What Link must learn from Bledisloe 2

By Alex Wood / Roar Guru

The Bledisloe Cup will stay in the land of the long white cloud for yet another year. And while we, the Wallabies faithful, believed the men in black could be bested, the night unquestionably belonged to the home side.

The All Blacks were fantastic. They were simply superb and those who questioned the ageing squad’s ability to maintain dominance may wish to reach for the face wipes and start removing the egg.

It would be easy to take the 51 points from the All Blacks to our 20 as proof all is lost. In contrast, I’m cautiously optimistic that this massacre is exactly what we need to encourage coach Ewen McKenzie to review his less orthodox selections.

Make no mistake, it’s Link who must be convinced. Nick Farr-Jones recently described McKenzie’s arrangement with the ARU as making him “essentially the sole selector”. This is good, the national coach should have the right of selecting his side, but the challenge is that sometimes even a great coach can lose perspective, as appears to have happened at camp Wallaby.

The most controversial of the selections was Kurtley Beale at number 10, which I wrote about last week. He did show attacking promise in the opening stanza, in particular one brilliant a set piece around the 39th minute mark. However, as the score line mounted in favour of the home side, that glimmer of hope was extinguished as KB’s confidence faded, along with his control of the game.

Therein lies the lesson McKenzie must learn if we are to salvage the 2014 season. Nick Phipps and Bernard Foley took the field at 51 and 55 minutes respectively, and with Toomua removed, pushing Beale back to his native 12 meant the Super Rugby winning combination dropped into place like reels on a slot machine.

From that moment on, we watched a dramatically different game. The Wallabies’ attack straightened thanks to Foley, which allowed Beale to finally find some rhythm and Phipps outplayed starter Nic White at every turn.

Once working in tandem, each of the Waratahs’ inside backs also created at least one quality opportunity to for teammate Israel Folau to enter the game, which resulted in him scoring one try and threatening another.

Perhaps the most striking difference post the 55 minute mark was the way the visitors started offloading in the tackle and the opportunities this created. It demonstrated a shift in attitude from the Wallabies and the appearance of some desperately needed confidence. And so, behind a pack who had been beaten up all night and confronted by an All Blacks side with home-crowd advantage and all the momentum, the Wallabies held the score for the last 25 minutes to a respectable 14-14.

Though the halves are key, there are other selections that Link should review. Save for the specialist open-side Michael Hooper, Scott Higginbotham has been the choice of the Wallabies’ loose forwards and earned a starting spot at six or eight So too has young Will Skelton who, despite a couple of uncharacteristic handling errors, lifted the pack and brought some much needed physicality.

The other key consideration for Link is accepting that selecting two wingers who are defensive specialists is a failed experiment. At the top level a team will simply not be competitive without even one world class finisher on the wing. Rob Horne is the form player, but perhaps Tevita Kuridrani could adapt to the wing. Perhaps not.

At the end of the day, we cannot know the outcome if the Wallabies XV was different. What we do know, is that the Super Rugby championship combination of Phipps and Foley has proven itself at Test level and made a strong argument for both of their teammates in 12 and 13 to be maintained as well. If we make these selections the Wallabies have the ability beat any team in the world, such are the synergies of the combo.

Though the Bledisloe is gone and the campaign for the Rugby Championship is in critical condition, there is a silver lining to be found looking up from our backs at the long white cloud.

Let’s all say it together, ‘We’re with you Link, swallow your pride, pick the right inside backs and let’s show the world what the Wallabies can do’.

The Crowd Says:

2014-08-28T07:56:10+00:00

George of Perth

Guest


You get rid of Link & you definitely get rid of Beale and then you start with a fresh approach with a new coach who can instill some spine & confidence into the Wallabies. Link has failed & failed badly. The selection of Beale at 10 was just sheer stupidity and there was no grounds at all to justify such a stupid losing selection. Beale stands too deep for a fly half, runs laterally and cannot tackle ..................... why was he even in a Test side ??????????????

2014-08-26T00:22:50+00:00

Ball'n'all

Guest


True.England are tough at home though,and can't be dismissed in as a threat in the way that Wales can. If oz can top their pool, they should make the finals no problem. However, if they come second in pool a, there will be a very tough road starting with Sa in the quarters.

2014-08-25T23:23:35+00:00

Rugby Tragic

Guest


Did you watch the Ellis P ark Test AB's v Boks last year?

2014-08-25T23:22:05+00:00

Rugby Tragic

Guest


Also if you look at the try Read score himself - who started it from behind his own 22....by memory Read!

2014-08-25T16:43:29+00:00

HARRY

Guest


That all really worked well!!! More time coaching, less time talking to the press about himself would be a good start!

2014-08-25T16:02:00+00:00

Tissot Time

Guest


Skelton is not an endurance athlete and at best a bench player only.

2014-08-25T11:54:05+00:00

Robo

Guest


Settle, England and Wales are not the ABs.

2014-08-25T10:06:52+00:00

col in paradise

Guest


Links biggest mistake was selecting fat and slow forwards...Look at the AB forwards chalk n cheese...Palu pfft..the second was believing his own bluff and BS.. I was expecting him to change the run on side but nope sat and watch them get butchered into the second half...

2014-08-25T08:28:30+00:00

Clark

Guest


6. Show me that tackling again

2014-08-25T08:27:30+00:00

Clark

Guest


KB is one of the worst tacklers I have seen, the guy has no idea

2014-08-25T08:03:13+00:00

Bayrunner

Guest


"Digby Ioane Born: July 14, 1985 (age 29)" Wow, what a gestation!

2014-08-25T07:56:55+00:00

Garth

Guest


Why are people still calling an AB side whose average age is YOUNGER than the 2011 RWC side, ageing? Apart from a handful of senior players, it's changed a hell of a lot.

2014-08-25T07:29:31+00:00

NickBrisbane

Guest


I think we need Horwill back

2014-08-25T07:02:59+00:00

somer

Guest


Precisely Moaman. Rugby is a 80 min game and cherry-picking snippets that conform to the desired picture isn't really useful.

2014-08-25T06:51:06+00:00

somer

Guest


Do you have any evidence of that Yogi? I think it's more likely a perception, the Kiwi sides have more depth and it's natural that Aussies would focus on their own injury woes and not those of the Kiwis. Leading up to Bledisloe 2 there were a lot of plaintive comments regarding unavailable Wallabies and yet the ABs were also in the same boat.

2014-08-25T06:35:41+00:00

jammel

Guest


Agree with a lot of what you say Matthew. I'd go White and Foley as the halves. Toomua and Kuridrani in the centres for now. AAC on the left wing and Beale on the right. Folau at FB. I also don't think White has a lot of responsibility for the scoreline necessarily. It is just a bit of a bandwagon for the pro-tah, anti-Brumby/anything else lobby to jump onto. We would have been thrashed by more probably if the tah back line had have been selected with Beale at #12…. Ideally, we should look at the following back line primed for the WC: 9Genia 10Cooper 11AAC 12Toomua 13Folau 14JOC 15Beale (Speight on the bench most probably, or starting with JOC on the bench)

2014-08-25T05:58:18+00:00

atlas

Guest


too right, need more of em! not quite Qld-born tho' Digby Ioane Born: July 14, 1985 (age 29), Wellington New Zealand

2014-08-25T05:04:26+00:00

TheSnake

Guest


Digby is a genuine treat.

2014-08-25T04:34:03+00:00

PJB

Guest


Hoy at this rate we will struggle to advance past the pool stages. We have Wales & England in our pool.

2014-08-25T04:31:04+00:00

Canetragic

Guest


4. Can you pass? 5. Can you run hard in support?

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar