Oh boy, who can save the Waratahs now?

By jeznez / Roar Guru

My Waratahs need saving from themselves. The players are clearly not enjoying themselves, fans are turning their backs, the coaches are stressed and the board is making meaningless noises.

Many are calling for a clean out of the board, coaching staff and playing roster.

I’m not sure if the ARU review being undertaken by Peter Cosgrove and Mark Arbib covers the Super Rugby sides. Hopefully it does. We’ll see what these two come up with in regards to the corporate governance of the game in this country.

Certainly the split of the NSWRU and Waratahs boards isn’t working from an on-field success perspective. In the meantime the coaches and players are there in the spotlight enduring a searing scrutiny.

The coaching structure has failed and needs to be replaced. Scott Johnson is my preferred option. I liked the way Johnson’s Welsh team played and would like to see what he can do as the head coach with an Aussie side.

Michael Cheika is another candidate but I haven’t seen his sides play so I cannot offer an opinion. I also prefer Johnson as coach as I think backs make better head coaches. Their skill sets as players involves the use of space, use of the ball and the scoring of tries. Forwards ultimately have their key focus on the contest for possession.

When it comes to game management, ultimately the backs and particularly the halves have the greatest say. Giving the backs coach the largest say in defining playing style and having the forwards coach assist by supplying a pack to complement that style is the sensible way to go.

Whoever next year’s coach is, they should be allowed to choose their own assistants. If replaced, Michael Foley has offered to stay on as an assistant but I have my concerns about him as a forwards coach.

The Waratahs scrum is excellent, their line out is okay, their mauling is poor and their static, flat-footed pick, drive and ruck game is terrible. Mauling and getting momentum into the pick and drive are easily fixed – that Foley has not done this concerns me greatly.

The Waratahs had one maul on the weekend where they successfully changed their angle and had a strong five or six man pod, ball at the back and only one or two Hurricanes in front of them; the remaining Hurricanes forwards had been isolated off to the side due to the good change of angle.

Despite having a three to one man advantage in the maul at that point it did not move forward.

This tells me that the ‘Tahs forwards are slacking off in the maul and expecting their team mates to pick up the slack. The strength of their scrum indicates where their mauling should be. Technique, power and teamwork are key to both scrummaging and skills and if you are good at scrummaging you should be good at mauling.

There really is no excuse for the poor mauling, which the Waratahs have been guilty of all year. The Brumbies are a smaller pack and vastly superior at it. They clearly work on this aspect of their game, work for each other and most importantly work together.

The Waratahs, except for their scrummaging, do not appear to be a cohesive unit.

Clearly fitness is a big issue. The Waratahs did lots of good things on the weekend, after their early poor kicks they greatly reduced their use of this option. If the rugbyheaven stats are to be believed they only kicked 12 times to the Hurricanes 25.

The ‘Tahs were right in the game at the sixty minute mark and if they could have converted pressure to points then who knows what would have happened. Instead, they ran out of puff as they have all year and in the end were beaten badly.

There was a concerted effort under Chris Hickey to increase the size and power of this side, too often they got over powered by opponents, particularly the Bulls.

Unfortunately in building size they have lost aerobic capacity and it shows badly. The team fades very poorly in both halves and does not build enough points in the early periods to try and defend a lead.

I would have looked at this four week break in the season as a chance to build some fitness before the last two matches. However, with eleven players in the Wallabies squad, the key culprits wouldn’t be available and the rest should be released to Shute Shield and given a chance to clear their heads.

A lot of the weekend’s issues were matters of skill; the continued drop ball killed all momentum. Handling was not the only issue though; tactically the team struggled.

After making breaks, they resorted to their forward pod hit ups to try and barge over. Pretorius tried once to go wide when close to the try line and was unable to hit Barnes. All those blaming the forwards for Barnes not getting a drop goal chance against the Cheetahs might want to consider that Pretorius would have had to pass that ball.

The forwards and halves need to have a look at what happens when they get within five metres of the try line. Barnes no longer wants the ball, he tells Pretorius to organise forward hit ups and a slow, predictable, flat footed procession of forwards take turns punching into a set defensive line.

The methods used to successfully progress up the other 95 metres of the field are abandoned as they punch at the edges of the ruck.

Is this a hangover to the wasted chances in the matches against the Chiefs and Brumbies?

The message from the coaching staff after those losses was one of patience. This appears to have translated into conservatism on the rugby field. The first half of the Cheetahs game and the period from ten through sixty minutes of the Hurricanes game indicate that the Waratahs’ reliance on kicking is waning.

The forward rumbles where players receiving flat-footed and not running onto the ball with any momentum needs to change. It completely slows the game down, allows the defence to re-set and asks very few questions of any competent tackler. It was a problem last year and remains one this year.

