Reds woes have implications for the Wallabies

By Yousef Teclab / Roar Guru

The Queensland Reds have been nothing short of horrific this season, with the glory days of the Ewen McKenzie era are now but a distant memory.

Where under McKenzie the Reds were genuine Super Rugby contenders, winning it in 2011 with some style, under Richard Graham they are a shadow of themselves.

With thirteen rounds gone the Reds find themselves bottom of the Australian conference and in 13th place. Though many felt the Reds would not have enough to reach the playoffs, no one thought this season would be such a wreck.

Throughout this season the Reds have been guilty of costly lapses in concentration that have stifled what promise they had shown. After their encouraging opening win against the Brumbies in Canberra, the following game against the Waratahs in Sydney was a disaster as they were torn to pieces 32-5.

On their South African tour, the Lions-Reds game would sum up their season so far. In the first half the Queenslanders blew the Johannesburg outfit away and were leading 20-0 at one stage. But through a mixture of taking their eye off the ball, battling spirit by the Lions and dubious decision-making by referee Stuart Berry, the Reds lost 23-20.

The looks of bewilderment from the coaching staff after the final whistle said a thousand words.

Since the demoralising defeat in Johannesburg, the Reds’ season has veered off badly. Defeats against the Western Force (29-32), Brumbies (20-23), Hurricanes (35-21), Blues (44-14) and recently the Crusaders (29-57) have put rookie coach Graham under serious pressure. Though 34,000 came to watch the Reds lose heavily to the Crusaders on the weekend, these numbers will drop if the Reds continue this wretched run.

No doubt their five-game winless run has ended their season. Moreover, it will be interesting to see the financial results for 2014 and whether the Reds can maintain the honour of being the only Australian franchise to post a profit.

The players that performed brilliantly when the Reds won the title in 2011 are not repeating that form. Will Genia’s sniping runs of old were such a threat, which managed to push over the gainline, draw opposition players towards him and created space out onto the wings. He seems to kick more now, and while kicking can be good if done right it seems a waste of his talents merely just gambling possession.

Fly-half Quade Cooper blows hot and cold at the moment. When he gets it right Cooper can be dynamite, helping to create line breaks and direct the team forward, but when it goes cold the results are not pretty.

Cooper is a maverick and is known to play risky moves such as his devilishly flat balls, but it has not paid off of late. Cooper’s flat passes have led to opposition tries, such as when the Cheetahs’ Boom Prinsloo ran away to score a try or against the Crusaders when winger Johnny McNicholl caught Cooper’s wild forward pass and chased his own kick to score his second try of the game.

Cooper’s kicking game was off key against the Crusaders. He did not find touch and just invited the Crusaders to counterattack with devastating impact. His chip kicks were also ineffective, as he had no support runners chasing the ball to try and take advantage of the space behind the line.

At least one of those chip kicks led to opposition tries that merely hit the nail on the coffin that is the Queensland Reds’ 2014 season.

As a result of the Reds’ dithering campaign, the stuttering form of Genia and Cooper could find their starting places in the June internationals against the French under threat. There are other players in good form that coach Ewen McKenzie could have a look at against the French.

Genia faces competition from the Brumbies’ Nic White. The scrum-half is enjoying a good season with the Canberra franchise so far, and with the help of George Gregan has improved his game even more from last season. He showed it again on the weekend against the Sharks. His awareness at a gap to the right of the Sharks ruck allowed him to slip Sam Carter to run through for the try that helped the Brumbies go top of the Australian conference.

Nic White reminds me of Wales’ Mike Phillips – an irritant that is hard to get off. He’s always sniping at the opposition but also his fellow players to improve, and never lets up on harassing opposition players within the laws of the game. If White continues his form he will cement his place in the Wallabies 23-man squad and stake a claim for the No. 9 jersey.

Cooper finds himself under threat from Matt Toomua. The two players cannot be more different – while Cooper can make reckless decisions that sometimes do not pay off and lead to hurting his team, Toomua is poised and calmness personified for the Brumbies.

Under the coaching of Wallabies legend Stephen Larkham, Toomua has improved his game and has been part of an intelligent side which are well on their way to the playoffs. The only possible saving grace for Cooper is Toomua might play at 12, and they could possibly form a 10-12 axis to give tactical kicking options if McKenzie sees it workable.

But on current form there would be little argument if Nic White and Matt Toomua were the halves pairing in against the French in Brisbane on 7 June.

The Crowd Says:

2014-05-14T00:20:59+00:00

Ethan

Guest


I was talking about squad. Gill was consistently one of the reds best before injury. Definitely deserves squad if fit, although I've no argument with Hodgson being there either.

