You have skipped the navigation, tab for page content

The anticipation for this first-ever meeting between the might of Australia and the emerging power of Tonga is palpable.

Neutral fans have been in awe of the passion and intensity frequently on show when the Mate Ma'a have clashed with Toa Samoa in recent years but Tonga's powerful surge into the final four of the last World Cup – and agonising two-point loss to England denying them a berth in the final – convinced everyone it's time for Tonga to get more chances against the 'big three'.

No doubt the defections from Australia and New Zealand of stars like Andrew Fifita, Jason Taumalolo, Siosiua Taukeiaho and David Fusitu'a boosted the little island's strength as a rugby league force and the result now is one of the most impressive forward packs in Test rugby league.

Their squad is boosted by the inclusion of veteran and spiritual leader Sika Manu who was in doubt with a knee injury. The only additions to the squad from the team that soundly beat Samoa back in June are Tevita Pangai jnr plus World Cup squad members Ben Murdoch-Masila and Solomone Kata. Manu Ma'u is missing – he has not played since a nasty facial fracture suffered in that very game – and Rabbitohs prop Tevita Tatola is not selected.

The Aussies will have few changes from the team that lost to New Zealand on Saturday; Reagan Campbell-Gillard and Tyrone Peachey are the two unused squad members who may get a chance while Mal Meninga will be hoping to have Luke Keary for more than the 16 minutes he got in a concussion-reduced debut.

Fifita: 'For us it will be bigger than Origin'

Key match-up: David Klemmer v Andrew Fifita. Two front row firebrands go head-to-head up front in one of the individual battles that could go a long way to deciding this test. Klemmer was the only green and gold forward to make over 100 metres against New Zealand (four of the Kiwis' forwards cracked 100 with two more over 90). Fifita can happily churn out 150+ metres in under 40 minutes of game time and with some other hard-running middles to share the load Fifita can go all out knowing he won't be required for 60 or 70 minutes of tackling. The two starting props are former Test and Origin teammates and each will be desperate to gain the edge over the other.

For the Kangaroos to win: We wrote in our preview last week that if the Kangaroos' new-look spine clicked that should be enough to get them over the line. It did not, and the highly-impressive Kiwis were good enough to make them pay. It's the same again this week; Tonga will look to blow the Roos away through the forwards but Australia unquestionably have more class in the playmaking options. However Daly Cherry-Evans, James Tedesco and Damien Cook will all need improvement from last week.

For the Mata Ma'a to win: The forward pack is where they can get them. The Kangaroos pack was OK against New Zealand but the Kiwis pack was better. If Taumalolo, Fifita, Taukeiaho, Addin Fonua-Blake, Pangai jnr and co can get a roll on then the Aussies won't be able to dictate how they want to play. If this happens Tonga have enough strike in the backs to capitalise.

Kangaroos Stat Attack: Strike centre Latrell Mitchell, up against one of the form defensive centres in the sport – Roosters teammate Joseph Manu – last week managed 142 metres, three line breaks, six tackle busts, three offloads and two line-break assists. "Get Latrell the ball" should be the order of the day.

Mate Ma'a Stat Attack: 475. That is the number of tackles busted by Tonga's seven NRL-based forwards in 2018 (dummy-halves not included in this analysis). Fifita (117) has almost as many as Australia's entire starting pack (127 between McLean, Klemmer, McGuire, Cordner and Kaufusi) combined for this year. Taumalolo's 97, Fonua-Blake's 71, Pangai's 64 and Terepo's 60 are each more than any Kangaroos forward managed this year (bench forward Tyson Frizell's 54 is the most in the squad). Of course there are other things the Australia forwards do well but in terms of a dynamic and hard-to-handle forward running game, the Tongans are miles ahead.

And another thing: Australia will field a maximum of nine players who took part in the World Cup final while Tonga could have as many as 16 of their 17 from their 20-18 World Cup semi-final loss to England on the field. If continuity counts for anything, that is a tick infavour of the Mate Ma'a.

Team Lists

Backs

  • Fullback for Australia is number 1 James Tedesco
    Fullback for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 1 Will Hopoate
  • Winger for Australia is number 2 Dane Gagai
    Winger for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 2 Daniel Tupou
  • Centre for Australia is number 3 Tom Trbojevic
    Centre for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 3 Michael Jennings
  • Centre for Australia is number 4 Latrell Mitchell
    Centre for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 4 Solomone Kata
  • Winger for Australia is number 5 Valentine Holmes
    Winger for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 5 David Fusitu'a
  • Five-Eighth for Australia is number 6 Luke Keary
    Five-Eighth for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 6 Tuimoala Lolohea
  • Halfback for Australia is number 7 Daly Cherry-Evans
    Halfback for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 7 Ata Hingano

Forwards

  • Prop for Australia is number 8 David Klemmer
    Prop for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 8 Andrew Fifita
  • Hooker for Australia is number 9 Damien Cook
    Hooker for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 9 Siliva Havili
  • Prop for Australia is number 10 Jordan McLean
    Prop for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 10 Siosiua Taukeiaho
  • 2nd Row for Australia is number 11 Boyd Cordner
    2nd Row for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 11 Tevita Pangai Junior 
  • 2nd Row for Australia is number 12 Felise Kaufusi
    2nd Row for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 12 Sika Manu
  • Lock for Australia is number 13 Josh McGuire
    Lock for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 13 Jason Taumalolo

Interchange

  • Interchange for Australia is number 14 Ben Hunt
    Interchange for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 14 Sione Katoa
  • Interchange for Australia is number 15 Jake Trbojevic
    Interchange for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 15 Addin  Fonua-Blake
  • Interchange for Australia is number 16 Tyson Frizell
    Interchange for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 16 Joe  Ofahengaue
  • Interchange for Australia is number 17 Aaron Woods
    Interchange for Mate Ma'a Tonga is number 21 Ben  Murdoch-Masila

Match Officials

  • Referee: Gerard Sutton
  • Touch Judge: Nick Beashel
  • Touch Judge: Dave Munro
  • Senior Review Official: Steve Chiddy

Last updated:

Australia: The Kangaroos have named an unchanged line-up to the one that went down to New Zealand last week, meaning Reagan Campbell-Gillard and Tyrone Peachey again miss out. Luke Keary is named at five-eighth after being concussed early last week.

Tonga: In a late change, Ben Murdoch-Masila (No.21) will start on the bench, with Peni Terepo left out of the 17. Tonga have a handful of changes from the mid-year Samoa Test with Solomone Kata and David Fusitu'a replacing Konrad Hurrell and Robert Jennings in the three-quarter line, plus Sika Manu and Tevita Pangai jnr replacing Manu Ma'u and Tevita Tatola in the pack.

Acknowledgement of Country

National Rugby League respects and honours the Traditional Custodians of the land and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and future. We acknowledge the stories, traditions and living cultures of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples on the lands we meet, gather and play on.

Premier Partner

Media Partners

Major Partners

View All Partners