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Waratahs vs Chiefs: McKenzie needs to be No.10, James O’Connor is right

By Finn Morton at Allianz Stadium, Sydney
Damian McKenzie of the Chiefs looks on during the round nine Super Rugby Pacific match between NSW Waratahs and Chiefs at Allianz Stadium on April 11, 2025 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

The NSW Waratahs have claimed a massive upset by beating the ladder-leading Chiefs 21-14 at Sydney’s Allianz Stadium on Friday evening. After tough losses away to the Hurricanes and Moana Pasifika, the Tahs are back in the winner’s circle.

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Code-hopping Wallaby Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii scored his first try for the Waratahs as they built up a strong lead against the Chiefs. Meanwhile, Damian McKenzie struggled as the home side took control in front of a passionate crowd.

Here are some takeaways.

Match Summary

0
Penalty Goals
0
3
Tries
2
3
Conversions
2
0
Drop Goals
0
110
Carries
158
6
Line Breaks
5
14
Turnovers Lost
18
6
Turnovers Won
7

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Video Spacer

James O’Connor is right about potential Wallabies bolter

Noah Lolesio’s decision to sign a short-term deal in Japan has sparked plenty of discussion and debate within rugby circles this week. In 2024, Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt often overlooked Test candidates who had signed deals away from Australian rugby.

What that means for Lolesio remains to be seen. Schmidt turned to Lolesio on a regular basis to steer the Wallabies around the park as the team’s leading playmaker, but now, many have speculated the coach may have to look elsewhere for the British & Irish Lions Series.

Crusaders first five-eighth James O’Connor name-dropped Tom Lynagh and Ben Donaldson as two candidates to replace Lolesio, while speaking on a recent episode of The Good, The Bad & The Rugby. O’Connor also suggested a bolter could be in the frame for selection.

Lawson Creighton debuted for the Waratahs in the team’s win over the Western Force earlier in the season, and the former Queensland Reds pivot has held onto the starting spot ever since. Creighton has consistently kept one-Test Wallaby Tane Edmed on the bench.

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If there’s any chance Creighton skyrockets in the frame for national selection, then matches like the Tahs’ clash with the Chiefs were always going to be key. With that in mind, Creighton wouldn’t look out of place in a Wallabies jersey.

Creighton started the round nine match with some skewed kicks, which were followed by some clean takes under the high ball, with Damian McKenzie usually returning fire. Throughout the rest of the first quarter, the No. 10 looked calm against the ladder-leading Chiefs.

After some Suaalii brilliance, Creighton nailed a tough conversion about 15 metres in from the right touchline. The loud cheer from the Sydney crowd made it known the attempt was going over before the assistant referees raised their flags.

Creighton reeled in a Damian McKenzie attempted touch-finder soon after, and was generally impressive. If coach Schmidt does move on from Lolesio, it’s becoming more possible each week that Lawson Creighton could be in the mix for selection.

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McKenzie needs to be wearing the No. 10

The Waratahs took a seven-point lead into the sheds at half-time and from a Chiefs perspective, they’re lucky the difference wasn’t more. Lalakai Foketi had come within a whisker of scoring a sensational try down the right edge, but the ball was grounded on the chalk.

But rather than focus on the Waratahs successes in attack, the big story out of the opening term was the Chiefs’ woes. Damian McKenzie went missing, and Josh Jacomb struggled to steer the team around the park as the team’s starting first five-eighth.

McKenzie enjoyed a series of standout performances in the No. 10 jumper, which included two tries in as many matches against the Blues and Moana Pasifika, but shifted to fullback to play the Waratahs – the All Black’s first time in the role since round three.

The Chiefs just didn’t have the same punch that they’ve had in recent weeks.

If the All Blacks’ long-lasting selection headache involving Beauden Barrett and Richie Mo’unga taught everyone anything, it’s that the team’s best player should not be moved out of position. Barrett was the two-time World Rugby Player of the Year yet was moved to fullback.

