The Wallabies are playing the champs of world rugby. Bring on Quade!

By Spiro Zavos / Expert

Right on time the All Blacks won a scrum penalty about 20m in from the touchline and well inside the Wallaby 22. Time was up.

The All Blacks were 5 points up and had only to kick the ball into touch to clinch a hard-won victory.

Instead, Richie McCaw told Dan Carter to kick for goal, added the instruction: ‘Make sure it goes over.’

By opting to take the kick at goal, McCaw also opted to give the Wallabies their only possible chance of winning the game.

If the ball hit the posts or fell short of the dead ball area and the Wallabies re-gathered and went all the way down the field to score a try and convert it, they would have pulled off the greatest heist in rugby history.

It’s history now that Carter kicked the penalty and the All Blacks opened their aggressive attack on The Rugby Championship with a victory away from home, also denying the Wallabies a bonus point.

It’s worth deconstructing the last few minutes of an enthralling Test match to make the point that the All Blacks, for the last couple of years, and this year, too, going on the evidence of this season so far, are one of the great Test teams in the history.

I could not help thinking as I watched the 2012 All Blacks go about the difficult task of defeating the Wallabies at home at ANZ Stadium that they have become the rugby equivalent of the Queensland State of Origin side. And the other top tier rugby nations, including the Wallabies (who have inflicted the last two losses on the All Blacks), are the equivalent of New South Wales.

Queensland have won the State of Origin for the last 8 years. The All Blacks have held the Bledisloe Cup for the past decade. Judging by the way the two teams played on Saturday night, the All Blacks will defeat the Wallabies at Auckland next weekend at Eden Park, a ground where Australia last defeated New Zealand in 1984!

Now those last few minutes of play deconstructed.

The crucial fact for Wallaby supporters, and something coach Robbie Deans ruefully acknowledged, is that despite a terrible first half, the Wallabies were only five points behind with the same number of minutes left to play.

Berrick Barnes had kicked a massive penalty punt to take play into the New Zealand half. The Wallabies mounted a series of attacks. They were too static, as they had been throughout the Test. And somehow Digby Ioane couldn’t be released the way he was when he set up the Wallabies first and only try near half-time to take the score, after the conversion, to 18 New Zealand – 10 Australia.

The All Blacks defended as they did against France in those last 20 minutes of the 2011 Rugby World Cup. They stayed behind the offside line. They didn’t try to win the ball on the ground with their hands and give away a penalty.

They had terrific line speed in coming up to attack the ball runner. And finally after a series of Wallaby hit-ups, the hooker Andrew Hore wrenched a ball clear from a maul. Israel Dagg booted the ball down field. Chased his own kick and tackled Adam Ashley-Cooper in the Wallaby in-goal area.

From the scrum and put-in, the All Black pack, as it had done several times in the Test, crushed the Wallaby pack and forced the penalty that Carter kicked.

Notice it was Hore not McCaw who got the turnover. And Dagg chased his own kick hard. And throughout the Wallaby attack, the All Blacks kept their discipline. Finally, Carter did kick the goal.

As Greg Clarke pointed out in his commentary, Carter has an 88 per cent winning record as an All Black. McCaw has captained the All Blacks 71 times for 63 wins. And in the last 106 Tests when they were leading at half-time, the All Blacks have won 102 of those matches.

The Wallabies have been more successful (in relative terms) against the All Blacks than any other team.

The Bledisloe Cup, though, just accentuates just how difficult it is for teams to win successive Tests against the All Blacks.

Deans’ problem, rather like Ricky Stuart for NSW in recent years, is that the Australian franchises are just not providing him with talent that is honed to an international level.

I would argue that the only Wallaby who has improved his game so that he is the best in the world in his position is Will Genia. But even Genia this season, for the Reds and on Saturday night for the Wallabies, has adopted the emperor penguin position over the ball at ruck time.

I can’t believe he is being coached to stand so long over the ball, sometimes up to 10 seconds (honestly, I counted).

