise penalty further narrowed the gap, signaling a shift in momentum as the halftime whistle approached.

The turning point came early in the second half when the Force’s Harry Potter received a yellow card, reducing his side to 14 men. Sensing an opportunity, the Brumbies patiently built their attacks, methodically probing the Force defense. Their patience paid off as Rob Valetini and Billy Pollard both crashed over the try line, seizing the lead and wresting control of the match from their opponents.

Despite a spirited fightback from the Force, rewarded with a late try from Harry Potter, the Brumbies’ resolute defense held firm in the closing stages. Ben Donaldson’s missed penalty goal and conversion attempts compounded the Force’s frustration, ultimately sealing the Brumbies’ victory in a tense finale.

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Super Rugby Pacific

Super Rugby Pacific 2026: Round 14 preview

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Super Rugby Pacific 2026: Round 14 preview
Hurricanes Jordie Barrett during the Hurricanes v Brumbies, Super Rugby Pacific match, One NZ Stadium, Christchurch, New Zealand. Saturday, 25 April 2026. (Photo by Martin Hunter / action press)

The battle for the Super Rugby Pacific minor premiership takes centre stage in Round 14 as the competition’s top three sides go head to head, with the table-topping Hurricanes travelling to Eden Park to face the Blues in a blockbuster that could determine who hosts the opening round of the playoffs. Three weeks remain in the regular season, and with the top six still far from settled, every match this weekend carries enormous weight.

The Hurricanes hold a five-point lead at the summit on 45 points after their eight-try demolition of Moana Pasifika last weekend, where Josh Moorby scored four tries and Kini Naholo marked his return from a year-long ACL injury with a double off the bench. The Chiefs sit second on 40 points following their hard-fought 31–21 victory over the Reds in Brisbane, while the Blues — stung by their 36–20 defeat to the Crusaders at Te Kaha — have slipped to third on 38 points and face a fight to secure a home playoff. Below them, the Crusaders (32 points), Brumbies (29) and Reds (27) hold the remaining finals berths, with the Highlanders (24), Waratahs (21) and Fijian Drua (20) all still mathematically alive.

The round opens in Hamilton on Friday night before Saturday’s triple-header takes the action from Suva to Auckland to Perth. The Brumbies, Crusaders and Moana Pasifika all enjoy the bye this week.


Friday 15 May

Chiefs v Highlanders

FMG Stadium Waikato, Hamilton — 7:05pm NZST / 5:05pm AEST

The Chiefs can clinch a home playoff match with a victory over the Highlanders, who arrive in Hamilton with their season on the line. Jono Gibbes has opted for a dual-playmaker approach, shifting Damian McKenzie to fullback and handing the No.10 jersey to Josh Jacomb for a combination the coach believes will unlock the Highlanders’ combative defence. All Blacks Quinn Tupaea has been rested ahead of the playoffs, with former Wallaby Lalakai Foketi stepping in at second five-eighth, while Josh Lord is absent after suffering a head knock during last week’s 31–21 win over the Reds in Brisbane. Seuseu Naitoa Ah Kuoi replaces Lord at lock alongside Tupou Vaa’i, and All Blacks hooker Samisoni Taukei’aho returns to the starting XV after a devastating double against the Reds — both tries coming from rolling mauls that tore through the Queensland pack.

Jamie Joseph has made just one enforced change to the Highlanders side that edged the Waratahs 31–26 in Dunedin last weekend, with Tanielu Tele’a replacing the suspended Jona Nareki at outside centre after the winger’s controversial red card. Caleb Tangitau was electric on his return from injury against the Waratahs, setting up the opening try for Jonah Lowe and providing the spark that saw the Highlanders race to a 28–7 lead before surviving a dramatic late comeback. Joseph has selected a 6–2 bench split, with only Folau Fakatava and Taine Robinson as the backs among the replacements — a decision that underscores the significance of the forward battle in what is effectively a must-win fixture. With a bye in the final round, the Highlanders likely need victories in both of their remaining matches — against the Chiefs and the Hurricanes — to force their way into the top six.

