28.04.2026Official Review: Japan Rugby League One 2025-26 Round 16

Division One

It was the ‘defining’ weekend in Japan Rugby League One that wasn’t.
While Shizuoka BlueRevs did move up one place to eighth, confirming Urayasu D-Rocks’ participation in the end-of-season promotion/relegation series in the process, otherwise it is ‘as you were’ on the standings; the top six unchanged with two weeks of the regular season remaining.

Seventh-placed Toyota Verblitz can still have a say in the make-up of the playoffs, though, with today’s 40-28 victory over BlackRams Tokyo putting them within striking distance of a position in the finals.
Steve Hansen’s men took full advantage of a yellow card to BlackRams centre Yuta Kurihara early in the second half, breaking the game open with two tries while their opposition’s complement was reduced.

All Black winger Mark Telea had opened the scoring with the sixth try of his maiden season in League One to put Toyota ahead, but a try by his ex-test teammate TJ Perenara was part of the BlackRams’ response, with the two sides level 14-14 at the break.

Although the former Queensland Reds and Australian Under-20 representative Isaac Lucas put the BlackRams ahead when play resumed with the fifth try of his last four appearances, the yellow card came two minutes later, allowing Toyota to edge ahead.

In an exciting conclusion, Wallaby backrower Liam Gill had the BlackRams back on terms while his Toyota counterpart Ryusei Koike was in the sinbin, only for the Australians’ score to be canceled out four minutes later by Verblitz winger Taichi Takahashi, before his side had been restored to a full muster.
Prop Hamdahn Tuipulotu, the younger brother of All Black second-rower Patrick, settled the issue by scoring the second try of his freshman League One season, four minutes before the end.

The finals door ‘re-opened’ for Verblitz, who are now two points behind sixth-placed Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo, after the two-time champions crashed to a 50-26 defeat against Yokohama Canon Eagles yesterday.
Leon MacDonald’s unheralded outfit, who took seven matches to win for their first-season boss, made it four from their last six after a remarkable turnaround where they overcame the concession of a fourth minute try by ex-(Canterbury) Crusaders hooker Andrew Makalio, to storm to an eight-try-to-four win.

Todd Blackadder’s men had beaten the Eagles 41-19 when the teams met in December.
On a bad day for Brave Lupus, who would have taken a major step towards playoffs qualification with a bonus point win, Toshiba conceded three tries in 10 minutes either side of halftime while flyhalf Richie Mo’unga was in the sinbin.

The triple strike, which included the second of two for the afternoon from the inspirational Eagles skipper and Springbok outside centre Jesse Kriel, floored their higher-ranked opponents.
It was 14-5 when the All Black exited; a scarcely believable 33-5 when he returned.
While the outcome has left Toshiba under pressure to hold onto their tickets for the playoffs, the Eagles are in the box seat to avoid the post-season relegation series, seven points ahead of 11th placed Mitsubishi Sagamihara Dynaboars, whom they face next.

Avoid defeat and what once seemed an unlikely salvage job will have been completed with 80 minutes of the season to spare.
Having averaged 57 points a game across the seven most recent engagements between the teams prior to the start of this season, history suggested Saitama Wild Knights would be far too strong for the Dynaboars.
So, it proved, as the home side ‘batted’ to their pre-season average in a 57-19 win.

While they had ‘held’ the Wild Knights to 33 points, in a 33-3 defeat earlier in the competition, the half century was already on the horizon by halftime yesterday, looming large after the break when inside centre Damian de Allende matched his Springbok midfield mate Kriel by touching down for the second of his two tries.
By the time the fulltime whistle blew at Kumagaya, Saitama had bagged nine tries to secure their eighth try-scoring bonus point from 16 matches.

This is three try-scoring extras less than Kobelco Kobe Steelers.
Dave Rennie’s charges are just a point behind the Wild Knights on the table despite suffering a defeat more, thanks to their 11 bonus points for tries; the latest picked up in a 49-28 demolition of Tokyo Sungoliath.

Kobe are averaging six-and-a-half tries a game; a tally they exceeded against Sungoliath where they deposited seven in the ‘bank’ to take their account beyond 100 tries for the season, the first side in the league to do so.

Sixteen of Kobe’s 105 tries have been scored by their irrepressible skipper, All Black second rower Brodie Retallick, who has failed to cross the opposing goal-line just five times in 16 appearances.
Free of injury after subjecting his body to years of battering on test duty, the 34-year-old is running around with the energy of a first season rookie, and he opened the scoring at Hyogo to set the home side on their way.
Leading in word and by deed, Retallick completed his double midway through the second half as Kobe held the visitors from the capital at bay, picking up the extra log point despite conceding four tries.

