The Wallabies crashed to a 42-26 defeat against France in Brisbane on Saturday, extending their losing streak to six matches—their worst run in a decade—and continuing their winless start to the Nations Championship. As they had done the previous week against Ireland, Australia squandered a half-time lead to be blown away by a scintillating French side, leaving coach Joe Schmidt facing a disappointing farewell in his final Test next week.
First Half: Australia Leads After Early Exchanges
Both teams were stinging from narrow losses the previous week, and their desperation showed in a frantic early tempo. Despite an early jackal and what appeared to be a 50-22 kick from Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, the referee scrubbed it for a high tackle. France took the gift, kicking deep and rolling into Australia’s red zone before unleashing the 145kg Brisbane-born wrecking ball Emmanuel Meafou from close range to open the scoring at 7-0.
Australia were stunned, and hooker Josh Nasser left the field for an HIA, bringing Brandon Paenga-Amosa into the fray. He made an immediate impact, throwing an audacious short line-out which Ryan Lonergan shimmied back. The gold jerseys piled in and peeled off, with Paenga-Amosa finishing what he began to level the score at 7-7.
Australia continued to make errors, and a fumble off the kick-off put them under pressure. A Josh Canham steal and clearance by debutant flyhalf Declan Meredith got them out of trouble, but France struck again. Their No. 10 Romain Ntamack dinked a grubber into the left corner, and Meredith tried to shepherd it into touch only to see Aaron Grandidier-Nkanang fly around the blind side, steal the ball, and score to make it 12-7.
After much of 2025 on the sidelines, Tom Wright had returned and his 50-22 got Australia back on track. As the Wallabies rumbled upfield, Meafou’s head clattered into Rob Valetini’s and was deemed dangerous enough to warrant a yellow card. The home side made the most of the one-man advantage, with a tap and go setting up repeat raids. Finally, the blue line snapped and Fraser McReight thundered over to level the score at 12-12.
Wallabies Take Half-Time Lead
Wallabies captain Harry Wilson is a gambler. Last week, his decision to play it safe and chase three points over five (twice) backfired with both kicks sailing wide. In the 32nd minute, he rolled the dice, kicking for the corner. Josh Canham seized the lineout, and the gold maul steamrolled over, with McReight notching the third double of his career. Lonergan nailed a third conversion to put Australia ahead 21-12 at half-time.
According to match statistics, Australia dominated possession in the first half, with 58% of the ball and 120 more metres gained than France.
Second Half: France Dominates
That half-time advantage didn’t last long. First, France’s Maxime Lucu slotted a penalty to bring his team within a converted score. That try came minutes later as Lucu spun the ball quickly after a Yoram Moefana charge. Fullback Matthieu Jalibert flew into the line and kicked behind the gold line for Grandidier-Nkanang to collect and touch down, levelling the score at 21-21.
But France weren’t done. With both teams emptying their benches, the tourists’ fresh legs served them better. Their maul rumbled into the red zone where Ntamack snuck down the short side and beat Lonergan for pace to snatch back the lead 21-27. With Wright still off the field, Les Bleus went in for the kill. Grandidier-Nkanang and Jalibert were at it again, counter-attacking 70 metres to send Florian Verhaeghe over for a try, extending the lead to 34-21.
At 34-21 down with a quarter to play, Australia looked cooked when Jalibert’s fast hands at the lineout fed Théo Attissogbe to crash over from close range. But they lived again when the referee found a forward pass. Could Australia capitalise? After Lucu’s penalty, they needed 16 points in as many minutes. They launched a breathless assault upfield, every gold jersey chiming in, but dud passes snuffed each opportunity.
As they had the previous week against Ireland, Australia squandered a strong start and half-time lead. France then showed them what elite rugby is about, cutting through with fast hands and feet to send Attissogbe over for a try to make it 42-21. A sold-out Suncorp Stadium, already reeling from a Queensland loss in State of Origin, hung their heads.
Consolation Try and Aftermath
There was a consolation try at the end, but no one cheered. For the Wallabies, it is a ninth loss in 10 Tests. They have now frittered away two home Tests and a lot of local support. If they lose to Italy in Perth next week, they will send Schmidt out a loser. A new coach in Les Kiss—and a new approach—can’t come soon enough.
According to Rugby Australia, the Wallabies have now lost six consecutive Tests for the first time since 2015, and their winless start to the Nations Championship leaves them bottom of the standings with zero points.