The Chiefs have won their last five meetings against the Highlanders, averaging 39 points per match in that run. The Highlanders have not won in Hamilton since 2019, but their forwards — led by co-captains Ethan de Groot and Timoci Tavatavanawai — have shown they can compete physically with any pack in the competition.

The key battle will be in the midfield, where Gibbes’ dual-playmaker system aims to stretch the Highlanders laterally. McKenzie at fullback gives the Chiefs an extra dimension in the back field, and with Wallace Sititi rampaging off the back of the scrum — the All Blacks No.8 scored twice against the Reds — the Highlanders’ defence will need to be near-perfect to contain the hosts.

Teams:

Chiefs: 15 Damian McKenzie, 14 Liam Coombes-Fabling, 13 Kyle Brown, 12 Lalakai Foketi, 11 Kyren Taumoefolau, 10 Josh Jacomb, 9 Xavier Roe, 8 Wallace Sititi, 7 Luke Jacobson (c), 6 Simon Parker, 5 Tupou Vaa’i, 4 Seuseu Naitoa Ah Kuoi, 3 Siona Ahio, 2 Samisoni Taukei’aho, 1 Ollie Norris.
Replacements: 16 Brodie McAlister, 17 Benét Kumeroa, 18 George Dyer, 19 Fiti Sa, 20 Samipeni Finau, 21 Cortez Ratima, 22 Daniel Rona, 23 Isaac Hutchinson.

Highlanders: 15 Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens, 14 Caleb Tangitau, 13 Tanielu Tele’a, 12 Timoci Tavatavanawai (co-c), 11 Jonah Lowe, 10 Cameron Millar, 9 Adam Lennox, 8 Nikora Broughton, 7 Lucas Casey, 6 Te Kamaka Howden, 5 Mitch Dunshea, 4 Tomas Lavanini, 3 Angus Ta’avao, 2 Jack Taylor, 1 Ethan de Groot (co-c).
Replacements: 16 Henry Bell, 17 Daniel Lienert-Brown, 18 Saula Ma’u, 19 Oliver Haig, 20 Sean Withy, 21 Veveni Lasaqa, 22 Folau Fakatava, 23 Taine Robinson.

Referee: Nic Berry. Assistant Referees: Reuben Keane, Louis Trisley. TMO: Brett Cronan.

Unavailable — Chiefs: Quinn Tupaea (rested), Josh Lord (concussion protocols).

Unavailable — Highlanders: Jona Nareki (suspended — red card).


Saturday 16 May

Fijian Drua v NSW Waratahs

HFC Bank Stadium, Suva — 4:35pm FJT / 2:35pm AEST

This is a straight elimination match. The loser’s season is effectively over, with both sides sitting just outside the top six and running out of opportunities to claw their way into the finals. The Drua, ninth on 20 points, know that their fortress in Suva — where they have won every home game this season — gives them a significant advantage, while the Waratahs, eighth on 21 points, must find a way to win in Fiji for the first time in four attempts if they are to keep their faint hopes alive.

Dan McKellar has made eight changes to his starting side following the dispiriting 31–26 loss to the Highlanders in Dunedin, where the Waratahs found themselves trailing 28–7 before staging a spirited but ultimately futile comeback. Jack Bowen has been handed a lifeline with his first start of the season at fly-half, with McKellar revealing that Bowen, Jack Debreczeni and Lawson Creighton are all off contract at season’s end. Halfback Jake Gordon has been rested, Andrew Kellaway is out with concussion, Pete Samu has been ruled out with a knee injury, and hookers Ethan Dobbins (foot) and Folau Faingaa (knee) are both unavailable. Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii has been retained at outside centre for his third match back from injury, and Max Jorgensen shifts to fullback. The feelgood story of the Waratahs’ season, prop Apolosi Ranawai — the disability worker who shed 33 kilograms to earn a Super Rugby debut in Round 12 — makes an emotional return to Fiji from the bench.

