Hougaard sinks the flimsy Wallabies at Pretoria
By Spiro Zavos, 30 Aug 2010 Spiro Zavos is a Roar Expert
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- Adam Ashley-Cooper, Francois Hougaard, Pretoria, Rugby Union, South Africa, Springboks, Tri Nations, wallabies
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Damn, damn, damn. Why can’t the Wallabies be like the All Blacks.
With minutes to go and with the Wallabies 6 points behind, Adam Ashley-Cooper was passed the ball about 10m out from the Springboks posts. I jumped from my seat with an exultant cry of ‘Yes!’ Try time was coming up.
Then from nowhere Francois Hougaard launched himself as a human missile and smashed Ashley-Cooper, dislodging the ball in the process.
This was the Gregan tackle revisited on the Wallabies.
If ever a tackle saved a Test, Hougaard’s superb, courageous effort was that tackle. Ashley-Cooper was in under the posts for all money if Hougaard had not made his hit.
Even the flimsy Wallabies would have held out the Springboks if the try had been scored. The altitude hoodoo, 47 years without a Test win by the Wallabies on the high veldt, would then have been shattered. And a season that is slipping away into mediocrity for the Wallabies would have been saved.
The Wallabies are flimsy, physically and especially mentally, because they had numerous chances to finish off the Springboks in a Test that raced up and down the field.
The Wallabies’ first kick in the Test, in fact, came in the 12th minute of play. In this time, the Wallabies scored two converted tries. It looked as if the Springboks were in for a hiding.
I wrote in my notebook that the Springboks ‘looked tired, almost uninterested’ in making their tackles and chasing after the ball. Then Juan Smith, one of the best on the field, smashed through on the diagonal for a sensational try. From this moment on, it was game on.
As the try was being converted, I dashed into the toilet for a quick tinkle. When I came back I saw replays of James O’Connor touching down out wide from what looked like a fumble by Bryan Habana. And this is indeed is what happened. Habana dropped the kick-off and O’Connor was in for a try.
The game was moving so quickly that it looked as if it were on fast forward.
Three more tries, one more to the Wallabies and two to the Springboks were scored before half-time. The frenetic pace of play was helped by referee Alain Rolland’s insistence on the tackled player being able to place the ball.
Rolland was so punctilious about this that he seemed to penalise any attempts to play at the ball in the rucks. This applied, it seemed to me, to legal attempts. David Pocock was virtually taken out of the game as a ‘fetcher’ by this. He did not get a turnover in the match.
The effect of this scrupulousness about the rights of the tackled player was that once one of the teams got a roll on with its phases there was an inevitable breaching of the defences. It also meant that towards the end of the Test the Wallabies, who had curiously stayed at sea level for most of the week, ran out of gas.
At half-time, with the scoreline showing Australia 28 – South Africa 24, Greg Clarke, the Fox Sports excellent caller, pointed out that in the last seven Test between the two counties the team leading at half-time won the match.
Not this time.
The Springboks won the second half 18 – 3, a scoreline that was flattered somewhat by a try score by JP Pietersen in the last play of the match when the Wallabies gave up a penalty in an effort to score the winning try.
Robbie Deans came in for criticism from the commentators for not emptying out his bench. And there is something in this.
Several people have posted on The Roar the observation that there are too many play-makers in the Wallaby backline (Genia, Cooper, Giteau and O’Connor) and not enough runners. Berrick Barnes and Anthony Faingaa, with instructions to hit the ball up hard, might have been more effective towards the end of the match than Cooper (who passed beautifully but without too much effect) and Giteau (who tends to disappear in really hard Tests).
The one key substitute that was made in the forwards totally backfired. I have never been a great fan of Nathan Sharpe’s game. But it has lifted this season and he is the best of the current second rowers available for the Wallabies. It was a surprise (and a mistake) that he was taken off rather than Dean Mumm who just does not have the temperament, skills and the mongrel to be a dominating tight forward.
When Sharpe was substituted the Wallabies lineout disintegrated. Apparently, he does the calling. He tried to make the calls from the substitutes bench. But there is no substitute for actually being on the field when making these calls.
The calls from the bench clearly did not work as the Wallabies, pressing to take the lead towards the end of the match, lost two 5m lineout throws when Saia Faignaa threw the ball directly to Victor Matfield. I would have thought that the golden rule for crucial lineouts is never throw the ball anywhere near Matfield.
Phil Kearns summed up the Test as ‘the one that got away.’
