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Super Rugby Pacific

Hurricanes make two changes for Blues top-of-table clash

The Hurricanes have named a settled side for their top-of-table Super Rugby Pacific clash against the Blues, with Callum Harkin returning from concussion at fullback.

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Hurricanes Callum Harkin try during the Hurricanes v Force, Super Rugby Pacific match, McLean Park, Napier, New Zealand. Friday, 13 March 2026, (Photo by Paul Taylor / action press)

The Hurricanes have named a settled side for their blockbuster Super Rugby Pacific encounter against the Blues in Wellington on Saturday, making just two changes to the team that dismantled the Reds 52-14 a fortnight ago.

Key team news:

  • Callum Harkin returns from concussion to start at fullback, pushing Josh Moorby to the right wing
  • Pasilio Tosi starts at tighthead prop in the only other change to the starting XV
  • Raymond Tuputupu named on the bench for his first appearance of the season
  • Both teams locked on 25 points at the top of the standings
  • Heritage Round fixture with fans on field at the end of the match

Coming into this week’s top-of-the-table encounter following last week’s bye, head coach Clark Laidlaw has kept faith with the core of his team. The forward pack remains largely unchanged, with Caleb Delany and Warner Dearns retained in the second row, while blindside flanker Devan Flanders, co-captain Du’Plessis Kirifi, and No 8 Peter Lakai make up the loose forward trio.

In the backline, the halves partnership of Cam Roigard and Ruben Love continues, as does the midfield combination of co-captain Jordie Barrett and centre Billy Proctor. Fehi Fineanganofo stays on the left wing.

The return of Harkin at fullback represents the most significant change to the backline. The youngster cleared return-to-play protocols earlier this week and slots straight back into the starting XV, allowing the versatile Moorby to shift out wide.

On the bench, hooker Raymond Tuputupu is in line to make his first appearance of the season. He joins tighthead prop Tevita Mafileo and veteran loose forward Brad Shields as new figures among the replacements.

Laidlaw said his side is ready for the challenge that awaits at Hnry Stadium. Both teams enter the contest in strong form, riding four-game winning streaks and refreshed from the bye week.

The Hurricanes are without several players through injury, most notably tighthead prop Tyrel Lomax, who remains sidelined with an ankle issue.

Hurricanes team to face Blues:

15. Callum Harkin
14. Josh Moorby
13. Billy Proctor
12. Jordie Barrett (co-c)
11. Fehi Fineanganofo
10. Ruben Love
9. Cam Roigard
8. Peter Lakai
7. Du’Plessis Kirifi (co-c)
6. Devan Flanders
5. Warner Dearns
4. Caleb Delany
3. Pasilio Tosi
2. Asafo Aumua
1. Xavier Numia

Replacements: 16. Raymond Tuputupu, 17. Siale Lauaki, 18. Tevita Mafileo, 19. Isaia Walker-Leawere, 20. Brad Shields, 21. Brayden Iose, 22. Ereatara Enari, 23. Jone Rova

Match details: Hurricanes v Blues, Hnry Stadium, Wellington. Saturday 11 April 2026, 7:05pm NZST. Live on Sky Sport NZ.

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Super Rugby Pacific

Debutant Mickelson seals Brumbies’ bonus-point win over Force

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Debutant Mickelson seals Brumbies’ bonus-point win over Force
SUPER RUGBY BRUMBIES FORCE, Chris Mickelson of the Brumbies celebrates with team mates after scoring a try on debut during the Super Rugby Pacific Round 13 match between the ACT Brumbies and the Western Force at GIO Stadium in Canberra, Saturday, May 9, 2026.(IMAGO / AAP)

Ryan Lonergan produced a captain’s performance and debutant Chris Mickelson capped a dream first appearance with a try as the Brumbies snapped their three-match losing streak with a commanding 32–15 victory over the Western Force at GIO Stadium, leapfrogging the Queensland Reds into fifth on the Super Rugby Pacific ladder.

Key moments

2 mins – TRY BRUMBIES: Darcy Swain spills the kick-off on his 100th Super Rugby appearance and the Brumbies pounce. Rob Valetini and Nick Frost hammer away at the line through repeated carries before Lachlan Shaw picks and goes at pace, muscling through two defenders to dot down beside the posts. Ryan Lonergan converts. (Brumbies 7–0 Force)

14 mins – INJURY: Force halfback Henry Robertson departs with a suspected leg injury. Nathan Hastie replaces him.

17 mins – TRY FORCE: The Force respond after sustained pressure near the Brumbies’ line. Carlo Tizzano’s run drives them inside the 22, and after multiple gain-line carries from the forwards, Darcy Swain and Brandon Paenga-Amosa hammer away before Harry Johnson-Holmes wins the collision and plants the ball down on the line. Ben Donaldson converts. (Brumbies 7–7 Force)

27 mins – LINEOUT STEAL: The Force earn a penalty inside the Brumbies’ 22 and Donaldson kicks to the corner, but Nick Frost pinches the lineout throw at the back in a massive play on his own line.

30 mins – PENALTY FORCE: Ben Donaldson slots from 24 metres after James Slipper is penalised for not rolling at the ruck. The Force take the lead. (Brumbies 7–10 Force)

31 mins – TRY BRUMBIES: The Brumbies strike back immediately. The lineout is secured by Frost and Corey Toole explodes through the middle, slipping past multiple defenders. Ryan Lonergan shifts it quickly left, with David Feliuai firing the ball to an unmarked Ollie Sapsford on the wing, who dives over in the corner. Lonergan converts from the sideline. (Brumbies 14–10 Force)

40+1 mins – CRUCIAL TURNOVER: With the Force threatening on the Brumbies’ line as the siren sounds, captain Ryan Lonergan pulls off a big steal on Carlo Tizzano to win a penalty and preserve the lead.

Half-time: Brumbies 14–10 Force. A physical, scrappy arm wrestle on a freezing Canberra night. The Brumbies started brilliantly and finished the half strongly after the Force had edged ahead through Donaldson’s boot, but Sapsford’s try and Lonergan’s last-gasp turnover ensure the hosts lead at the break.

49 mins – PENALTY BRUMBIES: Ryan Lonergan slots from 45 metres directly in front after Slipper wins a turnover penalty. (Brumbies 17–10 Force)

53 mins – TRY BRUMBIES: The Lonergan brothers combine brilliantly. The maul is sacked instantly five metres out, so Lachlan Lonergan peels off down the short side, draws the final defender and gets the ball onto his brother Ryan, who crashes over in the right corner. Lonergan cannot convert from the sideline. (Brumbies 22–10 Force)

61 mins – TRY FORCE: The Force refuse to go quietly. Donaldson finds touch in the right corner, the lineout drive rumbles forward before splintering, and Carlo Tizzano peels away at the perfect time to stroll over and score in the corner. Donaldson cannot convert from wide. (Brumbies 22–15 Force)

72 mins – FORMAL WARNING: Referee Nic Berry issues the Force a formal warning for repeated infringements. Jeremy Williams is penalised for deliberately slowing the ball.

72 mins – PENALTY BRUMBIES: Ryan Lonergan slots from in front to extend the lead to 10. (Brumbies 25–15 Force)

75 mins – TRY BRUMBIES: Debutant Chris Mickelson seals it. Valetini storms into contact and bends the line, Ryan Lonergan has a snipe and goes close, before Mickelson picks and goes powerfully, pumping his legs to plant it down beside the posts on debut. The crowd erupts as the local product celebrates with his club’s iconic owl hand signal toward friends and family. Lonergan converts. (Brumbies 32–15 Force)

Full-time: Brumbies 32–15 Force

Match report

On a freezing Canberra night with steam rising from the scrums, the Brumbies delivered exactly the performance their season demanded. Having lost six of their past eight matches and staring at the prospect of missing the playoffs for a second consecutive year, Stephen Larkham’s side found the composure, physicality and clinical edge that had deserted them in recent weeks to claim a victory that breathes life back into their finals push.

At the heart of it all was their captain. Lonergan registered 69 passes across the 80 minutes, nailed two crucial penalty goals from range, scored a try off a slick combination with his brother, and produced a match-defining turnover on his own line as the half-time siren sounded. It was a performance that further bolstered his Wallabies credentials and drew high praise from his coach.

“Last year was the breakthrough season for him, but I genuinely feel he’s playing better this year than he did last year,” Larkham said. “Ryan’s composure in and around the leadership and how he speaks to the boys is just putting everyone in a really good position to perform.”

The Brumbies could hardly have asked for a better start. Swain, leading the Force out for his 100th Super Rugby cap, spilled the opening kick-off cold, and the home side needed just 90 seconds to capitalise. Valetini and Frost hammered away at the line through repeated carries before Shaw picked and drove powerfully over beside the posts for his second opening try in consecutive weeks. Lonergan converted for an early 7–0 lead.

What followed was a brutal arm wrestle befitting the conditions and the stakes. The Force steadied through their forward pack, with Jeremy Williams working tirelessly in the tight exchanges and Dylan Pietsch — celebrating his 50th cap — pressing hard out wide. Johnson-Holmes burrowed over after sustained close-range pressure in the 17th minute, and Donaldson’s conversion levelled the scores. The Force would lose halfback Robertson to a worrying leg injury shortly after, but his replacement Hastie settled quickly.

