Woeful Waratahs cruelling Deans' Wallabies

By Spiro Zavos / Expert

Towards the end of the woeful Waratahs’ 33-12 thrashing by the young, enthusiastic Hurricanes side, the excellent Fox Sports game caller Greg Clark paused from his commentary.

He asked fellow commentators Phil Kearns and Rod Kafer what the Waratahs franchise needed to do now.

Clark prefaced his question by explaining that both of them had done unpaid advisory work for the Waratahs.

The context was the fact that on a slippery, muddy field and with rain falling often during the match the Hurricanes had scored four tries, the last of them from a short lineout set move on the Waratahs’ try line right on time.

The Waratahs had once again this season lost the second half, this time by 20-3.

A crowd of 13,347 watched the home team show no enthusiasm for hard-shouldered play, with the forwards reverting many times to the pick-and-drive (dive?) option.

This was the Waratahs’ smallest ever home crowd.

The backline with four past and current (as from next Tuesday) Wallabies in it (Berrick Barnes, Adam Ashley-Cooper, Rob Horne and Drew Mitchell) hardly threatened the defensive wall of the Hurricanes, which has been leaky many times this season.

The loss was the 10th for the Waratahs this season and sixth in a row. And there will undoubtedly be more when the Super Rugby tournament returns after the June Tests.

And what was the reply from Kearns and Kafer?

I couldn’t understand the points, if any, that Kearns tried to make.

Kafer, who has one of the shrewdest rugby brains in Australian rugby and is a terrific commentator on rugby, gave an answer about how changing coaches hadn’t worked in the case of the Waratahs with Ewen McKenzie. I took from this that the Waratahs franchise should be wary about sacking head coach Michael Foley.

Whatever we were meant to read into the somewhat cryptic comments by the two former Wallabies, neither of them expressed what is becoming a consensus within the Australian rugby community.

The Waratahs franchise needs a clean-out, root and branch, starting with the board and purging on through the support, medical and training staff, the coaching staff and a number of senior players.

What I found more troubling than what Kearns and Kafer had to say is that they are actually on the Waratahs’ Rugby Advisory Committee. This seems to be a formal part of the Waratahs franchise.

The Sunday Telegraph ‘revealed’ that they have had three meetings of ‘frank and open assessment sessions’ in the last six months on what is happening with the Waratahs.

Troubling? Because as broadcasters they should really disclose the appointment (even though it is unpaid) when they talk about the Waratahs on the Rugby Club and on the excellent Fox Sports rugby broadcasts.

For an ancient journalist like myself, there is an obvious conflict of interest of any broadcaster who has a sort of official connection with an organisation involved in running a franchise that he comments about.

In the same Telegraph article (which was written by James Hooper) the Waratahs chairman Ed Zemancheff ‘broke a four-month silence’ to assure supporters that the entire organisation would come under review as ‘clarity’ is sought on another season ‘punctuated by bitter disappointment.’

I believe that this review will be self-serving.

What really needs to happen is that the board that runs Waratahs Rugby P/L (which for practical purposes behaves like a self-perpetuating oligarchy) needs to dissolve itself and return the running of the Waratahs to the NSWRU board which is chaired by Nick Farr-Jones and has Tim Gavin as President.

The NSWRU gave Waratahs Rugby P/L a licence to run the Waratahs as a separate organisation. This licence needs to be revoked and the sort of clean-out the Queensland Reds did a couple of years ago should now be applied to the Waratahs.

Waratahs Rugby P/L has clearly failed NSW rugby and Australian rugby.

The Waratahs have become a joke as a rugby team. We are talking about one of the greatest provincial sides in world rugby here.

Even worse, there is culture of entitlement within the Waratahs franchise that starts with the board (who seldom engage with the media, on or off the record) and with coaches (why wasn’t there a contest when Michael Foley was appointed?) and players (who was responsible for paying a large amount of money to bring back Rocky Elsom?).

The impact of the poor coaching and the entitlement environment at the Waratahs can be seen in the disastrous performances of senior players. Wycliff Palu, Tatafu Polata-Nau and Benn Robinson have been left out of the Wallabies side to play Scotland. Admittedly, the three-day turn-around has something to do with this. But it will be interesting to see if any of them – or all of them – make the squad to play Wales next Saturday.

Dave Dennis is one Waratah who starts on Tuesday night for the Wallabies. It is interesting to note that if the entitled Elsom hadn’t been injured for most of this season, Dennis, one of the few Waratahs to have played splendidly all season, wouldn’t be where he is now.

Similarly, Sitaleki Timani had to wait his time while the entitled Dean Mumm held down the second row position, until he was injured.

Berrick Barnes is the last flyhalf standing. But his flighty play will have to improve (as it might in the well-coached Wallabies environment) if he is to stay in the Wallabies squad.

The sad fact about the Waratahs in the last few years is that the state that provides a third of all the rugby union players in Australia has not produced a potential champion since Kurtley Beale. And it is history now that Beale has gone to Melbourne, for the money admittedly but also for the chance to play some running rugby.

The case of Adam Ashley-Cooper is indicative of the problems the lacklustre Waratahs system is creating for Robbie Deans. As an inevitable Wallaby who can fill any position from inside centre to fullback, Ashley-Cooper was always somewhere in the starting backline.

