One final rock face before the summit for the Wallabies

By Elisha Pearce / Expert

We Wallabies fans are getting very close to the top of a tall mountain. There’s no denying that. On Sunday morning we either slip and fall to the bottom, or we climb the summit and set up on the ledge to marvel at the spectacular view.

With the Wallabies playing in a final there is a euphoric element to this week leading up to the match. Our Wallabies are going to run out onto the pitch at Twickenham and play a game to be crowned the best in the world.

So far we’ve swept aside all comers, only one more contender to bat away.

How excite!

But there is a slightly defensive instinct as well. Because what if we lose? It’s a World Cup final, so it’ll hurt that much more. It’s only natural to brace slightly for that kind of impact.

In the end though, you can’t help but get up for it. There isn’t room for pragmatism, a detached perspective or cold-blooded calculation when you’re considering winning a World Cup. Even if you wanted to adopt a defensive posture, you can’t. You have to open yourself up to the possibility you’ll be cheering for a loser.

In reality, cheering for a loser isn’t possible for Wallabies fans, even if it’s true they can lose on the weekend. Making a final is a remarkable achievement for this team when you consider their rocky path to get there.

On October 18, 2014 Wallabies coach Ewen McKenzie sensationally quit after Australia lost to the All Blacks by one point in Brisbane. Everyone watching that night can close their eyes and picture the lonely figure of McKenzie exiting stage right and walking down that long corridor by himself, into the belly of Suncorp Stadium, the scene of so many victories with the Queensland Reds.

The coach was broken. The Wallabies were broken.

One year and a day later, we all rose in the dark and watched Bernard Foley execute the Great Scottish Robbery as the Wallabies progressed through the World Cup quarter-final with a one-point win of their own. A remarkable turnaround.

On October 22 last year Michael Cheika was appointed Wallabies coach. Despite the short time between McKenzie’s resignation and Cheika’s appointment the negotiations about his tenure were tense and point towards the kind of coach he would be.

Cheika wanted an extremely high-class coaching staff, one that wasn’t in place by the time he signed, but one that would eventually come together. It was that kind of foresight that has characterised his short tenure thus far.

He put a brilliant core team around himself. The Wallabies’ defensive efforts against Wales reflect well on Nathan Grey, the attacking precision as the Wallabies jumped to a lead against Argentina were reward for bagging Stephen Larkham, Mario Ledesma has coaxed out the recent scrum improvements, and the team’s composure, commitment and repeat efforts reflect their captain Stephen Moore.

Cheika used the nine precious Test opportunities before the World Cup – just nine games to prepare, that is worth repeating – to expose a wide range of players without creating the feeling of unearned caps. That came full turn when Cheika selected two full teams in his World Cup squad knowing he could rely on the competition to keep training sessions sharp and a strong performance in the week with a short turnaround.

They broke a four-year winless streak against the All Blacks during that short preparation streak as well. That shouldn’t be glossed over because an era of close losses and draws could only come to an end when the Wallabies learnt to win, instead of hoping to not lose.

In a column about the Wallabies’ achievements it’s worth considering the position the All Blacks are in too and what they have to lose.

They have a group players looking to notch up a second World Cup. Richie McCaw, Keiran Read, Sam Whitelock, Kevin Mealamu and the like will join a very special group of players to win two. And for those attempting to win two, doing so in back-to-back tournaments will be a first, and perhaps a record that will last for decades.

Dan Carter missed the majority of the 2011 edition due to injury, so despite being an all-time great he has a lot on the line as well.

Given the evidence at the World Cup and in that victory against the All Blacks, the Wallabies’ chances of winning hinge on David Pocock leading a ferocious breakdown effort, supported by the rest of the pack. It is clear now, Pocock’s return to the Wallabies team and subsequent pairing with Michael Hooper in the backrow is the most influential event in world rugby this year.

A vintage breakdown performance by the men in gold could create enough space to manufacture points and confuse the All Blacks attack, preventing them from nailing the Wallabies for every mistake.

They will have to overcome a tiredness, which I fear will be a factor at the end of both halves. The Wallabies have played a very tough tournament. Coming through that particular run of matches against Fiji, England, Wales, Scotland and Argentina is akin to Lleyton Hewitt playing two weeks of five-set epics before trying to topple Roger Federer in an Open final.

The task isn’t impossible. But it is yet another rock face to traverse in a year of climbing them quickly and without a break.

We will find out on Sunday morning if they have enough in the tank to climb that final rock face and reach the elusive summit, or plummet to a disappointing second place. And we will be with them every step, pick and claw along the way.

The Crowd Says:

2015-12-04T20:39:32+00:00

mk

Guest


Of course the WMD mistakes that Miller made are something of a tangent here, but the argument that she would have had to be a "superwoman" to uncover the truth just doesn't hold water. And BTW, Mr. Aubrey, that "Clinton made the same mistake" argument only satisfies the partisan hacks. mk http://www.sacmichaelkors2015.fr

2015-10-29T00:19:58+00:00

vic rugby

Guest


Australia has more than twice the rugby players than nz do. And i would bet far superior facilities.

