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McKenzie breaks try-scoring record as Chiefs rout Moana Pasifika

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McKenzie breaks try-scoring record as Chiefs rout Moana Pasifika
Chiefs Damian McKenzie and Seuseu Naitoa Ah Kuoi celebrate a try during the Moana Pasifika v Chiefs, Super Rugby Pacific match, Rotorua International Stadium, Rotorua, New Zealand. Saturday, 11 April 2026, (Photo by Aaron Gillions / action press)

Damian McKenzie wrote himself into Chiefs folklore by becoming the franchise’s all-time leading try-scorer as his side ran riot in a 62–17 demolition of Moana Pasifika in Super Rugby Pacific’s return to Rotorua after eight years.

Key moments

5 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Quinn Tupaea goes over in the corner after slick handling from Kyren Taumoefolau and Liam Coombes-Fabling. Damian McKenzie converts from near the touchline. (Moana Pasifika 0–7 Chiefs)

9 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Tupaea breaks through the line with ease and finds Taumoefolau on his outside to score. McKenzie converts. (Moana Pasifika 0–14 Chiefs)

16 mins – INJURY MOANA PASIFIKA: Niko Jones is forced off early and replaced by Semisi Paea.

18 mins – TRY CHIEFS: The Chiefs work it down the short side as McKenzie chips through for Tupaea to chase. He claims and pops to Samipeni Finau, who goes over under the posts. McKenzie converts. (Moana Pasifika 0–21 Chiefs)

33 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Taumoefolau breaks straight up the middle and finds Tupaea with a nice ball on his inside. Tupaea strolls over under the sticks for his second. McKenzie’s conversion misses. (Moana Pasifika 0–26 Chiefs)

40 mins – YELLOW CARD MOANA PASIFIKA: Tom Savage is sent to the sin bin for head-to-head contact with Tupou Vaa’i. Savage later fails his HIA and does not return.

Half-time: Moana Pasifika 0–26 Chiefs. A dominant opening forty from the visitors. The Chiefs struck early through Quinn Tupaea and never let Moana Pasifika settle, capitalising on mistakes and turning pressure into points. Damian McKenzie controlled proceedings beautifully, dictating territory with his boot and creating chances at will. Moana had their moments deep in the Chiefs’ 22 but were denied repeatedly by strong defence and crucial turnovers.

44 mins – TRY CHIEFS: McKenzie breaks the Chiefs all-time try-scoring record. The Chiefs steal a lineout and spin it wide, with Coombes-Fabling breaking over halfway and finding McKenzie on his inside to stroll over for a stunning counter-attack try. McKenzie’s conversion falls short. (Moana Pasifika 0–31 Chiefs)

44 mins – DEBUT CHIEFS: Reon Paul comes on from the bench to make his Super Rugby debut, replacing Kyle Brown.

48 mins – DEBUT MOANA PASIFIKA: Jimmy Tupou comes on from the bench to make his Moana Pasifika debut, replacing Tom Savage.

49 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Tyrone Thompson finishes off a rolling maul to extend the lead. McKenzie misses the conversion. (Moana Pasifika 0–36 Chiefs)

52 mins – TRY MOANA PASIFIKA: Moana finally get on the board. Glen Vaihu stabs a kick ahead and a series of chips sees Patrick Pellegrini set up Solomon Alaimalo, who gathers and goes over for a beauty. Pellegrini converts. (Moana Pasifika 7–36 Chiefs)

56 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Taumoefolau completes his double. Coombes-Fabling steams into the 22, draws his man and finds Taumoefolau on the outside to stroll over. McKenzie converts. (Moana Pasifika 7–43 Chiefs)

59 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Josh Jacomb pounces on a loose Moana pass and pins the ears back to race the length of the field. McKenzie converts to bring up 50 points for the Chiefs. (Moana Pasifika 7–50 Chiefs)

65 mins – TRY CHIEFS: The Chiefs go the length again. Semisi Paea loses the ball in contact and Fiti Sa scoops it up to find Leroy Carter. He gets the offload away to McKenzie, who trips over the line to score his second. McKenzie misses the conversion. (Moana Pasifika 7–55 Chiefs)

