Rugby legends tend to arise in groups

By jeznez / Roar Guru

Rugby is a game built upon teamwork. I think one of the greatest demonstrations of this is in players frequently rising to greatness in the trios or pairs of their minor units.

By minor unit I mean the team within the team, within the team.

Front row is one such unit, they exist within a secondary unit of the tight five, itself a subset of the forward pack which itself is a unit within the overall team. Teamwork is required within minor units for successful rugby.

In today’s article, I want to focus on that most granular group and how frequently strong players rise together improving each other as they go.

You can look at the Olo Brown, Sean Fitzpatrick and Craig Dowd front row from the All Blacks, the Tony Daly, Phil Kearns and Ewen McKenzie front row for the Wallabies. These are front rows that stand out long after their retirement.

I’m sure a number of Aussie scrum knockers will criticise me for mentioning that Aussie front row alongside that All Black one, but Australia has not had as strong a front row unit since then.

Those three are absolutely a trio that rose and had success together, capped by the 1991 World Cup win.

I always laugh when I recall Tony Daly being credited with the try in that final because McKenzie had his hands on that ball as they grounded it together.

I think more recently we can actually look at the Reds front row from a couple of years ago. Calling themselves the Tripod, Ben Daley, Saia Fainga’a and Laurie Weeks had quite a bit of success taking tightheads against some much more fancied packs.

They certainly have not been the same players at scrum time since Weeks broke up the band and moved to the Rebels.

A front row is always going to be judged on their scrum work and a trio that know each other well can hit with good timing, control the height of the scrum and work as a unit to counter what the opposition throw at them.

Second rowers often rise in pairs. The most prominent of the modern era have been the Bulls and Springbok duo of Victor Matfield and Bakkies Botha. Modern locks tend to be paired with a lighter number four who controls lineouts and a heavier number five who locks the scrum driving in behind the tighthead.

Matfield was a superb lineout exponent and Botha provided the power needed from a five. The Irish pair of Paul O’Connell and Donncha O’Callaghan split the role a little less distinctly but also rose together as a unit.

John Eales formed two really strong partnerships during his career, in the early part he worked well with the more senior Rod McCall and later he partnered very strongly with David Giffin.

In the back row, it can be tough to get outstanding players in all three positions delivering everything that is required. Ball poaching, inside defence and running are all needed to be added to a third lineout option and set piece contribution.

The Jerome Kaino, Richie McCaw and Keiran Read trio at the last World Cup were exceptional.

Halfbacks and five eighths are another basic unit and certainly having a great player in one position without a strong player in the other weakens their effectiveness.

In Australia we’ve had some great combinations, with Nick Farr-Jones and Michael Lynagh being one such pair. Will Genia and Quade Cooper have built a fantastic rapport playing together for the Reds and Wallabies.

Probably the most indelibly linked pair in Australia has been George Gregan and Stephen Larkham, who were such a tight nit pair for the Brumbies and Wallabies that they share the naming rights to a stand at Bruce Stadium.

Obviously centres work together and the Tim Horan and Jason Little pairing is one of the best we’ve seen in Australia. In more recent times the South African pair of Jean de Villiers and Jacque Fourie worked really well together and for the All Blacks Ma’a Nonu and Conrad Smith have been brilliant.

Going back in time, the likes of Jeremy Guscott and Will Carling were a strong pairing as were Frank Bunce and Walter Little.

From that group, Tim Horan and Frank Bunce are my favourites. They were stand out players but they were lifted by (and lifted in turn) their centre partners.

When it comes to the outside backs, I struggle to think of a trio who really worked together and were stronger when all three were on the pitch. Hopefully some Roarers who actually like back play can nominate some players in this space.

I think it is interesting that individually limited players can make a great unit, I’m constantly drawn back to the David Wilson, Matt Cockbain and Totai Kefu back row for the Wallabies. As a unit, they were greater than the sum of their parts.

Wilson was an out and out fetcher/breakdown specialist, Cockbain provided the lineout option and tackled anything that moved, Kefu played the classic number eight ball running and linking role.

I cannot look at any of those three and say they were a individually a complete player, but they created a very complete and balanced backrow that brought the Wallabies great success.

I actually think the David Pocock, Scott Higginbotham and Wycliff Palu backrow that the Wallabies are using now has the potential to be similarly complete.

I think Palu’s injuries and Higginbotham improving his judgement of when to play tight and when to play loose are the keys for this group.

I’m not saying that Pocock, Higginbotham and Palu would be the same style as Wilson, Cockbain and Kefu, but I do think they can be similarly complete in performing all the functions needed from a backrow.

The main point I’m trying to highlight in this article is that greats frequently arise together as part of a working unit.

Front rowers need good second rowers, the modern contract exists such that as long as the four and five push, one and three will lift them come lineout time. Centres need halves, backs need forwards.

I’m not sure if forwards need backs but there must be a reason other than maintaining the status quo that we keep them around.

It will be interesting to see which of the mini-battles between units comes off on Saturday. Both the Chiefs and Sharks have quality groups in their front rows, second rows, back rows, halves.

The centres for both teams have been disrupted, but for both of them, their most dangerous players are there.

