Three outta five ain't bad: Let's grant Cheika a few spring tour losses

By Rugby Fixation / Roar Guru

It’s hard to fully comprehend the magnitude of what has occurred in Australian Rugby in the last few weeks, but I’m glad to see that the Wallabies once more have a coach.

Recent form doesn’t look too impressive for the team at the moment. In their last three encounters the Wallabies were ahead at half time before succumbing to second-half pressure.

On top of that, Di Patston and Ewen McKenzie have “exited stage left”, and the Kurtley Beale saga is still in full swing, with his hearing delayed further until Friday.

Enough of that though, time to focus on the Spring Tour, which you could be forgiven for forgetting, given the plethora of issues the media has broadcast. Michael Cheika has been named as coach, as has his squad, and he now has nine days to tinker and a formidable 23 against a star-studded Barbarians outfit.

The squad by and large remains the same, but uncapped players Sean McMahon, Tom English, Tetera Faulkner, Henry Speight (finally eligible) and Kyle Godwin make up the bolters who will be relishing the chance to get among the Test environment.

Perhaps even more interesting though, is the fact that we have a new coach who has an abundance of his own New South Welshmen to choose from. I don’t believe Cheika will let bias rule the 23, but I am hopeful that he can recognise the potential of Will Skelton and Luke Jones, and work towards finding our best 10/12 pairing.

Quade Cooper still hasn’t notched any Test minutes for the 2014 season due to Bernard Foley’s composure, and Christian Lealifano produced a blinder in the absence of Matt Toomua and Beale.

These are good headaches for a coach to have, but it’s imperative that this tour is used to identify our best possible 23, because we are still lacking certainty in a few positions.

I really feel for Cheika, to have been thrust into the most important job in Australian rugby two days before flying to Europe to begin preparation for an arduous draw of Northern Hemisphere Tests. My biggest hope is that Wallabies fans recognise the pressure he is under and can forgive him if he doesn’t win every match.

Realistically, I’d be happy with three from five – as long as both losses aren’t to our Rugby World Cup pool rivals Wales and England. This isn’t to say that our games against Ireland or France will be easy, but we have gone from playing the top two teams in the world five times in the past two months and now have to face teams ranked third, fifth, sixth and seventh.

As Australians we see anything other than a win is unsatisfactory. This idea is magnified given our demolition of France in June and the first-up draw against the All Blacks in Sydney. Even though we only managed two wins from the six most recent games, wins against the All Blacks and Springboks are hard for any team to notch up and given the internal struggles at Camp Wallaby and the tenacity of the ever-improving Pumas, a loss away to them is not the end of the world.

With this is mind, I implore everyone to wait out the Spring Tour before making judgment. Give Cheika a chance to familiarise himself with the entire playing group and work out our best options for the 2015 World Cup.

He turned around the Waratahs with great success and even though the Test arena is a different beast, I’m sure that Cheika will see us through successfully.

Good luck Michael Cheika and good luck Wallabies, give them hell!

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2014-10-23T21:50:01+00:00

Rugby Fixation

Roar Guru


He's back from injury and was more than available to close out the game on the weekend, he was jumping out of his skin at the time. I'm not saying Foley is the only reason, but it's why he didn't get a go against the AB's

AUTHOR

2014-10-23T21:33:03+00:00

Rugby Fixation

Roar Guru


That's the biggest issue with him on the bench, but I think Cheika would be safe in knowing Toomua or Lealifano could easily swap from 12 to 10 to allow Godwin to slot into his preferred position should our starting 10 get injured.

AUTHOR

2014-10-23T21:30:58+00:00

Rugby Fixation

Roar Guru


Yeah I completely agree. The fact that they still don;t have a standout 12 and Tuilagi is injured, their centre combo will be an area that Lilo and TK can exploit.

2014-10-23T21:17:42+00:00

bennalong

Guest


What a bizarre post. You're a hater not a fan. The bloke just came second for the John Eales Medal. Conniving? You're deranged. Nasty!

2014-10-23T19:12:38+00:00


How do you figure that? The Bledisloe was retained after the second test.

2014-10-23T19:07:33+00:00

Justin3

Guest


Ignorance is bliss hey Jane

2014-10-23T19:04:35+00:00

Justin3

Guest


What has 3 years ago got to do with today? We were 3 points from winning the BC this year!

2014-10-23T19:01:03+00:00

Justin3

Guest


Conrad Smith has had an average RC and only ben Smith is above Dolau right now.

2014-10-23T18:58:49+00:00

Justin3

Guest


Bizarre comments...

2014-10-23T18:58:07+00:00

Justin3

Guest


Except the Wallabies were the better team in two matches arguably and 3 points from taking the BC. Hansen must be struggling as coach as they are not firing...

2014-10-23T16:15:44+00:00

colfaxtim

Guest


Yes to Aussie and NZ press being brutal and sometimes some writers are an embarrassment. My broad point is to not give the English momentum leading up to the World Cup. It will be on their turf.

2014-10-23T15:08:40+00:00

Graeme

Guest


Not at all. The BaBa's game is just a Gimme, and wether he loses or wins he can use it too assess a few fringe starters. The remaining games we have to win. It's only a year until the WC, the next 12 months can only afford being spent on consolidating back line partnerships.

2014-10-23T14:48:53+00:00

IronAwe

Guest


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9uNgtf0n598

2014-10-23T12:34:58+00:00

JM

Guest


Deans - NSW puppet. Disastrous RWC 2011 because of NSW domination. Will RWC 2015 be different with Cheika. Hope not!

2014-10-23T11:36:09+00:00

Chaz

Guest


The key game is England, and a lot will depend on how they perform in earlier games. Losing at home to NZ, SA and Australia would be a disaster for England, so if they lose to both NZ and SA (which is more than possible), Australia can expect a backlash. 2012 is remembered in England mostly for their win v the ABs, but the fact that they'd previously lost to SA and Australia was a key motivating factor.

2014-10-23T11:27:55+00:00

Eddy

Guest


I don't think any body walks into the Wallabies. Just have a think about all that they need to demonstrate on the field before they even get a look in. If in doubt, just ask Speight and Goodwin.

2014-10-23T11:16:15+00:00

44bottles

Roar Guru


While I agree he would've done tackles like that, he does do his full on tackles. They're not a full blown, driving back, turnover tackle. More like grabbing the waste and dragging the player down over your shoulder, but it is a tackle.

2014-10-23T11:06:29+00:00

Rugby Tragic

Guest


"supposed to be “world class ” "....... you are getting a little cryptic in your old age Chan Wee!:

2014-10-23T11:05:00+00:00

Rugby Tragic

Guest


Well, I would find ahead of Folau at fullack, certainly Ben Smith and most likely Dagg (his positional play is ions better and he can kick), if I look at other countries, how about Kearney and Halfpennyand even WLR. Just that I would prefer him to play on Wing. .... Hell what would I know, Folau just won the John Eales medal!

2014-10-23T10:59:10+00:00


Chanwee, mum is the word. We will quietly build our backline and not emphasise any dangerous elements. We like them to be under estimated ;)

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