McKenzie has been the best flyhalf in Super Rugby this season, and is definitely in the race for Player of the Year honours – ranked fifth after eight rounds. If there’s any chance moving McKenzie away from that role might hurt the Chiefs, it just shouldn’t happen.

Now, this isn’t a criticism of Jacomb. The 23-year-old was involved with the All Blacks XV under coach Clayton McMillan last year and could very well enter the frame for even higher honours later this season, but for now, this should be McKenzie’s team.

Teddy Wilson is also knocking at the Wallabies’ door

Creighton isn’t the only Waratah knocking at the Wallabies’ door.

Joey Walton was superb against the Chiefs, and halfback Teddy Wilson continues to step up in place of injured skipper Jake Gordon. Wilson has scored three tries in as many matches since taking over from Gordon, and the youngster so nearly had a double on Friday.

Wilson – who is a former Junior Wallabies captain and representative of the Australian Sevens side – has everything coach Joe Schmidt would like in a Test-level scrum-half: accurate pass, quick decision-making, reliable kicking game, and leadership.

In the early stages of this round nine clash, Wilson seemed to have scored a try, only for the off-field TMO to rule the effort out. But the 23-year-old would still have a try-scoring moment, with the halfback reaping the rewards of some Andrew Kellaway brilliance in the second half.

Gordon joins Tate McDermott and Nic White as three highly likely picks for the Wallabies’ squad to face the British & Irish Lions Series, but Wilson could be in with a chance if either of those three are ruled out.

The Chiefs are still ‘probably favoured to win the comp’

In the Waratahs’ team announcement press release, coach Dan McKellar said the Chiefs are the team that’s “probably favoured to win the comp.” At the midway point of the season, it wasn’t an opinion or statement that many rugby fans would dare disagree with.

The Chiefs have claimed some big wins to date, which included last week’s hard-fought win over the Queensland Reds in Hamilton, and rightly sat in first place after eight weeks. After back-to-back Grand Final defeats, it seems entirely possible they go one better in 2025.

But the Chiefs didn’t look like competition favourites against the Tahs. If anything, in the earlier game on Friday night, the Crusaders looked like the real deal for at least 70 minutes of their crunch Kiwi derby against the Hurricanes at Sky Stadium.

So, has the baton been passed?

No.

Not yet.

The Chiefs have shown enough this season to say they’re the team to beat.

While their performance against the Tahs wasn’t pretty, most Chiefs players had nights to forget at Allianz Stadium. Damian McKenzie was unusually quiet, as was Quinn Tupaea, and the forwards weren’t exactly dominant at the set-piece.

The Chiefs will be better.

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Comments

29 Comments
J
JH 13 days ago

So the Chiefs sweat on Shaun Stevenson returning so they can have him at fullback, and shortly after start messing around with their backline putting Dmac back there. Just silly stuff from the coach.


No wonder NZ is sweating on their 10’s, they keep dicking them about between one position and another. Jack of all trades, master of none.

C
Chiefs Mana 15 days ago

Can’t understand why Chiefs have resorted to such a simple game plan, it’s very easy to defend albeit relentless…Chiefs are at their best when they’re playing fast and unpredictably, runners off 9 for 10+ phases seems like they’re either out of ideas or they’re potentially trying to excise the demons of their style that fell very short last year in the final.


Dmac was woeful, head didn’t seem to be in the game…perhaps a good wake up for him and the team that there’s plenty of rugby still to come this season.

J
JW 13 days ago

It’s not resorted man, this is the same level of performance weve seen from McMillans sides for years. They’re a hard team that relies on some Dmac or Scooter creativity to long dangerous, not patterns.


I think Jacomb can be a very good 10 for the Chiefs but they are going to need to change the plan completely to suit him. What works well with Dmac is not going to work well for Jacomb, perhaps the exact opposite of Dmac as his strength is being strong with the ball flat at the line while making decisions.


