
Brumbies legend says team tapered for Super finals push
Winner of two Super Rugby titles, Joe Roff feels the Brumbies have got their preparations right this season after falling short in recent years.
The ACT franchise face the table-topping Chiefs in Hamilton on Saturday afternoon with the winner advancing to the Super Rugby Pacific grand final.
Roff was part of the title-winning Brumbies sides in 2000 and 2004, which was the club's last trophy, but the Wallabies legend says former teammate and coach Stephen Larkham has the team primed to perform.
The Brumbies have made the last four semi-finals but haven't been able to make the decider.
"Speaking with Steve ... he has unfinished business here," Roff told AAP.
"He knows now, in the cycle of his coaching evolution, that the Melbourne Cup is not won in February.
"He's coached his team to be primed at the right time of the season and so this weekend, I'm expecting and looking forward to a big performance."
No Australian team has won a Super play-off in New Zealand with a 0-20 record, but Roff said that statistic shouldn't bother the Brumbies.
They snapped a 12-year hoodoo in Auckland against the Blues this season while they've also beaten the Chiefs in Hamilton, back in 2022.
"I see with the Brumbies a sense of self belief," Roff said.
"It was only two years ago where, as an Australian public, we were saying we don't know how to beat New Zealand Super Rugby sides and that is not the case anymore, not by any, any stretch.
"The belief that the Brumbies have going over to play against a wounded Chiefs team, who will come out very hard, is there."
Speaking from Hamilton, Brumbies lock Nick Frost said such records were there to be broken and asked "why not us".
"Obviously a lot of it is a bit upstairs, a bit mental," Frost said.
"It's we haven't won here for a while or we don't do that well', but it's why not, why can't we be the first to break a record, why can't we be the first team to do that?
"In 2013, the Brumbies were the first Australian team to win a play-off match in South Africa ... so the record in New Zealand is going to be broken one day so why can't it be us?"
Frost said the team wanted to start well and believed they had the ability to close out a tight game if that was how it unfolded.
"We've worked at our game through the year to be able to really close out games and we obviously fell short against the Crusaders, but we still have that big belief we can come home with a wet sail," the Wallabies forward said.
"Probably the big thing is starting well, we didn't do that against the Crusaders and you let a quality side get out to a big lead it's hard to claw back, so we want to start strong and start hard."
The Chiefs have lost the last two grand finals and were upset by the Blues in the qualifying final, but have All Blacks Luke Jacobson and Quinn Tupaea back in the line-up.
The Brumbies, who overcame the Hurricanes in their week-one final, are unchanged.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


7NEWS
16 minutes ago
- 7NEWS
Zac Lomax makes sad admission on wayward kicking in NSW's State of Origin II defeat to Queensland
Zac Lomax concedes his goalkicking 'wasn't ideal' in the second State of Origin game but has vowed not to board any emotional rollercoaster triggered by NSW's tight loss. NSW scored five tries to Queensland's four in Wednesday night's game but went down 26-24 as Lomax landed only two of five attempts at goal in wet and wild conditions. Nathan Cleary's groin injury left goalkicking duties to Lomax at the 11th hour and the right winger could have pushed the Blues to an unassailable 2-0 series lead off his boot. Instead, the result moves the series to a game three decider in Sydney on July 9, and denies NSW the chance for a first series clean sweep since 2000. Lomax said it was important not to become weighed down after the defeat. 'Week in week out, it's a rollercoaster of emotions. I guess like the first game, everyone was singing NSW's praises and game two, we lost. That's the way it goes,' he said. 'That's why you can't buy into it too much.' Parramatta winger Lomax said it could be easy to fall into thinking it was he alone who cost NSW the game. In reality, the Blues conceded eight unanswered penalties and completed at only 58 per cent as they fell 26-6 down at half-time. While critics may have pinned the loss on his kicking, Lomax said: 'It's easy to look at it that way because it (the margin) is two points and a goal is two points. For me, I pride myself on being a good goalkicker as well. 'It was not ideal. But as I said, it gives you guys (the media) something to talk about and the lead-in into game three. 'The thing is, I probably couldn't have struck them any better. They just sat out there. 'We were on the receiving end of it (defeat) but that's the way that footy goes. The best thing is we get another game, game three, and we'll be up for it.' Before then, Lomax is predicting a harsh reception playing before St George Illawarra's home crowd for the first time since his highly publicised exit from the club. Lomax surprised the NRL world last year by requesting a release from his Dragons deal amid career-best form that eventually yielded Australian and NSW debuts. After weeks of build-up the Dragons relented to Lomax's request and paved the way for him to sign at Parramatta, where he has continued to excel on the wing. A Dragon for 114 games, Lomax expects some rough treatment when he runs out at Wollongong in the Eels' blue-and-gold strip on Saturday evening. 'I'm sure I won't get a real nice reception there but that's the way that it goes,' he said after Parramatta's 36-20 defeat of Gold Coast. 'You completely try and take the emotion out of it because emotion can affect your game positively and negatively. 'For us it's learning what we did well tonight (against Gold Coast), learning things we can improve on.'


