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The Springboks destruction of the Wallabies was the sort of defeat that gives massacres a bad name. This was a thrashing, a walloping and a devastation.
Go through the thesaurus to find all the words for a massacre – a general slaughter, utter defeat, destruction and so on – and you get a feel for what happened at the citadel of Afrikaner rugby pride and power, Coca-Cola (formerly Ellis) Park in Johannesburg.
The Springboks were the ferocious mongols of Ghengis Khan: and the Wallabies were the hapless villagers put to the sword and fire with a vengeance and brutality.
In the manner of wiping away the blood from a victim, lets get some of the statistics out of the way.
This was the greatest margin of defeat for a Wallaby side, 45 points in arrears, since the team started playing Test rugby in 1899.
It was the second-largest points total conceded since that awful day in 1997 at Pretoria when the Springboks ran riot and scored a total of 61 points to 22.
The Wallabies have now won one of 9 Tests at Johannesburg. The one and only victory was in 1963 when John Thornett side, with the wonderful lineout leaping of Rob Heming, defeated the Springboks. This victory followed a victory in the Test before. Thornett’s side remains the Australian team to win two Tests in succession in South Africa against the Springboks.
When things go as badly wrong as this, it’s because everything goes wrong.
The five replacements to the winning team at Durban weakened the side, rather than strengthened it with new energy.
A couple of the replacements, for Daniel Vickerman and Berrick Barnes, were forced on Robbie Deans. The dropping of Stephen Moore as hooker, bringing in Matt Dunning to start in the front row and playing Phil Waugh ahead of George Smith were own goals scored by the Wallaby coach.
Dunning was substituted after 20 minutes and one would think that after Brisbane his Wallaby career is over.
Waugh showed once again that he is too small and just not a good enough player, especially at the linking game with his running and passing, to be a starter in Test rugby. Like Dunning, you would think that Waugh’s career as a Wallaby is coming to an end and some of the young loosies from the Western Force will be brought into the squad for the November tour.
The Wallaby lineout held up well, especially on the Springboks ball. Victor Matfield, usually so dominant, lost a number of lineouts.
And the Wallaby scrum, aside from a crucial scrum on its tryline when the side was leading 3 – 0 that the Springboks demolished, was adequate.
The Wallabies also did well enough in the rucks and mauls, especially when George Smith came on, to have enough ball to do well in general play.
The experiment with Timana Tahu, though, was a desperate failure. He started well with a long flat pass out to Lote Tuqiri’s wing but it was downhill all the way after that. He seemed to have no idea about defence and for the first time in years the Wallabies were being outflanked easily virtually every time the Springboks ran the ball through the backs.
Rugby league tragics are going to be angry at what I say next, so if you don’t want to read the truth drop down a couple of paragraphs. The truth is this: the days when rugby league greats like Rod Reddy could help the Wallabies win a Rugby World Cup (1991, in fact) by teaching them RL tackling methods and systems are long gone. The rugby league players of today just do not have the tackling nous of their rugby union counterparts, when they play rugby union.
We saw this with Wendell Sailor, often with Lote Tuqiri, always with Mat Rogers and now with Tahu. He reminded me of Andy Farrell’s efforts for England at inside centre a couple of years ago, especially when the Irish centres ran riot – rather like the Springboks on Saturday – with Farrell making all the wrong defensive choices (like Tahu).
Perhaps even more similiar was the case of Henry Paul who was hooked from the side on his debut at inside centre for England against Australia after about 20 minutes of being exposed defensively by the Wallaby centres. Tahu lasted 53 minutes, about half an hour too long.
Ryan Cross, a rugby league player admittedly but a former Australian Schoolboys rugby union player, made an immediate difference when he came on.
I think the Timana Tahu experiment is over for the time being and Deans will have to work out a centre combination of Stirling Mortlock-Ryan Cross for the crucial Brisbane Test against the All Blacks.
Also over, surely, is the fancy of playing Adam Ashley-Cooper ahead of Drew Mitchell at fullback. Ashley Cooper was too often out of position. His kicking was poor. His following up was even worse. There was a big improvement in the way the Wallabies handled the long kicking game of the Springboks when Mitchell came on. But by then, as Rex Mossop used to say: ‘Hang up your glasses. The horse has bolted.’
