I watched the first half live, but only now caught up on the second half. Funny how the score is so similar to the Chiefs game, yet I feel much more positive after the Brumbies game. Perhaps with the score, I was expecting a similar shambles, but it wasn't.
The bamtamweight Tahs pack got over the gain line consistently, was very effective in the scrum, and their defence against the Brumbies rolling maul was very pleasing. They need to get the ball out faster when they're going forward though - seemed a few too many delays there, not sure if that's the scrum-half or the support players. Matt Cockbain might be pretty good.
Their attack was generally direct, and only a few penalties for holding on in the tackle - a real improvement there.
You can't ignore 47 points conceded, but the defensive issues looked like miscalculations from young players rather than the effort issues that occurred against the Chiefs. Mark N (Nawaqanitawase) definitely needs to improve that part of his game. And the Brumbies took every one of their opportunities.
I know the pandemic is Much Bigger Than Sport - but what a shame we don't get to see these young Australian teams develop over this season - something really good is building at the Reds, the Brumbies, and perhaps even the Tahs.
I, too think that there was a lot to like in the Tahs game, and had the game ended up 25-18 that would have been a good reflection of the overall to-and-fro.
There is one other issue that has not been addressed in the thread at all that was extremely significant: At around the sixty minute mark the penalty count was 12-1. Now I am not saying that the Tahs did not deserve to be penalised 12 times in 60 minutes, most of those decisions were absolutely fine with me. But to suggest that the Brumbies only committed one penalisable offence (a scrum offence) in 60 minutes is absolutely ludicrous! At the same time as he whitewashed the Brumbies breakdown and maul work, the Tahs were getting regularly pinged. Now I expect an avalanche of Brumby fans reporting that yes, indeed the Brumbies breakdown work was so good that they didn't offend once in 60 minutes, but it just doesn't wash.
In that 60 minutes not one Brumby throw was called not straight, despite the ball going straight down the line of the Brumbies players and not in the centre of the lineout almost every time. There were multiple forward passes ignored, often 2 or 3 in the one movement. On balance they went about 3:1 the Brumbies way. The Brumbies second try had a blatantly forward pass that was ignored by everyone in the refereeing team. That try caused a major change in game momentum.
Shortly after the yellow card to Dempsey someone must have got a message to Rasivenghe. The previously blameless Brumbies had no less than seven penalties awarded against them in less than 20 minutes. From angels to sinners in the blink of an eye.
Rasivenghe's performance had a major impact in the match outcome. Clearly after 60 minutes the Tahs were beaten and trying to play catch-up. They gave away a couple of tries trying for the miracle ball and running in their 22. The 7-0 penalty count their way didn't help their cause, it only allowed Rasivenghe to say he'd obviously been fair because the penalty count ended up close. But he hadn't.
This is not Rasivenghe's only bad performance this year. Bad referees are a blight on the game and in our game where the decision on whether and who to penalise can be very marginal, if a referee is not constantly reviewing his own performance in game he can leave supporters seething and totally turned off. Those few supporters that are left!
Our season was gone anyway, thanks to Gibson and Hore, so I am under no illusions that the referee ruined our season. But the outpouring of rubbish about how good the Brumbies were was just not justified. They got regularly opened up like a can of sardines by a team full of newbies and has-beens. They are definitely not the assumptive champions they are being portrayed as and Australian rugby is not yet, in my opinion, on the rise. Its still bumping along on the bottom. When the best tight head in Australia got dominated in the first quarter by a first-year just out of U-20's, we have a long way to go.