Fifteenth time lucky for the Wallabies
By Spiro Zavos, 25 Aug 2008 Spiro Zavos is a Roar Expert
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- David Campese, George Smith, Peter de Villiers, Richie McCaw, robbie deans, rugby, Rugby Union, Sam Cordingley, South Africa, Springboks, The Springboks, Tri Nations, wallabies
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It was an ugly but comprehensive victory for the Wallabies over the Springboks at ABSA Stadium in Durban. So, after fifteen attempts, the Wallabies have finally won an away Test in the Tri-Nations tournament. But as the old sports adage says, “a win is a win is a win.”
Ugly or beautiful at the end of play it is the numbers on the scoreboard that ultimately count.
I had a feeling after the opening series of phases launched at the Wallaby tryline failed, with the defence moving the Springboks back in the tackles and then winning a crucial short arm penalty on a turnover that the Wallabies were going to win. The Springboks were strangely lethargic. They lacked organisation. They didn’t seem to have a coherent game. They made mistake after mistake.
As the errors piled up and the Wallabies took their score out to double figures and three scores in front, the crowd became more and more silent, as if they were at a funeral, which they were in a way – the burying of the Springboks Rugby World Cup glory.
At the end of the match the crowd showed its displeasure of what had happened by booing their team off the field. Sic transit gloria mundi. (So ends the glory of the world, the Latin motto shouted out by John Wilkes Booth after he assassinated President Lincoln.)
The South African authorities say that coach Peter de Villiers’ position is not under threat. Perhaps not, just yet. The captain, Victor Matfield, says that the team is committed to the expansive game being introduced by de Villiers. But as David Campese, who now lives in South Africa, noted in a column this week, teams can’t decide to play expansively and then expect the new strategy to work straight away.
The rewards for expansive rugby are high if it is done properly, with hatfuls of tries in the manner of the Springboks a few weeks ago when they scored about 60 points on the trot against the Pumas.
But if the strategy is not done properly and if the team selected to play the expansive game is not correctly selected – two factors that are in play with the current Springboks – then the team gets exposed to breakouts by their opposition when the wide play breaks down with poor passes and lost turnovers. The Springboks suffered 14 turnovers and numerous missed passes which were snaffled up by George Smith in the rucks and mauls and by the outside backs with the dropped passes.
Coach de Villiers is to be applauded for trying to add some additional dimensions to the traditional one-dimensional Springboks game. But he clearly does not understand that the expansive game can only be played with a clever distributor in the five-eights and with an industrious backrower who is excellent digging for the ball in the rucks and mauls in the George Smith/Richie McCaw/Neil Back mould. You only need one of these ‘fetchers,’ as the South African call them. But you do need that one player.
So the ambition to play expansively is not complemented with the selection of a side that can play this game. The Springboks have the ambition but not the means to play the sort of game the coach wants them to play.
Further, coach de Villiers does not understand that the expansive game, like any rugby strategy, must flow from a solid ball-winning play by the forwards. The Springboks scrum has improved but not so much that they can master the Wallabies at scrum time.
In fact, although the Wallaby scrum was crumpled a few times it generally won its ball and the penalties conceded at scrum time were one-all.
In trying to explain why the Springboks were penalised for ‘boring’, Phil Kearns could only make a weak joke about ‘boring play’.
The Fox Sports commentary, aside from the accurate call from Greg Clarke, badly needs the insights and information Rode Kafer brings to his Chalkboard analysis as a counter to the chauvinistic and meaningless shouting from the Kearns/Martin duo.
Rod Kafer would have told us something about the game plan organised by Robbie Deans, instead of the duo ranting against every decision that the excellent referee Lyndon Bray gave against the Wallabies.
It seemed to me that the Deans game plan was a simple one of contesting the contest areas strongly and running strongly down the middle of the field to expose the slow Springboks pack to having to defend both sides of the field. On many occasions, after the Wallabies switched play to another side of the field their backs found themselves confronted by members of the Springboks tight five having a bit of a breather.
The Wallabies contested the rucks and mauls ferociously and, again, exposed the weaknesses in the Springboks game plan.
That game plan called for the big loose forwards and the pacy secondrowers particularly to be out wide ready to break out from anywhere on the field. Springbok ball-runners were not supported when they were tackled and because they were out-numbered by swarming Wallabies found it difficult to release the back to their halfback. The consequences were a flow of short-arm penalties for not releasing/playing the ball on the ground, and many turnovers.
The Springboks are now in a terrible situation. They have lost the rump of their RWC team, especially their hard man Bakkies Botha and their experienced captain John Smit. Their normally ‘best’ players like Victor Matfield, Butch James and Percy Montgomery as bone tired after a long northern winter and are playing well below their best. They don’t have a world class ‘fetcher’ or five-eight. They have lost three Tri-Nations Tests in a row.
You could almost feel sorry for the Springboks until you remembered C J van der Linde, the continually thuggish prop, head-butting Sam Cordingley as the Springboks lost yet another ruck as the Wallabies poured in numbers to the breakdown.
Ellis Park, Johannesburg, has been a citadel of Afrikaaner rugby. It suddenly looks like a very vulnerable citadel for next Saturday’s Test.
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August 25th 2008 @ 9:56am
LeftArmSpinner said | August 25th 2008 @ 9:56am | Report comment
Spiro, the overwhelming memory of the game, after all the froth and bubble, was of the Wallabies getting fast, clean phase ball and doing more with it. This is a combination of factors, chicken and egg if you like. The Wallabies fetchers (and other forwards) got the ball quickly, providing the backs with quality ball which they then used to outflank and pressure the boks, helping to make the next breakdown favourable to the Wallabies getting quality ball. It had to take its toll and it did. Add to this, punishing, resilient defence and you have the ingredients for a win. Wallaby field position took the Boks field goal out of the equation.