The Wallabies were tactically inept. Early on in the game they tried to run the ball in confused and confined circumstances from inside their own 22. The result was turnover after turnover, especially from bad handling, which got worse as the players tired rapidly. The Springboks exploited Tahu’s ineptitude at reading back plays, and the points piled on.
Of all the major rugby grounds in the world, with the exception of Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria, Coca-Cola Park at Johannsburg is the worst ground in the world to try and run the ball inside your 22. Because of the altitude of the high veldt the ball travels much further than at sea level. So you get field position very easily by belting the ball downfield, and you hope that the opposition is stupid enough to try to run it back at you – which the Wallabies did.
When they did try to counter-attack with the kick-and-chase game they kicked far too deep, and there was no chase, until Mitchell came on to replace Ashley-Cooper.
If you watch the All Blacks their kick-and-chase game in their last two Tests was very successful because the winger positioned himself beside the fullback and ran on as soon as the ball was kicked to put pressure on the catcher. The Wallabies did not do this. Tuqiri is actually very good in the air. But where was his chase? He’s always complaining about not getting enough ball and so on. But he is a lazy player. Forget about his handling mistakes. He does very little work off the ball, particularly on the kick-chase game, and the Wallabies are at a disadvantage because of this.
It seemed to me that the difficulties of playing at altitude got to the Wallabies very early on in the game. After one early long sequence of play you could hear Matfield in his high-pitched voice shouting as the referee NZer Bryce Lawrence, ‘The Wallabies are faking injuries.’ There was a leaden-footed aspect to the play of the Wallabies that suggested that they were feeling the pressure of the lack of oxygen to their lungs and couldn’t get their second wind.
This brings us to the matter of how visiting teams should deal with having to play at altitude. The theory that works best, according to people who should know, is that you spend as long as you can at the altitude and acclimatise to it, a week before the Test if possible: or you go up as late as possible, the day before the Test, if possible.
Several days at altitude, apparently, leaves you in the worst possible position of a long exposure to the thin air but not enough time to acclimatise. This is what the Wallabies did. And the result was the massacre.
Deans now has the record of the first win in South Africa by the Wallabies in 8 years, and the worst defeat (in terms of a points-margin) in 109 years. Rooster one day, it seems, feather duster the next.
The Test in Brisbane against the All Blacks for the 2008 Tri-Nations championship now looms as a huge challenge for the Wallabies. Two slightly hopeful aspects, one short term and the other long term, emerge from all the – justifiable – doom, gloom and recriminations.
First, the short term message is that a number of the players starting on Saturday can’t be starters against the All Blacks. So selection mistakes should not occur for the next Test. And you would think, too, that the game plan for the side would be more appropriate to the skill level of the side.
Second, the long term message is that teams can recover from massacres. The Springboks came back from two comprehensive losses to score some marvellous tries and win one of their great Test victories.
Also, Rod Macqueen, as the new coach, took 13 of the Wallabies involved in the massacre at Pretoria in 1997 to a famous RWC triumph in 1999.
Robbie Deans and the Wallabies trying together the body and soul of the Wallabies after the Johannesburg massacre should take note of this splendid mantra: ‘The main thing is to keep the main thing the main thing.’
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September 1st 2008 @ 8:55am
Justin said | September 1st 2008 @ 8:55am | Report comment
Bob – no disrespect but considering Waugh can barely catch and pass how would he go throwing into the lineout even if he could manage the scrummaging (and thats a bloody big if)?
September 1st 2008 @ 8:55am
vincent said | September 1st 2008 @ 8:55am | Report comment
Hi Bob,
I noticed that http://www.planet-rugby.com usually lists out officials to test games prior to the game
September 1st 2008 @ 9:13am
Nick (KIA) said | September 1st 2008 @ 9:13am | Report comment
Tah/Benjamin
Re: Tahu
Agree Maori side not great – NZRU made strange choice in including them at expense of NZA, meant that a number of players who could have done with higher level competition in preparation for being replacements in ABs missed out (esp forwards like Tom Donnelly, Anthony Boric and Hayden Reid). Contributed to Dunedin loss to Boks.