2015-10-28T20:51:24+00:00

Mick Gold Coast QLD

Roar Guru


You are quite right Council - it really is quite alarming to see some of the angry responses to "seditious" and "unpatriotic" and "bigoted" (ie. critical opinion on declared best evah crowd favorites) comments made here, from what I assume to be a relatively young readership. I grew up hearing the message passed on by post World War II migrants fleeing Europe and it was simply told and crystal clear. Living under - barely existing in constant fear under - dictatorial suppression isn't a lot of fun. My wife's people have seen off several invasions over time and one of their most treasured values is their freedom of speech and independence of opinion, because they have had to fight for it. They stopped teaching history in our schools long ago and we have a generation or two which does not know what it is talking about on this score.

2015-10-28T19:13:40+00:00

soapit

Guest


amazing how reputations get sealed from one high profile moment over the rest of your play.

2015-10-28T13:21:18+00:00

Mick Gold Coast QLD

Roar Guru


"what has been done behind the scenes which is most pleasing"
Cheika came to the job, when the ARU was desperate, with the imprimatur of the current most powerful faction in NSW rugby. His success to date ensures the continuing predominance of that faction - the ARU and the other factions from NSW and elsewhere are back in their box until they come up with a cunning plan to unseat Cheika. That is the way of Australian rugby politics. A "common goal" is, has always been and will continue to be anathema to the factions. Their only shared interest is the common enemy in the ARU. Any agreement forged between Cheika and Larkham or anyone else will eventually be put to the torch for the evil it represents.

2015-10-28T13:14:25+00:00

Scotty

Guest


Nice one @CA3ZAR. I think they are a squad that has the weight of the country behind them. The Aussies have decided to wake up for a game or three as well. Let's hope it's at least interesting for the world fans too!

2015-10-28T11:41:46+00:00

CA3ZAR

Roar Pro


This will be a huge challenge for the resurgent All Blacks, but I think they're up for the task, as an All Blacks fan I've been impressed with the Wallabies

2015-10-28T11:23:03+00:00

Council

Guest


Do not read or comment... That's a stupid train of thought. If that was the case we woukd live in a nation where we aren't allowed to question what we are told. We all know where that line of thinking leads. This is The Roar. Not the USSR or North Korea. We are allowed to question and comment upon that which we do not agree. I do not agree with your post. Therefore I am replying with my opinion. Ahhh the wonders of a free society.

2015-10-28T11:16:28+00:00

Mick Gold Coast QLD

Roar Guru


"England has 600 times as many registered rugby players as nz"
Relying on Lindsay Amner's "NZ only has 148,483" at 1:43pm above, 148,483 x 600 = 89,089,800. It looks a tad high but I think you might have unintentionally included the player numbers for the Channel Islands in your estimate for England, markie362, and I don't think they are a part of England.

2015-10-28T11:06:54+00:00

rasty

Guest


It is not Hahahahahahaha. It is HakaHakaHaka possibly more ridiculous

2015-10-28T10:52:19+00:00

Council

Guest


Similarly to your credibility. Considering Coles is considered one of the best Hookers in the world.

2015-10-28T10:48:46+00:00

Noodles

Guest


TWAS: get off the train

2015-10-28T10:39:06+00:00

Council

Guest


Yet with six times our population the Wallabies have no excuse to a talent drain. League and Rugby are too different in the littke things that differentiate the sports for us to say Inglis would be god or Coles would dominate.

2015-10-28T10:35:24+00:00

rasty

Guest


Rebel, you hate anyone to deride anything Kiwi and that is cool and OK. But you are the worst for belittling others who have a different view to you about there team. It has very bad undertones of proper, serious hypocrisy.

2015-10-28T10:03:38+00:00

Joe

Guest


With the clowns we currently have and had had in charge of rugby in Australia they have failed to provide the structures disregarding everything and focusing on the Wallabies. Unless we win the cup the current moment will be short lived and the sport will again descend into the despondent state. Afterall lets be honest. We Australians only support winners.

2015-10-28T09:54:54+00:00

Just Lost, Sydney

Guest


That's explains why so many Australians play Rugby League and AFL. There is no other competition and then they can call themselves World Champions. "Now that's punching above your weight"

2015-10-28T09:26:45+00:00

soapit

Guest


btw that photo is a bit silly rebel. i guess we can be thankful our marketers didnt make them extend it beyond photo ops and you can be thankful you dont have any bright colours in your kit

2015-10-28T09:23:33+00:00

soapit

Guest


i was furious when i got done for using f_rt the other day as the post was undeniably hilarious. seems that my ordinary comedy gets through and the gold gets filtered out! maybe they're plagiarising me for profit somewhere else on the net.

2015-10-28T09:21:42+00:00

Black Hearted

Guest


Another rock face? More like another mountain on top of the mountain!

2015-10-28T08:54:29+00:00

Hertryk

Guest


The media has done hardly anything so far.. I wouldn't pay them in Salt.. as I emailed the ABC... and free to air.. It's been pathetic.. in a RWC Year too.. positively unacceptable..If they haven't got an informed reporter then they should bloody well get one.. !!

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