2014-05-13T14:36:18+00:00

Buzzard

Guest


Some stats so far in the season. Amazing how a few weeks ago , Australia was considered the strongest conference. Now its completely reversed. Matches won per Conference: Australia - 27 New Zealand - 30 South Africa - 22 Log points per Conference: Australia - 128 New Zealand - 151 South Africa - 113 Tries scored per Conference: Australia - 123 New Zealand - 155 South Africa - 103 Try-scoring bonus points per Conference: Australia - 11 New Zealand - 18 South Africa - 8

2014-05-13T13:18:40+00:00

Redsback

Guest


I agree with almost all of that, although I don't share your opinion on Gill. In all honesty, if your pack is getting smashed, I would prefer to have a Cooper than a more traditional 10. He can at least conjure something from nothing and when you are behind by 15 with 30 minutes to go with a pack that is getting smashed, solid isn't really going to do it - you need a bit of magic. As for Graham, I think it was a reasonable enough punt at the time and he had a year to work under Ewen. You never know what a change in environment will do for a team - look at Foley in WA. That said, it's not working and I can't see it turning around. The biggest problem appears to be recruitment though. We need a good tighthead and no. 8. Add in O'Connor at 12 or 15 and a new coach and the team will contend.

2014-05-13T12:21:33+00:00

icky47

Guest


When was this?

2014-05-13T12:13:37+00:00

Brian

Guest


9 Genia 10 Cooper 11 Davies 12 Taps 13 CFS 14 Turner 15 Toa This is the way the Reds should have started the season as it is the best line available. With all these injuries we will never see it though

2014-05-13T11:45:11+00:00

Squirrel

Guest


Love red supporters. They are going to get the spoon but they insist a third of the wallaby 15 are going to be reds. 3 of the tight 5 reds. Totally delusional.

2014-05-13T10:43:19+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


The Link will get the best out of the Reds contingent selected for the Wallabies, that's what good coaches do. Slipper, Horwill, Simmons, Genia and Cooper should be selected and that's about it. I'd stick with Genia and Cooper for the Wallas with Toomua at 12. Nic White putting serious heat on Genia which is good.

2014-05-13T09:33:26+00:00

Tane Mahuta

Guest


I dont agree that Quade is able to adapt to different gameplans. He struggles unless it suits his loose game style. He really seems to struggle in tight, high stakes games where a more conservative. If Quade cant adapt to Deans or Graham then Id say that Quade is the one at fault.

2014-05-13T09:25:40+00:00

Dru

Guest


And he may just be right.

2014-05-13T09:20:15+00:00

DAZZA

Guest


COTTRELL, CUMMINS ,TOOMUA, KURIDRANI ,MOGG and TOMANE, are..QUEENSLANDERS too

2014-05-13T08:52:12+00:00

Louie

Guest


The Reds problems are at the top and up front. Other than Slipper, Simmons & dare I say Horwell (never been a fan as a Wallaby) they have 5 journeyman. Gill is missing but he is another that I have never been overwhelmed by. Add to that Genia is a shadow of his former self but not playing terriblely, leaving Cooper trying to create diamonds from crap. They are both playing behind a belted pack. Finally a well proven hapless and hopeless coach. Graham could turn the All Black into a clueless rabble. The geniuses that brought him in as a EMac replacement need to review their meds and up the dosage.

2014-05-13T08:45:16+00:00

Common Sense

Guest


The Hurricanes forwards go missing all the time.

2014-05-13T08:36:11+00:00

wazza perth nz ex pat

Guest


Agreed - Sort of - but in rugby, especially in the forwards a good big fit guy generally beats up a good smaller fit guy over 80 minutes. The Force have a relatively light pack but they have been managing...just due to superior attitude, leadership and teamwork... If Wallabies can bring that to the table they will be competitive.

2014-05-13T08:30:54+00:00

Dru

Guest


Youssef you cheeky bugger! An artical like this written from Europe. Cheeky bugger. Apt though. Mate I think you've missed something more fundamental though. How cab the Qld locks hold their positions in the Wallabies? So then we need a captain. Moore for me. Strangely enough, for me this plays to Quade as vice C. Otherwise (and Iconsider myself a died-in-the-wool Quade fan), you have to ask under what ℅ dictionary does another fly get a shot? If the answer is he doesn't, geez, I love Quade but seriously? I think Will is in form. Not his best, but again the best in Aus. But You need "winners" as the basis for aNational team. That is NONE of the Reds at the moment. As a Red fan (I bleed Red), it's not looking good.

2014-05-13T08:13:25+00:00

Magic Sponge

Guest


God help us.

2014-05-13T08:03:34+00:00

Magic Sponge

Guest


Higgers must get heaps of frequent flyers, flying up and down to training

2014-05-13T07:57:38+00:00

RAF

Guest


Wazza - if they are good enough they are big enough

2014-05-13T07:56:53+00:00

Toomuaforpresident

Guest


he didnt try to go for the win with a drop goal against the Force

2014-05-13T07:55:22+00:00

El Gamba

Roar Guru


Combesy, I hear you and believe me, when the Force took their stand after the bali flight incident I was annoyed (long term Force supporter off the back of a terrible season). I do think, and there are many instances in many codes to support this, not least of all the Force performance this year (haha 8 wins is your goal?! hahaha) that there is a hell of a lot of merit in a no d*ckheads policy.

2014-05-13T06:51:17+00:00

wazza perth nz ex pat

Guest


"Kick, scratch, bite, gouge grab balls" - are you French Bazza ??

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