Would hope for a really smart coach in the Lancaster mould to take over the chiefs, or a young guy like O’Gara was coming in as attack coach, and build on the good foundation McMillan’s built. Actually Joe Schmidt might be just the guy!

R
Ritea 15 days ago

I honesty believe that Damien McKenzie should not have had a position change and replaced by another. My reason: Replacing one of the top All Black world class player against a newcomer at this stage in Super Rugby is a no brainer. Okay, his kicking may need to be improved on but he is a high profile player. What a huge mistake. 😔

J
JW 15 days ago

Yes all for the sake of progress though. They were willing to take the risk but they likely underestimated the Tahs.


There was talk Dmac might take his sabatical next year, so MacMillan wouldn’t want to leave the club in the lurch without a proven/developed first five.

C
Cantab 15 days ago

Once again it has been shown that no team in this competition is unbeatable. Well done the Waratahs who showed the flair and guts to upset an off colour Chiefs outfit. DMac possibly had his worst performance for a long time. Crusaders now have their nose in front but their return matches against the Blues & Chiefs ( both in Ch Ch ) will likely determine the eventual winner of the round Robin. Not beyond the bounds of possibility that an Aussie team could emerge as the overall winner.

J
JW 15 days ago

Yeah but Saders could finish top of the table still and wouldn’t that make all those calling for Penney’s head last year, and this, look stupid!

J
JW 16 days ago

Well done Tahs to quieten the naysayers that came out of the woodwork last week end, they were always going to be up for it. Was a fun first half to watch.


Nice to see Jacomb get a chance at 10 too and perform very well.

E
EW 16 days ago

Lost count of how many times the Chiefs lost the ball. And when they did get it, they wasted time deciding what to do with it.

C
Cantab 15 days ago

That’s what pressure can do of course and shows that any team can succumb to it.

A
Andrew Nichols 16 days ago

Nah. The 13 man Saders stood up and showed who is boss of this comp. That Chiefs performanve with so many big names against such a limited side as the Waratahs whod been thrashed twice in recent weeks showed their perrennial soft underbelly. Now the Saders are on the top.of the ladder, they wont relinquish it. Good on them but kond of sad for the comp. GP. Over to you.

B
BH 13 days ago

Crusaders have been inconsistent

C
Chiefs Mana 15 days ago

Boss of this comp, wow.

J
JW 15 days ago

LOL what? The Canes were poor last night, Roigard was directionless compared to Hotham, and Laidlaw blew the win with his substitutions.


Large parts of the Saders game was great though yeah, the tight work led by Barrett and those two young halves were brilliant.

0
007 16 days ago

As a diehard, long-suffering Hurricanes supporter - the Crusaders were on another planet tonight, can’t see any other team in the comp’ beating them from hereon in.

0
007 16 days ago

McKenzie was simply inept and lost at sea throughout the duration of the match - quite possibly one of the worst performances by an elite player since the inception of SR.

Macmillan should have started Stevenson and Narawa at 15 and 14, respectively. Wrampling at Centre spent his time attempting to decapitate Suaali’i’s head and deserved a red card upgrade.

H
Head high tackle 12 days ago

Sure. 1 bad game…Put him down. That seems to be the whole “concentration level” for some fans these days. A bloke has a good game and suddenly he is the worlds best and should be ab AB then 1 bad game and its “he should never be an AB again” yet Ive watched rugby for 55 years now and seen many of the best have a bad game or two. Even the great DC had bad games. Imagine if 20 games in to their careers guys like McCaw, Cater have a bad game…Drop them…. Just dumb.

J
JW 16 days ago

Yes people don’t understand how different the roles are between 10 and 15. No doubt a lot of it was down to chance, but he’s also not the young fella that could light it up from anywhere anymore, and when he’s given those sorts of opportunities I’m not surprised the result was similar to Bledisloe I last year.


I’ve had to repeatedly nag the drum that he can’t play 15 in test rugby, looks like I might have missed a beat when it comes to Super Rugby though lol

A
Andrew Nichols 16 days ago

Cant disagree.

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