There is something in this, of course. But great credit should be given for the tenacious fight-back by the Springboks. They can claim, with some justice, that they won the Test rather than that the Wallabies lost it.
Not many teams can come back from 14 – 0, 21 – 7, and 28 – 25 (at half-time) deficits. It was not until the 50th minute that they got in front for the first time. They scored five tries to the Wallabies four, and kicked some extra long range penalties (which the Wallabies failed to do).
And Hougaard made the tackle that counted. By way of contrast, too many of the Springboks tries involved soft defence by the Wallabies.
What I took out of this was that although the Springboks look to be a fading and aging side, the pride in the jersey and the great tradition of winning is still there.
It was the newest capped player in the squad, Hougaard, who made the crucial tackle and the second most capped player (Matfield with his 100 Tests) who made the vital lineout snatches.
What do the Wallabies do now?
I’d play Elsom at number 8 (and plan to get a new captain), and play Mumm on the side with Pocock. Stephen Moore needs to start to give some stability to the lineout throwing. Salesi Ma’afu gives away too many penalties at the rucks and should be replaced by James Slipper.
In the backs the Wallabies are in desperate need for some direct runners in the middle of the field.
This means, perhaps, Anthony Faignaa and Ashley-Cooper as the centres; or Ashley-Cooper coming in to inside centre and Giteau moving to outside centre; or Kurtley Beale as an outside centre, as Bob Dwyer has suggested.
It is a bit late in the season to try out these combinations and hardly the right time next Saturday when the Wallabies play the Springboks at Blomfontein, a Test they need to win.
Most importantly the Wallabies have to get it into their heads and hearts that they need to start winning these close Tests.
This is the eighth Test in the last year or so they have lost when leading at half-time. Good teams do not lose when they are leading at half time.
The flimsy Wallabies somehow have to become the good as gold Wallabies. But on the evidence of Pretoria they are a long way off this right now, damn it.
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August 30th 2010 @ 9:22am
formeropenside said | August 30th 2010 @ 9:22am | Report comment
The use of the bench is a problem.
One problem with Barnes is that he is not a ball runner – he is a distributor, usually by way of kicking. He is not particularly quick – although he seems to be managing a leg injury much of the time, so perhaps this is the reason – and will rarely run on through a gap.
The Wallabies need to focus on lineout and scrum: as an old forward, lineouts are easier to get up to speed. Not to become dominant, but to get some simple bread and butter throws and everyone knowing what their role is (and able to do more than one role).
I did not think the Wallabies could win this match, but I did not expect them to be able to lose it from the position they were in.
On the upside, it is easier to win the RWC than the 3N – see RWC 2007 – so anything remains possible for next year.
August 30th 2010 @ 9:40am
John Davidson said | August 30th 2010 @ 9:40am | Report comment
We need to sort out our lineout. It was woeful. I don’t care if Vickerman hasn’t played in months, get him in there. Maybe even dust off the cobwebs and get Justin Harrison in there too. And if it gets worse, maybe we wheel out John Eales. He may be retired for quite a few years but at least he knows how to organise a lineout.
August 30th 2010 @ 9:44am
Pablo said | August 30th 2010 @ 9:44am | Report comment
The Wallabies had this in the bag, even half way through the second half and probably beyond. The way i saw it, there were three incidents that finished them off. Firstly, Mumm dropping the ball from a South African kick off, under absolutely no pressure. South Africa scored from the ensuing set piece. The other 2 incidents were losing attacking line-outs less than 10 metres out from the South African line. Unforgivable.
Frankly, some of these guys should hang their heads in shame and publicly apologise for making the Australian Rugby community stay up until 3.00am to witness the one that truly got away.
August 30th 2010 @ 9:52am
Sprigs said | August 30th 2010 @ 9:52am | Report comment
Re commentary. I suggest that somebody at Seven educates Dan Crowley so he will stop making very dodgy statements about people, nationalities and so on.
August 30th 2010 @ 2:45pm
EP - Rugbywits said | August 30th 2010 @ 2:45pm | Report comment
Dan Crowley has no idea in commentary.
Apart from dodgy statements he has these kind of quality colour man commentary insights – “The Wallabies don’t just need to score again before half time, they need to stop the South Africans from scoring.”
I mean really… he probably earnt my whole salary for commentating that game and he offers that!?