West Australian
an hour ago
- West Australian
Alex Ducas: Geraldton product becomes ninth Australian to earn NBA championship ring as Oklahoma City triumph
Geraldton's Alex Ducas has become the ninth Australian-born player -and the second West Aussie - to win an NBA championship ring after Oklahoma City prevailed in the deciding game of the finals against Indiana. The Thunder proved too strong in Game 7 with a 103-91 triumph on Monday morning (WA time), sparking scenes of wild celebration on their home court. Among those on the podium was Ducas, who didn't take to the court in the playoffs but earns a ring after being a part of the squad in their historic season. Ducas featured in 21 games during the regular season, averaging 1.7 points and 1.2 rebounds per game in a role as a depth guard behind a stacked Thunder rotation led by league and finals MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. The 24-year-old joins three-time Chicago Bulls champion Luc Longley as the only WA products to have achieved title success in the NBA. Seven other Aussie-born players also boast championship experience: Andrew Gaze (San Antonio, 1999), Patty Mills (San Antonio, 2014), Aron Baynes (San Antonio, 2014), Andrew Bogut (Golden State, 2015), Matthew Dellavedova (Cleveland, 2016), Kyrie Irving (Cleveland, 2016) and Jack White (Denver, 2023). Ducas attended Geraldton's Nagle Catholic College and played for his hometown Buccaneers before attending Basketball Australia's Centre of Excellence and subsequently heading to college at famous Aussie breeding ground St Mary's in California. He went undrafted last June but was snapped up by the Thunder after impressing for their Summer League affiliate, paving the way for his championship honour. The result meant fellow Aussie Johnny Furphy missed out on his own ring as Indiana fell short of an unlikely finals upset. Gilgeous-Alexander finished off his MVP season with 29 points and 12 assists to help the Thunder recover from a one-point deficit at half-time to romp to victory. Jalen Williams scored 20 and Chet Holmgren had 18 for OKC, who were pushed to a Game 7 brink in the NBA Finals — but finished off a season for the ages at home. Oklahoma City won 84 games between the regular season and the playoffs, tying the 1996-97 Chicago Bulls for third-most in any season. Only Golden State (88 in 2016-17) and the Bulls (87 in 2015-16) won more. The day was soured by a suspected Achilles injury to Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton in the opening quarter, cruelling the visitors' hopes of an upset win.


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Alexander the great! Geraldton product wins NBA ring
Geraldton's Alex Ducas has become the ninth Australian-born player -and the second West Aussie - to win an NBA championship ring after Oklahoma City prevailed in the deciding game of the finals against Indiana. The Thunder proved too strong in Game 7 with a 103-91 triumph on Monday morning (WA time), sparking scenes of wild celebration on their home court. Among those on the podium was Ducas, who didn't take to the court in the playoffs but earns a ring after being a part of the squad in their historic season. Ducas featured in 21 games during the regular season, averaging 1.7 points and 1.2 rebounds per game in a role as a depth guard behind a stacked Thunder rotation led by league and finals MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Ducas in action during the regular season. Credit: Cooper Neill / NBAE via Getty Images The 24-year-old joins three-time Chicago Bulls champion Luc Longley as the only WA products to have achieved title success in the NBA. Seven other Aussie-born players also boast championship experience: Andrew Gaze (San Antonio, 1999), Patty Mills (San Antonio, 2014), Aron Baynes (San Antonio, 2014), Andrew Bogut (Golden State, 2015), Matthew Dellavedova (Cleveland, 2016), Kyrie Irving (Cleveland, 2016) and Jack White (Denver, 2023). If you'd like to view this content, please adjust your . To find out more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Guide. Ducas attended Geraldton's Nagle Catholic College and played for his hometown Buccaneers before attending Basketball Australia's Centre of Excellence and subsequently heading to college at famous Aussie breeding ground St Mary's in California. He went undrafted last June but was snapped up by the Thunder after impressing for their Summer League affiliate, paving the way for his championship honour. The Thunder celebrate their win. Credit: Justin Ford / Getty Images The result meant fellow Aussie Johnny Furphy missed out on his own ring as Indiana fell short of an unlikely finals upset. Gilgeous-Alexander finished off his MVP season with 29 points and 12 assists to help the Thunder recover from a one-point deficit at half-time to romp to victory. Jalen Williams scored 20 and Chet Holmgren had 18 for OKC, who were pushed to a Game 7 brink in the NBA Finals — but finished off a season for the ages at home. Oklahoma City won 84 games between the regular season and the playoffs, tying the 1996-97 Chicago Bulls for third-most in any season. Only Golden State (88 in 2016-17) and the Bulls (87 in 2015-16) won more. The day was soured by a suspected Achilles injury to Pacers star Tyrese Haliburton in the opening quarter, cruelling the visitors' hopes of an upset win.