As Rod Kafer pointed out, the longer the halfback stands over the ball waiting for it to hatch an idea, the longer the defenders have to set their defence. And once the All Blacks set their defence, it is extremely difficult to find a way through it or even to make a dent in it, as the last series of defensive plays proved.

Now I want to talk about two other players who have been hyped extravagantly but rarely deliver up to the superlatives lavished on them. And I would make the point, this should not read as a sort of personal, accusatory criticism.

It is, though, the sort of criticism they would evoke if they played in New Zealand.

Before every Bledisloe Cup Test, the pundits start promoting David Pocock as a better number 7 than McCaw. To me this is rubbish. Pocock is a very good player.

I would not rate him as a great player in the same class as McCaw who might be the finest loose forward in the history of rugby.

The thing about Pocock is that he is a two trick pony. He tackles strongly in the line but rarely after a break-out has been made against his team: and he wins a lot of ball on the ground, although he was totally nullified on Saturday night when he conceded several penalties rather than making turnovers.

What is lacking in Pocock’s game is the sort of hard, tough bursts that McCaw has brought into his game. And the reason for this, in my opinion, is that he (Pocock) has muscled up so much he is resembles Wayne Pearce, the rugby league great, in that he has lost too much flexibility and speed.

I don’t believe a New Zealand coach – or put it this way because John Mitchell was his first Super Rugby coach – a coach in New Zealand would have allowed to lose his speed by over-building himself up.

He is like a top-heavy building with weak foundations. This is why I have argued that he should now be played at number 6 which is a position that calls for defence and guarding the narrow blindside rather than roaming all over the field as a number 7.

One final point, McCaw was used as a main lineout jumper early in the Test rather than Kieran Read. Pocock, to my knowledge, rarely jumps in the lineout.

Now Kurtley Beale. In The Australian on Saturday, on the front page, Mark Ella wrote a terrific tribute to Beale arguing that he was the three Ellas wrapped up in one player.

Mark is one of my favourite players (along with Tim Horan, David Campese and Jonah Lomu). He is extremely modest about his achievements and generous with his appraisals of the modern day player.

But Mark, I saw you play (and your brilliant brothers too) and Kurtley is no Mark Ella, and it is incomparable for any one privileged to watch him play whether club rugby for Randwick or in Tests for the Wallabies.

Beale is tremendously talented. He left Joeys a better player, though, than he was after the Waratahs had had him for so many years before he went to the Melbourne Rebels this season.

It is true to say that when he came into the Wallabies that Deans saw his potential as a fullback and he grew under the coaching of Deans into a good player.

Occasionally, Beale has been brilliant and a match-winner. But he has not done this consistently which is the mark of a great player.

And the reason for this is that the Super Rugby coaches he’s had haven’t been able to do to him what, say, Deans did with Dan Carter and Dave Rennie has done with Aaron Cruden.

Deans used to spend hours when the official training of the Crusaders was over rehearsing and practising all types of kicks with Carter. Did Ewen McKenzie and Chris Hickey do this with Beale?

Beale’s first 30 minutes or so of the Test were among the worst he’s ever played in his life. Two of his mistakes were followed immediately by the two All Blacks tries. I thought he was trying to over play his hand.

One of the principles of New Zealand rugby is that backs should under play their game and strike when least expected. The play of Israel Dagg is built around this principle.

Beale is a more talented player than Dagg. But Dagg is a better Test player, right now.

I watched the Test with the publisher of The Roar, Zac Zavos. Not long into the match, when the All Blacks looked like piling on the points, he remarked to me: ‘The poor Super Rugby seasons of the Australian franchises are coming home to roost.’

And this is right. The Wallaby coaching staff had to spend a great part of the three weeks in camp getting the players fit. And the work paid off to the extent that the Wallabies lost the first half 18 – 10 but drew the second half, when everyone expected blast off from the All Blacks, 9 – 9, with the All Blacks final points coming right on time.

