Waratahs beat Blues in Super Rugby

Bernard Foley has saved the NSW Waratahs' blushes but there was no saving face for referee Jaco Peyper in a drab Super Rugby spectacle at Allianz Stadium.

NSW Waratahs players celebrate at full time

Bernard Foley has booted the NSW Waratahs back into Super Rugby's top six after a win in Sydney. (AAP)

Bernard Foley has booted the NSW Waratahs back into Super Rugby's top six on a night of comedy and melodrama at Allianz Stadium.

Two second-half penalty goals from Foley and a late try to replacement Peter Betham saved the Waratahs' blushes in a drab 23-11 victory over the winless and last-placed Blues.

But there was no saving face for referee Jaco Peyper on Saturday night.

Disgruntled fans jeered and booed Peyper after the South African spent the last five minutes of the first half relentlessly re-setting scrums as the Waratahs camped themselves on the Blues line.

Peyper then drew the big thumbs down and further mocking from the Waratahs faithful after rather unnecessarily waiting for security guards and police to escort him from the field to the sheds for the halftime interval.

Peyper's reception was in stark contrast to that which his countryman Jacques Potgieter earned.

Five days after being fined $20,000 by the Australian Rugby Union for making homophobic slurs in the Waratahs' heated derby win over the Brumbies, Potgeiter received a standing ovation after a typically wholehearted display.

Skipper Dave Dennis, who finished the game in the blood bin after copping an illegal high shot from Blues captain Jerome Kaino, and barnstorming lock Will Skelton also draw rapturous applause after the NSW forwards edged their New Zealand counterparts in a bruising encounter.

There was no sign of the dour spectacle to follow when Waratahs halfback Nick Phipps scored under the posts in the eighth minute after a polished set move and lovely short ball from Kurtley Beale to Michael Hooper from a lineout win.

Hooper's last pass to Phipps looked a touch forward but the TMO cleared it and Foley's conversion made it 7-0.

Israel Folau and Beale, in particular, were looking sharp, the forwards were carrying and hitting with venom and the Waratahs appeared up for the contest.

Wingers Taqele Naiyaravoro and Rob Horne were denied further tries in opposite corners in the space of 15 minutes after video replays confirmed Folau had spilt the ball in heavy traffic in the lead-up to both efforts.

As the hosts lost their sparkle and intensity, journeyman five-eighth Dan Bowden - in his first Super Rugby start in five years - slotted two penalty goals to reduce the Tahs' lead to just a point at the break.

The Blues briefly snatched a four-point advantage 15 minutes into the second half when powerful centre Francis Saili crashed over.

But Foley had the final say, his two penalties and the conversion of Betham's strike enough to secure NSW's fourth win from six outings in their title defence.

The Waratahs were hammered 8-1 in the penalties in the first half and won the count 9-1 after the break coach and Michael Cheika said he had no qualms with the referee's performance.

But he wasn't complaining about the crowd's passion, even if he felt Peyper might have been harshly treated by the Tahs' fans.

"I think the crowd just wanted us to score. That's pretty normal. I wanted us to score as well," Cheika said.

"So that's the home crowd. That's what we want. That's what we've been looking for over the years - to get the crowd into the game.

"Over the last year or two, that's been happening more and more and we enjoy it."

Blues coach Sir John Kirwan rued having Kaino in the sin bin for the last nine minutes and Cheika agreed the visiting captain was unlucky to have been yellow-carded.

"It was a head clash," Cheika said.

The win pulled the Waratahs to just two competition points behind Australian conference leaders the Brumbies.


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Source: AAP


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