The visitors edged ahead through a Donaldson penalty in the 30th minute after Slipper was caught not rolling, but the lead lasted barely a minute. Toole provided the spark that had been missing from the Brumbies’ attack in recent weeks, exploding through the middle off a lineout play with his trademark electric footwork and line-breaking speed. Lonergan shifted the ball quickly left, Feliuai found the space, and Sapsford — promoted to the starting wing and showing why he deserves more minutes — dived over in the corner. Sapsford finished with 44 metres gained and looked sharp throughout.

The first half had one final twist. With the siren sounding and the Force threatening on the Brumbies’ line, Lonergan produced a crucial steal on Tizzano at the breakdown to win the penalty and preserve the four-point advantage. It was the kind of play that encapsulated his evening — calm, composed, and decisive when it mattered most.

The second half belonged almost entirely to the Brumbies. Lonergan drilled a huge penalty from near 50 metres in the 49th minute before the brothers combined for the try that effectively broke the contest open. Lachlan peeled off the back of a sacked maul down the short side, drew the last defender, and fed Ryan, who crashed over in the corner. “I was laughing because jeez, I made it hard,” Ryan told Stan Sport. “He threw me a pie and I nearly spilled it.”

The Force kept fighting through Tizzano, whose specialty — peeling off splintering mauls — produced a try in the 61st minute that cut the deficit to seven. Donaldson’s conversion missed, and the visitors could not sustain the pressure. Penalties, errors and poor field position repeatedly invited the Brumbies back into attacking territory, and the hosts gladly accepted. Pietsch thought he had raced away for a try that would have brought the Force within striking distance, only to be denied by a tough obstruction call.

Berry issued the Force a formal warning for repeated infringements in the 72nd minute, and Lonergan extended the lead to 10 with his second penalty. The stage was then set for the night’s most popular moment.

Mickelson, last year’s John I Dent Cup player of the year, had entered the field just three minutes earlier to a roar from friends, family and supporters. The local product, who won the award as a hooker but was covering back-row for the Brumbies, needed no time to make his mark. After Valetini had softened the defensive line with a trademark surging carry and Lonergan had gone close with a snipe, Mickelson picked and drove powerfully beside the posts to seal the bonus point on debut. He celebrated by throwing the owl hand signal of his local club towards his people in the stands, and the stadium erupted as teammates swarmed the newest Brumby.

Force captain Williams was gracious in defeat. “Really physical game,” he told Stan Sport. “We knew they’d come out raring to go. At times we matched them. I do think they won the collisions. Our discipline let them into their attacking zone.”

The result lifts the Brumbies to 29 competition points and a 6–6 record, leapfrogging the Reds into fifth with just two matches remaining. The Force slip to 4–7 and sit nine points outside the top six — their finals hopes now on life support with three home matches to come. Coach Simon Cron remains defiant. “We’ve got three games at home,” he said. “We’ve got a job to do, so we’ve got to recoup, fix and get into it again.”

Match details

Brumbies 32 (Tries: Lachlan Shaw, Ollie Sapsford, Ryan Lonergan, Chris Mickelson; Conversions: Ryan Lonergan 3/4; Penalties: Lonergan 2/2)
Force 15 (Tries: Harry Johnson-Holmes, Carlo Tizzano; Conversions: Ben Donaldson 1/2; Penalties: Donaldson 1/1)
Half-time: 14–10

Venue: GIO Stadium, Canberra
Referee: Nic Berry (Australia)
Assistant Referees: Reuben Keane, Louis Trisley
TMO: Brett Cronan

Teams

Brumbies: 15 Tom Wright, 14 Ollie Sapsford, 13 Hudson Creighton, 12 David Feliuai, 11 Corey Toole, 10 Declan Meredith, 9 Ryan Lonergan (c), 8 Toby Macpherson, 7 Rory Scott, 6 Rob Valetini, 5 Lachlan Shaw, 4 Nick Frost, 3 Allan Alaalatoa, 2 Lachlan Lonergan, 1 James Slipper.
Replacements: 16 Billy Pollard, 17 Blake Schoupp, 18 Rhys van Nek, 19 Cadeyrn Neville, 20 Chris Mickelson, 21 Klayton Thorn, 22 Tane Edmed, 23 Andy Muirhead.

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

What’s next

The Brumbies have the bye in Round 14 before hosting the Highlanders. The Force return to Perth to host the Reds.