The Drua are unchanged from their most recent outing — a gutsy 24–14 win over the Highlanders two rounds ago that kept them in the finals conversation. They boast the competition’s best home record and will look to their powerful forward pack, anchored by veteran prop Peni Ravai and co-captain Temo Mayanavanua, to establish dominance in the set piece. Virimi Vakatawa’s return to the Pacific has added class to the midfield, and fullback Isikeli Rabitu has been one of the most improved players in the competition.

The Waratahs have lost their last three matches and have won only once in Fiji across all competitions. If they are to survive, their forward pack must front up against a Drua side that thrives on physicality at home, while their backline weapons in Jorgensen and Suaalii need front-foot ball to have any impact.

Teams:

Fijian Drua: 15 Isikeli Rabitu, 14 Frank Lomani (co-c), 13 Tuidraki Samusamuvodre, 12 Virimi Vakatawa, 11 Manasa Mataele, 10 Isaiah Armstrong-Ravula, 9 Issak Fines-Leleiwasa, 8 Elia Canakaivata, 7 Kitione Salawa, 6 Etonia Waqa, 5 Temo Mayanavanua (co-c), 4 Isoa Nasilasila, 3 Mesake Doge, 2 Zuriel Togiatama, 1 Peni Ravai.
Replacements: 16 Kavaia Tagivetaua, 17 Emosi Tuqiri, 18 Samuela Tawake, 19 Mesake Vocevoce, 20 Vilive Miramira, 21 Isoa Tuwai, 22 Philip Baselala, 23 Kemu Valetini.

NSW Waratahs: 15 Max Jorgensen, 14 Harry Potter, 13 Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, 12 Lawson Creighton, 11 Triston Reilly, 10 Jack Bowen, 9 Teddy Wilson, 8 Angus Scott-Young, 7 Charlie Gamble, 6 Clem Halaholo, 5 Miles Amatosero, 4 Matt Philip (c), 3 Dan Botha, 2 Ioane Moananu, 1 Jack Barrett.
Replacements: 16 Oniti Finau, 17 Isaac Kailea, 18 Apolosi Ranawai, 19 Ben Grant, 20 Jamie Adamson, 21 Michael McDonald, 22 Jack Debreczeni, 23 Sid Harvey.

Referee: James Doleman. Assistant Referees: Marcus Playle, Fraser Hannon. TMO: Aaron Paterson.

Unavailable — Waratahs: Andrew Kellaway (concussion), Pete Samu (knee), Ethan Dobbins (foot), Folau Faingaa (knee), Jake Gordon (rested), Ben Donaldson (quad).


Blues v Hurricanes

Eden Park, Auckland — 7:05pm NZST / 5:05pm AEST

The match of the round and potentially the match of the season so far. The Hurricanes can take a stranglehold on the minor premiership with victory at Eden Park, while the Blues — reeling from their 36–20 defeat to the Crusaders at Te Kaha last weekend — know that another loss could see them slip out of the top two and lose home advantage in the playoffs altogether. The Crusaders, sitting seven points behind the Blues with a game in hand and two home matches to come against the Chiefs and Hurricanes, are lurking ominously.

Vern Cotter has made significant changes to address the failings of last week. Beauden Barrett returns to the No.10 jersey after being controversially benched behind Stephen Perofeta against the Crusaders — a decision that backfired as the Blues’ attack misfired badly. Anton Segner steps in at openside flanker for the injured Dalton Papali’i, who suffered a fractured jaw making a tackle early in the Crusaders match and is likely out for the season. If so, his time in a Blues jersey is over, with the flanker departing for France at season’s end. Zarn Sullivan starts at fullback, with AJ Lam shifting to the right wing. Cotter acknowledged the disappointment of last week but said the group has trained with real intent. The Blues also adopt a 6–2 bench split, with Finlay Christie and Perofeta the only backs among the replacements.