69 mins – TRY MOANA PASIFIKA: Abraham Pole powers over from close range after Alaimalo breaks through the line and Miracle Fai’ilagi is stopped inches short. Pellegrini’s conversion falls short. (Moana Pasifika 12–55 Chiefs)

73 mins – TRY MOANA PASIFIKA: Captain Fai’ilagi breaks through the line and sprints down the right, beating McKenzie to the line for a fine individual try. Pellegrini’s conversion misses. (Moana Pasifika 17–55 Chiefs)

76 mins – TRY CHIEFS: Thompson completes his double, scooping up the ball from the back of a ruck and diving over. McKenzie converts. (Moana Pasifika 17–62 Chiefs)

Full-time: Moana Pasifika 17–62 Chiefs


Match report

There was an air of irony about this relocated fixture. Originally scheduled for Tonga before financial complications forced a venue change, Moana Pasifika’s “home” game ended up in the heart of Chiefs territory at Rotorua International Stadium – and the visitors made themselves very much at home.

From the moment McKenzie landed a 50-22 kick inside the opening minute, the Chiefs were in total command. Quinn Tupaea, the competition’s Player of the Year frontrunner, opened the scoring in the fifth minute after slick handling from Kyren Taumoefolau and Liam Coombes-Fabling created the overlap. McKenzie converted from the touchline to set the tone for what would become a one-sided afternoon.

The combination of Tupaea and Taumoefolau proved utterly devastating for Moana Pasifika. Tupaea turned provider moments later, breaking the line with ease before finding the former Moana winger Taumoefolau on his outside to double the advantage. The pair tormented their opponents throughout the opening half, their combination play opening gaps at will.

Moana had their moments. Tighthead prop Paula Latu was held up over the line twice as the hosts built promising attacking phases inside the Chiefs’ 22, but the visitors’ scramble defence refused to crack. It was symptomatic of Moana’s season – plenty of effort, not enough execution.

McKenzie’s chip through for Tupaea to chase set up try number three, the midfielder claiming the ball and popping to Samipeni Finau for a 21-0 lead after just 18 minutes. The game was already done as a contest, but the Chiefs were far from finished.

Tupaea completed his double in the 33rd minute, strolling over under the posts after Taumoefolau broke straight up the middle and delivered a perfectly weighted inside ball. McKenzie’s conversion drifted wide, but it mattered little with the scoreboard reading 26-0.

Moana’s misery was compounded on the stroke of half-time when lock Tom Savage was shown a yellow card for head-on-head contact with Tupou Vaa’i. The blow was softened when the incident was deemed accidental, but Savage later failed his HIA and did not return.

The second half brought only more pain for the hosts. Three minutes after the restart, McKenzie etched his name into the record books. An overthrown Moana lineout was gathered by Tyrone Thompson, and the Chiefs launched a stunning counter-attack from inside their own 22. Tupaea fed Coombes-Fabling, whose pace took him around William Havili, and he drew the last defender before finding McKenzie on his inside. The playmaker sprinted 40 metres to the corner, grounding the ball left-handed with his trademark grin. It was his 43rd try for the franchise, surpassing Sitiveni Sivivatu’s long-standing record of 42.

The five-pointer also brought up 1,500 career points in Super Rugby for McKenzie, moving him closer to Morne Steyn (1,551), Beauden Barrett (1,576) and all-time leader Dan Carter (1,708) on the competition’s points-scoring list.

Thompson finished off a rolling maul in the 49th minute to make it 36-0 before Moana finally got on the board. A hopeful chip from Coombes-Fabling inside his own half bounced kindly for Patrick Pellegrini, and the replacement first-five had the vision to put another kick through for Solomon Alaimalo – a former Chief – to gather and score. Pellegrini converted to give the home crowd something to cheer.

It was a brief respite. Taumoefolau completed his double three minutes later after another devastating break from Coombes-Fabling, before Josh Jacomb pounced on a loose Moana pass and raced the length of the field to bring up 50 points for the visitors.

McKenzie then got his second, finishing off another length-of-the-field effort after Fiti Sa scooped up a turnover and found Leroy Carter, who was hauled down by a brilliant cover tackle from Pellegrini. But the Chiefs recycled quickly, and McKenzie was on hand to trip over the line.