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Super Rugby Pacific

Tangitau stars as Highlanders survive late Waratahs surge

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Tangitau stars as Highlanders survive late Waratahs surge
Highlanders Caleb Tangitau scores during the Highlanders v Waratahs, Super Rugby Pacific match, Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin, New Zealand. Saturday, 9 May 2026, (Photo by Michael Thomas / action press)

The Highlanders kept their Super Rugby Pacific finals hopes alive with a dramatic 31–26 victory over the NSW Waratahs at Forsyth Barr Stadium, surviving a frantic late comeback after Caleb Tangitau’s electric return and Timoci Tavatavanawai’s match-winning turnover sealed a result that lifted the home side to seventh on the ladder.

Key moments

7 mins – TRY HIGHLANDERS: Mitch Dunshea claims the lineout and Lucas Casey carries in midfield. Timoci Tavatavanawai throws a nice offload for Cameron Millar inside the 22, before Tavatavanawai links again to find Caleb Tangitau, who breaks the line and dishes it to Jonah Lowe to score. Millar converts from in front. (Highlanders 7–0 Waratahs)

11 mins – TRY HIGHLANDERS: A huge scrum penalty gives the Highlanders position. Adam Lennox taps quickly and charges into the 22 before Tangitau picks from the back, barges through multiple Waratahs defenders and dives over for a brilliant individual try. Millar converts. (Highlanders 14–0 Waratahs)

19 mins – TRY HIGHLANDERS: Tavatavanawai carries powerfully from the lineout before Nikora Broughton charges forward. Millar fires the wide ball to Lowe, who flicks it inside for Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens to stroll in untouched. Millar converts from the left sideline. (Highlanders 21–0 Waratahs)

22 mins – YELLOW CARD HIGHLANDERS: Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii makes a half-break before Tavatavanawai is penalised for being off his feet at the ruck. Referee Damon Murphy deems it cynical and sends Tavatavanawai to the sin bin. Jack Debreczeni finds touch five metres out. (Highlanders down to 14)

23 mins – TRY WARATAHS: The Waratahs take immediate advantage of the extra man. Miles Amatosero claims the lineout, Angus Scott-Young carries in midfield, and Max Jorgensen fires it wide for Andrew Kellaway on the edge, who steps inside to score. Sid Harvey converts. (Highlanders 21–7 Waratahs)

30 mins – 50-22: Caleb Tangitau intercepts a Waratahs attack and delivers a superb 50-22 kick that trickles out on the five-metre line. Highlanders lineout 10 metres out.

35 mins – TRY HIGHLANDERS: After sustained pressure near the line, Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens throws the ball over the top for Lowe to pounce and score his second in the corner. TMO checks for a knock-on but the try stands. Millar converts from the left sideline. (Highlanders 28–7 Waratahs)

Half-time: Highlanders 28–7 Waratahs. A ruthless first-half statement from the Highlanders, built on forward dominance, the brilliance of Tangitau, and Tavatavanawai’s all-action involvement. The Waratahs responded through Kellaway during the yellow card period but were largely outclassed.

45 mins – TRY WARATAHS: Pete Samu claims the lineout and Suaalii breaks the line before being hauled down. Carter Gordon finds Apolosi Ranawai with the flat ball, and the replacement prop barges over for his debut Super Rugby Pacific try. Harvey’s conversion misses from wide. (Highlanders 28–12 Waratahs)

48 mins – TRY DISALLOWED: Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens appears to score his second after collecting a loose ball, but the TMO rules a clear knock-on from Jona Nareki in the build-up.

59 mins – RED CARD HIGHLANDERS: Tempers flare after Sid Harvey is tackled late. The TMO reviews a tackle by Jona Nareki, who made contact with his shoulder to the head of Jack Barrett. Initially shown yellow, it is upgraded to a 20-minute red card due to no mitigating factors. (Highlanders down to 14)

61 mins – HARVEY ERROR: Sid Harvey and Max Jorgensen combine brilliantly down the left, but Harvey drops the ball cold with the tryline at his mercy after gathering Jorgensen’s return pass.

65 mins – DEFENSIVE STAND: The Waratahs camp inside the Highlanders’ 22 but Tavatavanawai gets over the ball five metres out to win a crucial turnover penalty.

69 mins – TRY DISALLOWED: Suaalii breaks the line and feeds Harvey, who dots down in the corner, but Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens makes a superb last-ditch tackle to force Harvey into touch before grounding. The Waratahs tap from the penalty advantage.

70 mins – TRY DISALLOWED: Suaalii steps inside and scores, but the TMO finds a knock-on in the ruck in the build-up. The try is ruled out.

71 mins – TRY WARATAHS: Third time lucky. Clem Halaholo powers over from close range after sustained pressure. Harvey converts from in front. (Highlanders 28–19 Waratahs)

77 mins – MISSED PENALTY HIGHLANDERS: Cameron Millar’s penalty from 30 metres strikes the left upright. The Highlanders fail to extend their lead.