The Hurricanes, by contrast, have only strengthened. Ruben Love returns from a minor ankle injury to start at first five-eighth, captain Jordie Barrett is back in the midfield, and the front row of Xavier Numia, Asafo Aumua and Pasilio Tosi gives them enormous scrummaging power. Four-try hero Moorby is absent — Clark Laidlaw said the winger had taken a knock to the calf — while Du’Plessis Kirifi misses out with a knee injury, though he is expected back next week. Peter Lakai starts at openside in Kirifi’s absence. Kini Naholo, who scored twice off the bench against Moana Pasifika on his return from an ACL injury, earns a start on the left wing alongside Fehi Fineanganofo — the competition’s leading try-scorer with 15 — and Callum Harkin at fullback.

Recent history favours the Blues at Eden Park, where home advantage has proved decisive in 80 per cent of matches between these sides over the past five meetings. But the Hurricanes have been irresistible on the road this season, and with Barrett, Love and Fineanganofo all firing, the visitors carry enough firepower to win anywhere. Laidlaw said the opportunity to secure home playoff advantage made this one of the biggest matches of the season.

Teams:

Blues: 15 Zarn Sullivan, 14 AJ Lam, 13 Xavi Taele, 12 Pita Ahki, 11 Caleb Clarke, 10 Beauden Barrett, 9 Sam Nock, 8 Hoskins Sotutu, 7 Anton Segner, 6 Malachi Wrampling, 5 Sam Darry, 4 Patrick Tuipulotu (c), 3 Marcel Renata, 2 Bradley Slater, 1 Ofa Tu’ungafasi.
Replacements: 16 Kurt Eklund, 17 Mason Tupaea, 18 Flyn Yates, 19 Laghlan McWhannell, 20 Torian Barnes, 21 Che Clark, 22 Finlay Christie, 23 Stephen Perofeta.

Hurricanes: 15 Callum Harkin, 14 Fehi Fineanganofo, 13 Billy Proctor, 12 Jordie Barrett (c), 11 Kini Naholo, 10 Ruben Love, 9 Ereatara Enari, 8 Devan Flanders, 7 Peter Lakai, 6 Brad Shields, 5 Warner Dearns, 4 Caleb Delany, 3 Pasilio Tosi, 2 Asafo Aumua, 1 Xavier Numia.
Replacements: 16 Raymond Tuputupu, 17 Pouri Rakete-Stones, 18 Siale Lauaki, 19 Isaia Walker-Leawere, 20 Brayden Iose, 21 Jordi Viljoen, 22 Jone Rova, 23 Bailyn Sullivan.

Referee: Ben O’Keeffe. Assistant Referees: Todd Petrie, Warwick Lahmert. TMO: Richard Kelly.

Unavailable — Blues: Dalton Papali’i (fractured jaw — likely season-ending).

Unavailable — Hurricanes: Cam Roigard (calf), Du’Plessis Kirifi (knee — one match), Josh Moorby (calf).


Western Force v Queensland Reds

HBF Park, Perth — 5:35pm AWST / 7:35pm AEST

The Reds need a win in Perth to all but secure their place in the finals, but Les Kiss has rolled the dice by resting four Wallabies for the trip west. Captain and flanker Fraser McReight, backs Josh Flook and Filipo Daugunu, and lock Lukhan Salakaia-Loto have all been given a regeneration week, with Kiss conscious of managing his squad across the final three rounds. Hulking prop Massimo De Luttis returns from a long-term injury to bolster the scrum, while lock Hamish Muller, flanker John Bryant and centre Isaac Henry slot in. Carter Gordon wears the No.10 jersey alongside halfback Louis Werchon, and fullback Jock Campbell will bring up his 100th Super Rugby appearance — a remarkable milestone for the 30-year-old, who has been one of Queensland’s most consistent performers.