Moana salvaged some pride late on. Abraham Pole powered over from close range in the 69th minute after Alaimalo’s break, before captain Miracle Fai’ilagi produced a brilliant 50-metre solo effort to score in the 73rd minute, beating McKenzie to the line in the process.

But the Chiefs had the final say. Thompson completed his double from close range in the 76th minute, McKenzie converting to bring up 62 points and seal a comprehensive bonus-point victory.

For Jono Gibbes’ side, this was a statement performance that propelled them to the top of the ladder – at least temporarily – ahead of the Hurricanes-Blues clash later in the evening. The win extends their perfect record against Moana Pasifika to nine from nine, with an average winning margin of more than 40 points.

For Moana, it continues a difficult stretch. After winning their opener in Fiji, Tana Umaga’s side have now lost seven straight and face a tough assignment against the NSW Waratahs next weekend. The effort was there, particularly from Fai’ilagi and Semisi Tupou Ta’eiloa in the pack, but the execution gap remains stark.

The Chiefs, meanwhile, will prepare for a blockbuster showdown with the Hurricanes in Hamilton next Saturday – a match that could go a long way to deciding the top seed for finals.

What’s next

The Chiefs host the Hurricanes at FMG Stadium Waikato in Hamilton next Saturday in a blockbuster top-of-table clash. Moana Pasifika travel to Sydney to face the NSW Waratahs at Allianz Stadium.

Match details

Moana Pasifika 17 (Tries: Alaimalo, Pole, Fai’ilagi; Conversion: Pellegrini 1/3)
Chiefs 62 (Tries: Tupaea 2, Taumoefolau 2, Thompson 2, Finau, McKenzie 2, Jacomb; Conversions: McKenzie 6/10)
Half-time: 0–26

Venue: Rotorua International Stadium, Rotorua
Referee: Marcus Playle (New Zealand)
Assistant Referees: James Doleman, Fraser Hannon
TMO: Glenn Newman

Teams

Moana Pasifika: 15 William Havili, 14 Solomon Alaimalo, 13 Tevita Latu, 12 Faletoi Peni, 11 Glen Vaihu, 10 Jackson Garden-Bachop, 9 Augustine Pulu, 8 Semisi Tupou Ta’eiloa, 7 Niko Jones, 6 Miracle Fai’ilagi (c), 5 Veikoso Poloniati, 4 Tom Savage, 3 Paula Latu, 2 Millenium Sanerivi, 1 Malakai Hala-Ngatai.
Replacements: 16 Samiuela Moli, 17 Abraham Pole, 18 Atu Moli, 19 Jimmy Tupou, 20 Semisi Paea, 21 Melani Matavao, 22 Patrick Pellegrini, 23 Tyler Pulini.

Chiefs: 15 Liam Coombes-Fabling, 14 Leroy Carter, 13 Kyle Brown, 12 Quinn Tupaea, 11 Kyren Taumoefolau, 10 Damian McKenzie, 9 Cortez Ratima, 8 Simon Parker, 7 Jahrome Brown, 6 Samipeni Finau, 5 Tupou Vaa’i (c), 4 Naitoa Ah Kuoi, 3 Reuben O’Neill, 2 Tyrone Thompson, 1 Ollie Norris.
Replacements: 16 Brodie McAlister, 17 Jared Proffit, 18 Sione Ahio, 19 Fiti Sa, 20 Luke Jacobson, 21 Te Toiroa Tahuriorangi, 22 Josh Jacomb, 23 Reon Paul.

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Super Rugby Pacific

Force 19–15 Fijian Drua – Super Rugby Pacific Round 1

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Force 19–15 Fijian Drua – Super Rugby Pacific Round 1
SUPER RUGBY FORCE REDS, Western Force Zac Lomax runs out during the Super Rugby Pacific Round 14 match between the Western Force and the Queensland Reds Reds at HBF Park in Perth, Saturday, May 16, 2026. (IMAGO / AAP)

The Western Force claimed a hard-fought 19–15 victory over the Fijian Drua at HBF Park but failed to secure the bonus point they needed, ending their finals hopes despite a determined second-half comeback. Kurtley Beale moved into outright third on the all-time Super Rugby caps list with his 186th appearance.