79 mins – TRY WARATAHS: A set-play lineout move puts Harvey through a hole off an Ethan Dobbins pass. He bursts through the defence untouched and swerves to score under the posts. Harvey converts. (Highlanders 28–26 Waratahs)

79 mins – PENALTY HIGHLANDERS: From the restart, Lawson Creighton claims on his 22. Angus Scott-Young carries on the short side but Tavatavanawai gets over the ball and wins the match-sealing turnover penalty. Millar slots from 25 metres to seal the victory. (Highlanders 31–26 Waratahs)

Full-time: Highlanders 31–26 Waratahs

Match report

The Highlanders’ season is not dead yet, but it very nearly died a dramatic death under the Forsyth Barr Stadium roof. Jamie Joseph’s side produced their best 40 minutes of the campaign in the opening spell before almost unravelling completely in a second half that saw them play 30 minutes of the match a man down and withstand a Waratahs comeback that brought the visitors to within two points with 90 seconds remaining.

In the end, it took a trademark Tavatavanawai turnover at the breakdown — the co-captain’s third crucial jackal of the evening — to allow Millar to seal the result from 25 metres and send a crowd of 14,346 home relieved rather than distraught. The victory lifted the Highlanders from ninth to seventh on 24 points, one behind sixth-placed Brumbies, but they face an enormous task ahead with the Chiefs and Hurricanes on the road in their final two regular-season fixtures.

The writing was on the wall for the Waratahs from the sixth minute. Tangitau, returning from two matches out with concussion, used his speed and footwork to evade Suaalii, who had rushed out of the defensive line and missed his man, before finding wing partner Lowe with a neat inside pass to open the scoring. It was a warning the visitors failed to heed.

Five minutes later, Tangitau did it all himself. Collecting the ball from the back of a ruck after Lennox’s quick tap from a scrum penalty, the All Blacks hopeful beat four Waratahs defenders — Angus Scott-Young, Pete Samu, Jake Gordon and Angus Blyth — to power over in one of the individual tries of the season. The Forsyth Barr crowd were on their feet, and the Waratahs were on their knees.

The punishment continued. Millar, arguably the best goal-kicking flyhalf in the competition, showed his playmaking ability with a gorgeous long ball to Lowe out wide, and the winger produced an equally deft offload to send Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens strolling in untouched. At 21–0 inside 20 minutes, the contest appeared over.

It was not. A controversial yellow card to Tavatavanawai for a cynical ruck infringement — his attempt to get over the ball in the wider channels deemed worthy of a card by referee Murphy — gave the Waratahs a lifeline. They capitalised immediately, with Suaalii and Jorgensen combining to put Kellaway over in the corner. Harvey’s conversion from the sideline made it 21–7 and the visitors had a pulse.

But Tangitau was not finished. His superb 50-22 kick, after intercepting a Waratahs attack just inside his own half, handed the Highlanders another attacking lineout deep in enemy territory. The home side’s scrum then bulldozed through the Australians once more, and the resulting pressure produced Lowe’s second in the corner after Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens spotted the space out wide and threw an offload for his winger to race onto. Millar’s touchline conversion sent the Highlanders to the sheds with a commanding 28–7 advantage.

The second half became a completely different contest. The Waratahs, presumably following a half-time spray from McKellar, came out with renewed intensity. Suaalii broke the line early and Ranawai barged over for a debut try off Gordon’s flat pass to make it 28–12. Small errors then began creeping into the Highlanders’ game. They were no longer clinical in attack, and the match exploded when Nareki was yellow-carded in the 59th minute for a shoulder to the head of replacement Barrett. The card was later upgraded to a 20-minute red after an off-field review found no mitigating factors, leaving the Highlanders with 14 men for the remainder.

From there, wave after wave of Waratahs pressure crashed down on the Highlanders’ line. Harvey dropped the ball cold with the tryline beckoning after a brilliant combination with Jorgensen. Suaalii then had a try ruled out by the TMO for a knock-on in the ruck, and Harvey was earlier forced into touch by a superb last-ditch tackle from Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens. Three near-misses in the space of five minutes — and the Highlanders’ defensive line somehow held.

It finally broke in the 71st minute when Halaholo powered over from close range. Harvey converted to make it 28–19, and the momentum was entirely with the Waratahs. Millar’s penalty attempt from 30 metres then struck the left upright, denying the Highlanders breathing space and setting up a grandstand finish.

Harvey provided it. A clinical set-play lineout move put the fullback through a hole off a Dobbins pass, and he burst through untouched to score under the posts. His conversion made it 28–26 with barely a minute remaining, and the stadium held its breath.