The biggest talking point around the Reds, however, has nothing to do with this weekend. Teenage sensation Treyvon Pritchard — who scored his first Super Rugby try off the bench in the 31–21 loss to the Chiefs last week — is being targeted by new NRL franchise the PNG Chiefs. Kiss said the attention was warranted but stressed that Pritchard loves his rugby and the environment in Brisbane. The 19-year-old is named on the bench again and could have a significant role to play against a Force side that the Reds need to put away.

The Force are all but out of contention on 18 points after their 32–15 loss to the Brumbies, and have been dealt a further blow with the news that halfback Henry Robertson will require surgery to repair his ACL — ending his season and dashing his hopes of a Test debut. Nathan Hastie takes over at halfback, with Max Burey at fly-half. The pack is led by captain Jeremy Williams and the abrasive Darcy Swain, while former Wallaby Brandon Paenga-Amosa continues at hooker. Zac Lomax has been one of the Force’s standout performers on the wing this season, and Kurtley Beale provides experience off the bench.

The Reds’ narrow loss to the Chiefs last Friday was a tale of two halves — the visitors trailed 7–17 at the break after Wallace Sititi’s double, before Joe Brial and Pritchard scored to close the gap before the Chiefs pulled away through Taukei’aho’s brace from the maul. With McReight and several first-choice backs rested, the onus falls on Wilson, Gordon and Paisami to provide the leadership in what is a must-win encounter for the Reds’ top-six aspirations.

Teams:

Western Force: 15 Mac Grealy, 14 Zac Lomax, 13 George Bridge, 12 Hamish Stewart, 11 Dylan Pietsch, 10 Max Burey, 9 Nathan Hastie, 8 Vailoni Ekuasi, 7 Carlo Tizzano, 6 Nick Champion de Crespigny, 5 Darcy Swain, 4 Jeremy Williams (c), 3 Misinale Epenisa, 2 Brandon Paenga-Amosa, 1 Harry Johnson-Holmes.
Replacements: 16 Nic Dolly, 17 Marley Pearce, 18 Sef Fa’agase, 19 Franco Molina, 20 Will Harris, 21 Agustin Moyano, 22 Bayley Kuenzle, 23 Kurtley Beale.

Queensland Reds: 15 Jock Campbell, 14 Tim Ryan, 13 Isaac Henry, 12 Hunter Paisami, 11 Lachie Anderson, 10 Carter Gordon, 9 Louis Werchon, 8 Harry Wilson (c), 7 John Bryant, 6 Joe Brial, 5 Seru Uru, 4 Hamish Muller, 3 Massimo De Luttis, 2 Josh Nasser, 1 George Blake.
Replacements: 16 Matt Faessler, 17 Jeffery Toomaga-Allen, 18 Zane Nonggorr, 19 Charlie Brosnan, 20 Vaiuta Latu, 21 Kalani Thomas, 22 Ben Volavola, 23 Treyvon Pritchard.

Referee: Jordan Way. Assistant Referees: Damon Murphy, Jeremy Markey. TMO: James Leckie.

Unavailable — Force: Henry Robertson (ACL — season-ending), Ben Donaldson (quad), Tom Robertson (calf).

Unavailable — Reds: Fraser McReight (rested), Josh Flook (rested), Filipo Daugunu (rested), Lukhan Salakaia-Loto (rested).


Bye: Brumbies, Crusaders, Moana Pasifika


Milestones

Jock Campbell (Queensland Reds) — 100th Super Rugby appearance.


Where to watch

Australia: Stan Sport (all matches, ad-free, live and on demand); Nine Network (Saturday 7:35pm AEST match, live)
New Zealand: Sky Sport
Fiji: Sky Pacific (pay TV); Fijian Broadcasting Corporation (free-to-air)
United Kingdom & Ireland: Sky UK
United States & Canada: ESPN; FloSports (USA territories); TSN (Canada)
Pacific Islands: Digicel
Japan: Wowow
South Africa & Africa: SuperSport
France: Canal+
Rest of World: NZR+ (streaming)

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Super Rugby Pacific

Highlanders make one forced change for must-win Chiefs trip

Tanielu Tele’a replaces suspended Jona Nareki as the Highlanders head to Hamilton knowing their season is on the line against the in-form Chiefs.

