Back from the Dreamtime into a dream?

By Brett McKay / Expert

I’ve returned from a week looking at big rocks in the middle of Australia, and I’ll get the travel recommendation out of the way early: if you haven’t ventured in the red centre of this big country, you really should. It is just an amazing part of the world.

Of course, being hundreds of kilometres from anywhere, where today’s newspaper is actually yesterday’s (and where hotel broadband rates make Telstra’s look like a bargain), means that keeping up to date with the goings on in the sporting world was a little difficult.

After the previous weekend’s performance in Pretoria, where the Wallabies squandered 14-point leads not once, but twice, I was keen to find out what the fallout was.

The main points of interest seemed to be thus:

* Captain Rocky Elsom apparently gave the boys a good old-fashioned dressing room spray after the loss, which is great to hear, as Elsom has been criticised in some quarters for his lack of obvious emotion after games, and
* The Wallaby assistant coaches, Captain and Lieutenant Obvious, laid down a fresh challenge in the 2010 edition of the Stating the Bleeding Obvious Awards, by calling on the Wallabies to “show more consistency” after their Loftus Versfeld showing, where they surrendered a 23-year-victory-draught-ending lead twice.

A high point in clear thinking, I’d imagine.

Nevertheless, I was confident going into the Bloemfontein Test early Sunday morning. I had a really good feeling about the changes in the forward pack, that the recall of Stephen Moore and Mark Chisholm, and the promotion of Number 8 Ben McCalman to the starting side made a lot of sense.

Come the first half, I found myself forgetting about a fresh cup of tea once again, as the Wallabies raced out to a 31-6 lead within half an hour or so. Bonus points were secured before my bleary eyes had even stopped squinting at the TV.

So, some brief observations.

Rocky Elsom was outstanding, and played probably his best game as Wallaby captain. He was willing in the contest, and seemed to be back to his best with his wide running game.

His try from a James O’Connor break, which sealed the bonus point, looked to be out of determination that he wasn’t going to be run down for the second week in a row. It was a just reward for a storming game, and it was great to see a satisfied man lift the Mandela Plate post-match.

This might be a big call, but in Ben McCalman, the Wallabies may just have found their next long-term No.8. Wycliff Palu will inevitably return for a period once fit again, sure, but at only 22, McCalman looks to be that aggressive, hard-tackling presence at the back of the scrum that Richard Brown tries desperately to be, but just hasn’t quite mastered.

Admittedly, I need to lay a disclaimer here, that McCalman was one of my Next Breed subjects back in March, and I am just as excited about getting one right (and on that subject, Dave Dennis, what’s happened?) as I am about a young guy from central NSW coming through.

It will be interesting to see how he slots into the already Wallaby-laden Western Force backrow rotation next year, and more so, when or if the Waratahs might try to bring him home.

Now for the humble pie bit.

I’ve been saying for quite some time now that James O’Connor and Kurtley Beale in the same side make me nervous, but there’s no ignoring this: they were both outstanding in this game, and both seem to be getting better with every game in their current roles.

While Beale will ultimately be remembered for kicking the winning penalty goal, O’Connor was very dangerous on the counter, and had a major hand in two of Australia’s tries as well as netting one himself. If this roaming wing role is the one from which O’Connor can reach his undoubted potential at international level, then good luck to him.

This was the classic game of two halves.

Australia dominated play for 39 minutes, went to sleep just on halftime, and were then completely outplayed by South Africa until the 79th minute of the game, by which time a 25-point lead had disappeared and yet another heartbreaking loss looked inevitable.

However, some laziness from the Springbok forwards in trying to close out the game presented Beale with his opportunity for glory. From just inside halfway and on a decent angle, Beale stepped up under enormous pressure, both at the ground and from many a lounge room back in Australia.

I still haven’t seen the kick from front-on, but from side on it was only ever going to be a question of whether it was straight enough. As the flags went up, there was a triumphant, if muted, early morning celebration in my house not seen since Brett Holman’s cracking goal for the Socceroos in their World Cup clash with Ghana.

If, in twelve or thirteen months time, the Wallabies go further in the Rugby World Cup than expected, we may well look back at this game as the turning point.

This could be the game where Australia finally learned how to grind out a tight win in the most hostile of environments, where previously they might have folded and suffered yet another frustrating and inglorious loss.

I learned an enormous amount about Aboriginal history and the Dreamtime on my trip out to Uluru last week, but I suspect this current Wallabies squad is starting to create some history of its own.

Their next big test comes this Saturday in the final Bledisloe Cup match in Sydney, and not for the first time I find myself saying that the Wallabies are now only as good as their next game. With Dan Carter out injured, there may not be a better chance to beat the All Blacks.

The Wallabies are starting to give fans a reason to believe again though, and they deserve all the optimism that comes their way this week. I just hope this isn’t all some cruel dream.

The Crowd Says:

2010-09-08T05:15:40+00:00

Brett McKay

Guest


King, speaking personally, I've been away for most of it, and wouldn't have had access to watch it anyway. If you can do it justice, knock something up....

2010-09-08T03:31:01+00:00

The all new King of the Gorganites

Guest


why havent there been more articles (if any) on the higly entertaining women's world cup. there was 13.5K at the final. i think it warrants some attention.

