Wallaby positives to take from the Barbarians game

By Zac McLean / Roar Pro

It was a great game of rugby against the Barbarians, and here are my six positives I took from the game.

1. Tevita Kuridrani continuing his run of form:
It is fantastic to see a young player form his own identity as an international force and cement himself in a starting position.

While his first season in green and gold was promising, Tevita Kuridrani never fully persuaded Wallabies fans that he deserved the 13 jumper over Ashley-Cooper.

This has all changed this year, proven by his third placing in the John Eales Medal for 2014.

His game against the Barbarians on Sunday morning showed he is improving every week – hard to believe after his efforts in South Africa. T

he greatest part of Kuridrani’s game is his ability to make positive metres regardless of where he catches the ball. If he gets it flatfooted with a rushing defensive line – he jigs, finds a soft shoulder and makes two metres.

He gets the ball on the front foot – and he is off to the races. This is on top of his underrated defensive game. His tackling style is fierce and effective – although he can occasionally be out of position defensively, an aspect highlighted by Nick Cummins try.

Kuridrani’s man of the match award was thoroughly deserved, and his try was a beauty. He is the key to the Wallabies making positive metres out wide, often sucking in multiple defenders, allowing the Wallabies to exploit space on the following phases.

2. Ben McCalman playing like a Number 8 should
Ben McCalman is a high work rate forward who is picked for his consistency and reliability. While those are outstanding attributes – an international eight needs to have a more damaging impact with ball in hand, as shown by other premier Number 8’s like Kieran Read and Duane Vermeulen.

It was pleasing to see McCalman running in open space against the Barbarians and making metres after contact – which is imperative for a six or eight to do regularly. As usual he was safe in defence, and cleaned up a lot of loose ball – but his ball running was great to see.

3. Sam Carter revelling in a new role
Sam Carter is one of Australia’s most underrated players, and has been since he began plying his trade for the Brumbies in 2011. Since he debuted in France earlier this year it is clear he gets through an enormous amount of work for a player his size – topping the tackle count in several Tests this year.

His running game has been lacking however, especially his habit of going high into contact resulting in a slower play-the-ball or a turnover.

Cheika might have gotten into his ear about using his size more in attack then previous Tests, and Sunday morning saw the big lumbering forward making positive metres on many runs – the majority of them being support runs off the ball carrier.

His try highlighted this as he ran a beautiful delayed run underneath the defensive line. Yes he did try to push the offload and that caused some lost ball – but that is easily fixed. Once he learns when to offload and when to go to ground, he could become a damaging all-round second rower in the likes of Eben Etzebeth or Brodie Retallick.

4. Nic White coming on and making an impact
Will Genia was solid in his first game back, but I was most impressed by the nature of Nic White’s play when he was on the field. The tempo of the game increased dramatically and he got the ball out of the ruck with speed and decisiveness.

I particularly like how he passes with his feet set from the ruck and doesn’t waste time taking one or two steps before passing. His try assist to Rob Horne was a classic example of how that method is effective. Nick Phipps is still my starting nine and Genia is probably my backup – but it was good to see White impress in the gold after a dubious performance against New Zealand in Brisbane.

5. Rob Horne being Rob Horne

I love the way Rob Horne plays for Australia on the wing. All the attention was on the way Henry Speight would play in the Wallabies jersey (relatively quiet, but solid when called upon) but it was Horne that proved the better of the two wingers.

His ability to make metres after contact is great to watch and he is constantly coming infield, staying away from the sideline and being visibly energetic around the park. His bustling run that set up Foley’s try was his highlight of the game.

6. Of course: Sean McMahon
This man will get plenty of positive media for his performance and deservedly so, probably resulting in a Test debut next week due to Scott Higginbotham’s injury.

His impact off the bench was undeniable, and he played the way we have been yearning for Higginbotham to play for a long time. He sprinted at the line, broke tackles, knocked back the ball carrier in the defence and was extremely damaging cleaning out in the breakdown.

His try was largely due to a tired opposition, with a gaping hole that won’t be there in a Test match but all credit to him. His cleanout at the end of the game that turned the ball over and ended the Barbarians comeback drive was great to see.

The Crowd Says:

2014-11-04T00:42:49+00:00

Mike

Guest


Why isn't it a growing game there?

2014-11-04T00:41:33+00:00

Mike

Guest


But fortunately he is showing awareness of when not to.

