The talking points: Super Rugby Round 14

By Brett McKay / Expert

It’s the last weekend of Super Rugby for the next month, and thankfully, the competition is going to go into its recess with a bang. By my count, six of the eight games can have some kind of bearing on the race to the playoffs.

Here’s the talking points for Round 14.

Bolters galore, but not the one everyone expected
Broadly speaking, I like where Michael Cheika is going with this first Wallabies squad of the year. At the bottom of the Rugby World Cup cycle, 2016 needed to be a year of regeneration and of developing depth, and with ten uncapped players in a 39-man squad, he’s certainly started that phase in the right manner.

But in keeping 23 of the Rugby World Cup squad together, Cheika’s also placed a high value on incumbency and that’s also to be applauded. Indeed, I suspect some players named who perhaps aren’t in brilliant form are leading the appreciation of this move from the coach.

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I wrote of the halfback situation in Australia back in February, and how that Nick Phipps aside, there really wasn’t a whole lot of even just Super Rugby experience floating around the state sides. Of then Brumbies’ no.2 no.9 Michael Dowsett, I wrote, “…frankly, I’ll be surprised if he’s still in front of Joe Powell as Tomas Cubelli’s second banana by April.”

I was rapt with Powell’s NRC last year, and even just last week on Brumbies TV I named Powell as the young player who had impressed me this season.

Not for one second did I think he was a chance of being named in a Wallabies squad!

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But I actually love that he has been. I love that Allan Alaalatoa and Dane Haylett-Petty and Eto Nabuli have been named. Most won’t see game time; most probably won’t survive the first cut down to 30 players. But they’ll get so much out of being in a Wallabies camp, and that shouldn’t be underestimated.

There was one notable ‘bolter’ omission. Reece Hodge might just be the unluckiest player in the country right now. It’s probably arguable if he’s ready for Test rugby, but his form in every position he’s played has been top shelf all season. With a definite lack of fit and available midfielders, I thought he’d be a decent chance of winning a spot.

And that’s not to say I’d have had him playing the First Test. He’s a long way from the finished product, and he’s not immune to making the odd wrong decision. But he’s hardly alone in that front, and the positives mostly outweigh the negatives.

The general thought around Hodge is that it’s a matter of when, not if, he’ll play for Australia. So why not put him on that path now when the opportunity’s clearly there? Don’t get me wrong, there’s still plenty of time for Reece Hodge; he’s only played eight matches overall. But his name was not one I expected to see in the ‘notable omissions’ list.

Does the Wallabies announcement overshadow some important games?
The rumours were swirling this week that we might see a Wallabies squad named. It might be Sunday, it might be Friday; that part wasn’t really clear.

It might not have been overly clear to the ARU, either; the email alerting media to the announcement was only sent out at 8:15am AEST on Thursday. The team was announced shortly after Queensland and NSW respectively and hastily announced the immediate signings of Leroy Houston and Taqele Naiyaravoro around 1pm.

But here’s my question? Why did it have to happen before Sunday at all?

All discussion after the announcement, predictably, was about the Wallabies. There will only be more discussion today and across the weekend, and every game featuring an Australian team will now have a Wallabies squad angle to it.

What about Super Rugby Round 14? The competition is only three days away from taking a month-long recess, so why couldn’t it have had the spotlight for just three more days?

And what about the players? I spoke to Joe Powell on ABC Canberra on Thursday afternoon, and he said he was of course going to try and put the Wallabies aside for a few days and concentrate on the Sunwolves. And he has to say that publically, but how does a young player just ignore what must be a massive moment in his career? Luke Morahan hasn’t seen Wallabies kit since 2012; how does he ignore what he would obviously be feeling?

I know the team was always going to head into camp on the Sunshine Coast on Sunday afternoon, even with the Rebel and Force playing that afternoon, so why couldn’t the announcement have waited until then?

Seems a little strange to me. Self-interested, even. But that’s rugby for you…

Fantastic Friday: Sorry, Boss, I’ve got to finish early. Again…
Our fearless editor only a fortnight ago said the Highlanders-Crusaders game was one “we all need to leave work early for,” even if his reasoning wasn’t just about the game itself (“…so we can get a few into us before it kicks off,” he said – drink responsibly, obviously.)

That’s certainly the advice for this afternoon, too, with the replay of last year’s Final kicking the weekend off, followed by the all-important Waratahs-Chiefs. It’s almost a shame when the best games of the weekend are the first ones, because everything that follows is by definition a letdown.

But that’s our lot this weekend, and thus tonight shapes as a craft beer and corn chips night; the highest accolade I can bestow on a fixture of matches.

I found these two tips relatively easy, but that doesn’t mean I’m confident about getting them right. Both shape as cracking games, either way. Let’s hope they live up the hype.

(And yes, I know the Kings-Jaguares game is also on ‘today’. But you know, not where I am…)

Unpredicta-Bulls
Ooooh, my head hurts thinking about the Bulls. After I’d essentially dismissed them for 2016, they came good. Very good, in fact. Then, when I acknowledged their goodness and hinted that it might be time to consider the possibility that I might just have been somewhat un-right about them, they returned to type on their tour of Australia.

They did enough to beat the Stormers at Loftus last week, and though 62 per cent of more than 420 of you at the time of writing had voted for the Lions, the Bulls are a massive chance in the Highveldt derby.

And I can’t really think why they can’t win. I tipped the Lions, you’ll recall, but it wasn’t particularly confidently. The loss of Elton Jantjies could be as massive for the Lions and losing Kurtley Beale has been for the Waratahs.

