Golden era beckons for Wallabies

By Andrew Logan / Expert

Following last weekend’s 18-18 draw with New Zealand, a few grizzled old heads will have cast their minds back to another significant draw with the All Blacks in 1988.

An unheralded Wallaby side with several new combinations ran the 1987 World Champions to a 19-19 draw at Ballymore.

There are more than a few parallels between the two matches.

In 1988 and 2012, the All Blacks had won the World Cup the previous year. Both times also, Australia had lost the semi-final and eventually played Wales in the third place World Cup playoff.

In the previous game between the two sides, the Wallabies had lost by over 20 points both times – 22 points in 2012, and 25 points in 1988.

And on both occasions, the Wallabies were to face the Lions at home the following season.

In both Tests, the flyhalf was an indigenous player from the Randwick club – in 1988 it was Lloyd Walker, who was selected for his debut. In 2012, Kurtley Beale was returning to the flyhalf shirt after a long stint at fullback.

In both matches, an unfashionable but highly effective second-choice player was playing fullback.

In 1988, Andrew Leeds was brought in to cover the goalkicking, sending Campese back to the wing.

In 2012, Mike Harris was shifted to fullback and handed goalkicking duties. Both fullbacks kicked crucial goals in the drawn games – Harris five penalties, and Leeds three penalties and a conversion.

The 1988 result was a memorable one for Australia, but it was a rare positive blip on an undistinguished path through to the end of 1990, less than a year from the World Cup win. Not unlike the undistinguished path the Wallabies have found themselves on recently.

Between 1988 and 1990, under Bob Dwyer’s tutelage, the Wallabies won just 11 out of 21 Tests, a success rate only slightly better than 50%. The 1988-90 Wallabies lost Tests to New Zealand, the Lions, England and France. They beat New Zealand only once, in the last Test of the 1990 Bledisloe series and the final Test of that year.

Despite this, lots of pundits wouldn’t be too disappointed if history repeated itself. That means the Wallabies would lose the Lions series next year 2-1, blood several rookies in the subsequent 12 months who’d become Wallaby greats, and then win the World Cup in 2015. Many would be happy with that.

But what the Dwyer record reinforces is the same belief many have about Deans – that winning is a lot less about the coach and a lot more about the talent he has on hand at the time. Certainly Dwyer had an undistinguished record until he managed to get the right talent together.

And this is the key similarity between the two eras. At the moment we are seeing an unbelievable number of players making their debut for the Wallabies.

It’s easy to think that this is unheard of but, in fact, in the two seasons prior to the 1991 World Cup win, an amazing 22 players played their first Test for Australia.

Among these names were Horan, Little, Kearns, Daly, McCall, McKenzie, Roebuck, Egerton, Eales and Ofahengaue – 10 players who would start in the 1991 Rugby World Cup final, and yet, just one or two years before the tournament, most had not yet played a single Test.

Incredibly, Roebuck, Egerton and Eales made their debut together on July 21st, 1991, just three months and four Tests before the beginning of the World Cup tournament.

On that basis, we shouldn’t be surprised if the Wallabies are very competitive with the Lions next year.

The lead-up to the 1991 World Cup also proved that great new talent is always just around the corner and so our current Wallabies are in good shape for 2015.

There will be very few retirements and with new caps still to arrive on the scene, there will be 40-plus players with Test, World Cup and Lions Tour experience under their belts by the time the 2015 World Cup squad is chosen.

As happens every year, we’ll unearth at least one boom rookie who will be a legitimate star in three years’ time. History would suggest that we’ll see at least one truly great player against the Lions who hasn’t played a Test at all yet.

Michael Hooper is a great example of a player coming from nowhere to be the one of the best opensides in the world in a few short months and it could happen again next year.

The question of course remains whether Robbie Deans is the right coach, even if he has a great squad.

The biggest problem for Robbie is that he has often been forced to play with players who are excellent talents, but only average people. For a New Zealander who has always had the depth at hand to enforce a no-dickheads policy, it must be excruciating to have to choose players who you’d leave out if they weren’t so much better than the alternatives.

Can anyone imagine an All Black sleeping through the team announcement for the Rugby World Cup and still making it to the tournament? I can’t.

And this is perhaps why we’re seeing a mini-resurgence in the Wallabies over their last two Tests. Injury has self-selected out some of the problem-children and the team appears, on balance, to be better for it.

The stand-in captain has respect from the entire squad and plays like he loves it and means it. The rookies are grateful for the opportunity and are working like they want to keep the jersey. Deans is able to direct play his way without the input of a few self-important rockstars. The whole operation moves in the one direction.

And having been forced by injury to hand jerseys to a multitude of players, only some of whom were ready, he will reap the benefits of a deeper pool of talent in the next few years.

One swallow doesn’t make a summer, and certainly a fortunate draw with New Zealand doesn’t make a season. But it does show that we appear to have pulled together a team with determination, heart and not a small amount of potential.

