Waratahs take their first NZ Super scalp with last-gasp score
The NSW Waratahs remain believers after claiming their first New Zealand scalp of the 2023 season to scramble back into the Super Rugby Pacific’s top eight.
Ben Donaldson’s last-minute conversion of a desperate Mahe Vailanu try earned the Waratahs a heart-stopping 21-20 win over the Highlanders at Allianz Stadium on Friday night.
The thrilling victory thrust Darren Coleman’s side from 10th to sixth on the ladder.
“If I said I wasn’t looking at the ladder, I’d be lying. I pretty much know who everyone is playing for the last five weeks,” a hugely relieved Coleman said.
“We’ve got pretty clear goals about what we want to do in these last six weeks and the first step was tonight and we got the win.
“We’ve just got to keep building momentum and you’ve just got to hit the play-offs in form and relatively healthy and you’re a puncher’s chance.”
Coleman had been banking on the return of a raft of Wallabies to kickstart a run to the quarter-finals aft er last week’s 55-21 drubbing at the hands of the Blues in Auckland.
And the cavalry delivered, with champion flanker Michael Hooper, barnstorming No.8 Langi Gleeson and hooker Dave Porecki all putting in big performances upon their return to the starting XV.
Langi broke the Highlanders’ defence open in the first minute of the game, while man-of-the-match Hooper was typically in the thick of everything all night and even conjured a 50-22 kick that led to a vital try on the stroke of halftime to Lalakai Foketi.
That strike gave the Tahs a 14-6 buffer at the break after two Sam Gilbert penalty goals for the Highlanders all but cancelled out Izaia Perese’s powerhouse try in the 17th minute.
Whistle-happy referee Damon Murphy made for a dour contest but the Waratahs, seemingly locked in a six-way battle for the last three finals spots, will take wins however they come at this stage of the season.
Murphy dished out 20 penalties and back-to-back infringements from the Waratahs allowed Highlanders No.8 Hug h Renton to score from a driving maul to drag the visitors to within a point of the lead.
They hit the front for the first time five minutes later when Aaron Smith darted over.
In a double whammy, Foketi was sin-binned immediately after the Highlanders grabbed a 20-14 lead for a tip tackle in the lead-up to Smith’s try.
Suddenly the Waratahs needed to find something – and they did.
But they left it late.
With Foketi back on and Highlanders forward Pari Pari Parkinson yellow-carded, it was the Waratahs who finished the game with a one-man advantage.
The Highlanders held the Tahs at bay for several minutes before replacement hooker Vailanu finally found his way over and Donaldson coolly converted to snatch the lead back with 32 seconds left on the clock.
“It was a bit stressful up there,” Coleman said of the tension in the NSW coaches’ box.
“There was a period in that second half where they got a roll on and we were going back-to-bac k with errors and I felt like the momentum had swung and might have left us.
“But I’m just proud of the boys to show the ticker to stay in it and that composure at the end to get that try was pretty special.”
Confirms the need to reduce team numbers AND use northern hemisphere refs.
The Attack coaches of both teams are collecting their pay under false pretenses.