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Sione Tuipulotu rubs Aussie faces in it, reacts to 'humongous' Suaalii hit

By PA
Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii of Australia clashes with Sione Tuipulotu of Scotland as he leaves the field after picking up an injury during the Autumn Nations Series 2024 match between Scotland and Australia at Scottish Gas Murrayfield on November 24, 2024 in Edinburgh, Scotland. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

Bullish captain Sione Tuipulotu insisted Scotland always knew they would end Australia’s autumn resurgence after they cruised to a 27-13 triumph over the nation of his birth.

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The Wallabies arrived in Edinburgh buoyed by wins over England and Wales this month, but they were brought crashing back to earth at Murrayfield by an experienced home side who went up through the gears in a dominant second half.

Australia-born Tuipulotu scored the first of the Scots’ four tries before the break, with Duhan van der Merwe, Josh Bayliss and Finn Russell crossing the whitewash after the break as the hosts eased into a commanding 27-6 lead before Harry Potter’s late consolation for the visitors.

“The feeling throughout the week is we were pretty confident that we’re a better team than this Wallabies team,” he said. “I’m not too sure if it’s an upset, or how the media views it, but we were very confident that we were going to be the better team today.

“It’s a good win, but I don’t think it’s the best win or anything. The way we themed the week is we didn’t really feel like they had played a defensive team like us, and we also didn’t feel like they had played an attacking team like us.

Attack

175
Passes
149
103
Ball Carries
102
311m
Post Contact Metres
257m
9
Line Breaks
2

“We were very confident during the week. We knew they were going to come in with confidence as well, but we knew once we got into the game that we could make them feel pretty uncomfortable, with our defence especially.”

Tuipulotu felt Scotland let Australia off the hook and should have won more convincingly as they ended their autumn campaign with three wins and a spirited defeat by South Africa from their four Tests.

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“I think the scary thing for this group is that that’s probably just a six or seven out of ten performance against a pretty good team,” he said. “It’s just about cleaning up the little bit, the few errors that we had in that game.

“I actually think that scoreline can be a lot bigger. We made a lot of errors on our set-piece and stuff like that when we were clean through.

Sione Tuipulotu
Sione Tuipulotu – PA

“If we can clean up those things and be a bit more ruthless with our set-piece in the finish zone – we had a couple of lineouts that we lost there – we’re a pretty dangerous team.”

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The afternoon was “super special” for Tuipulotu as his 77-year-old Greenock-born grandmother Jaqueline Thomson – the woman by whom he is eligible for Scotland – was in the stand watching him play for his adopted nation for the first time. She then presented the Hopetoun Cup – the trophy for defeating the Aussies – to him after the match.

“I don’t really score many tries, so that one was pretty special to score while my grandma was here and knowing how much she also wanted to beat Australia,” he said.

“I feel really blessed just because of this all happening and not just for me. I’m a little bit emotional about the fact that her life’s just gone full circle and now she gets to sit in the stand and get some recognition.

“It makes me so happy, genuinely. I’m really stoked with how this week’s gone.”

Tuipulotu was on the receiving end of a ferocious tackle from Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii that resulted in the Wallabies’ burgeoning rugby league convert having to go off injured after just 31 minutes.

“To be honest, I didn’t really know it was him that hit me because it felt humongous,” he laughed. “When I popped up, I was just kind of looking around at who it was and then I saw that he was on the ground, so I said something to him and then he went off the pitch.”

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SK 1 hour ago
What is the future of rugby in 2025?

Set pieces are important and the way teams use them is a great indication of how they play the game. No team is showcasing their revolution more than the Springboks. This year they have mauled less and primarily in the attacking third. Otherwise they have tended to set like they are going to maul and then play around the corner or shove the ball out the back. They arent also hitting the crash ball carrier constantly but instead they are choosing to use their width or a big carrying forward in wider areas. While their maul is varied the scrum is still a blunt instrument winning penalties before the backs have a go. Some teams have chosen to blunt their set piece game for more control. The All Blacks are kicking more penalties and are using their powerful scrum as an attacking tool choosing that set piece as an attacking weapon. Their willingness to maul more and in different positions is also becoming more prominent. The French continue to play conservative rugby off the set piece using their big bruisers frequently. The set piece is used differently by different teams. Different teams play different ways and can be successful regardless. They can win games with little territory and possession or smash teams with plenty of both. The game of rugby is for all types and sizes and thats true in the modern era. I hope that administrators keep it that way and dont go further towards a Rugby League style situation. Some administrators are of the opinion that rugby is too slow and needs to be sped up. Why not rather empower teams to choose how they want to play and create a framework that favours neither size nor agility. That favours neither slow tempo play or rock n roll rugby. Create a game that favour both and challenge teams to execute their plans. If World Rugby can create a game like that then it will be the ultimate winner.

35 Go to comments
J
JW 7 hours ago
'Let's not sugarcoat it': Former All Black's urgent call to protect eligibility rules

Yep, no one knows what will happen. Thing is I think (this is me arguing a point here not a random debate with this one) they're better off trialing it now in a controlled environment than waiting to open it up in a knee jerk style reaction to a crumbling organtization and team. They can always stop it again.


The principle idea is that why would players leave just because the door is ajar?


BBBR decides to go but is not good enough to retain the jersey after doing it. NZ no longer need to do what I suggest by paying him to get back upto speed. That is solely a concept of a body that needs to do what I call pick and stick wth players. NZR can't hold onto everyone so they have to choose their BBBRs and if that player comes back from a sabbatical under par it's a priority to get him upto speed as fast as possible because half of his competition has been let go overseas because they can't hold onto them all. Changing eligibility removes that dilemma, if a BBBR isn't playing well you can be assured that someone else is (well the idea is that you can be more assured than if you only selected from domestic players).


So if someone decides they want to go overseas, they better do it with an org than is going to help improve them, otherwise theyre still basically as ineligible as if they would have been scorning a NZ Super side that would have given them the best chance to be an All Black.

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