From the restart, Creighton claimed on his own 22 and Scott-Young carried on the short side. But there was Tavatavanawai — the man whose first-half yellow card had given the Waratahs life — standing over the ball at the breakdown, winning the penalty that allowed Millar to slot from 25 metres and send Forsyth Barr into celebration. It was a fitting end to a match of extraordinary swings, and a moment that may yet prove season-defining for both sides.

For the Waratahs, the defeat extends their wretched run across the Tasman to 13 consecutive losses in New Zealand. Dan McKellar’s side will almost certainly need to win their final three matches — away to the Drua, home to the Brumbies, and away to the Force — to have any chance of squeezing into the top six. On this evidence, that looks a tall order. A bewildered McKellar looked a beaten man in the coaching box as his side’s self-inflicted penalty count mounted throughout the evening.

The Highlanders, by contrast, head to Hamilton with renewed belief. Their scrum was dominant, their defence made more than 200 tackles, and in Tangitau they have a player whose All Blacks selection seems a matter of when, not if.

Match details

Highlanders 31 (Tries: Jonah Lowe 2, Caleb Tangitau, Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens; Conversions: Cameron Millar 4/4; Penalties: Millar 1/2)
Waratahs 26 (Tries: Andrew Kellaway, Apolosi Ranawai, Clem Halaholo, Sid Harvey; Conversions: Sid Harvey 3/4)
Half-time: 28–7

Venue: Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin
Attendance: 14,346
Referee: Damon Murphy (Australia)
Assistant Referees: Jordan Way, George Myers
TMO: James Leckie

Teams

Highlanders: 15 Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens, 14 Caleb Tangitau, 13 Jona Nareki, 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 Folau Fakatava, 22 Taine Robinson, 23 Xavier Tito-Harris.

Waratahs: 15 Max Jorgensen, 14 Andrew Kellaway, 13 Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, 12 Lawson Creighton, 11 Sid Harvey, 10 Jack Debreczeni, 9 Jake Gordon (c), 8 Pete Samu, 7 Charlie Gamble, 6 Angus Scott-Young, 5 Angus Blyth, 4 Miles Amatosero, 3 Dan Botha, 2 Ethan Dobbins, 1 Isaac Kailea.
Replacements: 16 Folau Fainga’a, 17 Jack Barrett, 18 Apolosi Ranawai, 19 Clem Halaholo, 20 Leafi Talataina, 21 Teddy Wilson, 22 Jack Bowen, 23 Harry Potter.

What’s next

The Highlanders travel to Hamilton to face the Chiefs next Saturday. The Waratahs head to Fiji to face the Fijian Drua.

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Super Rugby Pacific

Sititi and Taukei’aho doubles help Chiefs hold off gutsy Reds

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Sititi and Taukei’aho doubles help Chiefs hold off gutsy Reds
Chiefs Wallace Sititi celebrates scoring a try during the Reds v Chiefs, Super Rugby Pacific match, Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane, Australia. Friday, 8 May 2026, (Photo by Pat Hoelscher / action press)

The Chiefs moved to the top of the Super Rugby Pacific standings with a hard-fought 31–21 victory over the Queensland Reds at Suncorp Stadium, with Wallace Sititi and Samisoni Taukei’aho both scoring doubles in a bruising encounter that was decided in the final minutes.

Key moments

8 mins – TRY REDS: Hunter Paisami’s pop pass puts Harry McLaughlin-Phillips through a hole, and the flyhalf offloads out of contact to send Lachie Anderson into the corner. McLaughlin-Phillips converts from the right sideline. (Reds 7–0 Chiefs)

11 mins – TRY CHIEFS: The Chiefs stay patient after the Reds botch their restart near the 22. Josh Lord pops up short side and gallops through a hole, and quick ball sees Xavier Roe go back to the short side where Wallace Sititi crashes over. Damian McKenzie converts from wide. (Reds 7–7 Chiefs)

16 mins – MISSED PENALTY CHIEFS: Damian McKenzie pushes a 40-metre penalty well right of the posts after the Reds are penalised for offside. (Reds 7–7 Chiefs)

24 mins – MAUL TURNOVER: The Chiefs hammer away inside the Reds’ five after a lineout drive, but Fraser McReight and Seru Uru force the maul turnover to keep them out.

34 mins – TMO DENIES CHIEFS: Isaac Hutchinson slides over and is awarded the try, but the TMO spots a couple of bobbles in the lead-up and the try is disallowed. Back to the penalty. (Reds 7–7 Chiefs)

36 mins – PENALTY CHIEFS: Damian McKenzie slots the resulting penalty from in front. (Reds 7–10 Chiefs)

37 mins – BLOWN CHANCE: Kyle Brown drops the restart and Harry Wilson grabs it, but instead of backing himself for the line he throws a pass that is broken up. The Reds get the scrum feed 15 metres out but Zane Nonggorr pushes an unnecessary offload and it goes loose.

