A light at the end of the tunnel for the Reds

By The Crowd / Roar Guru

Queensland Reds player Digby Ione breaks through. AAP Image/Dave Hunt

Five rounds into the final Super14 season and the Reds are in sixth spot, although with a bye coming up, they will probably fall behind the Tahs (assuming the Tahs beat the Force). After that, there is a three week trip to South Africa, but with two winnable games against the Lions and Cheetahs.

So what has season 2010 meant so far for the Reds in light of the optimistic preview some months back?

Unfortunately, there was last-minute heartbreaking loss to the Tahs that the Reds simply should have won. And a refusal to play wet weather rugby in the wet against the Blues was also costly. The Reds were in front at halftime in both games, and if they had held onto that lead, they would be 5 from 5 and finals-bound.

Still, it’s a promising start, and hopefully as much can be learned from the losses as from victories.

The Reds have stood up across the park, forwards and backs. Some players I maligned have come good (the Faingaas and Davies), and no one has been a disappointment (except for those players who might leave, but that’s an issue for another day).

McKenzie has put some spine into the forwards, and the backs are revelling behind a competitive pack, and have rediscovered the joys of defence.

The Good
Saia Faingaa has made the most of his opportunities with an early injury to Hardman, and has improved dramatically on uninspiring performances last year.

His set piece work is steady, but he has been a vigorous defender and has worked well in the tight. The Reds lineout is good, at least with Van calling the shots.

Daley, Weeks and Holmes have all looked good in the front row, with Holmes able to play both sides, and in fact working over Woodcock a little in the Auckland match from THP.

Both Daley and Weeks have been good around the ground and good in defence, with Weekes making the transition to fully professional player and being both bigger and more mobile for it. The Reds scrum has been solid, but is not yet a weapon.

Still, this is an improvement on the last few years.

The second and back rows have been strong runners and good tacklers: Higgy is looking like a genuine Wallaby 6 option, and a trimmed down Houston has made a welcome return. Young Jake Schatz has impressed in his time on the park.

Daniel Braid has been extremely impressive, with the return to the older ruck rules suiting him well. Van and Byrnes have performed well – especially Van, who at 110 is looking fitter than ever – while Simmons has not disappointed in his brief time on the park.

The best of all is Genia and Cooper.

Genia has continued his good Wallaby form, and Cooper is the form Australian 10 at present, with sublime passing skills and a good kicking game. His ability to put a man into a gap is presently unsurpassed. With Faingaa next to him, any defensive issues have not been apparent: some tackles have been missed, but opposition attempts to target the channel have failed.

Anthony Faingaa, like his twin, has turned a corner this year. His jolting defence has been the basis of Reds turnover attack, and against the Force he has shown he can hit a gap too.

Of the Reds outside backs, all of Digby, Morahan, Davies and Hynes have speed to burn. Hynes is underrated: his clearing kick has been generally good, and his kick return is always dangerous. Chambers will be better for the time on the park, and Va’aulu has made a solid return from injury. This year, most of the Reds tries have come from the backline.

The Bad
Horwill is out injured, just as he was showing some good form at both lock, and, surprisingly, blindside flanker. He leaves a hole in the pack almost no matter how well his replacement performs.

Braid is in the final year of his contract, and despite entreaties to the ARU, it appears it cannot be renewed. Lei Tomiki has been unsighted, and Andrew Shaw has had one chance without impressing.

If one of Van or Byrnes goes down, the second row stocks look thin: Ezra Taylor or Higginbotham may be press-ganged into the engine room.

The Ugly
The Rebels.

Apparently Kingi, Byrnes, and Weeks are all moving south, with this being announced in the next few days. Its like 2005 all over again. Kingi, despite being a real talent, is probably the least loss of the three. Losing a second rower for 2011 with Van also probably retiring is a double blow, and Weeks is a solid THP of the sort that don’t grow on trees.

Then maybe Hynes is on the Rebels radar, and there is talk of Cooper heading West for some reason.

Up front, young James Slipper and Paul Alo-Emile may fill the gap in the next few years, but they are not ready for Super 14 yet. Dayna Edwards has been playing for the Academy, as has Jack Kennedy, so perhaps they will step up in the short term.

True tall timber is hard to come by: perhaps MMM or Heenan coming home would help, but this is unlikely.

All in all, it has been a long road for Reds fans over the last decade. Hopefully the light at the end of the tunnel is not a goods train.

The Crowd Says:

2010-03-20T08:41:39+00:00

Rockin Rod

Guest


Disagree AR, you have to play yiour best players, forget next year, their is a titkle to be won this year for the reds. So if QC signs in France this week would you play Tim walsh, please

2010-03-20T08:35:08+00:00

Rockin Rod

Guest


i bet Cooper and Hynes arent in that 22

2010-03-18T21:33:01+00:00

formeropenside

Guest


Byrnes also now apparently confirmed as gone. bugger

2010-03-18T10:26:34+00:00

reds fan

Guest


There is still a chance he could force his way into the Wallabies squad. Plenty of motivation for him. Just diminished motivation for Link to play him.

2010-03-18T07:10:00+00:00

TommyM

Guest


Wow, you are one bitter man....

2010-03-18T06:36:47+00:00

AR

Guest


This is taken from http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/sport/no-logic-in-weeks-defection-says-mckenzie-20100318-qhwx.html "McKenzie was initially taken aback when informed of Melbourne's announcement, with the coach learning of the move through the media instead of being informed by his departing player." - this is a bit of a gutless thing to do by Weeks in my opinion. "Weeks has opted for what he clearly considers greener pastures and bigger paypackets" But he said if there was strong competition for his spot from a player that had committed to the Reds, Weeks may find himself on the wrong side of a 50-50 selection call. "I don't have a policy one way or the other. Clearly we need focused individuals who are doing the best thing by the team. It doesn't really change the day-to-day this year. We'll try to deal with this year now and next year next year," McKenzie said. "There's no doubt if it's 50-50, I'll be favouring the people who are going to be with us in the long haul. There's no doubt about that."

2010-03-18T04:53:27+00:00

formeropenside

Guest


Its not ideal is it, but its for the Rebels benefit, so we have to sacrifice Australian rugby to save it...

2010-03-18T04:51:36+00:00

JK

Guest


Each individual probably handles it differently, some guy's might not need thier heart to perform, some guy's do, people have different motivators. In Weeks case it's up to Link to get some return on investment now before he goes. I don't like mid season signing, transfer periods out of season would be the go

2010-03-18T04:42:53+00:00

AR

Guest


Agreed, you do still have to pay them to a point - match day you don't have to if they don't make the team. Sometimes you have to wonder though if someone signs on to play for another team, is there heart still in the now or looking to the future? It is not always the case but it can pop up from time to time.

2010-03-18T04:30:24+00:00

JK

Guest


If it's that close, absolutely you would go with the player committed, but rarely are two players that similiar, every player has certain strenghs and weaknesses and what they can provide to the overall gameplan. In business you would just march the person out the door, in sport you still have to pay them, they have obligations and so does the team, so you'd think that would not be an issue at the selection table.

2010-03-18T04:24:09+00:00

reds fan

Guest


agreed. Link will need to balance the need to win with the teams future. Holmes will probably get more game time. If it looks like the impact on the side isnt too great maybe then we'll see Holmes as a regular starter. he is fit and injury free for the first time in a while.

2010-03-18T04:15:02+00:00

AR

Guest


If you own a business and have invested in two people who are of near equal competence. One is going to leave you and one is committed. You are always going to chose the one who is committed first as you are putting your money into the future. This won't be the case with Weeks however... Just because Weeks is leaving does not mean he will be dropped - I very much doubt it. He one of the form Australian props this season so far and will be very much needed when it comes to packing down against the big South African packs. Having a young Academy play like Kennedy in the touring squad will be good as he can learn a lot about Weeks and what he does on and off the field before he leaves.

2010-03-18T04:07:40+00:00

JK

Guest


I agree with the sentiment, but I don't think it's the way to run a professional organisation, sport or not.

2010-03-18T04:07:09+00:00

formeropenside

Guest


Maybe Weeks will find himself on the bench or on the outer too, then.

2010-03-18T04:03:57+00:00

AR

Guest


To confirm it http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/sport/reds-prop-joins-rebels-20100318-qhhu.html

2010-03-18T03:58:38+00:00

reds fan

Guest


double bugger

2010-03-18T03:57:41+00:00

AR

Guest


I think you'll find that the absence of Turinui and Kingi from the squad was also to do with the fact neither will be around next year. Turinui has in the past expressed a desire to travel overseas to play rugby and Kingi is all but confirmed for the Rebels. Why invest in players that have no future in your club? McKenzie has always said if it were near a 50/50 selection call between a player who was staying and one who was leaving, you know who he would pick.

2010-03-18T03:54:03+00:00

formeropenside

Guest


bugger

2010-03-18T03:51:23+00:00

AR

Guest


From those that were at the lunch, said it was announced Laurie Weeks had been signed

2010-03-18T03:15:10+00:00

reds fan

Guest


same. especially as we dont have a lot of cover for 13 in that squad. chambers is very green. Va'aulu can play there. but i would have thought Morgs was a sure fire backup in case of injury to Diggers.

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