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Jordan Petaia return on horizon as Reds eye to break long-standing drought against Brumbies

(Photo by Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

After busting a seven-year drought against the NSW Waratahs, Queensland Reds skipper Liam Wright sees no reason to believe his unbeaten team can’t end their Super Rugby hex in Canberra.

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It’s six years since the Reds toppled the Brumbies in the capital and Wright is up for the fight when the two leading teams in Super Rugby AU meet on Saturday.

The Brumbies have won the last such six encounters at home, scoring 35 tries in the process.

Dan McKellar’s men nearly came unstuck in January in round one of the curtailed Super Rugby proper when, with bushfires blazing nearby, they trailed the Reds by 10 points at halftime before prevailing 27-24.

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It’s a result that stings for Wright, who takes some heart from ending an 11-match losing streak against the Waratahs in round one this month.

“It’s been six long years (in Canberra). We’ve put ourselves in with a shot a few times now, especially this year,” he said.

“We made it a mess for ourselves and the Brumbies did really well to come back. We know we can play down there, we’ve just got to do it for the full 80 minutes.

“That’s what we’ve been chasing this whole competition.”

The Reds have been heartened by the return to training of Wallabies sensation Jordan Petaia although Wright rates the outside back’s chances of suiting up this weekend as slim.

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Injury-prone 20-year-old Petaia has been sidelined by a shoulder problem since February but was showing enough to suggest his return isn’t far off.

“He’s tracking along quite nicely and getting back into the full swing of things,” Wright said.

“I think there’s a few more boxes to tick but it’s just nice to see him back in training and looking pretty confident.

“He’s had a bad run so it’s good to see him confident in his body again and just enjoying his footy.”

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A collision of two in-form packs will be fascinating, with Wright relishing the scrum battle in particular.

Tighthead Taniela Tupou has anchored a dominant Reds front row throughout 2020 but Wright didn’t want to light a fuse under the Test-quality Brumbies scrum, even though it hasn’t been imposing in recent weeks.

“They’re still pretty much a Wallabies front row there so you can’t take them lightly or write them off at all,” Wright said.

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R
RedWarrior 39 minutes ago
Records show All Blacks' greatest rugby adversary is now Ireland

Foster was literally whinging about the TMO in the Ireland series in the presser AFTER the RWC final. NZs whinging about the final itself was apparently picked up by Voyager 2 which was near the asteroid belt. What about the whingefest and crybabies after O'Mahony's legendary sledge (during the match) on Sam Cane?


I often hear talk about NZ players being poisoned or similar nonsense during the 1995 final. NZ boast that they are 'superstars' and 'humble heroes' on their own website. You gave England the same treatment in 2002-2003, calling them arrogant just because they beat you. They told the rest of us then what you were like, we should have listened. I would give as much credence to a NZ supporter disliking us, as I would to Krusty the clown saying the same thing. Let's just say your judgement may not be the best.


Regarding 2016, as the referee had basically let NZ away with cheating their way to victory via filthy dangerous play and fouling he was hardly going to pull Sexton up when clearly trying to stop a grounding. NZ always leave the boot or arm in to hurt a try scorer but that seems to be invisible to you entitles lot.


BTW NZ have literally being whinging and crying about Ireland since Soldier field. You are just very bad losers. We will be delighted to be shot of you on Friday. I hope we do so with a win, so that you rethink your philosophy of mocking opponents and spectators you've just beaten.


After the match last Saturday the internet was full of Kiwi supporters basically abusing English folk. Where is your national honour? Where is your national integrity?

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