Key moments

10 mins – TRY FORCE: Carlo Tizzano finished from the back of a powerful rolling maul, equalling the all-time Force record for maul tries. Max Burey converted. (Force 7–0 Drua)

17 mins – TRY DRUA: Kitione Salawa barged over under the posts from close range in his 50th match for the Drua after sustained pressure near the line. Kemu Valetini converted. (Force 7–7 Drua)

28 mins – TRY DRUA: Zuriel Togiatama scored in the left corner after Isaak Fines-Leleiwasa fired a pass to the short side where the hooker was unmarked following the lineout. Valetini missed the conversion. (Force 7–12 Drua)

Half-time: Force 7–12 Drua. The Drua led through their physicality at the breakdown and dangerous attacking flair, with Salawa and Togiatama crossing. The Force struggled with handling errors and ill-discipline, with the official warning issued for a count-up of penalties. Burey managed territory well but the hosts lacked clinical finishing.

51 mins – TRY FORCE: Vailoni Ekuasi picked from the back of a dominant scrum and powered over Fines-Leleiwasa to score. Burey converted. Kurtley Beale entered as a replacement, becoming the third-highest capped player in Super Rugby history (186). (Force 14–12 Drua)

57 mins – YELLOW CARD DRUA: Maika Tuitubou was sin-binned for a professional foul, slapping the ball out of Nathan Hastie’s hands at the ruck.

64 mins – PENALTY DRUA: Valetini slotted from 20 metres after the Force conceded a string of penalties on their own line, putting the visitors back in front despite being down to 14 men. (Force 14–15 Drua)

69 mins – TRY FORCE: Zac Lomax dived over in the corner after Hamish Stewart kept alive in the tackle and offloaded, with quick hands finding the winger on the edge. Burey missed the conversion. (Force 19–15 Drua)

78 mins – TRY DISALLOWED FORCE: Jeremy Williams appeared to seal the bonus point after Dylan Pietsch retrieved a high ball, but the TMO ruled a knock-on from Zac Lomax in the aerial contest.

Full-time: Force 19–15 Drua

Embed from Getty Images


Full match report to follow.

Match details

Force 19 (Tries: Tizzano, Ekuasi, Lomax; Conversions: Burey 2/3)
Drua 15 (Tries: Salawa, Togiatama; Conversions: Valetini 1/2; Penalties: Valetini 1/1)
Half-time: 7–12

Venue: HBF Park, Perth
Referee: Paul Williams
Assistant Referees: Angus Mabey, Mike Winter
TMO: Aaron Paterson

Teams

Force: 15 Mac Grealy, 14 Zac Lomax, 13 Bayley Kuenzle, 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 Boston Fakafanua, 23 Kurtley Beale.

Fijian Drua: 15 Isikeli Rabitu, 14 Taniela Rakuro, 13 Maika Tuitubou, 12 Virimi Vakatawa, 11 Manasa Mataele, 10 Kemu Valetini, 9 Isaak Fines-Leleiwasa, 8 Isoa Tuwai, 7 Kitione Salawa, 6 Vilive Miramira, 5 Temo Mayanavanua (c), 4 Isoa Nasilasila, 3 Samuela Tawake, 2 Zuriel Togiatama, 1 Meli Tuni.
Replacements: 16 Sairusi Ravudi, 17 Penaia Cakobau, 18 Mesake Doge, 19 Joseva Tamani, 20 Elia Canakaivata, 21 Simione Kuruvoli, 22 Isaiah Armstrong-Ravula, 23 Iosefo Namoce.

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Super Rugby Pacific

Hurricanes 45–28 Highlanders – Super Rugby Pacific Round 15

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Hurricanes 45–28 Highlanders – Super Rugby Pacific Round 15
Hurricanes Eretara Enari, left scores a try during the Hurricanes v Highlanders, Super Rugby Pacific match, Hnry Stadium, Wellington, New Zealand. Saturday, 23 May 2026, (Photo by Marty Melville / action press)

The Hurricanes secured the minor premiership with a comprehensive 45–28 victory over the Highlanders at Hnry Stadium, blitzing their opponents with three tries inside 15 minutes before cruising to their 11th consecutive win over the Southerners. The match was marred by a red card to Highlanders prop Daniel Lienert-Brown for a head-on-head collision that forced Devan Flanders from the field.