And there was a lot to admire about the play of the Wallabies. They did take the All Blacks on. There wasn’t nearly as much kicking from the Wallabies as we expected. The scrum won some penalties and was only crushed once, although this was an important loss when the Wallabies were on attack and needing a converted try to take the lead.

The glaring failure of the team, though, is its inability to score tries. This Test season the Wallabies have scored six tries in five Tests. Not good enough.

It’s time for Quade Cooper at five-eighths and Berrick Barnes at inside centre.

The argument that Cooper hasn’t had enough rugby doesn’t make sense. He’s had more rugby than Beale and Drew Mitchell and James O’Connor when he comes back into the side.

If there is an issue about something or rather to do with Cooper (he hasn’t signed up with the ARU although he has with the Queensland Rugby Union) then let’s hear what it is about.

The fact of the matter is that the Wallabies are not going to win back the Bledisloe Cup, any more than NSW are going to win the next State of Origin, without some X-factor player to match the numerous X-factor players the All Blacks have.

Cooper can win Tests when things go his way. He can lose them, too, as he showed in the 2011 Rugby World Cup semi-final.

But for a side that is out-classed all around the field, as the Wallabies were on Saturday night, someone with the touch of genius is needed to make the plays that like alchemy turn dross into gold.

The Crowd Says:

2012-08-25T04:04:09+00:00

Saker

Guest


No offense Ralph - tho I think your point has relevance to a point - but who are the current League world champions? Not Australia.

2012-08-25T03:58:37+00:00

Saker

Guest


now After one match like hell? His form at international level has been sensational. In the WC he was easily the best fullback and against Ireland in the test series simply outstanding carving them to shreds. He is quicker then Beale and better defensively and the one weapon he has is that insane 8o metre punt that he sometimes unleashes and with great accuracy and I don't if you have noticed, but when he punts the ball up in the air it goes up for miles - and seems to take forever to come down allowing him and other All Blacks to arrive when it comes down. In the last 12 months Dagg has been the most consistent and most dangerous Fullback at test level in the world regardless of his Super 15 form and he still played well just not his usual blinding self. Dagg for many reasons has weapons - like his punt and positional strength that are second to no one in world rugby at fullback.

2012-08-21T12:26:27+00:00

Sluggy

Roar Guru


I agree. I never cease to wonder why rugby, which offers a position as a professional sportsman to brick shaped slow tough guys - as opposed to AFL or League where they don't have the skills or speed- isn't attracting these guys.

2012-08-21T12:17:04+00:00

Sluggy

Roar Guru


BS, for the first 3 yrears Deans usually picked Giteau/Barnes or Cooper/Giteau at 10/12 with occasional changes for injuries. It was only in year 4 (2011) that with Giteau dropped, and Barnes injured he went with a non ball playing IC instead of a 2nd 5/8.

2012-08-20T23:42:29+00:00

mania

Guest


kiwi - i dont disagree that he brought this on himself but do we really care that much to continue it? i dont and i really dont think he's a good enough player to warrant all this attention. if anything AB's fans should be welcoming him back.

2012-08-20T23:22:35+00:00

kiwi

Guest


I don't agree mania. Rightly or wrongly (and I really believe he's mainly brought this upon himself) if he comes back to New Zealand - and especially Auckland - he can expect more of the same.

2012-08-20T22:08:17+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


with Barnes at 10 in the their last 5 tests the Wallabies have had a pathetic attack, he cannot run a backline.

2012-08-20T22:05:39+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


timani made 10 tackles , missed 1 tackle

2012-08-20T21:10:16+00:00

Kevy

Guest


predictions... 25 Aug All Blacks vs. Wallabies Eden Park, Auckland - All Blacks by 20+ 08 Sep Wallabies vs. Springboks Patersons Stadium, Perth - Boks by 10+ 15 Sep Wallabies vs. Argentina Skilled Park, Gold Coast - Wallabies by 5 30 Sep Springboks vs. Wallabies Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria - Boks by 10+ 07 Oct Argentina vs. Wallabies Rosario Central Stadium, Rosario - Arg by 1 I recall earlier comments by ex All Black Richard Loe, his prediction was that the Wallabies would win only one game at these championships, I tend agree given the way we played last Saturday. Bring back Q Cooper? playing into the hands of the kiwis, does Public enemy #1 ring the bell?

