It was a throwaway line from Nathan Sharpe after an early training session with new Wallabies coach Robbie Deans that got me excited.
Describing Deans’ early philosophy as the coach had outlined it to the players, Sharpe said, “One of the most pleasing things for all the guys is that he wants us to play what’s in front of us”.
“So rather than being really structured and, I guess, oriented to playing predetermined phases, he wants guys in the right position. Make decisions and then back yourself.”
This is without doubt a trait that has been missing in Australian rugby in recent years – the ability for players to back themselves in tight situations, and to make tough decisions on the spot and carry them through.
It is also clear from Deans’ tenure at the Crusaders that he places high value on basic skills: the catch, the pass, the tackle and the breakdown contest. Several young Australian players are limited in one or more of these areas, and lack the game time necessary to develop the skills in pressure situations.
Luckily for the Wallabies and their new coach, the perfect development vehicle exists for giving young players high pressure international rugby experience in front of big crowds, in all different parts of the world.
The IRB Sevens circuit, despite being one of the rugby world’s premier competitions, has been given little support by the ARU in recent years, but the signs are there that Sevens in Australia may be about to undergo something of a rejuvenation.
In mid-March John O’Neill said the ARU would look at their Sevens strategy at their May board meeting: “At the moment, we are a sort of bit half pregnant, I guess. But we don’t like coming eighth in competitions,” he said.
Sevens is the ideal complement to the Deans-led Wallabies, particularly as it is no longer a scrambling contest to find out who has the fastest sprinters, but a highly strategic and physical game of punch and counter-punch.
Modern Sevens rugby demands not only extremely high levels of fitness, but precise handling, the ability to make hard one-on-one tackles and excellent decision making.
If the skills need to be spot on, then the mental focus required to succeed in the tournament format of Sevens is total. A player may play up to 6 games a weekend, often having to tough it out through injury and needing to quickly refocus if they have a bad game.
Coaches already recognise the benefits of developing players playing Sevens.
A recent IRB survey showed the top skill areas that coaches believed were developed by playing Sevens. The areas were: learning to operate in space; improved defensive and attack qualities; improved work rate due to higher fitness levels; better ball retention; and (in a view beautifully aligned with the Deans philosophy) reading the play and playing what is in front of them.
Players can sometimes hide or be protected by their teammates in fifteens rugby.
In Sevens, there is no such luxury. A moments lapse in concentration, a half-hearted tackle, or a poor pass often lead to a turnover or an opposition break, and more often than not, a try is the result.
Because of this, Sevens can lead to heartbreak, as the Australian team found out in London this year against Fiji.
Leading 10-7 with less than two minutes on the clock, the Aussies took a rushed tap, threw a poor pass and conceded a turnover inside the Fijian 22. The Fijians went 75 metres and scored at the other end of the field, condemning the brave Australians to a 12-10 loss.
A win would have seen them competing with the top 8 in the Cup rounds. The loss sent them crashing to the Bowl competition where their best possible tournament finish was a rank of 9th.
This knife edge pressure is recognised by coaches as being of huge benefit to developing players.
IRB research also shows that unions with strong sevens programs like the fact that young players are given an opportunity to participate in a squad environment that takes them traveling, living with their team mates, training, and applying the ethos of rugby away from their home environment.
Not only that, developing players are also introduced to a wide range of new situations to deal with on and off the playing field such as unfamiliar refereeing interpretations, disciplinary procedures at IRB level and best practice doping procedures.
And of course, throughout the IRB Sevens World Series, there are a variety of crowds of up to 45,000 people, ensuring that younger players experience high pressure rugby in heavily charged atmospheres.
So where to from here for Australian sevens rugby?
A good first step would be to ensure that the best possible players are available for next year’s 2009 Rugby World Cup Sevens. This would mean treating the Sevens like any other national team, and placing it clearly above Super 14 on the agenda.
If the IRB carry through some mooted changes in the schedule, the Sevens World Series would be over after the Hong Kong/Adelaide leg in March anyway, so far from being a hindrance to the Super 14 franchises, it may actually become a vital preparation tool for young aspirants.
Another potential step would be to create a separate Sevens business unit or franchise, allowing the Sevens to contract some of their own players as Sevens specialists, and perhaps more importantly, strike their own unique sponsorship deals.
There is little doubt that Sevens costs the ARU a significant amount whilst returning little in the way of cashflow, so anything which would reduce the financial pressure on the union would go a long way. Private equity could be a boon to the Sevens program.
