The Roar
The Roar

Advertisement

All the way with ABJ

15th October, 2017
Advertisement
Alan Jones in likeable rugby mode. (AAP Image/Dan Himbrechts)
Roar Guru
15th October, 2017
224
5167 Reads

On 15 July this year, I was happy to hear the news that former Wallaby coach Alan Jones had accepted an invitation from Barbarian F.C. to coach the touring side to play the Wallabies on 28 October.

This year marks the 30-year anniversary when Jones last coached the Wallabies.

Jones’ contribution to Australian rugby has often been understated, perhaps because he is a controversial media personality.

However, aside from R.J.P. Marks, I can’t think of a more appropriate candidate for the ARU Hall of Fame (which unfortunately does not include coaches).

Jones’ reign as Wallaby coach brought unprecedented success to Australian rugby.

In the 102 games that Jones coached, the Wallabies won 89.

Advertisement

Of the 30 Tests that he coached, Australia won 21, drew 1, lost three to the All Blacks by one point, and lost another with 14-men after David Codey was sent off in the opening minutes of the World Cup third-place playoff against Wales.

He was the coach of a side that is one of only five teams to have won a Test series in New Zealand – the 1986 Wallabies.

The 1984 Grand Slam Wallabies still remain the only Australian side to have won every Test on the tour to the United Kingdom.

Many of Jones’ accomplishments paved the way for future Wallaby success, and were replicated by other nations as well.

Perhaps Jones firstly deserves praise for introducing the role of assistant coach, a relatively new innovation in the amateur era of rugby, by utilising Alec Evans and assigning him the role of forwards coach of the Wallabies.

Assigning assistant coaches was a move to be replicated by future Australian coaches, such as the great Bob Dwyer. In Full Time: A Coach’s Memoir, Dwyer wrote that:

Credit goes to Alan Jones for introducing the role of the assistant, a key factor for improving the Wallabies. He roped in Alec Evans as his assistant and forwards coach for the ’84 Grand Slam tour and it was such a success that I had no hesitation in replicating the move when I was returned as national coach in 1988.

Advertisement

Jones had met Evans while they were both employed at Brisbane Grammar, and Evans was to become not only an amazing asset for Australian rugby for the duration of Jones’ coaching reign, but for many more years to come, which include his role as part of the victorious 1999 World Cup Wallabies.

However, the effort Jones made to construct infrastructure in Australian rugby is more extensive than this.

Upon his appointment as Australian coach, Jones introduced a national training squad of 50 to 60 players. This was an extraordinarily large number of players. However, Jones hoped that by giving fringe players a taste of the national squad, it would help lift the standard of the NSW and Queensland teams.

Jones’ first point of order was to find a tight five capable of winning and securing quality ball. This may sound ridiculous, but this was no mere feat for Australian rugby. The 1981-82 Wallabies to tour the United Kingdom were consistently exposed in the scrums and line-outs.

Jones earmarked Andy MacIntyre as a suitable tight-head prop for Australia. MacIntyre had made his debut for the Wallabies in 1982. And despite playing both Tests in France in 1983, MacIntyre spent most of 1983 absent from the starting Wallaby side, and even on the bench for Queensland.

Hooker Tom Lawton Jr was yet to play a game for Queensland before the Wallabies won their triumphant Grand Slam in 1984. Deemed too big to play the hooker position, today if you ask Sean Fitzpatrick who his toughest opponent was, he will say Lawton Jr

And while any coach in world rugby would be intelligent enough to select Topo Rodriguez after his immigration to Australia, Jones made every effort to help Rodriguez once his residency was certified.

Advertisement

However, no selection defined the coaching reign of Alan Jones than that of Steve Cutler.

Following Australia’s 1983 tour to Italy and France, Cutler was told that he would never play for Australia again.

He was the first player Jones selected!

“Treat a man as he is and he will remain as he is,” former Dallas Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson once said. “Treat a man as what he could be or should be and he will become what he could be or should be.”

Jones treated Cutler like the best line-out exponent in the world, and that’s what he became.

If you ask Cutler what his best performance in a Wallaby jersey is, he’ll tell you the first Test against New Zealand in 1984.

On a day when both Mark Ella and David Campese kicked poorly at the goals, Australia defeated New Zealand in the line-outs 25-16, with Cutler obtaining most of this possession.

Advertisement

It was Jones who led the Manly rugby club (a club historically resistant to outsiders) to their first club premiership in 33 years in 1983. Not only that, but Manly’s victory broke Randwick’s steak of five successive premierships from 1978-1982.

Perhaps the most surprising aspect of Jones’ coaching reign, is that with in-form Manly players such as Phillip Cox, Ross Reynolds, Bill Calcraft and Peter FitzSimons, perhaps Jones could have been excused for selecting players he already felt comfortable with.

When Steve Williams was accorded the vice-captaincy of the Wallabies for the Grand Slam tour, some felt the Wallabies might gain an influx of Manly players.

Instead, Jones’ resisted the strong push from Queensland to include Tony Parker in the squad for the 1984 tour of the United Kingdom, and selected Nick Farr-Jones – a player who had been playing second division for Sydney University.

“The first time I met him was when we went into camp before we left [for the UK tour],” Mark Ella wrote in Ella: The Definitive Biography. “I didn’t know who the hell he was.” (p 251)

Little did anybody know that Jones had selected probably one of Australia’s ten greatest rugby players.

Ross Reynolds was another player the fall under the Jones’ selection knife. In his place was selected arguably Australia’s most dynamic eightman, Steve Tuynman.

Advertisement

Then there were cut-throat decisions, none more so than the decision to select David Codey for the 1984 Grand Slam tour. Firstly, this selection meant that Peter Lucas would be omitted from the touring side – a shock to a great many people given his form.

Secondly, it became obvious that if Jones wanted Codey for height, so he could have a fourth line-out jumper, either Simon Poidevin or vice-captain Chris Roche would have to be dropped.

The dropping of an incredible player, Chris Roche, came as a shock to many, but cruelly it did have the effect of heightening and bulking the Australian forward pack.

(AAP Image/Dan Himbrechts)

Then there was the issue of goal-kicking. Jones had recognised that the 1984 Bledisloe Cup would be decided on penalties, given the way the first two Tests had played out.

Prior to the third and deciding Bledisloe Cup Test of 1984, Jones earmarked Michael Lynagh for the fullback position. Unfortunately, Lynagh declined the invitation, unwilling to play in a position he’d never played before in the deciding Test of a Bledisloe Cup Series.

Australia lost that Test to New Zealand 24-25.

Advertisement

One cruel statistic reveals why I regard that loss as arguably the most painful in Australian rugby history.

There were 26 penalties in the Test. 19 were awarded to Australia. Seven were awarded to New Zealand – all in Australian territory. Robbie Deans kicked six penalties from seven attempts. Roger Gould had an off-day with the boot at fullback!

However, Jones was sure to find a place for Michael Lynagh on the Grand Slam tour at inside centre. Again, this involved the dropping of an in-form player, the wonderful Michael Hawker.

Another forgotten Jones contribution was the addition of the Rhino Powerhouse scrum machine that accompanied the Wallabies throughout the 1984 Grand Slam tour.

Jones was godfather to the son of Tim Francis, who then presided at Dulwich College in the United Kingdom. Francis alerted Jones to the machine provided by Phil Keith Roach, an Englishman who was unable to sell any of his scrum machines.

Jones decided to trial the scrum machine, paid for it to be carted throughout the United Kingdom (out of his own pocket), and it yielded unprecedented success for the Wallabies, most notably when they scored a pushover try against Wales at Cardiff Arms Park.

Nick Farr Jones passes to Simon Poidevin

vin. (Georges Gobet/AFP/Getty Images)

Advertisement

Jones decided to replicate this move for the Wallabies next overseas tour, the 1986 tour to New Zealand, and again paid for this scrum machine to be transported to every town the Wallabies played at in New Zealand (again, from his own pocket).

And what was the biggest contributing factor to the Wallabies incredible Grand Slam success in 1984? Jones’ self-styled Green Machine – Australia’s midweek team.

No Australian Test player could feel safe – Topo Rodriguez was challenged by Stan Pilecki and Cameron Lillicrap, Poidevin was challenged by Roche, Farr-Jones by Cox, Lynagh by Hawker, etc.

The depth of Australian rugby was incredible, but Jones deserves credit for creating internal tension within the Wallaby camp – something missing in 1981-82.

Australia was scheduled to play Ireland one week following their Test against England in 1984.

Faced with no choice, Jones selected a team of second-stringers – the Green Machine – to take on the strong provincial side Midlands that featured Peter Wheeler and goal-kicking fullback Dusty Hare.

The Green Machine triumphed 21-18.

Advertisement

Then there was the match against Pontypool, after Australia had defeated Scotland to win the Grand Slam and prior to the Barbarians game, featuring nothing less than the best team Europe could select.

Jones selected only five players from the starting team for the Green Machine. They emerged victorious 24-18.

There were other triumphs beyond the incredible Grand Slam success.

One week before Australia was scheduled to play France in 1986, the French side demolished Queensland 48-9.

This was a truly great backline, featuring the likes of Berbizier, Camberabero, Charvet, Sella, Lagisquet and Blanco.

The Wallabies provided what Andrew Slack regarded as Australia’s greatest forwards performance of his career – greater than the 1979 Bledisloe Cup triumph and the 1984 victory over Wales.

France scored three tries to Australia one, but Jones employed percentage tactics, ensuring that Australia played a forward-oriented ten-man-style of rugby, and Australia emerged victorious 27-14, with Lynagh scoring 21 points (a then record for him).

Advertisement
Michael Lynagh

(Photo by Ben Hoskins/Getty Images)

What is the greatest achievement by any Australian rugby team?

To beat the All Blacks in New Zealand will always be the ultimate in rugby, and perhaps nothing illustrates that better than their incredible record at Eden Park.

The second last time the All Blacks were beaten at Eden Park, the Wallabies produced arguably their greatest ever defensive effort, as New Zealand produced some of the most incredible running rugby ever displayed on a rugby pitch, and nearly won but for an epidemic of dropped passes.

Peter FitzSimons would later write in Nick Farr-Jones: The Authorised Biography that, “If Jones were ever to take a bow for coaching a team to a superb performance it would be now. In the two weeks leading up to the final Test, Jones’s training sessions were as well planned and they were precisely executed.”

Simon Poidevin related in For Love Not Money that, “As we chased and tackled from one side of the field to the other it crossed my mind how grateful I was for all the gruelling training Jonsey had put into us early in the tour.”

An impressed Bob Dwyer recalled seven years later in The Winning Way that, “my mind at once goes back to the third Test against New Zealand in 1986, when a team more or less the same as the 1984 team defended as well as any Australian side I have seen.”

Advertisement

Jones was relentless in his pursuit of success in New Zealand during 1986, and the New Zealanders hated his abrasive approach to conquering their All Blacks.

However, as Jones said: “If you want success in today’s world, you have to believe people are going to resent your achievement of it. You must be invigorated by that, not intimidated. I just live for now and go full throttle on what I’m doing now.”

Talk of defence reminds me that the 1984 Grand Slam Wallabies only allowed one try in four Test matches to be scored against them.

What should Alan Jones tell the Barbarians just before kick-off?

Perhaps he should remind the players of what an awesome opportunity they have been given: ‘Just remember, there are four things that don’t come back: the spent arrow, the spoken word, lost time, and the missed opportunity.’

Perhaps Jones should begin by talking about Nadia Comăneci, the Romanian gymnast, like he did before the Welsh Test of 1984. Maybe the Barbarians will play mistake-free rugby for the first 23 minutes of the game.

No… I think there’s one thing, above all, that Alan Jones needs to tell the Barbarians – the Gucci Factor: “Do the hard work now, and long after you’ve paid the price, the quality will remain.”

Advertisement

However the match turns out, I’m sure it will be, ‘Bigger than Quo Vadis, greater than anything!’

And once the match is over, ‘The dogs may bark, but the caravan moves on…’

I hope the Barbarians are ready to have an electric shock sent through their bodies, from a man who completed transformed Australian rugby for the better, and brought it previously unheard of success.

To Alan Jones: Good luck on your return to coaching! I hope the Barbarians play a great game and don’t forget to remind them: “Do the hard work now, and long after you’ve paid the price, the quality will remain.”

close