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Hurricanes steamroll Brumbies to end Canberra hoodoo

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Hurricanes Kini Nanolo celebrates scoring a try during the Brumbies v Hurricanes, Super Rugby Pacific match, GIO Stadium, Canberra, Australia. Wednesday, 2 April 2025, (Photo by Mark Evans / action press)

The Hurricanes exposed the Brumbies’ defensive fragilities to end an eight-year Canberra hoodoo, claiming a vital 35-29 victory at GIO Stadium on Saturday night that breathes new life into their faltering Super Rugby Pacific campaign.

Key moments:

9′ – Allan Alaalatoa crashes over from close range to open the scoring (Brumbies 7-0)
13′ – Billy Proctor steps inside Corey Toole to respond for the Hurricanes (Brumbies 7-5)
15′ – Noah Lolesio penalty extends Brumbies lead (Brumbies 10-5)
28′ – Ngatungane Punivai finishes in the corner after contentious pass from Higgins (Hurricanes 12-10)
31′ – Ruben Love penalty extends Hurricanes lead (Hurricanes 15-10)
35′ – Luke Reimer powers over from short range to level the scores (15-15)
37′ – Kini Naholo scores untouched after Callum Harkin regathers Love’s kick (Hurricanes 20-15 HT)
46′ – Ruben Love penalty pushes Hurricanes further ahead (Hurricanes 23-15)
48′ – Len Ikitau powers over to reduce deficit (Hurricanes 23-22)
50′ – Kini Naholo steamrolls defenders for his second try (Hurricanes 30-22)
57′ – Tuaina Taii-Tualima shown yellow card for high tackle on Love
61′ – Ngatungane Punivai scores his second after clinical backline move (Hurricanes 35-22)
72′ – Andy Muirhead finishes in corner to give Brumbies late hope (Hurricanes 35-29)

Wingers Kini Naholo and Ngatungane Punivai proved unstoppable on the edges, each crossing for a double as the Hurricanes became the first New Zealand team to win in Australia this season, snapping a run of six straight defeats at the venue dating back to 2017.

The match began with a solemn Anzac ceremony, with Wallaroo and Naval seaman Lydia Kavoa delivering the Last Post before kick-off, after which both sides displayed contrasting approaches – the Brumbies relying on forward dominance while the Hurricanes sought width at every opportunity.

It was the hosts who struck first through captain Allan Alaalatoa, who burrowed over from close range after excellent build-up work from Tuaina Taii-Tualima. The dynamic No. 8 created the opportunity with a powerful burst through the Hurricanes’ defensive line, bringing the Brumbies within striking distance. After a series of forward drives, Alaalatoa, continuing his impressive try-scoring form, muscled his way over despite the attention of multiple defenders. Noah Lolesio converted with ease to give the Brumbies a 7-0 lead after nine minutes.

The Hurricanes’ response was swift and highlighted their attacking intent. Billy Proctor, making his first start of the season after recovering from an Achilles injury that had sidelined him for the opening nine rounds, showcased his class with a brilliantly taken try. Fullback Callum Harkin initiated the move with a scything break before delivering a superb cut-out pass that allowed Proctor to step inside the flat-footed Corey Toole and power over near the corner. Ruben Love’s conversion attempt from a challenging angle drifted wide, leaving the score at 7-5.

A Lolesio penalty after the Hurricanes were penalised for obstruction at the restart extended the Brumbies’ advantage to 10-5, but the visitors’ attacking threats continued to trouble the home side’s defence, which would miss a staggering 40 tackles throughout the contest, including 25 in the first half alone.

Controversy struck in the 28th minute when the Hurricanes took the lead through Punivai. The move began with Harkin making another incisive break before the ball was shipped wide. Second five-eighth Riley Higgins appeared to deliver a forward pass in the build-up that created space for Brad Shields, who in turn put Punivai into the corner. Referee Paul Williams consulted with TMO Richard Kelly, but they ruled the pass had gone backwards out of the hands, allowing the try to stand despite vociferous protests from the Brumbies players and home crowd. Love’s excellent touchline conversion put the visitors ahead 12-10.

Three minutes later, Love extended the Hurricanes’ advantage with a booming penalty kick from the halfway line after winning a crucial turnover at the breakdown, pushing the score to 15-10.

The see-sawing nature of the first half continued when the Brumbies forwards reasserted themselves. After winning a penalty near the Hurricanes’ 22, they opted for the lineout and set up a series of powerful carries. Flanker Luke Reimer, a constant menace at the breakdown, eventually burrowed over from close range after the Brumbies displayed patience and control through multiple phases. Lolesio couldn’t add the extras, leaving the scores level at 15-all with five minutes remaining in the half.