Key moments

2 mins – TRY HURRICANES: Josh Moorby finished a coast-to-coast move on his 50th appearance, linking with Devan Flanders and Kini Naholo before easing over on the left edge. Ruben Love converted. (Hurricanes 7–0 Highlanders)

6 mins – RED CARD HIGHLANDERS: Daniel Lienert-Brown was initially sin-binned for a head-on-head collision with Devan Flanders, before the card was upgraded to red after review. Flanders left the field with a head injury.

9 mins – TRY HURRICANES: Kini Naholo walked in on the left edge after Love swung a cutout pass to exploit the numerical advantage. Love converted. (Hurricanes 14–0 Highlanders)

15 mins – TRY HURRICANES: Du’Plessis Kirifi finished down the right after Josh Moorby produced a mesmerising run from deep, beating five defenders. Love converted. (Hurricanes 21–0 Highlanders)

25 mins – TRY HIGHLANDERS: Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens hacked ahead from halfway and won the race with Love to squeeze the ball down. Cameron Millar converted. (Hurricanes 21–7 Highlanders)

29 mins – TRY HURRICANES: Ruben Love chopped inside a couple of front rowers, hit a massive step past Nic Shearer and strode in under the posts. Love converted. (Hurricanes 28–7 Highlanders)

40 mins – TRY HIGHLANDERS: Timoci Tavatavanawai chopped back inside Naholo off a stable scrum and dived over on the right edge on the stroke of half-time. Millar converted. (Hurricanes 28–14 Highlanders)

Half-time: Hurricanes 28–14 Highlanders. The Hurricanes were electric in the opening quarter, scoring three tries before the Highlanders could draw breath. Lienert-Brown’s red card compounded a difficult evening for the visitors, though Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens’ opportunistic try and Tavatavanawai’s effort on the stroke of half-time kept them in touch. Love was outstanding at ten, while Moorby’s try and involvement in Kirifi’s score were highlights.

41 mins – YELLOW CARD HURRICANES: Ngane Punivai was sin-binned for a dangerous tackle on Mitch Dunshea at the restart, taking out the lifter and the jumper who landed dangerously.

42 mins – YELLOW CARD HIGHLANDERS: Xavier Tito-Harris was sent to the sin bin for a deliberate knock-on with a line break on.

43 mins – TRY HURRICANES: Jone Rova flicked an offload for Naholo, who bounced through Jack Taylor to score his second in the left corner. Love converted. (Hurricanes 35–14 Highlanders)

49 mins – TRY HIGHLANDERS: Adam Lennox tapped a free kick and launched himself at the line to score from close range. Millar converted. (Hurricanes 35–21 Highlanders)

52 mins – TRY HURRICANES: Brayden Iose picked out Mitch Dunshea and breezed past him to score in the right corner after superb interplay involving Moorby. Love missed the conversion. (Hurricanes 40–21 Highlanders)

59 mins – TRY HURRICANES: Ereatara Enari powered over in the right corner after Ngane Punivai ran the crash and Peter Lakai bellowed around the corner. Love missed the conversion. (Hurricanes 45–21 Highlanders)

67 mins – YELLOW CARD HURRICANES: Tevita Mafileo was sin-binned for repeated scrum infringements.

68 mins – TRY HIGHLANDERS: Lucas Casey controlled a screwing scrum and powered through Love and Lakai to score down the right. Millar converted. (Hurricanes 45–28 Highlanders)

Full-time: Hurricanes 45–28 Highlanders


Full match report to follow.