But at a time when two of the X-factor players are out (Quade Cooper and James O’Connor) it is an indictment on the Waratahs system that Ashley-Cooper is now only a reserve for the Wallabies on Tuesday.

The Crowd Says:

2012-06-05T08:23:41+00:00

Richard Bowen

Guest


Spot on.... I haven't time to read all the other post from irate Tahs fans, but clearly for a loooong time now, the Waratahs have been an organisation rotten to the core - at the rot starts at the top. My welsh father would take me too ALL the games, EVERY year when I was a liitle fella, even he gave up on them 10 years ago. There should be an article in the SMH / The Roar every day, naming and shaming the clowns who are running this show. Our best chance of redeemption is of them going flat broke, having the ARU bail them for a few years, put Gen Peter Gosgrove in charge, and rebuild the entire organisation. We can only live in hope.

2012-06-05T01:17:33+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


and confirm that the Tahs are still are a bunch of amateurs

2012-06-05T01:13:16+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


He lasted barely a year as head coach of the US Eagles and didn't get good reports so don't know about being reformed.

2012-06-04T13:42:18+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


The Waratahs won a tighthead in the second half. That's hardly smashing the opposition, particularly when the opposition outscores you by about 20 points in the half.

2012-06-04T13:06:58+00:00

Crashy

Guest


Seriously, anyone who has foxtel, have a squizz at the Aus under 20 s vs Scotland.looking very good.

2012-06-04T12:56:42+00:00

Crashy

Guest


I think that it's a tad arrogant to draw a conclusion that Australian rugby is in trouble because the Tahs are rubbish... Anyone watching the Australian under 20s currently demolishing Scotland in south Africa would probably see that our next generation of players are looking very, very good... How good are our youngsters looking...

2012-06-04T12:12:46+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Canes definitely had the better of the early scrums. I haven't watched them a huge amount this year but in the games I have seen they are very good on the hit early on. In this game and the Brumbies the Oz side got knocked around early and once they brought their engagement speed up to match the Canes the Aus teams managed to get on top.

2012-06-04T12:06:19+00:00

jeznez

Guest


My assistant call was related to your reference to his Wallabies time. I liked the way Wales played under his charge, they certainly always had a crack.

2012-06-04T11:09:12+00:00

Moaman

Guest


Whilst on the subject of the commentary team; Spiro-Do you deem it "excellent" that the team would basically cease calling the game with 10-15 minutes to go and chatter on about other matters? I call that disgraceful. As a neutral (and maybe it's getting late here) I think it's very sad to hear all these "rusted-on",longtime fans becoming so disillusioned with the NSW setup. Surely,surely they (the people that run the 'Tahs) must be made aware of the damage that is being done before it becomes terminal?

2012-06-04T10:45:11+00:00

Johno3

Guest


Ben Mowen is a queenslander. he left QLD after 7 games to seek opportunities elsewhere as the waiting time was too long in QLD. He went to Nsw and then ennjoyed 40 games, some muchso he left the successful franchise. I would not quote him as an ex tah as it is not a great reinforcement of tah magic

2012-06-04T10:31:59+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Smith never played for the Brumbies. He was on the coaching staff though.

2012-06-04T10:30:50+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


The Tahs fans have got to stop using the weather as an excuse for not going. A.It rains in other parts of the world and people still go to matches. B. It doesn't get cold in Sydney. If you think it is cold buy a decent jacket.

2012-06-04T10:26:44+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


see my post above in regards to the Irish regulations and how they could come in to play in Australia.

2012-06-04T10:25:51+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


The Tahs are the NSWRU and NSW Rugby. They have represented their governing body since day 1, regardless of the current structure

2012-06-04T10:23:38+00:00

Deathriding the Tahs

Guest


Incidentally...Ex Brumby ,Brian Smith joined the Sky Rugby team commentary team a few weeks ago here in the UK and did an excellent job providing wonderful insight. http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Smith_(rugby)

2012-06-04T10:19:12+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


He was head coach at Wales (for a short time), a few stints as head coach of the Ospreys and bailed on the US head coach job. He didn't achieve a lot in those head coaching gigs. However that would be enough to get a job at the Horratahs

2012-06-04T10:10:58+00:00

Deathriding the Tahs

Guest


I feel the same KOTG. I have been deathriding the Tahs for the last few games. Each game they lose is another step towards fixing the problem as far as I am concerned.

2012-06-04T10:08:07+00:00

schuey

Guest


'I don't believe Foley is the problem more a lack of purpose by some senior players' Who picks the players?. And for that matter. Who picks the coach?. FFS it's called accountability.

2012-06-04T09:58:57+00:00

joeb

Guest


Yes, but he's been struggling with the Lions, and towards the end of his stay in Perth things became pretty intense. Still, maybe it's precisely what the Tahs need, someone to really get in their ear. Good point, i wouldn't object to him taking the reins.

2012-06-04T09:58:52+00:00

schuey

Guest


All the evidence points to something more than a 'footy problem' levelheaded. Do you really think buying a playmaker will change things?. Really?. West Ham recently got promoted to the Premier League. Big Sam Allardyce took on the managment role there a season ago. The first thing he himself said he did when he started was change the culture of the organisation. I The emphasis was as much off the pitch as on.

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