2012-08-20T18:53:18+00:00

Jerry

Guest


It wasn't the semi-final - think it was the 2004 TN match. Marshall went off with injured ribs in the semi-final.

2012-08-20T18:06:01+00:00

Let the One King Rule

Guest


Anyone who suggests that the Kiwis jeer QC just out of 'devilment' really has no conception of how much he is hated outside of Australia.

2012-08-20T18:02:15+00:00

Shop

Guest


I didn't count, but 8 out of 10 scrums must have ended in penalties with the arm alternating between both sides - ridiculous. I though a couple of penalties for the AB's going of feet was unfair because there was no opposition, however there were plenty cases of AB bodies lying around the tackle area without a care in the world and never penalised. I think the it all evened out in the end, but it was pedantic and poor reffing. Usually Rolland is better. Steve Walsh was much better in the ARG v SA game.

2012-08-20T18:01:01+00:00

Let the One King Rule

Guest


Queensland won the Super title because the best team in the competition was crippled by natural disasters, and because of the teething problems inherent in the first year of the God-awful conference system. The same X factor players have been impotent at Test level, with no indication of getting any better.

2012-08-20T17:53:31+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


Shop if you're new to the forum I've gone over this so many millions of times as to not want to repeat it. But you can listen to RK going on as he is not tired of the issue.

2012-08-20T17:43:03+00:00

Shop

Guest


"if McKenzie was given the job tomorrow" you have me excited already!

2012-08-20T17:40:56+00:00

Shop

Guest


Relatively new to the forum, but KPM, Deans has made a very long list of errors as Kev mentions. Since his reign - and I was initially a fan - there has been very little to cheer about. It isn't just his record that is questionable but the lack of any consistancy or direction. Ironically, I think last weekend was the first time when the players, not the coach, was at fault.

2012-08-20T14:56:07+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Im with you armchair sprotsfani was filthy the last time i was so angry as a wallaby fan was when i was still in highschool. -The wallabies played a test vs NZ in 1997 at chrsitchurch. Larkham was fullback played well, but we got smashed the likes of marco Caputo never played for OZ again we were a mess that day. matt cockbain made his test debut, but yes we were all over the place it was a disgrace, rod mcqueen came in shortly after and fixed it up. -And Jake white might need to do the same.

2012-08-20T14:04:12+00:00

Armchair Sportsfan

Guest


Im so angry I don’t know where to start...but rather than go over all the things that could/should be done at the team level, there’s only one that really matters... The attitude of the players (admittledly from my outside viewpoint) to me is so symptomatic that they have no faith in the coach, methods, or the team. If this was a business, you’d either see all the employees leave or the boss gets fired...since it’s a national team the players have less of a choice about leaving than they might like...so the solution is obvious. Sadly, as others have said on this site, while i'll be cheering the WB's this weekend, a little part of me hopes they get spanked so that changes will ensue.

2012-08-20T13:45:34+00:00

abnutta

Roar Guru


sheek, if you're counting the 1994 French "series" of 2 test matches, then let's not forget Trevor Allan's side that regained the Bledisloe Cup in 1949. 1971 Lions supporters... we're not forgetting your 2-1 series victory either but sheek does refer to "countries" which I assume referred only to individual nations rather than composite touring teams... am I right sheek ;)

2012-08-20T13:39:34+00:00

abnutta

Roar Guru


sheek, you mention the 1986 series below. Might be interested to note that the fine tighthead prop, Gary Knight, who was playing the last 2 matches of his All Black career in that series, was also a noted wrestler. He won a bronze medal at the 1974 Commonwealth Games.

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