The Wallabies are settled off the field, only playing in one competition and hence focused and rested.
Bring on J’Burg and Brisbane. But, I say it again, its Tahu Time!!!!
August 25th 2008 @ 10:15am
Chris Ash, syd Aust said | August 25th 2008 @ 10:15am | Report comment
I hear everyone saying the TN will come down to the brisbane test between the AB’s & the Wallabies on Sat 13th Sep.
Well if the wallabies manage to win with a bonus point (4+ tires) next week at Ellis park that will put them on 18 points on the tri nations ladder, 4 points clear of the All Blacks. Then if (unlikely im sure :p) they manage to screw up at suncorp but only loose by <7 points and not letting the AB’s get 4+ tries – they will win the TN by 1 point with a total of 19 points, as the all blacks will be on 18 points (but loose the bledisloe at the same time)
abit daunting…
as im going to honkers for the final bledisloe i want to see them get up on the AB’s to make it a real spectacle in Nov.
anyone else’s thoughts ?
August 25th 2008 @ 10:17am
Chris Ash, syd Aust said | August 25th 2008 @ 10:17am | Report comment
ps well written article Spiro (got carried away with another topic sry)
August 25th 2008 @ 10:37am
Peter K said | August 25th 2008 @ 10:37am | Report comment
Spiro good report on the game.
Wallabies won it at the breakdown, their intensity and a better backline. Won ball and did more with it.
Wallabies have a lot to imporve though, that was one of the worst displays by the Boks I have seen.
Kafer is a really good call. His chalkboard analysis on inside rugby is the best analysis of rugby provided to the public I have ever seen.
The Boks have not lost that many players, maybe they had a good draw at the WC and they are not that good. PDV is a shocker of a coach.
I disagree re Bray. As I pointed out on another post he missed many major incidents. He tolerated the thuggish Bok antics far too much instead of warning and yellow carding when they persisted.
August 25th 2008 @ 10:52am
mudskipper said | August 25th 2008 @ 10:52am | Report comment
A little more Latin…for Spiro
Aspirat primo Fortuna labori – Fortune smiles upon our first effort…And…Fortitudine vincimus – By endurance we conquer…
First Johannesburg and then the All Blacks in Brisbane…All is possible for the Wallabies in 2008…Win the Tri-Nations and Bledisloe Cup.
Springboks have lost 4 of their 5 Tri-Nation matches…This week will Robbie Deans play to win in Johannesburg or prepare his team to win the Tri-Nations tournament in September 13 at Brisbane?
August 25th 2008 @ 10:55am
tarpo said | August 25th 2008 @ 10:55am | Report comment
Thank goodness that Fox at least showed the game live, what possible good does Channel 7 do for the game of rugby.
Agree Kearns had his moments as a player but as a commentator he is hopeless. Countless times he just makes things up & are plain wrong, he has to go.
Justin, yes thank heavens we were spared the SA rubbish.
August 25th 2008 @ 11:00am
tarpo said | August 25th 2008 @ 11:00am | Report comment
Mudskipper, thanks for the Latin lesson, Robbie will play to win, one of his many strengths is to focus on the now, win this week & another layer of belief is biult. Then is on in Bris Vegas!!
Enjoed the article as always Spiro
August 25th 2008 @ 11:08am
Jameswm said | August 25th 2008 @ 11:08am | Report comment
The Boks were back to their thuggish worst.
VDLinde was bad but Burger worse. Burger tried to twist George Smith’s leg at one stage, Meads style. He tipped an Aussie on his head (from off side). He threw punches. He was altogether thuggish and outplayed (perhaps one follows the other). It’s a shame, as he can be a wonderful physical player.
Our scrum was actually rock solid when Baxter came on. Who knows how much of this was because he was fresh and the opposition tiring?
Tahu had 2 touches for 2 offloads leading to breaks. Missed one tackle, but the guy had to run a long way infield to beat him. A calculated gamble.
Mortlock played a wonderful captain’s knock, capped off by that try. Lote dropped a couple but was otherwise a menace.
Horwill and Elsom add such a hard edge to the team.
Giteau was close to MOM and controlled the game, not bad for someone suposedly not a real 5/8!
August 25th 2008 @ 11:11am
Jerry said | August 25th 2008 @ 11:11am | Report comment
James – “Burger tried to twist George Smith’s leg at one stage, Meads style.”
Worse than that – he tried to twist something between the legs.
August 25th 2008 @ 11:11am
Harry said | August 25th 2008 @ 11:11am | Report comment
Chris Ash you are right and we sould have been in a far better position had 1) we got a 4th try on the weekend, Gits came close to getting a runaway and, more relevantly 2) we hadn’t gifted the Kiwi’s that last try in Auckland with that stupid and pointless running of the ball after full time.
But anyway the Brissy match will be a decider whatever happens this weekend.
I fully agree with the castigation of Greg Martin and Phil Kearns, they are an embarassment. Someone bagged the SA commentators above, to be honest I find them the best of the lot, certaintly better than Fox, 7 and also ahead of the Kiwi’s – who are the opposite to our lot who are shamemlessly partisan and biased, the Kiwi’s try to be impartial but can’t eg. “maybe Tana and Kevin got their timing slightly wrong” was their description of the illegal, dangerous and off-the-ball cheap shot piledriving of the Lions skipper in the first minute of the Lions/AB series in 05.