Match details

Hurricanes 45 (Tries: Moorby, Naholo 2, Kirifi, Love, Iose, Enari; Conversions: Love 5/7)
Highlanders 28 (Tries: Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens, Tavatavanawai, Lennox, Casey; Conversions: Millar 4/4)
Half-time: 28–14

Venue: Hnry Stadium, Wellington
Referee: Angus Gardner (Australia)
Assistant Referees: George Myers, Matt Kellahan
TMO: Graham Cooper

Teams

Hurricanes: 15 Josh Moorby, 14 Ngane Punivai, 13 Bailyn Sullivan, 12 Jone Rova, 11 Kini Naholo, 10 Ruben Love, 9 Ereatara Enari, 8 Brayden Iose, 7 Peter Lakai, 6 Devan Flanders, 5 Warner Dearns, 4 Isaia Walker-Leawere, 3 Pasilio Tosi, 2 Asafo Aumua, 1 Siale Lauaki.
Replacements: 16 Jacob Devery, 17 Pouri Rakete-Stones, 18 Tevita Mafileo, 19 Tom Allen, 20 Du’Plessis Kirifi (co-c), 21 Jordi Viljoen, 22 Lucas Cashmore, 23 Billy Proctor.

Highlanders: 15 Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens, 14 Xavier Tito-Harris, 13 Jona Nareki, 12 Timoci Tavatavanawai (co-c), 11 Jonah Lowe, 10 Cameron Millar, 9 Nic Shearer, 8 Hugh Renton (co-c), 7 Lucas Casey, 6 Te Kamaka Howden, 5 Mitch Dunshea, 4 Tomás Lavanini, 3 Saula Ma’u, 2 Henry Bell, 1 Daniel Lienert-Brown.
Replacements: 16 Angus Ta’avao, 17 Jack Taylor, 18 Ethan de Groot, 19 Oliver Haig, 20 Sean Withy, 21 Adam Lennox, 22 Stanley Solomon, 23 Meihana Grindlay.

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Super Rugby Pacific

Campbell strikes late as Reds deny Moana Pasifika farewell win

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Campbell strikes late as Reds deny Moana Pasifika farewell win
Reds Jock Campbell during the Moana Pasifika v Reds, Super Rugby Pacific match, North Harbour Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand. Saturday, 23 May 2026, (Photo by Blake Armstrong / action press)

Jock Campbell scored with 90 seconds remaining to break Moana Pasifika’s hearts and give the Queensland Reds a dramatic 33–31 victory at North Harbour Stadium, denying the hosts a fairytale ending in what could prove to be their final home match in Super Rugby Pacific.

Key moments

2 mins – TRY MOANA PASIFIKA: Augustine Pulu raced 40 metres to score after Tevita Latu broke two tackles down the sideline and linked with Patrick Pellegrini. Pellegrini converted. (Moana Pasifika 7–0 Reds)

11 mins – TRY REDS: Tim Ryan finished a stunning counter-attack involving Jock Campbell, with the pair exchanging passes over 50 metres before Ryan dotted down behind the posts. Carter Gordon converted. (Moana Pasifika 7–7 Reds)

14 mins – HELD UP MOANA PASIFIKA: Augustine Pulu was driven over the line but held up after Moana won a penalty and kicked to the corner.

22 mins – TRY REDS: Josh Canham scooped up a deflected pass and powered over from close range. Gordon converted. (Moana Pasifika 7–14 Reds)

27 mins – TRY DISALLOWED MOANA PASIFIKA: Israel Leota dived over in the corner after slick hands along the backline, but the try was ruled out for obstruction by Solomon Alaimalo on Tim Ryan.

40+1 mins – TRY REDS: Tim Ryan spun through a tackle to score his second in the left corner on the stroke of half-time after Josh Nasser had burst through from close range. Gordon converted. (Moana Pasifika 7–21 Reds)

Half-time: Moana Pasifika 7–21 Reds. The Reds dominated after conceding the early try, with Ryan and Campbell electric in broken play and Fraser McReight winning multiple turnovers at the breakdown. Moana had a try disallowed for obstruction and were held up over the line, leaving them to rue missed chances.