2010-09-08T02:40:09+00:00

ilikedahoodoogurusingha

Guest


It should lead to an interesting selection problem. How about To'omua at 10, Gits 12, AAC 13, and Lealiifano at 15? Wingers MCCabe and Fainifo

2010-09-08T00:56:02+00:00

Brett McKay

Guest


DC, he played quite well at 12 for the Brumbies this year actually, until he got injured, but then of course Toomua came onto 10 and Giteau started playing much better at 12. It will certainly be interesting to see how the three of them sot together next season..

2010-09-08T00:19:42+00:00

Terry Kidd

Guest


Formeropenside, did you know that the try scoring strike rate of Peter Hynes in tests is 1 try per 5 tests while Drew Mitchell's strike rate is 2 tries per 5 tests? Did you know that Drew Mitchell has a better try scoring strike rate in tests than any other current Wallaby player? What does that tell you about strike power? I said in another post earlier this week that one thing I did like about Mitchell was his ability to find the line and his try scoring strike rate proves it. I got those stats from the ARU website.

2010-09-07T20:52:15+00:00

jiggles

Guest


I have seen a couple of his matches also and he looks like he is developing into a pretty handy player. Australia should send more of its fringe players over to the NPC after the super comp to get some really rugby experience. sure does beat club land!

2010-09-07T17:41:48+00:00

DC

Guest


On the subject of backs, I predict a certain Christian Leialifano will have a storming 2011 for the Brumbies, if he ever comes back from Waikato. I saw him playing 12 in a recent ITM Cup game and he showed guile, skill, speed and toughness.

2010-09-07T13:40:57+00:00

Tortion

Guest


My problem with AAC is that whilst he is consistent he has zero X factor which adds flavour to the game.

2010-09-07T11:34:23+00:00

jiggles

Guest


This humble pie is very sweet so its all good if you ask me :D !! Peter K thats a pretty handy backline and if chambers and davies continue their form into next years super 15 it could well be pretty spot on. However rightly or wrongly it would have to take something pretty serious for Giteau not to be picked in the starting 15.

AUTHOR

2010-09-07T08:55:06+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


PK, how big is this JOC humble pie now?!? There's a few of us chewing on it now!! :lol:

AUTHOR

2010-09-07T08:05:16+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Scott, that was exactly my thoughts too, that Elsom was a big benefactor of McCalman's presence, and to be honest, I had every intention of writing as much. It obviously never materialised in my mind again! You could often see Elsom and McCalman talking across the back of the ruck, they were working out where they needed to be in conjunction with each other, and quite often they would station themseleves on either side in defence. Smart play..

2010-09-07T07:59:46+00:00

Peter K

Guest


Beale was fantastic in attack but is just as bad in defence, worse than Cooper. Never make s cover tackle, and cant tackle big forwards front on. I am willing to eat humble pie on JoC at wing because the way he injects and roams makes up for lack of pace. But I still think he would be far better at 12 with Cooper at 10 than Giteau. JoC is a better tackler and attacking player and playmaker than Giteau. On size , I agree, but both Chambers and Davis have enough of that. My ideal backline would be Genia, Cooper, Ioane, Joc, Chambers, Davis and AAC at F/B. reserves Burgess, Giteau and Beale. Forwards yes Chisholm had easily his best game. McCalman finally replaces Brown. The forwards are still to weak and we badly need ball carryiers and hard tacklers than fixing the backline. Hence Palu, TPN , Alexander, Horwill, Vickerman will have a greater impact and improvement than buy Inglis etc.

2010-09-07T07:51:13+00:00

Peter K

Guest


Andrew Walker and Jason Robinson were very successful converts as well. Actually better in Rugby than league IMO.

2010-09-07T07:49:58+00:00

chrisa

Guest


I haven't seen him but an experienced watcher told me that there is a giant, mobile winger playing for Eastwood and scoring tries against good opposition. The Australian Lomu. Does anyone have an opinion?

2010-09-07T07:45:53+00:00

Peter K

Guest


Andrew Walker was easily the best Australian league player to switch to Rugby.

2010-09-07T06:55:28+00:00

dunc

Guest


As another bloody Kiwi, I want add that I thought Stephen Moore and Mcalman played well on the weekend. A big mental win for the Gen Y's too... will be exciting to see Cruden vs Quade!

2010-09-07T06:32:48+00:00

el gamba

Guest


I think he was on the bench for the Perth Baba's game - must have had a run but can't recall right now.. The trick with all of these players mentioned is to ensure that they stay in Australia for the next 5 years. At the moment we have young "potentials", if we keep the names being bandied around above we will have seasoned depth...

2010-09-07T06:31:13+00:00

scottmit

Guest


Interesting all this discussion about bolstering the Wallaby backs. I thought they played all right on the weekend. Beale looks pretty good as a "strike runner" IMHO. The forwards have been a soft spot this year and the selections here made a difference. Chisholm may not be Horwell, but he has 50 tests and knows how to do the job. Moore is a better footballer than Fiangaa. But my take away from the game was how much more comfortable Elsom and Pocock looked with McCalman in the team. Seemed to me that Elsom played that wider channel where he is so effective, presumably because he felt the job was going to get done closer in. I wondered why he tended to disappear in the Brumbies games and maybe there's the reason.

2010-09-07T06:09:39+00:00

Brett McKay

Guest


at $160 a pop, I can assure you I won't be going with two a year!!

2010-09-07T06:04:31+00:00

Bring Back Rucking

Guest


Brett, My only comment is that there will be at least 2 different versions every year or so. Therefore you really can't make a right or wrong decision

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