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Just as the half appeared to be ending level, the Hurricanes produced the moment of the match. Love delivered a perfectly weighted grubber kick behind the Brumbies’ defensive line that Harkin, showing remarkable pace, regathered brilliantly before immediately offloading to the supporting Naholo, who raced untouched into the left corner. It was a try that exemplified the Hurricanes’ clinical counter-attacking ability. Love’s conversion attempt narrowly missed, leaving the Hurricanes with a 20-15 advantage at the interval.

The pattern of trading scores continued after the break, with the Hurricanes extending their lead through another Love penalty in the 46th minute after the Brumbies were caught offside. The eight-point buffer didn’t last long, however, as the Brumbies responded through newly re-signed centre Len Ikitau.

After securing a lineout five metres from the Hurricanes’ line, the Brumbies patiently worked through multiple phases, drawing in defenders before Ikitau, celebrating his recent contract extension, powered over from close range despite the attentions of two Hurricanes defenders. Lolesio’s conversion narrowed the deficit to just one point at 23-22, setting up a tense final 30 minutes.

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Just as the momentum appeared to be shifting towards the home side, Naholo delivered the most devastating moment of the match. Receiving the ball on the Brumbies’ 22-metre line, the powerful winger used his explosive combination of pace and raw strength to steamroll multiple defenders, including halfback Ryan Lonergan, who was left flattened in his wake. Naholo’s unstoppable surge to the line drew gasps from the crowd and pushed the Hurricanes’ lead back to eight points after Love’s conversion.

The Brumbies’ task became considerably more difficult in the 57th minute when Taii-Tualima was shown a yellow card for a high tackle on Love. The Hurricanes playmaker was temporarily removed for a head injury assessment, with Riley Hohepa replacing him, but the visitors immediately capitalised on their numerical advantage.

From a scrum inside the Brumbies’ half, halfback Cam Roigard created a mismatch on the blind side before releasing Higgins into space. The second five-eighth drew the last defender before timing his pass perfectly to Punivai, who sprinted untouched to the corner for his second try of the evening. Callum Harkin’s conversion attempt drifted wide, but the Hurricanes had established a commanding 35-22 lead.

Despite being down by 13 points, the Brumbies mounted a spirited comeback in the final ten minutes. After sustained pressure near the Hurricanes’ line, replacement halfback Klayton Thorn created space on the right before Tom Wright delivered a perfectly timed pass to winger Andy Muirhead, who finished expertly in the corner despite the covering defence. Lolesio nailed the challenging sideline conversion to bring the Brumbies within six points at 35-29 with eight minutes remaining.

The home side had ample time to snatch victory and mounted several promising attacks. Tom Hooper nearly broke through with a powerful surge, only for Billy Proctor to make a crucial defensive read, intercepting a pass when the Brumbies were pressing. In the dying minutes, the Brumbies had possession inside their own 22 but inexplicably threw the ball into touch, gifting the Hurricanes a lineout and allowing them to run down the clock.

The final whistle confirmed the Hurricanes as the inaugural holders of the Captain Shout Cup, a trophy created specially for the Anzac Weekend fixture and named after Alfred Shout, a Wellington-born soldier who was awarded the Victoria Cross during World War I.

“It was a huge win for us. We needed it. It was almost our season on the line,” Proctor told Sky Sport afterwards. “Coming here, we hadn’t won here since 2017 and I think I’ve been part of every loss we’ve been a part of in that span so it feels awesome to come here and get the win.”

“We’ll look back at that game and say we missed too many tackles,” lamented Brumbies skipper Alaalatoa. “Our tackle completion wasn’t great, especially around the ruck. When we scored points, they scored pretty much straight after.”

“Very proud,” said Hurricanes co-captain Du’Plessis Kirifi. “We were just saying before, I’ve been playing Super for eight or nine years now and I’ve never won in Canberra so to come over here and get one across is pretty pleasing, not just for the game itself, our season was on the line. A win tonight keeps us in the hunt and helps us build momentum. It’s no easy feat coming here and beating the Brumbies at home.”

The victory propels the Hurricanes from eighth to fifth on the Super Rugby Pacific ladder, reigniting their playoff hopes with four rounds remaining. For the third-placed Brumbies, the loss widens the gap between them and the second-placed Crusaders to eight points, dealing a significant blow to their top-two aspirations and home playoff chances.

After back-to-back away games in Australia, the Hurricanes return home to prepare for a semifinal rematch against the table-topping Chiefs at Sky Stadium next Saturday, a contest that will further test their resurgent form. The Brumbies, meanwhile, will look to bounce back when they face the Waratahs in a crucial Australian derby next weekend, knowing they can ill afford another slip-up if they are to secure a favourable playoff position.

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Super Rugby Pacific

Chiefs rout Crusaders to reach Super Rugby Pacific Grand Final

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Chiefs rout Crusaders to reach Super Rugby Pacific Grand Final
Chiefs Kyren Taumoefolau during the Chiefs v Crusaders, Super Rugby Pacific Semi Final match, FMG Stadium Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand. Friday, 12 June 2026, (Photo by Stringer / action press)

The Chiefs delivered their biggest win in history against the Crusaders, running in six first-half tries to crush the defending champions 49–12 in a devastating semi-final performance at FMG Stadium Waikato and book their place in next weekend’s Super Rugby Pacific Grand Final.