And if the mass blooding of rookies in the lead-up to 1991 is any guide, a golden era is not far off.

The Crowd Says:

2012-10-24T07:16:38+00:00

Mike

Guest


Sadly true, RR. Many of our fans (and perhaps players as well) would prefer not to win, if it means winning ugly. The Soviet army had a saying in World War II: "Quantity has a quality all its own". To me, winning has a beauty all its own!

2012-10-24T03:56:21+00:00

RebelRanger

Guest


After reading Ritchies biography I have come to the conclusion that the Wallabies come close when they play negative boring rugby which then gives Australia hope that if they only attacked more they would win. Then they play with attacking intent and get spanked taking them back to square one.

2012-10-22T13:35:36+00:00

dcnz

Guest


I think the Wallabies have peaked and can't win without Quade Cooper.

2012-10-22T12:46:20+00:00

Toothless and ruthless

Guest


I AGREE CUMMINS BRINGS SOME REAL AGRESSION 2 THIS TEAM HE NEEDS MORE BALL AND WE WILL SEE SOMETHING SPECIAL

2012-10-22T11:19:32+00:00

Crazy Horse

Guest


Would Cummins get selected over JOC? Well anyone who has watched the two of them play side by side at the Force would say he should as a Winger or No 13. Probably not for other positions. He is bigger tougher and a better defender, as well as fast.

2012-10-22T10:10:35+00:00

Bono

Guest


Good performance from the wb's but that was one of the worst AB displays in the last ten years imo. Let's get some perspective people, I don't think the Ab's were up for that game.

2012-10-22T08:48:49+00:00

Stanley grella

Guest


Horne was injured after he was dropped. I think people are writing Robinson off a bit much, he has one through aform slump but he still contributes and is the best THO set piece wise in the country by a mile.

2012-10-22T07:58:22+00:00

JohnB

Guest


James Grant sidestep around Joe Stanley and acceleration over 10 m to score is what I remember. And Mark Hartill blowing out his knee when he was starting to look like a very good prop in the making.

2012-10-22T06:49:43+00:00

mikeylives

Guest


Mealamu's 100th and world record on the cards. Don't think it was a dead rubber match for the All Blacks (and therefore not for the wallabies either).

2012-10-22T06:45:55+00:00

Jutsie

Guest


Very clever glenn, for a minute I was wondering what the yanks had to do with anything. I wonder if wikileaks will publish QC's contract negotiations?

2012-10-22T06:43:30+00:00

Jutsie

Guest


noted. I was veering into johnno territory there ;)

2012-10-22T06:17:37+00:00

mikeylives

Guest


Note for future - Resign and Re-sign are similar but complete opposites.

2012-10-22T06:14:47+00:00

Hopperdoggy

Guest


Fair cop Bazz. Perhaps then what I should say is that given the lack of stability in the team right now, Deans needs to be the Tradesman, rather than the Innovator to develop the depth coming through....

2012-10-22T06:03:52+00:00

Barry

Guest


Horne is still injured

2012-10-22T05:53:47+00:00

bluerose

Guest


i read that Hugh McManiman has signed with the Force because he wants to play again for the Wallabies.

2012-10-22T05:45:28+00:00

flying hori

Guest


Why is it that the Wallabies ONLY play well against the ABs in dead rubber games?

2012-10-22T05:24:51+00:00

Jerry

Guest


Deans only knew Carter was ready when Henry had already blooded him at test level including a 45-6 thrashing of France in Paris.

2012-10-22T05:09:07+00:00

Glenn Condell

Guest


Great game that one in 88. I can recall a few things - Steve Cutler loping over to crash Kirwan into touch with a trysaver; me having a coronary at the AB professional fouls when under the pump at the death; Warren Ryan the league coach being quoted as he left saying it was the best game in either code all year. The real similarity is the sheer refusal of the longtime underdog Wallaby teams to allow another defeat; the cussedness and bloodymindedness, never saying die etc. About that time I saw the Blacks play Randwick at Coogee and if you took Foxies goals out of that one it was pretty close too. It wouldn't happen nowadays - I wonder what the scoreline would be if they played Randwick now!

2012-10-22T05:02:11+00:00

Glenn Condell

Guest


Why is Mark Arbib involved in an ARU report? Is there no pie the Americans don't have a finger in?

2012-10-22T05:02:11+00:00

Bazza (Wallaby supporter)

Guest


Markus you are correct, but Cameron McIntyre was a fill in, even the club he played for new Carter was always going to be the man. It just proves that Deans knows when players are ready. There is a big difference between a 12 and a 10 and a 15 and 10. The 10 has to have the experience and ability to read and direct a game. Both a 12 and a 15 can play the 10 role if they have those qualities. Carter was always a 10, he just needed to be blooded for the big time.

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