40+3 mins – HELD UP: Seru Uru appears to get over the line from close range after the Reds hammer away following a penalty, but the officials rule he is held up. The TMO confirms the on-field decision stands after viewing just one angle, with a subsequent replay appearing to show Uru had grounded the ball.

Half-time: Reds 7–10 Chiefs. A brutal, physical first half with the Chiefs leading by a McKenzie penalty. Both sides have had chances without nailing them, and the Reds’ lineout struggles have hampered their attacking platform.

51 mins – TRY CHIEFS: The Chiefs’ rolling maul proves unstoppable as Samisoni Taukei’aho steers it over from the back after multiple penalties draw the Reds offside near the line. McKenzie converts. (Reds 7–17 Chiefs)

53 mins – CLOSE CALL: Carter Gordon makes a brilliant break on his first touch, getting the Reds inside the Chiefs’ 22, but they are penalised five metres from the line for holding on.

58 mins – CHARGE DOWN: Louis Werchon’s high kick into the 22 is tipped down by the Chiefs, but Seru Uru charges down Xavier Roe’s clearance and regathers five metres out. However, Tupou Vaa’i jackals and wins the holding on penalty.

66 mins – TRY REDS: Brilliance from Harry Wilson. Josh Flook pokes through in midfield, then Carter Gordon lofts a cut-out pass to Wilson on the right wing. He charges into the 22 before flicking a no-look offload out the back to send Joe Brial diving into the corner. Werchon converts from wide. (Reds 14–17 Chiefs)

69 mins – YELLOW CARD REDS: Jeffery Toomaga-Allen is sent to the sin bin for a cynical foul at the breakdown, slapping the ball from the scrumhalf’s hands. (Reds down to 14)

70 mins – TRY CHIEFS: The Chiefs’ lineout drive is again unstoppable and Taukei’aho claims his second, steering the maul over from the back. McKenzie converts. (Reds 14–24 Chiefs)

74 mins – TRY REDS: Carter Gordon spots space wide on the left and whips a pass to debutant Treyvon Pritchard on the wing. He still has McKenzie to beat, but skips past the veteran on the outside to score his maiden Super Rugby Pacific try. Werchon converts from wide. (Reds 21–24 Chiefs)

79 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Sititi seals it with his second. The Chiefs win a penalty after Carter Gordon is caught inside his 22, opt for the scrum, and Sititi takes off the back. Louis Werchon barely lays a finger on him as he streaks away to dot down under the posts. McKenzie converts. (Reds 21–31 Chiefs)

Full-time: Reds 21–31 Chiefs

Match report

This was a match that rarely produced pretty rugby, but the Chiefs will not care one bit. In a gritty, physical encounter defined by untidy breakdowns, handling errors and sloppy lineouts, the visitors did just enough to grind out a result that sent them to the summit of the standings alongside the Hurricanes on 40 points, ahead on the first tiebreaker of wins with a 9–2 record and three regular-season matches remaining.

For the Reds, it was a night of frustration. The final penalty count read 12–5 against the Queenslanders, and there were contentious moments that left Les Kiss’s side feeling aggrieved — none more so than a held-up try ruling on Seru Uru just before half-time that appeared to be made after viewing just one unclear angle, with a subsequent replay showing the lock may well have grounded the ball. Reds players pointed at the big screen in an attempt to get the TMO to take another look, but their pleas fell on deaf ears.

The Reds started with intent, and winger Lachie Anderson — playing his comeback match from a dislocated wrist — struck early. Hunter Paisami’s pop pass released McLaughlin-Phillips through a hole, and the flyhalf rode the tackle before offloading to send Anderson over in the corner. McLaughlin-Phillips converted from the sideline for a 7–0 lead inside eight minutes.

The advantage lasted barely three minutes. Queensland’s failure to deal with the restart handed the Chiefs possession near the 22, and Josh Lord’s sharp break on the short side left the Reds scrambling and short of numbers. Quick ball allowed Roe to feed the short side, and Sititi crashed over for the first of his two tries. McKenzie levelled from the tee, and the contest settled into an arm wrestle.

The Reds’ lineout woes — a problem that had plagued them the previous week against the Brumbies — continued to undermine their attacking platform. They had lost three lineouts by the 29th minute, with Wallabies captain Harry Wilson yelling in frustration at his teammates. The Chiefs, by contrast, were controlled and patient. Lord was excellent in the tight exchanges, while loosehead Ollie Norris and tighthead George Dyer provided the grunt that allowed their loose forward trio of Luke Jacobson, Simon Parker and Sititi to dominate the collisions.

