Rugby World Cup bolters: It’s never too early

By Brett McKay / Expert

Don’t let the fact we’re only into the third week of Super Rugby fool you, this is a World Cup year and amateur selection is the name of the game. All. Year. Long.

And let’s be honest, we’re going to guess and speculate and overhype and go cold on players all year. One less than ideal game will see last week’s World Cup certainty dumped as easily and as ruthlessly as a primary school girlfriend.

Squads nominated with even just one player different to a squad you’ve named yourself will have been picked by people who ‘clearly don’t watch the game’, while squads favouring rookies will be the flavour one week, only to be replaced by ageing veterans the next. It’ll be Dad’s Army or boy bands and no grey areas in between.

And that’s without even mentioning the policy-shifters, who want to name players based overseas.

But if there’s one thing we like more than picking a squad, it’s naming a bolter. And being the first to name a certain left-field option carries a healthy degree of self-satisfaction with it, especially if he starts appearing more widely in other squads.

So let me name a few bolters myself, though I know I’m not the first to list these players. And in the event of form suddenly going south, I’ll obviously arrange the deletion of this article.

Lopeti Timani – Melbourne Rebels lock/backrower
I’m definitely not the first to name Timani, with several Roarers – Johnno, almost certainly – nominating him for ‘bolter’ status last week. At least I’ve waited until after he’d played a second game.

When I asked all those pre-season questions back in January, Timani was the last of eight players I named as having to fit into the Rebels backrow somewhere. It was an indication of how far down the pecking order I thought he was, despite having a quality National Rugby Championship season in 2014 for the Melbourne Rising.

And when he was named at lock for the opening round – the tighthead lock, no less – I assumed it had to be just a temporary thing and that someone, anyone would resume in the number five jersey the following week. I hadn’t seriously considered Timani as a genuine lock option.

But with his official figures of 193 centimetres and 123 kilograms – taller than Dave Dennis, shorter than Luke Jones and Rob Simmons, but heavier than all of them – Tony McGahan might just be onto something. He’s certainly playing tight enough and having the sort of impact you’d expect from your number five lock, but more importantly, he deserves to hold onto the spot on his current form.

With Scott Higginbotham fit and firing, the Rebels haven’t really lost anything with a slightly shorter lock in the tight five.

And though he might be a bit short to play lock at international level, his utility value becomes very handy if he can maintain the current form line. Certainly, his power carry game fits right in with the Michael Cheika blueprint, and already the Wallabies coach has said publicly that he wants to see more of Timani in 2015.

If the Rugby World Cup squad was being picked tomorrow, he’d have to be right in the mix.

Taqele Naiyaravoro – NSW Waratahs right winger
Big Taqele, what a beast. Softly spoken, but certainly not soft in traffic, Naiyaravoro has already shown enough in two games to know why Cheika was so keen on rushing him into the Waratahs set-up last season.

There’s something very enjoyable about playing large and fast humans on the wing. Indeed, most coaches at professional level will try it given the opportunity. And in Naiyaravoro, Australian rugby might have finally found the closest thing we’ve had to Nemani Nadolo or Julian Savea.

Though he’s still coming to grips with the nuances – he learnt the hard way that batting the ball dead in rugby has very different consequences than in league – he certainly knows his way to the try line, with two tries this season already.

The Wallabies coach certainly rates him, but the outcome of his rumoured move to Edinburgh for three years might perhaps determine whether he becomes a true Rugby World Cup bolter.

Scott Sio – ACT Brumbies loosehead prop
OK, so maybe not technically a bolter, given he’s already played five Tests, but Sio’s start to the season has been such that if a team was being picked tomorrow, it would be a hard task deciding who would start out of Sio and James Slipper.

Sio was superb in the scrum for his 62 minutes against the Chiefs, and he well and truly had Ben Tameifuna covered in the second half, despite giving up 15 kilograms. Around the ground, he was excellent as well.

There will be people wanting to switch him to tighthead, and yes, Ewen McKenzie did speak of ‘grooming’ him for the number three jersey last year, but he’ll absolutely stay at loosehead for the Brumbies, meaning there won’t be time to switch him over before the World Cup. And I don’t know that we should be looking at it anyway.

When all five Australian sides show significant issues once the bench props come on – as did the Wallabies in Europe last Spring – why wouldn’t we want to keep the best scrummaging looseheads on their strongest side? By all means, pull out all the stops in building the tighthead depth, but not at the cost of the loosehead stocks.

I just hope Sio can stay fit. He made his Test debut in the Sydney Bledisloe in 2013, played three more Tests that same year, and since has played only 28 minutes off the bench against France in Sydney last year when, rather surprisingly he wasn’t picked when fit and available. Hopefully that changes this year.

The Crowd Says:

2015-02-25T05:22:00+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


I didn't agree with it at the time. He was a young developing player and largely missed out last year due to injury. I think he is showing now pretty much what he was showing at the time he was released. Happily he has been retained in Aussie rugby and is developing well.