A final left field solution might be to strike a partnership deal with the NRL and field a joint Sevens outfit, or at least take a few league players into the team.
The Sevens World Series will eventually fall about 80 percent outside the league season anyway, and it would allow league players to access a genuine international contest which is not available in their sport.
The travel and big match experience would be unique for the leaguies, and with their proven skills, high levels of fitness and one-on-one defence, they would be tailor made for rugby Sevens.
Whatever the future, the fact is that Australian rugby players are about to freed to “play what’s in front of them”. For developing players, there is no better way to learn how to do that on the big stage than Sevens.
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June 10th 2008 @ 7:59pm
Cutter said | June 10th 2008 @ 7:59pm | Report comment
A couple of points. Those who play for the Crusaders dont necessarily play for Canterbury in the NPC so their records wont necessarily correspond.
Fiji havent converted their 7s success to the 15 man game, but that is largely a result of their set piece and forward inferiority. Props, hookers and locks dont make national 7s teams. Fiji does produce good (but not great) back rowers and had a sublime backline at the world cup who carved Wales and almost South Africa. Those skills can be directly attributable to 7s.
June 10th 2008 @ 8:08pm
Spiro Zavos said | June 10th 2008 @ 8:08pm | Report comment
A new example of how Sevens Rugby can help a gifted player make it in the 15-man game is Adam Thompson. Thompson was a brilliant Under-21 player and in line for an IRB player of the year award. His career floundered in Dunedin. Last year he was drafted into the NZ Sevens side. He played splendidly and was given a Super 14 contract with the Highlanders. He did not make the starting side until well into the tournament. Now he is an All Black. QED.
June 10th 2008 @ 8:50pm
DaveW said | June 10th 2008 @ 8:50pm | Report comment
Well perhaps the emphasis for the development of sevens should not be on the professionals but in the junior systems. The skills learned playing sevens is surely more beneficial to the development of junior players then colt level and upwards for example. I personally never once played sevens or had the opportunity to as a junior player. Only later at uni did I play and soon realised it was not a game made for props. Where fitness aside, my ball skills matched up in no shape or form either.
However, it is intetesting to note that soccer is going through a process now of the implementation of 5 a side games as the lynchpin of their junior development system. Furthermore sighting many points already discussed here, improved technical ability, greater understanding of positional play, fitness etc. I certainly think that there can be only benefits to come from the greater implementation of sevens rugby into junior football.
June 10th 2008 @ 10:10pm
sheek said | June 10th 2008 @ 10:10pm | Report comment
True tah,
My point is that Fiji hasn’t translated those 7s skills into consistent success at 15s.
JimC,
Noted re England team, but my focus was on Australian rugby.
June 11th 2008 @ 3:01pm
kenikenipat said | June 11th 2008 @ 3:01pm | Report comment
The current Aussie 7′s team have been dissapointing (Go Portugal). But it’s not due to the ARU. I’ve heard that its because their oranges haven’t been cut into 6ths or 8ths as is traditional, but quarters or thirds. This means they’re unable to place the orange, mouthguard style, between the lips and teeth because quarters are obviously too large. As a result they are getting dehydrated and that is why they lost to Fiji in London. Eric Rush and Serevi have always been massive fans of the fruit cut into eighths, as their impressive records show.
I think the Orange Boy needs to have a good think about this.
June 27th 2008 @ 4:00pm
Dave said | June 27th 2008 @ 4:00pm | Report comment
The crowd do not boo Australia in Sevens because Australia “played so well”. It was due to an incident of poor sportsmanship.
This boo Australia tradition goes back to one of the early Hong Kong Sevens tournaments in the late 70s.
Right from the first tournament, which I think was in 1976, the crowd has always given lots of support to the underdog in any game. This underdog support is one of the things that made it into the great event it has become.
Not in that first year but soon after it, Australia were playing a true minnow of rugby. From memory I think it was some ex-pat teachers,etc cobbled together to represent Hong Kong but I am not sure. Anyway the match was always going to be a cake walk for the Australian team. During the match one of the Aussie players got unnecessarily physical with one of the Hong Kong players. Then after scoring a try the Aussie player made various hand signals to rub in the fact that Australia were winning and scoring.
In other words it was a display of bad sportsmanship from a vastly superior rugby team towards a minnow team who were doing their best.
From that point on the HK crowd have booed every Australian try.