2014-11-04T00:40:39+00:00

Mike

Guest


"Also he only passed the ball twice during the whole game ..." Good. He should pass only when it is clearly a better option than taking the ball into contact himself and having the ball sent out to the winger (or whoever) on the next phase. "his defencive awareness his non existent" Those are pretty strong words. How many tackles did he miss, or tries let in?

2014-11-04T00:37:59+00:00

Mike

Guest


"He is the key to the Wallabies making positive metres out wide, often sucking in multiple defenders, allowing the Wallabies to exploit space on the following phases." Yep, after showing promise and some false starts over last couple of years, TK is looking the goods at outside centre.

2014-11-03T21:09:47+00:00

usacenter

Guest


With so few standout locks, why not let Fardy play lock to make room for McMahon at let Simmons call the line out. Maybe a bit light but god they'd be aggressive at the breakdown.

AUTHOR

2014-11-03T07:35:55+00:00

Zac McLean

Roar Pro


I doubt McMahon will put pressure on the 7 jersey as our captain and arguably best player is our 7. Also McMahon is a number 6 thats where he has played for the rebels and where he played for the Wallabies on sunday morning. Neither Fardy or Higgibothams are 7's either. I think you mean blindside flanker or number 6.

2014-11-03T07:25:57+00:00

MUZ

Guest


Genia was as slow as he has been for years. He has a case of the Gregans where he weighs his own options before passing because he thinks he is so important. A 9's job is to pass ASAP, the fellas outside him decide on strategy. Nic White is great when he passes but he should be dropped from the squad if he keeps kicking. Nick Frisbee deserves a crack, he was simply fantastic for Brisbane city in the NRC. Sean McMahon is one answer for the pack. Second row is still unsolved but Carter was solid. Would love to see Skelton and him together at kick-of. Would also love to see Kyle Goodwin have a start...... if not now, when? One more thing..... the ARU must allow O/S players to be picked for the Wallabies: imagine if we could call Giteau, Timani, Douglas, Ioane, Pyle.

2014-11-03T07:18:49+00:00

Chan Wee

Guest


not sure what positives came from Carter. Other than being in the right place to score a try :) according to ESPN he conceeded 2 turnovers and missed 2 out of 5 tackles attempted. aint nothing to crow about. considering the game was more like a circus than a test match , he was poor IMO.

2014-11-03T07:13:45+00:00

Chan Wee

Guest


just goes to show how much those in USA know about rugger :) and some people think its a growing game there LOL

2014-11-03T05:37:01+00:00

Fuzztone

Guest


No it wasn't...but the article was about the positives.

2014-11-03T04:55:58+00:00

The Sheriff

Guest


Both White( poor passes and one aborted box kick which I think he had to clean up) and Speight were disappointing. Speight was beaten on the outside a number of times. Unforgivable for a winger. Backline for Welsh should remain as for All Blacks. Forwards, too where possible.

2014-11-03T04:45:06+00:00

Realist

Guest


Funny comment. Kuridrani is exceptional at setting up his winger. He is a 13 who can pass.

2014-11-03T02:58:37+00:00

Utah

Guest


White played reasonably well, the highlight being a beautiful pass to Horne that resulted in a try. A big improvement on his recent efforts. If you think he had a bad game, you either lack objectivity or are optically challenged.

2014-11-03T02:54:03+00:00

Utah

Guest


Are you serious Eveready? If so, give yourself an uppercut.

2014-11-03T02:31:41+00:00

Julian King

Roar Guru


I'm not yet sold on Nic White. I do think the Wallabies attack has looked more dynamic since Kuridrani's selection. In terms of this match being a selection tool, I don't take too much stock of Barbarians games.

2014-11-03T02:12:03+00:00

The Twins

Roar Rookie


maybe because he is Fijian...??? duhhhh!!!

2014-11-03T01:29:44+00:00

Hoppers

Guest


Gold.

2014-11-03T01:11:19+00:00

AndyS

Guest


Ah well, even if you didn't think much of this game, at least we got plenty of credit for flogging the Americans... http://www.nzherald.co.nz/rugby/news/article.cfm?c_id=80&objectid=11352363

2014-11-03T01:01:23+00:00

World in Union

Guest


@ Eveready - give it a rest mate

2014-11-03T00:52:16+00:00

Celtic334

Guest


Both white and foley looked good, but it also coincided with the inclusion of forwards who dominated the play. Before that the entire pack was running around like a headless chicken. It also happened to be that the baabaa's started to throw the ball around so recklessly that any structure within the game was lost.

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