  • Chiefs reach their fifth Grand Final in six years with their most emphatic play-off victory
  • Six converted first-half tries produced a scarcely believable 42–5 lead at the break
  • Damian McKenzie celebrated his 150th Super Rugby match with a perfect 7/7 from the tee
  • Kyren Taumoefolau scored twice; every Chiefs back was involved in first-half tries
  • Crusaders exit ends Rob Penney’s three-year coaching tenure; Scott Hansen set to take over
  • Injury concerns for Chiefs: Isaac Hutchinson (leg), Quinn Tupaea (ankle), Lalakai Foketi and Luke Jacobson all failed to finish

Key moments

11 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Innovation at the lineout as Josh Lord peeled around the front, and the Chiefs shifted left to expose Johnny McNicholl isolated on the edge. Lalakai Foketi floated a wide ball to Kyren Taumoefolau, who waltzed into the corner untouched. Damian McKenzie converted from the left sideline. (Chiefs 7–0)

15 mins – TRY CHIEFS: A strong carry from Samipeni Finau was followed by quick ball left, with McKenzie stabbing a low kick in behind towards the left wing. Taumoefolau chased on an angled run, kicked further ahead off the ground, then had the awareness to slow and gather short of the line before diving over for his second. McKenzie converted. (Chiefs 14–0)

20 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Straight off a solid scrum platform, the Chiefs came to the right edge where Foketi went clean past a poor defensive read from Braydon Ennor. He drew the final defender and found Isaac Hutchinson off his right shoulder, who had enough pace and strength to score in the tackle of Chay Fihaki. McKenzie converted. (Chiefs 21–0)

24 mins – TRY CHIEFS: The scrum collapsed so the Chiefs cleared it and hammered away at the line. Samisoni Taukei’aho got to the back of the ruck, picked up, and burrowed over with fantastic low body position. McKenzie converted. (Chiefs 28–0)

25 mins – INJURY: Isaac Hutchinson succumbed to a leg injury and was replaced by Leroy Carter.

26 mins – TRY CRUSADERS: A Chiefs clearing kick was batted backwards by David Havili and McNicholl cleaned up. It was sent infield for Taha Kemara, who busted clean through with superb footwork. A wide pass found Fihaki on the right, and he had the pace to finish in the corner. Kemara missed the conversion from the right sideline. (Chiefs 28–5)

30 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Jamie Hannah dropped the restart and the Chiefs struck immediately. After staying patient with the forwards on the right, it came back left with McKenzie shaping to play wide. Leroy Carter angled back through traffic to take McKenzie’s pass and carved through under the posts. McKenzie converted. (Chiefs 35–5)

33 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Liam Coombes-Fabling spotted the chance to end a kicking duel, chipping over a disjointed Crusaders chase line and charging through to claim on the full beyond halfway. He busted past Noah Hotham, found Foketi rampaging in support, and it was turned back inside for Tupou Vaa’i to finish. McKenzie converted. (Chiefs 42–5)

35 mins – INJURY: Leicester Fainga’anuku limped off for the Crusaders, replaced by Dom Gardiner.

Half-time: Chiefs 42–5 Crusaders. An extraordinary forty minutes from the Chiefs, who blew the defending champions off the park. The platform was set by a dominant pack winning the battle at the breakdown, with McKenzie orchestrating six converted tries as the backs ran riot. Taumoefolau scored twice, Taukei’aho and Vaa’i crossed from the forwards, and Carter struck immediately off the bench. The Crusaders had no answer to the Chiefs’ skill and variation in attack.

44 mins – CHANCE BUTCHERED: Ennor went clean through off slick handling from Kemara, with Hotham backing up on the inside, but the pass was a fraction behind and Hotham knocked on 10 metres out. A crucial missed opportunity for the Crusaders.

47 mins – TRY DISALLOWED: Christian Lio-Willie claimed a try after the Crusaders hammered at the line from a tapped penalty, but TMO Graham Cooper scrubbed it out for a knock-on by Dom Gardiner in the build-up.

55 mins – INJURY: Quinn Tupaea left the field clutching his ankle after going down in a ruck. Replaced by Josh Jacomb.

63 mins – TRY CRUSADERS: Havili powered straight off a scrum win, drove into contact and pumped the legs to reach out and ground the ball on the line. Rivez Reihana converted. (Chiefs 42–12)

64 mins – YELLOW CARD CHIEFS: Coombes-Fabling tipped Jamie Hannah dangerously at the restart and was shown a yellow card.

