Sports

Dylan Pietsch and Tate McDermott’s unique connection to Wellington on Wallabies return

Wallabies Dylan Pietsch and Tate McDermott are very familiar with Sky Stadium, even if they’re used to a lot fewer people on the field.

The two return to Wellington looking to break a two-decade drought of Kiwi dominance in New Zealand after making their Sevens debuts in the capital in 2007.

The then teenagers were thrust into the Australia squad for the new year’s tournament after guiding the Aussies to a World Schools Sevens title in Auckland.

Further strong performances at the Hottest 7s saw then Sevens coach and incoming Brumbies Super Rugby W coach Andy Friend call the duo fresh out of high school onto the international stage.

“Both Tate and Dylan performed well up at Darwin.” said Friend at the time.

“Dylan’s quite a big bloke for an 18-year old; he’s got a good step on him and a good carry of the football – Momentum is his friend and he’s a powerful boy.

“Tate is more of a half, he sees the game of football and has very good feet on him to put people through holes and he can get through holes himself as well.”

Whilst the Australians struggled to a tenth-place finish, it was clear the two young stars were destined for big things.

McDermott debuted for the Reds the following year after featuring for the Junior Wallabies, establishing himself as one of the premier halves in the country since.

Pietsch’s journey involved a longer stint in the Sevens program than his Wallabies teammate, staying for the Tokyo Olympics before earning his Test debut earlier in 2024.

“It was awesome to come out here and play that tournament out in Wellington. I think it was the last year of Wellington,” Pietsch recalled.

“The crowd wasn’t as big as it was going to be on the weekend but good memories and a great place to be.”

Both Pietsch and McDermott made a major impact off the bench in the opening Bledisloe Test in Sydney, with the winger pushing the likes of Marika Koroibete and Andrew Kellaway for a start on Saturday.

“I’d always love to start,” Pietsch said

“We gotta respect what (Marika’s) done in the past and what he does every week … I’m more than happy to start but I understand that Marika is there and is one of the best.”

Related Posts

The Wrap: Gilt-edged chance thrown away as Wallabies well beaten, inaccurate All Blacks clock off a week early

Given the snow that fell in the lead up to the Wallabies match against Scotland, the visitors must have been delighted to find conditions to their favour at…

Superb Scotland blunt Joe Schmidt’s Wallabies to end tourists’ grand slam dream

The Wallabies are still waiting for their first Home Nations grand slam since 1984 after they were outplayed by an outstanding Scotland side, going down 27-13 at Murrayfield….

Jones to love ‘pantomime villain’ role against England

Eddie Jones will be happy performing the role of pantomime villain when he plots England’s downfall at Twickenham, according to prop Ellis Genge. Former Wallabies boss Jones faces…

‘You’re only human’ – Warren Gatland admits negativity in Wales has had an impact on him

Warren Gatland said he remains “motivated” for his job as head coach and has a desire to stay in charge after Wales suffered a 12th successive Test match…

‘Frustrating day’: ‘Sloppy’ All Blacks edge past Italy as Cane, Perenara wave goodbye

Fourteen months after New Zealand smashed Italy 96-17 in Lyon, the All Blacks had to work much harder for their win against their European rivals after managing a…

Springboks manhandle woeful Wales to complete Autumn Nations Series sweep, piling more pressure on Warren Gatland

South Africa cruised to a predictably emphatic 45-12 victory over struggling Wales to finish their Autumn Nations Series campaign on a high note on Saturday. Tries from Franco…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *