The Star Early Edition

Rennie buoyed by Aussies’ Super form

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DAVE Rennie is hopeful Australia’s teams are closing the gap on their New Zealand rivals in Super Rugby as the Wallabies coach plots to win back the Bledisloe Cup from the All Blacks after a 19-year drought.

Australia’s rebuilding Waratahs stunned New Zealand powerhouse the Crusaders on Saturday, their first win over Kiwi opposition since 2019, while the Brumbies were convincing winners over the Hurricanes on Sunday.

“The other sides all went close… so it’s good,” Rennie said from Melbourne yesterday.

“I think we’re certainly more competitiv­e and teams can take a lot of confidence out of that.

“It’s important that we do well against the Kiwi sides as it gives us confidence, gives our players confidence that playing against some of the best players in the world, they can stand up.”

Australia were whitewashe­d

3-0 in last year’s Bledisloe Cup as New Zealand retained the trophy contested by the trans-Tasman foes for a 19th consecutiv­e season.

The All Blacks’ dominance has been underpinne­d by New Zealand’s strength in Super Rugby, with the nation’s five teams winning 23 out of 25 matches against Australia’s last year.

Rennie said building depth remained a “big challenge” for Australia’s Super Rugby teams to be consistent­ly competitiv­e against the Kiwi sides, but he was more bullish about producing strong match-day squads for the Wallabies.

“We’d be confident we can pick a really strong 23 - our Wallabies bench could add value and it’s crucial against the All Blacks because they’ve got so much depth,” he said.

Australia face the All Blacks in Melbourne on 15 September and at Eden Park on 24 September.

Both Bledisloe Cup clashes double as Tests in the four-nation Rugby Championsh­ip which also features the Springboks and Argentina.

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