79 mins – TRY CHIEFS: A penalty advantage as the scrum powered ahead. Simon Parker got close, the forwards had a couple of goes, and Xavier Roe found a hole inside George Bower with a dummy right and a dummy left to score. McKenzie converted to finish seven from seven off the tee. (Chiefs 49–12)

Full-time: Chiefs 49–12 Crusaders


Match report

Five straight finals losses and three successive regular-season defeats to the Crusaders had left the Chiefs with everything to prove against their great modern rivals. On a cool, still Friday night in Hamilton, with Damian McKenzie’s 150th match providing an emotional backdrop, they proved it in emphatic fashion with a performance that was as ruthless as it was complete.

The Chiefs’ intent was evident from the opening exchanges. After a relatively even first ten minutes in which both packs traded carries and kicks, the home side sparked to life and never let up. They turned down multiple shots at goal, backing their pack to finish the job from close range, and were rewarded time after time as the Crusaders’ defence disintegrated.

Taumoefolau opened the scoring in the 11th minute after the Chiefs manufactured an overlap on the left edge from an innovative lineout play. Lord peeled around the front and the ball was shifted wide, with Foketi spotting McNicholl stranded in isolation and floating the final pass to Taumoefolau, who strolled over untouched. Four minutes later, Taumoefolau had his second – a remarkable individual effort that began with McKenzie’s low grubber in behind, continued with Taumoefolau kicking ahead off the turf mid-chase, and ended with the winger having the presence of mind to slow, gather, and dive over.

It was the kind of attacking rugby that the Chiefs had promised all season, and the Crusaders simply could not live with it. The home side’s power ball carrying won most, if not all, collisions, generating unstoppable front-foot possession that allowed time and space for the backs to exploit. Tupaea continued his standout season with a masterclass of dominant carries – including one where he steamrolled over the top of opposite number Havili – while the forward pack crushed their opponents at almost every opportunity.

The third try arrived in the 20th minute when Foketi sliced clean through a poor defensive read from Ennor and found Hutchinson off his right shoulder to finish. It was Hutchinson’s last meaningful contribution before succumbing to a leg injury, but his replacement Carter – the All Blacks winger returning from a hamstring issue – wasted no time in making his mark. After Taukei’aho had burrowed over from close range for the fourth try on 24 minutes, Hannah dropped the restart and Carter carved through under the posts within seconds to make it 35–5.

The Crusaders’ lone first-half highlight came through Kemara, who busted clean through the Chiefs’ midfield with superb footwork before finding Fihaki out wide. But it was a brief interruption to the onslaught. Coombes-Fabling produced the try of the match on 33 minutes, chipping over a disjointed chase line and regathering on the full beyond halfway before finding Foketi rampaging in support. The ball was turned back inside for Vaa’i to crash over – a fitting score for the All Blacks lock who had spoken before the match about the importance of composure. McKenzie’s sixth conversion from six attempts made it 42–5 at the break.

Even the Crusaders’ errors before half-time told the story of a side under consuming pressure. Hannah, one of their best performers this season, dropped a regulation restart, and the vastly experienced Taylor had a wonky lineout throw just before the break.

The second half was always going to be an anticlimax, and so it proved. The Chiefs were content to preserve their commanding lead, and the contest lost its intensity as both sides emptied their benches. The Crusaders had promising moments – Ennor burst through midfield early in the half before Hotham knocked on with the line beckoning, and Lio-Willie powered over only for TMO Cooper to scrub the try for a Gardiner knock-on in the build-up. Penney was furious on both occasions, but the damage had long since been done.

Havili salvaged some respectability with a powerful carry off a scrum in the 63rd minute, driving through three tacklers to ground the ball, but Coombes-Fabling’s yellow card for a dangerous tip on Hannah at the subsequent restart was the only other moment of note before Roe rumbled over for the Chiefs’ seventh try from the base of a dominant scrum in the final minute.

The result ends Penney’s three-year coaching tenure with the Crusaders, with former All Blacks assistant Scott Hansen set to take the reins next season. The defending champions deserve credit for rallying from a dire Australian tour in April – when they lost successive matches to the Reds and Force – to win four straight Kiwi derbies and reach the final four. But away from home, against a Chiefs side that delivered their performance of the season, they were outclassed in every facet.

For the Chiefs, this was a statement that they are ready, in Jono Gibbes’ first season at the helm, to break their 12-year title drought. McKenzie was the conductor of the orchestra but was far from a lone hand, with Tupaea, Foketi, Coombes-Fabling, Taumoefolau, Hutchinson and Carter all playing starring roles behind a dominant pack anchored by Lord and Vaa’i in the lineout and Taukei’aho in the loose.

The injury toll will be a concern heading into next weekend’s decider, with Hutchinson, Tupaea, Foketi and captain Jacobson all failing to finish the contest. Tupaea battled through his ankle issue to suggest it may not be too serious, but Gibbes will be sweating on the fitness of his midfield combination.