The Chiefs thought they had scored when fullback Isaac Hutchinson slid over in the 34th minute, but the TMO found multiple knock-ons in the build-up. The Suncorp crowd laughed as each fumble was replayed on the big screen, and McKenzie had to settle for three points from the resulting penalty. The Reds then squandered a golden opportunity when Brown dropped the restart and Wilson grabbed the ball 15 metres out, only to throw a pass rather than back himself for the line. A loose offload from Nonggorr from the resulting scrum compounded the error. Combined with the controversial Uru decision, the Reds headed to the sheds trailing 7–10 and wondering what might have been.

The Chiefs’ bench made the difference in the second half. Taukei’aho’s injection from the interchange provided the decisive firepower, the All Blacks hooker steering two rolling maul tries over from the back. His first, in the 51st minute, followed a series of penalties that drew the Reds offside near the line. His second, in the 70th minute, came moments after Toomaga-Allen was sin-binned for cynically slapping the ball from the scrumhalf’s hands, and appeared to put the result beyond doubt at 24–14.

Between Taukei’aho’s two scores, fit-again flyhalf Carter Gordon sparked a Reds fightback with a moment of individual brilliance. Gordon’s beautiful cut-out pass released Wilson on the right wing, and the Wallabies captain produced a stunning no-look flick pass out the back of his hand — reminiscent of Len Ikitau at his best — to send blindside flanker Brial diving into the corner. Werchon converted from wide to cut the deficit to three, and Suncorp roared back to life.

The Reds then landed another blow through teenage replacement Pritchard, who showed flashy footwork to beat McKenzie on the outside and score his maiden Super Rugby Pacific try. At 21–24 with five minutes remaining, the comeback was alive. But a late penalty against Flook for an incorrect entry at the breakdown proved to be the death knell. The Chiefs opted for the scrum against the 14-man Reds, demolished the Queensland pack, and Sititi waltzed over untouched from the base to seal the victory.

“It was a bit of a dogfight,” Chiefs captain Jacobson told Stan Sport. “It was pretty scrappy. We were really just trying to fight for momentum. The Reds are a gutsy team, they’re a tough team to beat here at home as well. Really pleased with how we’ve come out on top there.”

Reds captain McReight, after coach Kiss almost stopped him from fronting the media, bit his tongue on the officiating but left no doubt about his frustration. “There were some tough ones out there tonight for sure,” he told Stan. “I felt there were definitely some calls that could have gone both ways. I thought we dug in really well. It’s a tough one to swallow.”

The Chiefs’ defensive effort was equally impressive, missing just eight tackles to the Reds’ 32, with Sititi contributing 22 tackles and a turnover won to complement his two tries. Xavier Roe was arguably the best player on the park during his stint at halfback, providing tempo and direction before making way for Cortez Ratima.

The result drops Queensland to fifth on the ladder, a daunting 11 points adrift of the top three with just three rounds remaining. Their hopes of a home qualifying final are all but over. The Chiefs, meanwhile, head to Dunedin next week knowing they are firmly in the box seat for the minor premiership.

Match details

Reds 21 (Tries: Lachie Anderson, Joe Brial, Treyvon Pritchard; Conversions: Harry McLaughlin-Phillips 1/1, Louis Werchon 2/2)
Chiefs 31 (Tries: Wallace Sititi 2, Samisoni Taukei’aho 2; Conversions: Damian McKenzie 4/4; Penalties: McKenzie 1/2)
Half-time: 7–10

Venue: Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane
Referee: Marcus Playle (New Zealand)
Assistant Referees: Fraser Hannon, Dan Moore
TMO: Glenn Newman

Teams

Reds: 15 Jock Campbell, 14 Filipo Daugunu, 13 Josh Flook, 12 Hunter Paisami, 11 Lachie Anderson, 10 Harry McLaughlin-Phillips, 9 Kalani Thomas, 8 Harry Wilson, 7 Fraser McReight (c), 6 Joe Brial, 5 Lukhan Salakaia-Loto, 4 Seru Uru, 3 Zane Nonggorr, 2 Matt Faessler, 1 George Blake.
Replacements: 16 Josh Nasser, 17 Jeffery Toomaga-Allen, 18 Nick Bloomfield, 19 Hamish Muller, 20 Vaiuta Latu, 21 Louis Werchon, 22 Carter Gordon, 23 Treyvon Pritchard.

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

What’s next

The Reds host Moana Pasifika in Round 15 after the bye in Round 14. The Chiefs travel to Dunedin to face the Highlanders next Saturday.

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