Recent educational reforms across Australia have intensified a focus on explicit teaching before problem solving or reasoning in mathematics classrooms. This shift presents significant challenges for primary school mathematics leaders positioned at the intersection of policy implementation, research translation and classroom practice. This round table explores the tensions these middle leaders face as they navigate between mandated pedagogical approaches and mathematics education research-informed practices. Preliminary observations indicate mathematics leaders experience considerable pressure to implement government and sector directives that prioritise explicit teaching before problem solving and reasoning—a concerning development given the limited empirical evidence supporting this approach in mathematics education research sources. This round table invites MERGA members who work directly or indirectly with mathematics leaders to consider how we might collectively support leaders during these reforms. We will examine how mathematics leaders are currently navigating pedagogical tensions, identify strategies to enhance leaders’ access to mathematics education research beyond politically supported evidence sources, and explore ways the MERGA community can provide practical support. Of particular interest is how leaders might leverage MERGA’s Position Statement on Effective Mathematics Teaching as a leadership tool when mediating competing pedagogical demands. This round table aims to strengthen the research-practice connection at a critical juncture in Australian mathematics education.