August 30th 2010 @ 9:59am
kingplaymaker said | August 30th 2010 @ 9:59am | Report comment
Spiro it was odd how there was a feeling throughout the first half that something would go wrong. Why is this? It wasn’t simply that the Wallabies would panic but something much deeper. The fear of losing?
It reminded me of the autumn international against England when the Wallabies would stroll across the whole pitch and then freeze the moment they came next to the opposition line, and simply couldn’t make those crucial final metres while having easily made so much greater a number to get that far.
Against South Africa it was as if whenever they got to a certain stage in front, rather than relax, they would become incredibly nervous, lose all forward thrust and start making unpressurised mistakes (many of the mistakes i.e. Mumm’s knock-on from a line-out restart, did not result from Springbok pressure at all but rather the pressure exerted by the Wallabies own inner demons).
I think they have now been so battered, so strongly assaulted in the press, have lost so many games since the last run of wins, that they no longer have the deep inner confidence that comes from having had a series of wins in recent memory, as both New Zealand and South Africa have, and which allows them to strengthen in pressurized second halves and the absence of which makes the Wallabies crumble.
Sadly the only solution to that is a run of wins.
Regarding the excess of playmakers, the number is even higher than you mention. Beale is a playmaker, an outstandingly talented inside back who was developing into a great fly-half until Chris Hickey came along, and is only at full-back because even in that position he is superior to the alternatives. In fact many of his interventions in the line were in the form of a playmaker and not a runner, and very successful they were. How long before he demands inclusion as what he is, an inside back? Cooper and Beale as a pair of playmakers at 10 and 12 would be an extraordinary source of creativity.
Barnes is also a playmaker. That means in the starting 15 there are an unbelievable five playmakers (Genia, Cooper, Giteau, O’Connor, Beale) and only two strike runners, Mitchell and AAC (and not very effective ones at that). On the bench there is one more playmaker (Barnes) and a strike runner (Faiingaa). In the end though the problem lies in Australian rugby: aside from Digby Ioane, there are no top quality strike runners.
John O’Neill and Chris Hickey are responsible for this, as the Waratahs and Wallabies in the last two year have managed to lose Tuqiri, Tahu and Nemani Nadolo, three pure strike runners. O’Neill has also made bids for various league strike runners: Karmichael Hunt, Jarryd Hayne, Mark Gasnier, Israel Folau and Greg Inglis. All five bids were too low to convince these players to make the move (what was the point in making such unrealistically low offers at all?).
My personal preference now would be to splash out on Inglis and Hayne and damn the consequences with player negotiations after the world cup: break the bank then if necessary. A Wallaby side with no strike runners cannot conceivably win the world cup (especially as their strength is supposed to be the backs), and the sight of Cooper, Giteau, O’Connor and Beale continually creating situations for each other to create more situations was utterly absurd. A couple of true runners would have torn the game apart when put in those wonderful positions.
A minor point: it still isn’t clear if Sharpe went off because of injury or not.
The Wallabies should try and be positive. They face a tiring Springboks, then New Zealand twice without Dan Carter or much motivation. If they won all three, things would seem better. However, they’ll never get far in the long run relying on AAC and Mitchell as their only strike runners. So Spiro if you have O’Neill’s number call him up and plead with him to buy up Inglis and Hayne, two powerful strike runners young enough to convert well. Then it would be game on again.
August 30th 2010 @ 12:23pm
JB said | August 30th 2010 @ 12:23pm | Report comment
Turner has always been a very strong finisher for ‘tahs. And Hynes is fit as well. Both were in favour but not clear why they’re on the outer after strong S14s. Any objections?
August 30th 2010 @ 2:57pm
EP - Rugbywits said | August 30th 2010 @ 2:57pm | Report comment
KPM – I both agree with this sentence and find it hilarious at the same time!
“The sight of Cooper, Giteau, O’Connor and Beale continually creating situations for each other to create more situations was utterly absurd.”
True. I think Turner being on the wing would be good. I also think either of the Reds wingers that are currently injured would be great on the wing. And there is Cummins in the training side but never getting a run to think about.
But I think Turner is the guy who could be a real classy Test winger given good coaching. He was great when he started out but was made to dumb down his game a lot.
Ashley Cooper is a good runner. With AAC, Ioane and Turner in the same side (WITHOUT O’Connor) we could have 3 quality ball runners to compliment Cooper and Beale at least.
The final decision is what to do with Giteau… replace for a real ball runner or go with the extra playmaker? My preference would be go with the runner.