Match details

Chiefs 49 (Tries: Taumoefolau 2, Hutchinson, Taukei’aho, Carter, Vaa’i, Roe; Conversions: McKenzie 7/7)
Crusaders 12 (Tries: Fihaki, Havili; Conversions: Kemara 0/1, Reihana 1/1)
Half-time: 42–5

Venue: FMG Stadium Waikato, Hamilton
Referee: Angus Gardner (Australia)
Assistant Referees: George Myers, Matt Kellahan
TMO: Graham Cooper

Teams

Chiefs: 15 Isaac Hutchinson, 14 Liam Coombes-Fabling, 13 Lalakai Foketi, 12 Quinn Tupaea, 11 Kyren Taumoefolau, 10 Damian McKenzie, 9 Cortez Ratima, 8 Simon Parker, 7 Luke Jacobson (c), 6 Samipeni Finau, 5 Tupou Vaa’i, 4 Josh Lord, 3 Sione Ahio, 2 Samisoni Taukei’aho, 1 Ollie Norris.
Replacements: 16 Brodie McAlister, 17 Jared Proffit, 18 George Dyer, 19 Seuseu Naitoa Ah Kuoi, 20 Kaylum Boshier, 21 Xavier Roe, 22 Josh Jacomb, 23 Leroy Carter.

Crusaders: 15 Johnny McNicholl, 14 Chay Fihaki, 13 Braydon Ennor, 12 David Havili (c), 11 Sevu Reece, 10 Taha Kemara, 9 Noah Hotham, 8 Christian Lio-Willie, 7 Leicester Fainga’anuku, 6 Ethan Blackadder, 5 Jamie Hannah, 4 Antonio Shalfoon, 3 Fletcher Newell, 2 Codie Taylor, 1 Finlay Brewis.
Replacements: 16 Manumaua Letiu, 17 Jack Sexton, 18 George Bower, 19 Tahlor Cahill, 20 Dom Gardiner, 21 Kyle Preston, 22 Rivez Reihana, 23 Macca Springer.

What’s next

The Chiefs will face the winner of Saturday’s semi-final between the Hurricanes and Blues in the Grand Final. If the top-ranked Hurricanes prevail as expected, the Chiefs will travel to Hnry Stadium in Wellington for the decider. Should the Blues spring an upset, the Chiefs would host the Grand Final at FMG Stadium Waikato.

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Super Rugby Pacific

Super Rugby Pacific 2026: Semifinals preview

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Super Rugby Pacific 2026: Semifinals preview
Chiefs Quinn Tupaea and Crusaders David Havili during the Crusaders v Chiefs, Super Rugby Pacific match, One NZ Stadium, Christchurch, New Zealand. Friday, 22 May 2026, (Photo by Martin Hunter / action press)

For the first time in Super Rugby Pacific’s five-year history, the final four is an all-New Zealand affair. The Chiefs host the defending champion Crusaders in a rematch of last year’s Grand Final on Friday night in Hamilton, before the top-ranked Hurricanes welcome the Blues to Wellington on Saturday with a home decider on the line.

Both semi-finals pit form against pedigree, familiarity against unpredictability, and feature contrasting selection narratives. The Chiefs and Hurricanes have enjoyed largely settled campaigns and earned home advantage, but the Crusaders and Blues arrive through different doors – the former riding a four-match winning streak, the latter surviving as the qualifying final’s lucky losers after a 52–31 defeat to those same Crusaders in Christchurch.

Friday night’s clash in Hamilton has the added intrigue of Damian McKenzie’s 150th Super Rugby match for the Chiefs, while Saturday’s encounter sees Fehi Fineanganofo return from injury with the all-time Super Rugby single-season try record in his sights.


Friday 12 June

Chiefs [2] v Crusaders [3]

FMG Stadium Waikato, Hamilton – 7.05pm NZST / 5.05pm AEST

The rivalry that has defined this era of Super Rugby Pacific resumes with Grand Final berths on the line. The Chiefs have reached three of the last four Grand Finals but lost all three — twice to the Crusaders and once to the Blues, including last year’s decider in Christchurch. They are desperate to end a title drought stretching back to 2013, and the emotion of McKenzie’s milestone match in front of a packed FMG Stadium Waikato will add another layer to an already charged occasion.

Head coach Jono Gibbes has been forced into changes, however, with All Blacks number eight Wallace Sititi ruled out after a sickening head knock against the Reds last weekend. Kyle Brown has also been concussed, leaving Samipeni Finau to start at blindside flanker with Simon Parker shifting to number eight and Lalakai Foketi coming into the centres alongside Quinn Tupaea. Liam Coombes-Fabling returns on the right wing, while Leroy Carter has again been tentatively named on the bench after failing a fitness test last week with a hamstring issue.

McKenzie said reaching the milestone in a semi-final against the Crusaders at home would be hard to top. “We have been working really hard throughout the year to put ourselves into playoff contention and to play my 150th against the Crusaders in the semifinal is special,” McKenzie said. “In playoff rugby there are small margins and small moments you have to nail. We know if we stay with what is true to us, it will put us in a good position.”