In the back line, apart from momentary flashes they have disappointed. Bernard Foley must be given a chance in the 10 shirt. It doesn’t even require a change from the starting line up. Berrick Barnes can move to 12 and Adam Ashley-Cooper to 15.

Foley has been one of the most positive players in the Waratahs this year. Foley’s debut last year in a playoff against the Blues was at 10. Why hasn’t he been given another shot at it? Take some pressure off Barnes by moving him to the secondary play-maker’s spot. It is such a simple switch I cannot believe we haven’t seen it all season.

Finally, why with Drew Mitchell’s return have we not seen Atieli Pakalani on the bench? The last two weeks we have had Daniel Halangahu and Tom Carter, neither is able to come on and offer a spark late in a game.

At least Pakalani has pace. It makes no sense that he would be left out of the 22. If he is injured and then one of the other outside backs should be there instead.

The Waratahs have the personnel to perform much better than they are this season. Their game plan, fitness, lack of confidence and coaching are all conspiring against them.

There are two games left, they need to go away make a few of the simple changes discussed above and have a real go in their last matches.

There certainly isn’t anything left to lose.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2012-06-05T08:21:09+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Let the tug of war commence SB!

2012-06-05T07:37:58+00:00

sittingbison

Guest


the consensus with Force supporters is Johnson Chieka Louden not necessarily in that order. All have different attributes that make them appealing. Not really interested in the other names mentioned, although Mulvihill was liked by players and fans when he was Mitchells assistant. Problem is has he got the experience and authority to make the necessary changes.

2012-06-05T07:33:45+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Maybe jeznez your right. I have another smokey Carlos Psencer and rod kafer. Spencer is the deputy to Mitchell at the Lions jeznez. And Deans was the deputy to Mitchell so it can't be all deans or spencers fault with teams involving Mitch. And kafe has top line experience head coach at sarecens from memory. Pat Howard too would be great but he seems tied up with cricket australia now, but he has head coach roles inengland too. Matt Burke does some coaching witht he tahs. but maybe not Burkey yet. Phil Mooney maybe might get another oppurtunity, but he did nothing much at otago either in the ITM cup. Phil Blake too of course is from sydney not Perth remember and he has such good connections in sydney from his league days and at the Marlins in manly, and john muggleton would love a head coach job. Brian smith the rugby union brian smith. And here is an out there 1. Sir clive woodward. Don't laugh everyone . Woodard for those that don't know may not look like it but he played test rugby for England, and he played club rugby at warringah, so he knows the sydney scene and lifestyle. Nick mallett to or martin johnson even as he has had time in NZ johnson played junior all blacks. Dick Muir from south africa maybe, or brian ashton too, I don't think the tahs will get bernard laporte, peter devilliers, or marc lievermont somehow.

AUTHOR

2012-06-05T07:19:49+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Johnno - I'm with Carnivean - Mitchell's efforts with the Force and Lions are black marks. The Chiefs were inconsistent under him. Todd Louden has a lot of supporters - he walked away from the Tahs as they wouldn't give him what he wanted. He might be worth another look.

AUTHOR

2012-06-05T06:18:33+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Did not catch them Paul. Looked up Jed Holloway and am pleased to see another Southern Districts lad doing well. He is a bit small for a Super 15 lock - similar to Luke Jones. Jed is 195cm and 107kg's on the ARU website. The Waratahs do have one of last years U-20s on their roster in Greg Petersen - he is 204cm and 122kg - that puts him up there in the Timani, Douglas and Neville size range. Hopefully he can come through and earn selection in the 22 as Mumm moves on. Richard Stanford at 196cm 110kg's is ahead of him in the selectors minds at the moment playing in the last two games. Stanford has been ok in his matches so far - although the knock on compounded by the penalty on the weekend was poor.

AUTHOR

2012-06-05T06:11:58+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


I agree, the number of times in the last couple of seasons that we have seen the Waratahs try for the pushover and not quite get there, get penalties awarded to them and re-set has driven me nuts. I'd like to see pushovers but although the Tahs scrum has been on top, it hasn't been that far on top. Having a crack in other parts of the field to earn penalties that are kickable or just give field position would be much more useful.

2012-06-05T05:41:21+00:00

Farthing

Guest


Fair point.

2012-06-05T04:42:38+00:00

Carnivean

Guest


John Mitchell, the most losing coach ever at Super Rugby? John Kirwan would be a good answer, with Foley, or some other ex-forward as the forwards coach.

2012-06-05T04:41:24+00:00

Carnivean

Guest


Dean Mumm can do that. I think we need something more.