August 30th 2010 @ 8:40pm
kingplaymaker said | August 30th 2010 @ 8:40pm | Report comment
EP I agree more runners in general should be used, but those three hardly look terrifying. AAC ignoring the dropped ball, made no impact at all when he did manage to catch it, I’m not so sure Turner is talented, and who would bet on Ioane being fit for the World Cup?
August 30th 2010 @ 10:01am
Edgo said | August 30th 2010 @ 10:01am | Report comment
I can’t imagine how the players will be mentally after that test. Played so well in patches with some backline brilliance but manage to lose again. As a supporter I’ve really hurt over the last few years but as a player in the wobbly squad it must feel like groundhog day. They seriously must be struggling up top and know as we do that next week will be same result( or worse)… Followed by ABs. A losing culture is firmly entrenched… Do they need a shrink?
Agree Juan smith had a blinder and hougarrd match turning tackle. Actually thought he was unlucky week before against ABs to be subbed 10 min before end.
I notice even the AB roarers are yet to stick the boot in… God help us even AB fans are feeling sorry for us?
August 30th 2010 @ 10:32am
Stash said | August 30th 2010 @ 10:32am | Report comment
I feel very sorry for the Wallabies after that loss…
August 30th 2010 @ 5:55pm
dunc said | August 30th 2010 @ 5:55pm | Report comment
I am an AB Fan and I would be seriously f***** off if my team played like that. It kind of reminded me when Taine Randell and Ruben Thorne were leading the ABs around the park. Now those were dark days.
August 31st 2010 @ 6:33am
bayboy said | August 31st 2010 @ 6:33am | Report comment
It wasn’t pretty and you don’t need AB fans to highlight this, I think most Australian fans already understand the inadequacies and lack of depth, poor decision making, over rated players (Cooper, Giteau, Elsom & Genia) I’, sorry but so much has been made of the big four and not one of them has done anything that special. OK a one off game, yes there has been some good play but it seems not one of them can string back to back games together.
I think Australians need to stop plucking someone out of mediocrity and putting them on a pedestal and hero worshiping. Unfortunately you build that pedestal so high it is always going to be an almighty thud when it topples which is seemingly more often than not.
Build a steady base of players don’t let anyone think they are better than the rest. Once there is cohesion and unity in the Wallabies then and only then will the team start winning consistently.
Then again is winning consistently really that important these days seems you only have to be on your game for 7 weeks every four years now?
August 30th 2010 @ 10:07am
Harry said | August 30th 2010 @ 10:07am | Report comment
We’ll go on losing when we field a pack containing Brown, Mumm, Ma’afi and Faingaa as starting players. None are test standard at the moment, Faingaa might be and can cut it as a sub, but the others aren’t and never will be. Its a waste of time picking them but we do it again and again – how many tests has Richard Brown played?
Disagree with all those saying if only AAC had scored that try. SA would have found a way to get into our territory (by that stage they were winning lineouts at will, our scrum was dodgy and we began conceding turnovers) and get the winner.
They are completely incapable of consolidating a lead or defending a lead as well. I see Mumm has already started talking about putting last week behind us and another opportunity.
Snore … bring on next years S14 so we can start the year with hope again.
Love Spiro’s solution for Ma’afi btw. Lets pick a bloke whose played one full game of S14 and is about 12 years old as our starting tighthead against the Boks at altitude. Only in Australian rugby …
August 30th 2010 @ 10:31am
True Tah said | August 30th 2010 @ 10:31am | Report comment
Im willing to bet that if Hougaard was born in Sydney, he would more than likely be wearing the blue and gold of Parramatta Eels, lets face it, with that haircut he wouldnt be playing for Sydney University.
August 30th 2010 @ 12:28pm
Hayden said | August 30th 2010 @ 12:28pm | Report comment
lol. Or if he was in New Zilund, he’d be playing for Taranaki.
August 30th 2010 @ 1:32pm
Wawnout said | August 30th 2010 @ 1:32pm | Report comment
Southland or Otago
August 31st 2010 @ 6:42am
bayboy said | August 31st 2010 @ 6:42am | Report comment
Who by the way are sitting 3rd on the table after downing 2 Super 14 base teams in Waikato & Otago both away from home may I add, and they will surely fancy their chances against Auckland.