45 mins – TRY REDS: Treyvon Pritchard stretched to score in the right corner after Jock Campbell fired a wide ball from a scrum. Gordon missed the conversion. (Moana Pasifika 7–26 Reds)

50 mins – TRY MOANA PASIFIKA: Semisi Tupou Ta’eiloa powered over from close range after Veikoso Poloniati carried powerfully through the midfield and Israel Leota made a surging break. Pellegrini converted. (Moana Pasifika 14–26 Reds)

55 mins – PENALTY TRY MOANA PASIFIKA + YELLOW CARD: The Reds illegally sacked the Moana Pasifika driving maul close to the line. Referee Reuben Keane awarded the penalty try and sin-binned Joe Brial. (Moana Pasifika 21–26 Reds)

58 mins – TRY MOANA PASIFIKA: Israel Leota produced a stunning solo effort, receiving the ball on halfway from a Miracle Faiilagi offload and beating three defenders to score behind the posts. Pellegrini converted. (Moana Pasifika 28–26 Reds)

64 mins – TRY DISALLOWED REDS: Josh Canham crossed for what appeared to be his second try but the TMO found a knock-on by Kalani Thomas in the build-up.

77 mins – PENALTY MOANA PASIFIKA: Pellegrini slotted from 40 metres after the Reds were penalised for obstruction. (Moana Pasifika 31–26 Reds)

79 mins – TRY REDS: Jock Campbell struck with 90 seconds remaining, receiving a Josh Flook offload from a scrum 25 metres out and beating multiple defenders with a change of direction to score near the posts. Ben Volavola converted. (Moana Pasifika 31–33 Reds)

Full-time: Moana Pasifika 31–33 Reds


Match report

Jock Campbell produced a moment of individual brilliance with 90 seconds remaining to snatch a dramatic 33–31 victory for the Queensland Reds over Moana Pasifika at North Harbour Stadium, all but securing a Super Rugby Pacific finals berth while breaking the hearts of a crowd who had dared to dream of a fairytale farewell.

With Moana Pasifika reportedly on the cusp of withdrawing from the competition, the emotion of the occasion was palpable from the outset. Coach Tana Umaga had spoken before the match about the toll of the club’s uncertain future. “It’s been an emotional week, another tough one with all that’s going on,” he said. “We talked about it earlier in the week — if we’re here, let’s do it well. The last thing we want to do is just peter out at the end.”

His players did anything but peter out. An emotion-charged Tau Moana before kick-off set the tone, and Moana had the Reds scrambling inside 90 seconds when Augustine Pulu raced 40 metres to score the opening try after Tevita Latu had broken two tackles down the sideline and linked with Pellegrini. North Harbour Stadium erupted.

The Reds’ response was emphatic. In the 11th minute, Campbell initiated a break from the backfield and combined with Tim Ryan in a stunning passage of interplay that covered nearly 70 metres. The pair exchanged passes three times before Ryan dotted down behind the posts for one of the tries of the season. Gordon converted to level the scores.

Josh Canham’s determination led to a second Reds try in the 22nd minute. Gordon’s cutout pass deflected off a Moana hand, but Canham tracked across the field from his lineout position, scooped up the loose ball and powered over from close range despite having an opponent clinging to his back.

Moana thought they had struck back in the 27th minute when Israel Leota dived acrobatically into the corner after slick hands along the backline, but the try was ruled out for obstruction by Solomon Alaimalo on Tim Ryan. It was a cruel blow for the hosts, who had also been held up over the line through Pulu earlier in the half.

Ryan crashed over for his second on the stroke of half-time after Josh Nasser had burst through from close range, and the Reds went into the break with a commanding 21–7 lead. Tate McDermott, playing his first match since sustaining a hamstring injury against New Zealand last September, had a polished 50-minute cameo in his return, directing traffic efficiently alongside Gordon.

Treyvon Pritchard’s acrobatic one-handed finish in the right corner early in the second half, after Campbell fired a wide ball from a scrum, appeared to put the result beyond doubt at 26–7. But what followed was one of the most remarkable passages of the Super Rugby Pacific season.

Moana Pasifika scored three tries in eight minutes to turn the match on its head. Semisi Tupou Ta’eiloa powered over from close range after Veikoso Poloniati and Israel Leota had carried powerfully through the midfield. Then referee Reuben Keane awarded a penalty try after the Reds illegally sacked a Moana driving maul close to the line, sin-binning Joe Brial in the process. The deficit was suddenly five.