2015-02-25T00:45:42+00:00

Martin English

Roar Rookie


No future for Godwin if he continues - whether by choice or by his coach - playing "Foley ball" (i.e. kicking everything he gets his hands on). On the other hand, it meant we got to see some sweet tries by the Reds :)

2015-02-24T22:55:41+00:00

RobC

Roar Guru


Ditto for Kotze Nic. Pett Paraka et al. Im a huge fan of Pek. Along with most top-tier scrummagers. The point here is Im unsure Pek would have made a significant diff to the result last Sat.

2015-02-24T22:52:20+00:00

Mantis

Roar Guru


Somehow I don't think Kane Douglas will get picked...

2015-02-24T22:37:39+00:00

Mantis

Roar Guru


Arrogance and Pestiness are the two most important traits in a scrumhalf

2015-02-24T22:36:08+00:00

Mantis

Roar Guru


Id put Speight as a lock for a wing spot too. Not the best start to the year, but hes had no ball, and breaks tackles for fun when he does

2015-02-24T22:33:55+00:00

Mantis

Roar Guru


Kellaway is the best winger the Tahs have

2015-02-24T22:27:58+00:00

Mantis

Roar Guru


Speight is first picked

2015-02-24T22:25:53+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Peterk you are kidding yourself. Of the 18 players that were used as starters over the Lions Tour 3 test series in 2013, 7 of these were 2-14 Waratahs (Beale, Folau, AAC, Robinson, Douglas, Hooper, Palu). The Brumbies with their apparently better roster in 2014 had 4 (Lealiifano, Tomane, Moore, Alexander, Mowen). Then of the 9 reserves there were 3 Waratahs (Kepu, Phipps and Horne) and 2 Brumbies (McCabe and Mogg). TPN would have been a certainly if fit. Regardless that means that of the 2014 Brumbies with their alleged superior roster there were only 6 in total players used for the Lions test as opposed to 10 Waratahs. 2014 saw even more Waratahs used in tests so your claim is clearly baseless.

2015-02-24T22:24:09+00:00

Daz

Guest


My vote for smokie would have to go to Nathan Charles and the Mr Invisible of Australian rugby who plays in the same team as him at 7. He's invisible because he gets stuck in and does his job with a minimum of fuss. Maybe if he grew his hair and pranced around in the backs a bit more he would get more attention. Now there's a thought.

2015-02-24T22:22:48+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


He was huge during the Waratahs game too. I think he's definitely done a lot to shake the questions about his workrate. The two games he played last year were relatively mediocre, nothing to write home about. He was also battling injury all of 2014 too so that wouldnt have helped. Must have just got back to fitness prior to the NRC and turned it up a notch. I didnt think he'd get a game without someone being injured, all of a sudden he's been probably top-3 at the Rebels. Massive.

2015-02-24T22:15:15+00:00

pick & go..!!

Guest


Rubbish..!! I think we have to move on from stereotyping players based on there ethnic background & actually watch games. Pacific islanders are always hit with the label or tagged with the "lazy high impact low work rate player" If you watched the the Rebels vs Crusaders game, Timani made something like 18 carriers against pretty much the All Blacks forward pack & bagged himself a meat pie for good measure.

2015-02-24T22:13:40+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Why? It would have meant we couldn't have recruited Thomson. Out wide was not an issue at all for the Reds.

2015-02-24T22:12:55+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


He didn't play the week before due to being unavailable due to injury. May have been his first game back.

2015-02-24T22:12:11+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Had been around for a couple of years and hadn't impressed anybody enough to crack the team. Only cracked the Rebels in 2014 due to extreme injuries. Surely it was the right decision at the time.

2015-02-24T22:11:26+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Not sure sorry. My inside source no longer works there unfortunately. I was told his attitude did improve as 2014 progressed though. Essentially just turned up in terrible condition, performed abysmally on the 1km time trial and wasn't too dominant in the strength side, but his attitude improved and he started to progress back to where he needed to be.

2015-02-24T22:11:15+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


There's a lot of wing competition so it may be possible that Speight, Horne and AAC miss out, although the versatility of Horne and ACC (plus his experience) makes it seem a little unlikely. At this stage Palu misses out only if he's injured. I'd say Genia will be there, as for QC and possibly Beale. Horwill, Godwin and Hodgson are the three that have a real chance of missing out. Higginbotham will be there. Of your 'Boltersto make it" only Timani and Kerevi are actually bolters and I'd say they both have a real shot. Skelton will be there or in the mix, same goes for Cummins. I find it hard to see Hoiles and Turner being there, there would need to be a serious run of injuries for them to climb the ranks. probably need to be more extreme than 'The Great Hooker Crisis of 2014".

2015-02-24T21:38:41+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


I'm with you there, Jeznez. At this stage I'd say Weeks is probably our best option at 18. Yet to really see anything from Paddy that gives me confidence about him at international level.

2015-02-24T19:33:29+00:00

Doylie

Guest


I reckon Rory Arnold may be a bolter. Solid start to the season for the Brumbies. Thoughts?

2015-02-24T12:05:18+00:00

AB

Guest


lets not forget nadolo was playing on the wing for Randwick, was picked up by the waratahs and playing for age group wallabies. In a very ordinary waratahs backline he couldn't get a game. Having watched him play for Randwick, its no surprise now to see him flourishing with the crusaders - if we had the vision to coach him properly he would probably be a warpaths and wallabies regular.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar