Hougaard sinks the flimsy Wallabies at Pretoria

By Spiro Zavos / Expert

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.

The Crowd Says:

2010-09-01T12:48:04+00:00

Ivan Nel

Guest


Clarkie and Kearns - Ever heard a commentator ejaculate when Australia score ? tune in to Foxsports commentary. Not that Hugh Blayden is any better, hes so he commentated on the battle of david and goliath.

2010-09-01T01:05:32+00:00

True Tah

Guest


I would back Wilkinson or Carter to be able to stop Spies. Maybe not smash him, but at least stop him from making easy metres. Quade Cooper sort just hangs on, and Spies made ground every time he took an 8-ball.

2010-09-01T00:49:27+00:00

Rusty

Guest


I'd like to know what ten Tru Tah would have making dominent tackles on Spies?

2010-09-01T00:14:29+00:00

Cros

Guest


The worst Wallaby side I have ever seen. The lack of character in this team can be summed up in Cooper. Let him go. League will suit him.

2010-08-31T11:50:09+00:00

Nappy Rash

Guest


No way, I like reading your sad little stories... Hey, maybe u should recall your wonder-boy Rathbone -lol!

2010-08-31T11:47:04+00:00

Nappy Rash

Guest


Much better yeah! Let's see what your "play-makers" do on the weekend....making so much play and forgetting to actually play rugby!

2010-08-31T06:34:19+00:00

True Tah

Guest


Maybe the All Blacks and Springboks simply value their respective jerseys more than the Wallabies?? Too many Wallabies seem to see playing for Australia as a job...but the Boks and Blacks see pulling on the jersey as a privilege. The Boks can take a bloke who was playing on the wing in the super 14, put him a half back and he plays two excellent games in a row. The lack of depth in Australian rugby is the real reason for this.

2010-08-31T06:33:30+00:00

mudskipper

Guest


Where was the Wallabies flanker cover Spies.... I also noticed JOC getting stuck around the middle of the field defending poorly.

2010-08-31T06:12:59+00:00

Craig

Guest


All I can say Davo, is we must be watching different Rugby matches. Standing at the back leaning on the last bloke is not being effective at the ruck - he just floated behind the play spectating. My chip is not so much with Pocock, he may be an effective player in two or three years. I am just angry that George Smith was dropped for this spectator, and no-one ever says a bad word about him. If you reckon he topped the tackle count on Saturday, then the leading tackler must have made THREE tackles. He obviously signed your autograph as you are looking through rose coloured glasses, and I suggest you watch the match again - I just have and I stand by my comments 100% !

2010-08-31T03:18:58+00:00

Muzza

Guest


Yep, tis fair to say that Kearnsy is a blithering one-eyed idiot. Bloody embarrassing to hear such blatent bias in the calling. Some Kiwi "callers" (Tony Something) are just as bad though in the S14.

2010-08-31T02:43:23+00:00

brasso

Guest


I have got sicking to saying this, but the Wallabies predicament is due to issues far deeper that the quality (or lack thereof) of the currently squad. Rugby in Australia is still, essentially, an amateur affair. Both in terms of the way it is administered and the way it is run at game level. I feel a bit for Robbie Deans, who came from NZ and Canterbury where the game is run very much along the lines of AFL and the NRL. That is, by professionals for professionals that want to genuinely promote the game and choke choke, WIN!. Here, it is a captured commodity of the old boy network and, more importantly, the independant rugby school system. If you don't believe me, check the school backgrounds of the squad that went to the last WC. As I understand it, of the whole squad only 3 (George Smith, Palu and Gerrard) came from state schools. What does this say? Quite frankly that despite the game going professional in 1995, little or nothing has been done to get it played in more schools, especially government schools, as it is in SA and particularly NZ. And, quite frankly chaps, until the ARU and its associated bodies understand that, we may as well get used to being also-rans. The net must be cast wider. The independant rugby school system is basically a sporting methadone program that will prop us up but ultimately will not defeat the scourge that assails us. I thought John O'Neill might address this but a friend told me that he thinks O'Neill may well have come from one of the very schools that are proving the root of the problem! If this is true, then it could be argued that the old boy network certainly rules in current climes!!!

2010-08-31T00:27:57+00:00

Mick Gold Coast QLD

Roar Guru


Oh dear. Oh my dear! Separated at birth. O'Connor, I'm sure, imitates the other girl's haircut. Oh dear!

2010-08-30T20:42:04+00:00

bayboy

Guest


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.

2010-08-30T20:35:40+00:00

M.O.C.

Roar Guru


Hey Mich, do yourself a favour and type justin bieber into youtube and watch - JOC's clone. You will pi$$ yourself

2010-08-30T20:33:24+00:00

bayboy

Guest


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?

2010-08-30T20:28:47+00:00

Sam

Guest


Sweet so let's look at what you'd then have; a fairly decent backline (which the wallabies already have), and terrible forwards. Square one here I come.

2010-08-30T20:28:38+00:00

Nick_KIA

Guest


Then go read something else?

2010-08-30T20:24:24+00:00

bayboy

Guest


Mate what is your problem if you don't like what's written on an Australian site why even bother posting. Ungracious winner much......

2010-08-30T20:23:02+00:00

bayboy

Guest


I hope your feeling better now you have got that off your chest.

2010-08-30T12:49:29+00:00

Mick Gold Coast QLD

Roar Guru


I did, M.O.C., and I'm sorry 'cos there is way too much material there! Dunno who Bieber is (pop singer?) but I did watch O'Connor at the back in Wellington last year, from end on, and he fair dinkum looked like some kid playing marbles by himself, waiting for the final whistle so he could run over and pinch the corner post for his collection. They were done by half time in that match, too. That viewing position reinforced to me just how fragmented the backs are under pressure. They toss aside any drills they've had and there is no clear plan to the "exciting running" that inevitably collides with a regimented and disciplined defence 19 times from 20. In defence they are just as chancy, scrambling all the while. Elsom was the same with the ball as these backs - careering off with their individual plan and by chance someone else may follow close enough behind. The French can make that work 'cos they're all half mad and random, but only them. A Pretoria / All Blacks pattern, in attack and defence, compares as a Panzer tank advance, relentlessly ensuring every space that should be filled, is.

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