All Blacks lock Tupou Vaa’i stressed that composure would be the decisive factor. “There’ll be a lot of emotions going in and out of our heads, but I think the longer we can stay composed and poised, we can come out with the win,” Vaa’i said. “There’s a cliche that defence wins games, and it’s going to come down to our defence.”

The Crusaders, meanwhile, are boosted by the return of All Blacks tighthead Fletcher Newell from the MCL injury he sustained against the Hurricanes a fortnight ago. Newell missed only last weekend’s qualifying final demolition of the Blues, and his comeback bolsters a set piece that head coach Rob Penney expects to be pivotal. Braydon Ennor replaces Dallas McLeod (groin) at outside centre alongside captain David Havili, while fullback Johnny McNicholl has been cleared to play after finishing the Blues match with a heavily strapped hand – a match in which he scored a hat-trick.

“Set piece always is crucial, and countering each other will be a big part of it,” Penney said. “Fletcher has got the ability to do special things out of the blue and he’s a very explosive man. He has played phenomenally for us and we’re blessed to have him back this week.”

Newell was eager for the contest. “We love going up against the Chiefs. They have got a good scrum, lineout and a lot of big leaders. These are the games you want to be part of,” he said. “We’ve got a lot of trust in our scrum. It has developed nicely over the last few weeks and we know these are the games we need to step up with our set piece.”

History offers comfort to the visitors – the Crusaders beat the Chiefs 43–33 in Hamilton earlier this season, have won their last seven semi-finals on the bounce, and their last five finals matches against the Chiefs. But the home side have won nine of their last 10 matches and their last three semi-finals. Josh Lord, the 12-test All Blacks lock who has remarkably missed all four of the Chiefs’ finals in the last five seasons through injury, is available and has enjoyed his best run of games this campaign with 13 appearances alongside Vaa’i in the competition’s best lineout.

Something has to give.

Chiefs (1–15): Ollie Norris, Samisoni Taukei’aho, Sione Ahio, Josh Lord, Tupou Vaa’i, Samipeni Finau, Luke Jacobson (c), Simon Parker, Cortez Ratima, Damian McKenzie, Kyren Taumoefolau, Quinn Tupaea, Lalakai Foketi, Liam Coombes-Fabling, Isaac Hutchinson

Replacements: Brodie McAlister, Jared Proffit, George Dyer, Seuseu Naitoa Ah Kuoi, Kaylum Boshier, Xavier Roe, Josh Jacomb, Leroy Carter

Crusaders (1–15): Finlay Brewis, Codie Taylor, Fletcher Newell, Antonio Shalfoon, Jamie Hannah, Ethan Blackadder, Leicester Fainga’anuku, Christian Lio-Willie, Noah Hotham, Taha Kemara, Sevu Reece, David Havili (c), Braydon Ennor, Chay Fihaki, Johnny McNicholl

Replacements: Manumaua Letiu, Jack Sexton, George Bower, Tahlor Cahill, Dom Gardiner, Kyle Preston, Rivez Reihana, Macca Springer

Referee: Angus Gardner. Assistant Referees: George Myers, Matt Kellahan. TMO: Graham Cooper.

Unavailable – Chiefs: Wallace Sititi (concussion – TBC), Kyle Brown (concussion), Tyrone Thompson (concussion), Daniel Rona (hand – season), Emoni Narawa (foot – season), Etene Nanai-Seturo (foot – season), Jayden Sa (shoulder – season)

Unavailable – Crusaders: Scott Barrett (back – season), Will Jordan (calf – season), Tamaiti Williams (discitis – season), Mitch Drummond (shoulder – season), Xavier Saifoloi (shoulder – season), Will Tucker (shoulder – season), Toby Bell (shoulder – season), James White (shoulder – season), George Bell (calf – 1–3 weeks), Dallas McLeod (groin – 1–3 weeks), Cullen Grace (knee – 1 week), Seb Calder (calf – 1–3 weeks), Kershawl Sykes-Martin (neck – 1–3 weeks), Aki Tuivailala (concussion – GRTP)


Saturday 13 June

Hurricanes [1] v Blues [4]

Hnry Stadium, Wellington – 7.05pm NZST / 5.05pm AEST

The Hurricanes and Blues have never met in the Super Rugby play-offs, but the form book suggests this is a mismatch on paper. The competition’s most consistent team, who thrashed the Brumbies in their qualifying final and have beaten the Blues twice this season by 23-point margins, welcome a side that has lost four consecutive matches and only survived to the semi-finals through the lucky loser format.

The home side’s already formidable attack receives a major boost with the return of Fehi Fineanganofo on the left wing. The try-scoring sensation feared his season was over when he suffered a hamstring injury in May, but has been cleared to play and will have the chance to break the all-time Super Rugby single-season try record outright. Fineanganofo is currently tied on 16 with Joe Roff and Ben Lam. It is the sole change to head coach Clark Laidlaw’s starting side, with Kini Naholo reverting to the bench and hat-trick hero Ngane Punivai the unlucky man to miss the 23 entirely.

