Townsville Bulletin

Reds ready to menace

- JIM TUCKER

NEW warhead Caleb Timu has saluted the grit of rookie fly half Hamish Stewart in Buenos Aires, where he delivered the Queensland Reds’ first victory overseas since 2015.

Desperate, spirit- infused defence plus a dominant scrum and lineout were the bedrock to the 18- 7 upset of the Jaguares.

Take a bow, Brad Thorn. The novice coach promised a team that would scrap as if they cared and show character in every scrambling tackle or commanding front- on hit.

They needed to in every one of the 149 tackles they were forced to make in the second half to repel the Jaguares, who made just 41 when commanding all the ball for zero points.

“There’s ticker there ... you don’t walk away from the ground or a TV screen saying these guys don’t have a go,” a proud Thorn said.

The reward has been the Reds best start ( 3- 1) to a season since 2013, the same year they last won three games of Super Rugby in succession.

The resolve of the Reds was tested in multiple ways, including the forced change at halftime when Stewart, 20, replaced Jono Lance after a head knock assessment.

They were Stewart’s first minutes of the season, yet he pulled off the key attacking play and a classic late try- saver.

With just over four minutes to play, Stewart torpedoed low into 82- Test Argentinia­n flanker Juan Manuel Leguizamon to force a boot onto the touchline just before he scored.

“Hamish is known for that and I love that he doesn’t take a backward step,” No. 8 Timu said.

“As Thorny said all week, you don’t want to travel this far in vain. Very pleasing.”

Stewart ( 16) topped the tackle count in just 40 minutes, according to Opta Stats.

From a lineout early in the second half, Stewart sent the impressive Timu ( 11 runs for 94m) galloping into a hole after using 135kg Taniela Tupou as rugby’s biggest decoy.

Standout Izack Rodda was the dominant figure in the lineouts, including a steal 10m out, and imposing centre Samu Kerevi made a try- saving strip on the line on halftime.

Thorn reflected on the biggest questions when he took over as a rookie coach and with so many young players.

“’ Could you change the culture?’ and ‘ Can you build something a level up ( from Under- 20s and Queensland Country)?’ were the big two,” Thorn said. “The players have responded in spades and we are a still a work in progress as everyone can see.”

Lance made two try- saving front- on tackles on his line and young flanker Angus ScottYoung worked for the full 80minutes.

 ?? Hamish Stewart. ??
Hamish Stewart.

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