Will it be one or more of those key groups that swings the match? Or will it be those unsung men, waiting out on the cold, cold wings who have a major say?

The Crowd Says:

2012-08-10T23:30:24+00:00

Lannash

Guest


As an AB follower I learned to fear Gregan/Giteau at their best. Back in history we had brothers - Going, Going and almost Going for the ABs, Colin and Stan Meads (AB locks) and the Ella brothers for Australia. All combining on the back lawn, no doubt.

2012-08-09T08:02:32+00:00

Sneaky Samurai

Guest


Maybe somebody who is more steeped in rugby folklore than I, could do an article on player's nicknames? "Wild" Bill Cerutti, "Killer" Ken Kearney... where have all the primeval nicknames gone?

2012-08-04T05:36:03+00:00

Sluggy

Roar Guru


How about giving Genia/Beale a run? Please Mr Deans, please.

2012-08-04T04:19:43+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Jeznez, You make a good point here. Just looking at your specialty - the front-row - the first great Wallaby front-row was brought together back in 1929/30 - Wild Bill Cerutti at tight-head, Eddie Bonis at hooker & Eddie Thompson at loose-head. Unfortunately, Thompson retired ridiculously early at age 24 to concentrate on his career as a bank officer. These were after all, the amateur days, & the depression was also hitting. In 1947/48, Eric Tweedale, Killer Ken Kearney & Nick Shehadie formed another strong front-row. Kearney went onto greater fame in rugby league, guiding St. George to its first 6 of 11 successive grand finals, 1956-61. Then came the celebrated trio of Jon White, Peter Johnson & John Thornett from 1963-65. They were followed by Andy McIntyre, Tom Lawton jnr & Topo Rodriguez in 1984-87, & then Ewen McKenzie, Phil Kearns & Tony Daly 1990-95. Even the 1999 world cup trio of Andrew Blades, Mick Foley & Richard Harry was technically brilliant if largely underrated. Even famous halves come in pairs - for the Wallabies, Tom Lawton snr & Syd Malcolm (1927-32), Phil Hawthorne & Ken Catchpole (1962-67), Paul McLean & John Hipwell (1974-78), Mark Ella & Phil Cox (1980-84), Mick Lynagh & Nick Farr-Jones (1985-93), Steve Larkham & George Gregan (1998-2007) & more recently Quade Cooper & Will Genia.

2012-08-03T12:26:28+00:00

Johnno

Guest


jeznez steve Mcdowell was a fantastic prop. Just born to be a prop. Him fitzpatrick and Loe were one of the most fearsome front rows ever mighty tough all of them and good rugby intelligence. I agree jeznez this aussy props and hookers you mention not very confident in the scrummaging at all not a chance. Give me Noriega, or Andrew Blades anyway of the week.

2012-08-03T11:11:40+00:00

AndyS

Guest


Quite right. In some respects he is a particularly interesting example in that he was the last and youngest of such a group, left behind and kind of isolated as the older players started to retire.

2012-08-03T10:14:24+00:00

DC of nz

Guest


Fifty comments here and not one mention of.... matt giteau.... What does that tell you ? Has he been wiped from the history books already?

2012-08-03T07:26:25+00:00

Jutsie

Guest


Yeah but jones couldn't decide between waugh or smith so he played two openside flankers at 6 and 7 instead of melon. Such a waste of great talent.

2012-08-03T07:02:02+00:00

Damo

Guest


I thought Melon was a 6?

2012-08-03T04:34:48+00:00

Jutsie

Guest


Agreed, I will never get over the fact jones played waugh over melon during the 2003 world cup.

2012-08-03T04:28:57+00:00

Dexter William

Roar Guru


Melon Finegan, George Smith and Kefu was also pretty good. Melon was our best openside flanker in the last 20 years.

AUTHOR

2012-08-03T04:24:35+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


ha ha ha, I was wondering when someone would pick up on that line. :D

AUTHOR

2012-08-03T04:21:38+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Correct, Harry was a converted flanker. Had been playing breakaway (I think openside) for Sydney Uni and he asked what he had to do to progress to the next level - was told become a prop.

AUTHOR

2012-08-03T04:20:25+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


I was very close to including Brooke and Jones in my second row pair. Very close.

2012-08-03T03:46:16+00:00

Shungmao

Guest


Back three Roff, Burke and Tune we pretty cohesive

2012-08-03T03:18:00+00:00

Riccardo

Guest


None other but it was Greg Cooper...

2012-08-03T03:17:02+00:00

Jerry

Guest


It was actually Greg Cooper. Matt Cooper was a Waikato team-mate of Loe's.

2012-08-03T03:05:17+00:00

Jutsie

Guest


Ahhh so Harry was the prototype for the props we've had throughout the 2000's, looks good in open play but wasn't good in the actual scrum.

2012-08-03T02:55:49+00:00

Grimmace

Roar Pro


I've never been able to work out why we keep backs either

2012-08-03T02:55:13+00:00

Johnno

Guest


For me in rugby defence and set pieces, come 1st and attack 2nd. You can't attack if you are getting trod on in defence. Just ask Quade cooper.

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