With the Reds down to 14 men, Leota produced the moment of the match — or so it seemed at the time. Receiving the ball on halfway from a Miracle Faiilagi offload, the Brisbane-bred winger beat three defenders with a devastating change of pace and direction to score behind the posts. Pellegrini’s conversion put Moana ahead 28–26, and North Harbour Stadium was rocking.

The Reds had a try to Canham ruled out in the 64th minute after the TMO found a knock-on by replacement halfback Kalani Thomas in the build-up. Pellegrini then extended Moana’s lead to five with a 40-metre penalty in the 77th minute after the Reds were penalised for obstruction, and the upset appeared inevitable.

But Campbell had other ideas. From a strong Reds scrum 25 metres out, replacement fly-half Ben Volavola swung the ball right to Josh Flook, who popped an offload to Campbell. The fullback changed direction inside, skinned two defenders and waltzed in near the posts to level the scores. Volavola made no mistake with the conversion from straight in front.

“They came home with a wet sail,” Campbell said afterwards. “It was a set play for us, and thankfully it worked.”

Reds captain Fraser McReight was equally relieved. “In that last 25 minutes, they had all the momentum. We had to scratch to get it back and had to show some ice in the veins to execute at the end. I’m super proud of the boys,” he said.

The final act was almost as dramatic. Kemara’s restart was secured by replacement forward Vaiuta Latu under enormous pressure, and Volavola thumped the ball into the stands to seal the victory.

The result opens up a six-point gap between the Reds and seventh place, eliminating the Waratahs and Highlanders from finals contention. Reds head coach Les Kiss paid tribute to Moana’s spirit. “You had to respect what was on the line for Moana Pasifika, the emotion and the spirit that came through for them. Their tackles were monstrous at times,” he said. “We find a way. As we have done three or four times this season, we held our nerve and found solutions when we had to.”

Despite the loss, the Moana Pasifika fans stood and applauded their side from the field. While the franchise’s future remains uncertain, the spirit they showed in their potential farewell was anything but a whimper.


Match details

Moana Pasifika 31 (Tries: Pulu, Tupou Ta’eiloa, Penalty Try, Leota; Conversions: Pellegrini 3/3; Penalties: Pellegrini 1/1)
Reds 33 (Tries: Ryan 2, Canham, Pritchard, Campbell; Conversions: Gordon 3/4, Volavola 1/1)
Half-time: 7–21

Venue: North Harbour Stadium, Auckland
Referee: Reuben Keane
Assistant Referees: Jordan Way, Louis Trisley
TMO: Brett Cronan

Teams

Moana Pasifika: 15 William Havili, 14 Israel Leota, 13 Solomon Alaimalo, 12 Tevita Latu, 11 Glen Vaihu, 10 Patrick Pellegrini, 9 Augustine Pulu, 8 Semisi Tupou Ta’eiloa, 7 Semisi Paea, 6 Miracle Faiilagi (c), 5 Veikoso Poloniati, 4 Allan Craig, 3 Atu Moli, 2 Millennium Sanerivi, 1 Malakai Hala-Ngatai.
Replacements: 16 Mamoru Harada, 17 Abraham Pole, 18 Paula Latu, 19 Alefosio Aho, 20 Dominic Ropeti, 21 Siaosi Nginingini, 22 Faletoi Peni, 23 Tyler Pulini.

Reds: 15 Jock Campbell, 14 Treyvon Pritchard, 13 Josh Flook, 12 Filipo Daugunu, 11 Tim Ryan, 10 Carter Gordon, 9 Tate McDermott, 8 Harry Wilson, 7 Fraser McReight (c), 6 Joe Brial, 5 Seru Uru, 4 Josh Canham, 3 Massimo De Lutiis, 2 Josh Nasser, 1 George Blake.
Replacements: 16 Matt Faessler, 17 Jeffery Toomaga-Allen, 18 Zane Nonggorr, 19 Hamish Muller, 20 Vaiuta Latu, 21 Kalani Thomas, 22 Ben Volavola, 23 Lachie Anderson.

What’s next

The Reds host the Fijian Drua at Suncorp Stadium in the final round, needing a win to guarantee their place in the top six. Moana Pasifika travel to Canberra to face the Brumbies in what is scheduled to be their final Super Rugby Pacific match.

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