Australia hope Waratahs’ Super final triumph translates into test success
Wallabies fans will be hoping that Australia's superlative Super Rugby season, capped by a maiden title for the New South Wales Waratahs, will be a springboard to further success in the test arena this year.

Wallabies fans will be hoping that Australia's superlative Super Rugby season, capped by a maiden title for the New South Wales Waratahs, will be a springboard to further success in the test arena this year.
And for Australians, international success outside the World Cup is measured in only one way - victories over New Zealand and the return of the Bledisloe Cup for the first time since 2002.
It is a tempting leap of logic. A Waratahs side packed with Wallabies pip an All Blacks-laden Canterbury Crusaders to win a maiden provincial title at Sydney's Olympic Stadium.
Therefore, goes the thinking, Australia should have the edge in the opening match of the Rugby Championship at the same arena in two weeks' time.
It sort of worked in 2011 when the Queensland Reds beat the Crusaders in the Super Rugby final in Brisbane and the Wallabies returned to Lang Park to prevail 25-20 in one of their two Tri-Nations tests against New Zealand that year.
It was not enough to reclaim the Bledisloe Cup, however, and in the World Cup semi-finals a couple of months later the All Blacks put Australia firmly back in their box with a 20-6 victory on their way to claiming the Webb Ellis Trophy.
The Brisbane win remains the last time Australia beat the All Blacks, although they did earn an 18-18 draw at the same ground in 2012 to prevent New Zealand from claiming the record for most consecutive victories by a tier one nation.