Also, no one is doubting Tahu’s skill with ball in hand. He showed a couple of good touches on Sat. But as I and others pointed out prior to the game, was shown up on defence in the win over boks when he came on last week. Vs the Maori, Aus A were running riot, and the quality of the midfield attack against him, meant that he wasn’t tested on defence.
Statistically speaking, he’s likely to be like the rest of the league converts, Brad Thorn excepted, who never really figure out how to adjust their play to the new game in front of them. Defence is much different to league, you could see Tahu trying to double team the ball carrier all the time rather than take his man. Directly lead to at least one try.
I’d be pleased to be proven wrong, but as Benjamin/Spiro point out, give the bloke a chance to learn what to do and see if he’s up to it before lauding him. S14 will be good if he can break into the starting Tah’s centres. I don’t think that is necessarily certain at this point.
September 1st 2008 @ 9:23am
sheek said | September 1st 2008 @ 9:23am | Report comment
Spiro,
In another thread, I suggested that the two heavy defeats in Auckland & Jo’Burg showed that this was still an ordinary team that had been coaxed by a canny coach to mostly play above itself.
The Wallabies will eventually improve, as Deans’ learns what the the team is capable of, & as better quality players come into the side. But for the moment, he has to make the best of what he’s got, which he has mostly been able to do.
September 1st 2008 @ 9:41am
The Link said | September 1st 2008 @ 9:41am | Report comment
Spiro, any coincidence, as Mark Ella has pointed out, that this happens when John Muggleton is no longer defensive/assistant coach? I find it a bit strange that you leave him or Les Kiss out of any analysis.
September 1st 2008 @ 9:41am
eric said | September 1st 2008 @ 9:41am | Report comment
Spiro, “the Wallaby lineout held up well”?!?
I’ll admit I nodded off occasionally, but I did hear Gordon Bray say that we had lost 7 of our own lineouts in a row.
I wouldn’t be so harsh on Tahu just yet. He might be better at outside centre.
Give AAC a bit of slack too. He has just come back from some weeks with a broken hand.
I am at a loss to explain how the Boks scored so many unopposed tries. Nokwe wasn’t touched until his fourth try!
One thing, the Wallabies didn’t defend well against the pass in tackles, leaving gaps for the runners, eg Bekker & Jacobs’ tries.
September 1st 2008 @ 9:46am
OldManEmu said | September 1st 2008 @ 9:46am | Report comment
I agree with most of what Spiro has written but I must take issue with two points he makes about Waugh and Dunning.
Phil Waugh will leave the Wallabies on his terms. Anyone that writes him off does so at their danger. I see a posting suggesting that Phil Waugh can barely catch and pass – that is probably not inaccurate so imagine how much Phil Waugh would have achieved in the game if he had good ball skills. One incident about Phil Waugh that for me defines the man. After Sydney Uni RUFC won the Sydney First Grade premiership in 2001 having been in the 99 and 2000 GFs there was a big party back to the Grandstand, Uni’s clubhouse. I’ve bailed the great man up to have a beer with him. Couldn’t get him to have a beer. I was staggered -”You’ve just won the comp mate” . For a battler like me who had been through the dark days of Uni in the mid 90′s it was incomprehensible. His reply ws something along the lines of “I’m in training for the November Tour”. Amazing. If Phil Waugh is dropped, then he will return.
Dunning should not be written off neither. Like Waugh I think he is a very determined footballer. He has been pilloried for a lot of his career, I think unfairly. This is not the forum to discuss international referee bias against the Wallabis at scrum time – a phenomena that I think has dogged the Wallabies since the aftermath of the RWC 2003 Final when the Poms whinged about Bill Young’s tactics, but my view is that Dunning is a good scrummager who continues to improve, is very good in the lineout, is an excellent player around the field, and a player who is popular with his team mates. Why drop him? And who would replace him?
Finally, I am not the least bit surprised by the flogging. The Springboks are proud people – they were never going to cop the criticism lying down. And a prediction for the Brisbane test – the Wallabies in a whale of a game that will go down as one the greatest tests of all time.
September 1st 2008 @ 9:50am
Peter K said | September 1st 2008 @ 9:50am | Report comment
No doubt that Deans is a better coach than Jones or Connolly, however how much better.
So far he has marginally improved the performances in terms of results.
Yes we had our first away win in SA for years. The question is that could of been more due to SA and PDV being poor than Deans and Wallabies being good.
We always had a good home record.
The real test will be the NH tour.
I had stated that we would be poor with only 1 real kicker in Giteau and at altitide it really hurt us. This comes down to selections.
Tahu needs another season at 12 at S14 level.
Burgess is sorely needed. The scrum we were turned over on , it was clear the boks pushed off the mark way too early, a better scrumhalf would not have fed the ball whilst it was going backwards. He would of done a Gregan and held the ball up and said the scrum is not steady sir.
McMeniman did ok I do not see why he should be dropped.
That was Mortlock’s worst game I have ever seen. A bit early to say his career is over, people of short memories, he has had a couple of blinders this season, more than can be said of the other backs.
For Brisbane, Moore in, Baxter in, Smith in, Burgess in, Cross in, Mitchell in.
September 1st 2008 @ 9:56am
Benjamin said | September 1st 2008 @ 9:56am | Report comment
Good point about the Maori, Nick.
September 1st 2008 @ 10:08am
LeftArmSpinner said | September 1st 2008 @ 10:08am | Report comment
Spiro, We are seeing the cleverness of the concept of the Roar in its full glory!!! A brilliant article with rapid fire, observations from passionate supporters. In the meantime, the mainstream are going with bland, unimaginative and lightweight, one dimensional AAP! ROAR!
Now to the rugby, yes, a disaster by reference to the scoreline, and by the performance of several Wallabies, though I don’t include Tahu in this. More later.
But, it is darkest just before the dawn. We learnt a lot, much of it old lessons previously ignored and Deans now has a mandate to renew the team. It is over for Dunning and Waugh (the invisible man). Mortlock was missing for most of the game, particularly in defence. He provided no leadership, no direction, particularly as they repeatedly stood in the in goal waiting for conversions to be missed!!
AAC actively chose to run backwards after his kicks, waiting for the reply. The alternative is to kick it so that they can’t return it. Kick chasers and better kicks followed by aggressive tackles and counterrucking! He was clearly short of a run and might have been better served by coming back through the bench. Also, he was not seen running the ball at all, and I had thought that that was why he was in the team!
Tahu: I disagree with Spiro about Tahu. On numerous occasions, the Boks swept the ball to the left after strong driving play by their forwards. Many of these same forwards then popped up out wide whlie their Wallabies brethren were buried at the bottom of the ruck and/or sucking in big ones for deear life. Tahu was presented with 2 and 3 man overlaps outside and no cover defence. There was nothing to lose and everything to gain by trying to close off the attack by coming up AND in. He was still going hard at it, in cover defence, getting back to try to stop Nokwe’s 4th try.
As regards the Wallabies tactics, I thought they looked good initially, crisp, good at the breakdown, organised in attack but in the 15th minute, there was a sustained period of Wallaby attack, repelled by the Boks, and ending with a 70 metre clearing kick to touch. I suspect that, with lungs burning, the Wallabies mentally surrendered while the Boks sensed this and went up a gear. Then, even more oxygen deprived, they lost the plot with suicidal attacks in their 22.
Positioning the winger just behind the FB and on the fly chasing the kick to pressure the catcher and put teammates onside is rugby 101. Didn’t happen!!!
I can only agree with Spiro about Tuqiri and his laziness. A summary of the 2008 Tuqiri is, lazy, not quick enough for a winger, average kicker, until recently, good in the air, good tackler but not last Saturday. Hmm, note to Dingo, drop Tuqiri: Less talk and more action.
So, Dunning, Waugh, Mortlock, Tuqiri and of course, Cordingley to go after the Brisbane game. In comes a real tight head prop, Pocock, Cross, Turner and Burgess. Giteau goes to Captain!