“It’s a bonus being able to pick a really consistent team where a couple of guys who have been injured are coming back in,” Laidlaw said. “We’re expecting a very tough semi-final. At this time of the year, the four best teams are left, so the team has prepared with the intensity that this game deserves.”

Two significant milestones mark the occasion. Brad Shields will overtake Dane Coles as the third most-capped player in Hurricanes history when he runs out for his 142nd match, while Peter Lakai brings up his 50th Hurricanes cap at just 23 years of age. Co-captains Du’Plessis Kirifi and Jordie Barrett lead an otherwise unchanged side, with Cam Roigard and Ruben Love continuing their halves partnership and Siale Lauaki returning from injury on the bench.

Halfback Roigard warned against writing the Blues off. “I don’t think the past few weeks will be a reflection of how they’re going to play. They’re going to be physical,” Roigard said. “They’ve still made a semifinal which comes down to the performances they put in at the start of the season to create a buffer for them. So, they’ll be throwing everything at it.”

The Blues certainly need something dramatic. Head coach Vern Cotter has been forced into four personnel changes and two positional switches, with Beauden Barrett recalled at fullback after shaking off a quad injury that kept him out for three weeks. The 35-year-old will line up in the number 15 jersey for the first time in over 12 months, returning to the ground he called home during eight years with the Hurricanes. Stephen Perofeta retains the fly-half jersey.

Hoskins Sotutu starts at number eight for the suspended Malachi Wrampling, who received a three-week ban for his red card for a high tackle on Leicester Fainga’anuku in last weekend’s qualifying final defeat. Finlay Christie replaces Sam Nock (broken hand) at halfback, while the backline has been reshuffled with Xavi Taele shifting to second five-eighth, AJ Lam moving to centre and Cole Forbes starting on the right wing.

Cotter struck a defiant tone. “We know what’s waiting for us in Wellington and we’re excited about the challenge,” he said. “Finals rugby is about embracing that and earning the right to keep your season alive. This group has shown resilience all season. We’ve had plenty of injuries and challenges, but the players continue to stay in the fight.”

Assistant coach Jason Holland, who will take charge of the Blues next season, emphasised the Hurricanes’ need to stick to their process. “We’re not trying to reinvent anything, we’re not trying to find a little bit of magic,” Holland said. “It is about the simple parts of the game around our carry-clean, around our work rate, all the little things we’ve been talking about for years.”

The Hurricanes have lost their last three play-off matches, while the Blues have lost two. Should the Blues fall, it would mark the first time in the club’s history they have dropped three consecutive play-off matches. The stakes, as ever in semi-final week, could not be higher.

Hurricanes (1–15): Xavier Numia, Asafo Aumua, Pasilio Tosi, Caleb Delany, Warner Dearns, Brad Shields, Du’Plessis Kirifi (co-c), Peter Lakai, Cam Roigard, Ruben Love, Fehi Fineanganofo, Jordie Barrett (co-c), Billy Proctor, Josh Moorby, Callum Harkin

Replacements: Raymond Tuputupu, Siale Lauaki, Tyrel Lomax, Isaia Walker-Leawere, Brayden Iose, Ereatara Enari, Jone Rova, Kini Naholo

Blues (1–15): Ofa Tu’ungafasi, Bradley Slater, Marcel Renata, Patrick Tuipulotu (c), Sam Darry, Torian Barnes, Anton Segner, Hoskins Sotutu, Finlay Christie, Stephen Perofeta, Caleb Clarke, Xavi Taele, AJ Lam, Cole Forbes, Beauden Barrett

Replacements: Eli Oudenryn, Mason Tupaea, Flyn Yates, Josh Beehre, Che Clark, Taufa Funaki, Pita Ahki, Payton Spencer

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

Unavailable – Hurricanes: Devan Flanders (concussion – TBC), Brett Cameron (knee – season), Riley Higgins (shoulder – season), Jai Tamati (knee – season), Drew Wild (shoulder – 1 week)

Unavailable – Blues: Zarn Sullivan (foot), Sam Nock (hand), Malachi Wrampling (concussion/suspension), Ben Ake (ankle), Kurt Eklund (back), Joshua Fusitu’a (hamstring), Jordan Lay (concussion), Sam Matenga (neck), Dalton Papali’i (jaw), James Cameron (legs – season), Cameron Christie (knee – season), Hemopo Cunningham (foot – season)


Milestones

  • Damian McKenzie (Chiefs) – 150th Super Rugby match; third player to reach the milestone for the club
  • Brad Shields (Hurricanes) – 142nd Hurricanes cap; becomes the club’s third most-capped player, overtaking Dane Coles
  • Peter Lakai (Hurricanes) – 50th Hurricanes cap at 23 years of age; seventh Hurricane to reach the milestone in 2026
  • Fehi Fineanganofo (Hurricanes) – tied the all-time Super Rugby single-season try record (16), alongside Joe Roff and Ben Lam