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Highlanders make one forced change for must-win Chiefs trip
Highlanders Tanielu Tele'a during the Fijian Drua v Highlanders, Super Rugby Pacific match, Four R Stadium, BA, Fiji. Saturday, 2 May 2026, (Photo by Kirk Corrie / action press)

The Highlanders have been forced into just one change for Friday night’s crucial Round 14 Super Rugby Pacific clash against the Chiefs at FMG Stadium Waikato, with Tanielu Tele’a coming in at centre for the suspended Jona Nareki.

Nareki received a two-week ban for a dangerous tackle during last weekend’s 31–26 victory over the NSW Waratahs, and his absence means Tele’a slots into the midfield alongside co-captain Timoci Tavatavanawai.

Beyond that enforced change, head coach Jamie Joseph has unsurprisingly kept faith with the XV that delivered an energising win over the Waratahs. That first-half performance, in which the Highlanders played scintillating, high-tempo rugby, reminded their supporters exactly what this side is capable of when it fires.

The forward pack is unchanged, with co-captain Ethan de Groot leading from loosehead alongside Jack Taylor and Angus Ta’avao in the front row. Tomás Lavanini and Mitch Dunshea continue their second-row partnership, bringing physicality and big-match experience to the set piece, while Te Kamaka Howden, Lucas Casey and Nikora Broughton complete the loose forward trio.

In the backs, Adam Lennox and Cameron Millar retain the halfback and fly-half roles, with Jonah Lowe on the left wing, Caleb Tangitau on the right and Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens at fullback.

Tangitau has been arguably the most explosive wing in the competition this season, and his power, acceleration and finishing ability will again be central to the Highlanders’ ambitions. His form is a major reason the Highlanders remain in the play-off conversation at all.

Anticipating a bruising battle up front, Joseph has opted for a 6–2 bench split, with dynamic openside Veveni Lasaqa returning to the match-day 23. The forward-heavy bench is completed by Henry Bell, Daniel Lienert-Brown, Saula Ma’u, Oliver Haig and Sean Withy, with Folau Fakatava and Taine Robinson the two backs among the replacements.

The equation is straightforward. The Highlanders sit seventh on 24 points, three behind the sixth-placed Queensland Reds. A win in Hamilton keeps the door to the play-offs ajar; defeat would make the climb extremely steep with only two rounds remaining.

The challenge is formidable. The Chiefs are on a six-game winning streak and have won their last eight encounters against the Highlanders. The two sides met in Round Two, where the Chiefs prevailed 26–23 in a tight contest, and the visitors will need to produce their best performance of the season to reverse that result on the Chiefs’ home turf.

Highlanders (1–15): Ethan de Groot (co-c), Jack Taylor, Angus Ta’avao, Tomás Lavanini, Mitch Dunshea, Te Kamaka Howden, Lucas Casey, Nikora Broughton, Adam Lennox, Cameron Millar, Jonah Lowe, Timoci Tavatavanawai (co-c), Tanielu Tele’a, Caleb Tangitau, Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens

Replacements: 16. Henry Bell, 17. Daniel Lienert-Brown, 18. Saula Ma’u, 19. Oliver Haig, 20. Sean Withy, 21. Veveni Lasaqa, 22. Folau Fakatava, 23. Taine Robinson

Unavailable: Jona Nareki (suspended, 2 weeks), Finn Hurley (hamstring, 2–3 weeks). Season-ending: Dylan Pledger (ACL), Fabian Holland (shoulder), Josh Tengblad (knee), Reesjan Pasitoa (ankle), Josh Bartlett (foot)

Match details: Chiefs v Highlanders, FMG Stadium Waikato, Hamilton. Friday 15 May 2026, 7:05pm NZT / 5:05pm AEST. Live on Sky Sport (NZ) and Stan Sport (Aus).