August 30th 2010 @ 10:32am
Justin said | August 30th 2010 @ 10:32am | Report comment
The forwards lost the match, no doubt. McCalman continues to look like he loves the tough stuff every time he comes on. He is one of the only ones! He needs to start at 8 (Spiro Elsom hasnt the skill to play 8). Moore should have been on early in the 2nd half. Saia was not having a good match. Deans left him on, big mistake, it didnt get better. Mumm is still there (he isnt good enought to start Tests).
Gits besides his goalkickng did bugger all. I think his kicking is now the only reason he is in the side. Personally I think we need to see AF at 12 with JOC kicking or Shepherd when he comes back. We need more strike runners. Have a look at the breaks QLD made this year. With Genia and Cooper you do not need any more playmakers. Just strike runners taking advantage of the space they create.
Deans is starting to be consistent. His use of the bench is diabolical as are his selections. How many changes will be made this week? The same under performers will continue to get picked (Mumm, Brown, Maafu, etc etc).
August 30th 2010 @ 11:01am
kingplaymaker said | August 30th 2010 @ 11:01am | Report comment
Cooper, Giteau, Barnes, O’Connor, Beale: five fly-half/inside centres, that is, nos 10 and 12.
Do the Wallabies need to pay 5 players to cover these positions?
Think how much money would be saved by culling two of them!
Which two? Definitely not Cooper and Beale at least.
August 30th 2010 @ 11:00am
Sam said | August 30th 2010 @ 11:00am | Report comment
Hougaard Is the first Saffer I have seen with a legit step on him. Unbelievable. I saw him do a Joeli Vidiri goose step at one stage. It’s a scary sign that South Africans are starting to become clever runners and add more skills to their game while Australia stagnates. Don’t be fooled by SA’s recent losses, thats a coaching issue, in player terms they have as many good players as the ABs.
August 30th 2010 @ 1:42pm
Shauny said | August 30th 2010 @ 1:42pm | Report comment
Haha, I noticed that too…At the moment he’s the only Saffer I know of that he a step ( a good one at that) a little like Coopers step too. He used it against the AB’s last week as well and easily pipped Rocko.
1 or 2 youngsters coming through at Currie Cup level as well with a decent step…its about time.
With a good bout of conditioning and meaningful rest seniors like matfield, smit & habanero could come back with a bang! Look at Thorne, he’s playing the rugby of his life and he’s older than matfield & smit…so I definitely won’t write them off!
August 30th 2010 @ 2:33pm
Lee said | August 30th 2010 @ 2:33pm | Report comment
De Jongh and Aplon both have mean steps too. The most exciting backline the Boks could probably put together would be:
9. Hougaard
10. James
11. Mapoe/Mvovo
12. F Steyn
13. De Jongh
14. Basson/Habana
15. Aplon
August 30th 2010 @ 3:07pm
Sam said | August 30th 2010 @ 3:07pm | Report comment
Is James really exciting though? If we’re talking about pure excitement rather than trying to secure the result how about Elton Jantjies at 10 and Lambie at 12. Seems like that’s the future team anyway. BTW when I talk about stepping I mean specifically what Hougaard has been doing recently, guys like Aplon and De jongh run fantastic lines but they’re not really steppers (the same could be said of cullen so it’s not a insult).
August 30th 2010 @ 3:45pm
Lee said | August 30th 2010 @ 3:45pm | Report comment
I didn’t take it as an insult, I just think that De Jongh has a pretty decent step, he just hasn’t shown it against the Wallabies or ABs.
Butch isn’t great, but he is better than Morne at the running game. I think Lambie at 10 will be great, he has done very well for the Sharks there in the Currie Cup – I really he hopes he goes to Europe with the Boks this November. Haven’t seen enough of Jantjies yet to comment.
And I like F Steyn at 12 because he was good there for the Boks in the WC 2007, and I think he is better when he doesn’t have as much time to think i.e. fullback and fly half
August 30th 2010 @ 4:03pm
Sam said | August 30th 2010 @ 4:03pm | Report comment
Why does no one ever look at Peter Grant instead of Morne? I don’t know enough about SA rugby but to me he looks way better.
August 30th 2010 @ 6:10pm
jiggles said | August 30th 2010 @ 6:10pm | Report comment
Sam you should of seen De Jongh step about 5 waratah players in the storm v Tahs semi this year.
it was amazing!
August 30th 2010 @ 9:19pm
Tubby said | August 30th 2010 @ 9:19pm | Report comment
Peter grant would be my pick at 10. Not afriad to run at big guys or to tackle. He kicks only just shy of what m steyne does but brings all options up
isn’t he playing in japan now since he wasn’t in the boks squad?