2012-06-05T03:43:57+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Laurie Fisher might want a new challange jeznez, he must be inspired by Jake white and would love another crack at a head coaching job. Jake White has seemed to re-energized Laurie Fisher. John Mitchell even who i rate highly, or even John KIrwan.

AUTHOR

2012-06-05T03:33:58+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Johnnon, Henry certainly has pedigree but I can't see him wanting to do it. Bob has had two bites at the Tahs and we didn't acheive the success we want in his second coming. Alan is so long out of the game I can't imagine he'd be good for the side. Campo has never been a head coach, only ever a specialist. Johnson and Cheika are the stand out candidates for mine with the likes of Louden and Mooney the next ones to look at.

2012-06-05T03:13:03+00:00

Paul.

Guest


Did anyone watch the under 20s last night? Has to be some answers there they looked good. With 2 games left the Tahs should try em, I mean that Holloway guy in the second row looks great, dunno what he is like in the scrums but he can fend a bloke in the face and that's always fun to watch.

2012-06-05T02:43:28+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Tah land needs dramatic and extremly drastic measures, and it has to be put out there. What about the following candadate to coach the tahs as head coach. Sir Grahame Henry, Bob Dwyer or Alan Jones. Or too get really advenerous our own Roar columinist Campo,

2012-06-05T01:59:54+00:00

Bellringer

Guest


Yeah it's Pukala, he's away with Tonga at the moment in the PNC, he'll probably partner another Aussie player in the midfield who was let slip by the brilliant Aussie talent scouts Maafi Kefu. -- Comment left via The Roar's iPhone app. Download The Roar's iPhone App in the App Store here.

AUTHOR

2012-06-05T01:49:41+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


ORB on another thread is pushing subbies players! There must be some good players out there. Was distressed to see some of the comment yesterday nominating an Eastwood centre only for another Roarer to flag that Perpignan has just locked the guy to a three year deal. I've never seen the guy they were talking about but the fact we have had Tom Carter and Dan Halangahu there for ever and there is apparently a good number 12 getting picked off by Europe is a selection/scouting issue.

AUTHOR

2012-06-05T01:47:12+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Was that under the second coming of Bob Dwyer? I thought they'd payed enough when the Brumbies knocked them out in the finals the next weekend by putting about 50 points on them.

AUTHOR

2012-06-05T01:46:12+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Was a definite plan from Hickey a little while ago, it hasn't worked so they have to attack it in the off-season.

AUTHOR

2012-06-05T01:43:09+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Sheek - I agree we have structural issues. As long as the premier clubs control the state boards they aren't going to change a thing. This is an ARU issue more than a NSWRU one. I agree it needs a solution but making the changes above would not in anyway hinder changes at the structural level. We are going to see a clean out at the Tahs next year. Mumm is definitely gone, Elsom is 90% gone, Halangahu and Carter need to complete the moving on list. The replacements need to be young developing guys. There is enough top line talent in the team now, we just need to see the next guys coming through. If you look at the Tahs and tag players as developing in their careers it is a fairly skinny list: Truly young/developing: Paddy Ryan, Lopeti Timani, Michael Hooper (from next year), Bernard Foley and Tom Kingston Been there a little while and still young/ or new but already mature - we'll get some improvement from this group but not as much as those above: Jeremy Tilse, Damian Fitzpatrick, John Ulugia, Richard Stanford, Chris Alcock, Pat McCutcheon, Sitaleki Timani, Kane Douglas, Brendan McKibbin, Rob Horne and Atieli Pakalani. They have a key group of players near their peak - guys like Benn Robinson, Tatafu Polota-Nau, Sekope Kepu, Dave Dennis, Wycliff Palu, Berrick Barnes, Adam Ashley-Cooper are all at their top. Add in Dan Vickerman, Drew Mitchell and Lachlan Turner if they can recover from injury. The guys who need to move on from the squad are the ones I mentioned above in Mumm, Rocky, Hangers and Carter - they need to find some more up and comers to replace these guys.

2012-06-05T01:26:46+00:00

cros

Guest


The Tahs pedestrian backline and focus on playing 8 man rugby is letting themselves down. Not to mention the mindless and continual kicking away possession, has them not only losing games but the fans staying away in droves. Expecting a different outcome with the same approach is one definition of an idiot. The Tahs seemingly play a conservative game to prevent a defeat, rather than chancing their arm in order to succeed. The Auckland Blues have achieved a similar result, but I would still pay the price of admission to see them play. The Tahs are pretty dull to watch.

2012-06-05T01:26:26+00:00

mania

Guest


yeah remember that one. kearns sounded surprised. was funny early on when they were saying that diff to tahs and canes is the canes dont kick it all the time, then barrett boots it down field.

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