Where to watch

Australia: Stan Sport (all matches, ad-free, live and on demand)
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

Blues recall Beauden Barrett at fullback for Hurricanes showdown

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Blues recall Beauden Barrett at fullback for Hurricanes showdown
Blues Beauden Barrett during the Blues v Reds, Super Rugby Pacific match, One NZ Stadium, Christchurch, New Zealand. Saturday, 25 April 2026. (Photo by Martin Hunter / action press)

Beauden Barrett has been recalled at fullback as the Blues make four personnel changes and two positional switches for Saturday’s Super Rugby Pacific semi-final against the Hurricanes at Hnry Stadium in Wellington.

Key team news:

  • Beauden Barrett returns at fullback after missing three weeks with a quad injury; Zarn Sullivan ruled out with a foot problem
  • Hoskins Sotutu starts at number eight for the suspended Malachi Wrampling, who received a three-week ban for his red card against the Crusaders
  • Finlay Christie replaces Sam Nock (broken hand) at halfback
  • Xavi Taele shifts to second five-eighth, AJ Lam moves to centre, Cole Forbes starts on the right wing
  • Stephen Perofeta retained at fly-half alongside Barrett
  • Four changes to the side beaten 52–31 by the Crusaders in last weekend’s qualifying final

The 35-year-old Barrett will line up in the number 15 jersey for the first time in over 12 months when he returns to the ground he once called home during eight years with the Hurricanes. His comeback offsets the loss of incumbent fullback Sullivan, while Perofeta retains the fly-half berth he has made his own during Barrett’s absence.

The Blues enter the semi-final as heavy underdogs, having lost four consecutive matches, but reached the final four courtesy of the competition’s qualifying final format which gave the highest-ranked loser a second chance.

Head coach Vern Cotter has been forced into changes across the park. Wrampling’s absence after his red card for a high tackle on Leicester Fainga’anuku against the Crusaders brings Hoskins Sotutu into the starting side at number eight – in what could prove his final appearance before departing for England. Finlay Christie steps in at halfback after Nock suffered a broken hand in the same defeat in Christchurch.

The backline has been reshuffled significantly. Xavi Taele moves infield from centre to second five-eighth, with AJ Lam shifting from wing to outside centre. Cole Forbes comes onto the right wing, while Pita Ahki drops to the bench. Che Clark and Taufa Funaki have been added to the replacements.

Captain Patrick Tuipulotu leads the side, with the forward pack otherwise unchanged from last weekend’s loss. Ofa Tu’ungafasi, Bradley Slater and Marcel Renata remain in the front row, while Sam Darry partners Tuipulotu in the second row and Torian Barnes and Anton Segner continue in the loose forwards alongside Sotutu.

Cotter struck an optimistic tone despite the disruption. “We know what’s waiting for us in Wellington and we’re excited about the challenge,” he said. “Finals rugby is about embracing that and earning the right to keep your season alive.”

The Blues coach acknowledged the scale of the task awaiting his side against the competition leaders. “The Hurricanes have been the competition’s most consistent team, and they will be tough to beat at home, but we’ve prepared well and are looking forward to the contest,” Cotter said. “This group has shown resilience all season. We’ve had plenty of injuries and challenges, but the players continue to stay in the fight.”

The Blues’ injury list makes for grim reading, with Ben Ake (ankle), Kurt Eklund (back), Joshua Fusitu’a (hamstring), Jordan Lay (concussion), Sam Matenga (neck), Dalton Papali’i (jaw) and several long-term absentees also unavailable. The toll has contributed to a difficult run of form since the Blues last won – a 59–34 victory over the Moana Pasifika in Round 14.

The Hurricanes have beaten the Blues twice this season by 23-point margins, making it a daunting assignment for a side that has not won a play-off match away from home since claiming the title in 2024. Should the Blues lose, it would mark the first time in the club’s history they have dropped three consecutive play-off matches.

Blues (1–15): Ofa Tu’ungafasi, Bradley Slater, Marcel Renata, Patrick Tuipulotu (c), Sam Darry, Torian Barnes, Anton Segner, Hoskins Sotutu, Finlay Christie, Stephen Perofeta, Caleb Clarke, Xavi Taele, AJ Lam, Cole Forbes, Beauden Barrett

Replacements: Eli Oudenryn, Mason Tupaea, Flyn Yates, Josh Beehre, Che Clark, Taufa Funaki, Pita Ahki, Payton Spencer

Match details: Hurricanes v Blues, Hnry Stadium, Wellington. Saturday 13 June, 7.05pm (NZST) / 5.05pm (AEST). Live on Sky Sport (NZ) and Stan Sport (Aus).

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