Although they suffered a fifth consecutive defeat, results below them on the table continue to work in Sungoliath’s favour and they remain in charge of their finals destiny.
The same cannot be said for Mie Honda Heat, whose shoots of promise following a string of three wins, have withered after they backed up last week’s 44-point stinker against the BlackRams with a 33-point hammering at Spears Edoriku Field.

Having scored just his second try of the season during last week’s win over Sungoliath, World Rugby Player of the Year Malcolm Marx added two more as Kubota Spears dispatched the visitors 54-21 to extend their winning sequence at the ground to 25.
A tight opening saw Kubota ahead by just one point when the Springbok hooker made his first intervention, five minutes before halftime.

When scrumhalf Ippei Okada also scored before the break, Honda suddenly found themselves 20-7 down, with the deficit increasing shortly after the re-start when Marx scored again.
Although fullback Lemeki Lomano Lava and the in-form Flying Fijians’ test hooker Tevita Ikanivere gave Honda hope with tries; the latter’s ninth of the season, Honda still trailed by nine and Okada’s second five-pointer of the afternoon shut the door.

As well as putting the game out of reach, the try precipitated a collapse as Honda leaked four tries in the final 11 minutes, allowing Kubota to pocket maximum points.

Tries by test stars Samu Kerevi and Jasper Wiese came too late to rescue Urayasu who will play the promotion/relegation series for a fourth consecutive season after their 49-26 loss to Shizuoka on Friday night.
Needing a maximum point return to keep their slim playoff hopes alive, the Kwagga Smith-led BlueRevs bounded to a 28-0 halftime lead before resisting a D-Rocks fightback that at one stage threatened to deny Shizuoka the vital extra point.
Brave Blossoms winger Malo Tuitama’s fifth try from his last seven outings two minutes before the end made the try-scoring bonus safe; Shizuoka finishing with a seven-try-to-four count in their favour.

Division Two & Three

Defeats for the top two on the standings has opened up the race for the Division Two spots in the promotion/relegation series, with Hanazono Kintetsu Liner’s surprise 29-19 loss to Shimizu Corporation Koto Blue Sharks yesterday being just the section leader’s second of the season.

Kintetsu’s loss, coupled with Toyota Industries Shuttles Aichi’s shock 29-14 defeat by sixth-placed Kyushu Electric Power Kyuden Voltex on Friday night, trimmed the margin between the top three sides on the standings to eight, leaving the way open for the Blue Sharks to overtake one of the top two, who play each other in the final round.
While the situation at the top of the table has been muddied, at the bottom, a 37-24 loss to Green Rockets means Nippon Steel Kamaishi Seawaves will be joining Hino Red Dolphins in attempting to defend their second-tier status against the top two finishers from Division Three; SkyActivs Hiroshima and SAYAMA SECOM RUGGUTS.

The last unbeaten side across the league’s three divisions, SkyActivs also boast the competition’s highest outright try-scorer, with Andrew Davidson outdoing his second-row colleague Retallick, taking his total to 17 from 11 appearances after a four-try haul in today’s 47-12 win over Le RIRO Fukuoka.

SkyActivs are six points ahead of the RUGGUTS and require one further win to wrap up the division title for the second season running.

Previews&Reports List

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Teams

DIVISION 1

  • URAYASU D-Rocks
  • Kubota Spears
  • KOBELCO KOBE STEELERS
  • SAITAMA WILD KNIGHTS
  • SHIZUOKA BlueRevs
  • TOKYO SUNGOLIATH
  • TOSHIBA BRAVE LUPUS TOKYO
  • TOYOTA VERBLITZ
  • MIE Honda HEAT
  • Mitsubishi Sagamihara Dynaboars
  • YOKOHAMA CANON EAGLES
  • リコーBlackRams Tokyo

DIVISION 2

  • GREEN ROCKETS TOKATSU
  • Kyushudenryoku KyudenVoltex
  • SHIMIZU KOTO BLUE SHARKS
  • Toyota Industries Corporation Shuttles Aichi
  • KAMAISHI SEAWAVES
  • HANAZONO KINTETSU LINERS
  • HINO RED DOLPHINS
  • RedHurricanes Osaka

DIVISION 3

  • Kurita Water Gush Akishima
  • SAYAMA SECOM RUGGUTs
  • Chugoku Electric Power Red Regulions
  • SKYACTIVS HIROSHIMA
  • Yakult Levins Toda
  • LeRIRO Fukuoka
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