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Chiefs turn to twin playmakers for Highlanders clash

Josh Jacomb starts at first five-eighth with Damian McKenzie at fullback as the Chiefs chase a seventh straight win and their 250th Super Rugby victory against the Highlanders in Hamilton.

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Chiefs turn to twin playmakers for Highlanders clash
Chiefs Josh Jacomb and Damian McKenzie during the Highlanders v Chiefs, Super Rugby Pacific match, Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin, New Zealand. Friday, 30 May 2025. (Photo by Martin Hunter / action press)

The Chiefs have turned to their twin-playmaker system for Friday night’s Round 14 Super Rugby Pacific clash against the Highlanders at FMG Stadium Waikato, with Josh Jacomb named at first five-eighth and Damian McKenzie at fullback.

It will be Jacomb’s sixth start at first five-eighth this season, and his partnership with McKenzie has become a weapon head coach Jono Gibbes is increasingly willing to deploy. Gibbes spoke of the pair’s ability to challenge opposition defences with two playmakers operating simultaneously, adding that it would be important to shift the point of attack quickly against a physical Highlanders defensive line.

The selection also reflects a strategic decision to rest Quinn Tupaea, who has shouldered a considerable workload throughout the campaign. Former Wallaby Lalakai Foketi steps in at second five-eighth, having impressed in recent outings. Versatile wings Liam Coombes-Fabling and Kyren Taumoefolau have swapped sides from last week.

In the forwards, All Blacks lock Josh Lord is going through concussion protocols, so Seuseu Naitoa Ah Kuoi comes in to partner Tupou Vaa’i in the second row. The loose forward trio of Simon Parker, captain Luke Jacobson and Wallace Sititi remains unchanged, while the return of hooker Samisoni Taukei’aho means there are six All Blacks in the starting pack and two more among the replacements in Brodie McAlister and Samipeni Finau.

The front row is completed by loosehead Ollie Norris and tighthead Siona Ahio, with Xavier Roe at halfback.

Friday’s match carries historic significance. A victory would be the Chiefs’ 250th win in Super Rugby — a feat only the Crusaders, Brumbies and Hurricanes have previously achieved. The Chiefs are also on a six-game winning streak, their longest in Super Rugby Pacific since they opened the 2023 season with ten consecutive victories.

The Highlanders will arrive in Hamilton buoyed by last weekend’s 31–26 win over the Waratahs, but they face a daunting task. The Chiefs have won their last eight matches against the Southerners, including their last three in Hamilton. The sides met in Round Two this season, with the Chiefs edging a tight contest 26–23.

The Chiefs sit second on the ladder and are firmly in contention for home play-off advantage, making this a match they will be determined not to let slip.

Chiefs (1–15): Ollie Norris, Samisoni Taukei’aho, Siona Ahio, Seuseu Naitoa Ah Kuoi, Tupou Vaa’i (vc), Simon Parker, Luke Jacobson (c), Wallace Sititi, Xavier Roe, Josh Jacomb, Kyren Taumoefolau, Lalakai Foketi, Kyle Brown, Liam Coombes-Fabling, Damian McKenzie

Replacements: 16. Brodie McAlister, 17. Benét Kumeroa, 18. George Dyer, 19. Fiti Sa, 20. Samipeni Finau, 21. Cortez Ratima, 22. Daniel Rona, 23. Isaac Hutchinson

Unavailable: Jared Proffit (concussion), Josh Lord (concussion), Reuben O’Neill (concussion), Emoni Narawa (foot), Leroy Carter (hamstring), Etene Nanai-Seturo (foot), Jayden Sa (shoulder, season)

Match details: Chiefs v Highlanders, FMG Stadium Waikato, Hamilton. Friday 15 May 2026, 7:05pm NZT / 5:05pm AEST. Live on Sky Sport (NZ) and Stan Sport (Aus).

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