The Bulls on the other hand are playing Bulls rugby pretty well, and as we know, they’re always tough to beat at home. And a win would be massive for the Africa 1 conference, with the Stormers expected to fall into top spot.

Call this tip-regret if you like; all I know is the headache is likely to hang around all weekend.

#Joubers100
A tip of the hat this weekend to leading Super Rugby and International referee Craig Joubert, who will run out for his 100th Super Rugby match, in the Bulls-Lions derby in Pretoria.

Just the third whistle-blower to crack the ton, Joubert currently trails Steve Walsh (111 matches) and South African colleague Jonathan Kaplan (107). Given he’s ‘only’ 38, you’d think he’ll be top of the tree by this time next year.

But this got me thinking. We know what the players generally do to mark the milestones of their teammates, but how does it work for refs?

Will the touchies pause in the tunnel and let Joubert run out to the middle by himself?

Does he get the jersey embroidery treatment?

And can we get the celebratory hashtag trending?

Maybe. Either way, enjoy your rugby this weekend.

The Crowd Says:

2016-05-27T18:30:10+00:00

Faith

Guest


Yes, that Waratahs - Hurricanes game quite key. Also bonus points play a huge role, both losing and winning bonus points, over the last 3 rounds. The Waratahs will probably chase the wildcard spot in competition with Highlanders and Chiefs rather than the Hurricanes who looked ominous today. There are some serious looking NZ derbies coming and if the NZ sides share the points their wild card will pip the Aussie wildcard. Chiefs v Crusaders, Hurricanes vs Crusaders very tricky ... if the current trend of the last (NZ) team beating the one on top continues the wild card positions will remain all NZ. But also, there might be some injuries during the tests that could change things. Chiefs looking very very shaky. Poor defence - they seem unable to beat teams that play physically against them. They really missed Leitch today - they are now feeling the injury toll to their forwards. As great as the Chiefs are are as attacking side we saw a soft centre to them that could not take on the Tahs upfront ... doubt whether they can take on the Saders with such a soft centre. Inability to make dominant tackles ...

2016-05-27T12:54:39+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


It won't be - the Australian group is still the Brumbies' to lose. But the win against the Chiefs sets up the Tahs for the final wildcard of the Australasian conference and makes the game against the Hurricanes (at home) the potential decider.

2016-05-27T12:48:31+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


Happy to be proven wrong! Great game, great win for the Tahs!

2016-05-27T11:30:09+00:00

Faith

Guest


Waratahs always play best when against the wall. Even if they've beaten the Chiefs either the Blues or the Hurricanes will beat them and that will be their undoing ...

2016-05-27T08:55:16+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


Don't fully disagree with you, but as a positive counter-point, the Waratahs recruited 15 young players this year, most from the NRC. Of those fifteen, three are already showing good promise (Robertson, Lucas, Kellaway), beside three young players that were already on the books (Horwitz, Dempsey, Holloway). If anything, the Tahs overdid it this year, as they lost senior talent and didn't recruit at the same level. Time will tell if the gamble pays off.

2016-05-27T08:49:58+00:00

Boomeranga

Guest


If only they had of picked 38 we could have speculatively connected it to Jarryd Hayne. Another missed opportunity ARU (spit).

2016-05-27T07:15:31+00:00

Beardie

Guest


I had similar thoughts watching that game, RnB.

2016-05-27T07:08:16+00:00

RubberLegs

Guest


Is it Cheika's plan that Foley plays every minute of every game at #10? Lilo is the reserve 10 so he will not start?

2016-05-27T06:37:44+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


Yes true I don't see the Tahs as title threatening this year and I think we'll see why again tonight.

2016-05-27T06:35:52+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


Yes I've gone Highlanders Brett, just. The way they beat the Saders was just too good to ignore. These two sides are historically very close and I just can't help but think it's going to be another classic. Has all the ingredients of two sides desperate to score tries.

2016-05-27T06:31:35+00:00

Matty

Guest


Anything could happen considering the Chiefs stumbled to the Highlanders and Lions, yet I see it being a big ask for the forwards to dominate guys like Sam Cane, Brodie Retallick and Dominic Bird.

2016-05-27T06:17:30+00:00

Foley must go

Guest


Brett I am talking about state coaches. We don't unearth players at test level, this needs to happen at state level and it ain't happening anywhere near enough to provide the player pool required. Even worse is the growing habit at test level of picking old overseas players, so we are squeezing the young out of both levels and then scratching our heads at lack of depth -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2016-05-27T06:11:17+00:00

Machooka

Roar Guru


And it's going to be windier in Sydney than in Wellington... like wtf?? Bit surprised by the Lions nudging the Bulls 60/40

AUTHOR

2016-05-27T06:04:51+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


For what it's worth, The Crowd went with the Highlanders tonight, with 61.7% of the vote. Lions won out over the Bulls by a similar margin..

AUTHOR

2016-05-27T05:52:30+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Yes, that's entirely my point, Paulo. Though I'd still argue the players could've been told later - given the Rebels and Force players are still playing Sunday, it's not like any training would've been done when they first come into camp. Anyway, it's a moot point now..

2016-05-27T05:48:05+00:00

Machooka

Roar Guru


Geez Digger... and be blowed as I didn't think you were living in Qlds!?! Or is that just being just way too cynical? :)

2016-05-27T05:11:33+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


Good luck digger, Highlander. A replay of last years final in all its glory. Lets hope its as great a game as weve come to expect. Im sure it will be. No rain yet and not a bad nite so far digger. Just left Trax and a good buzz in there already.

2016-05-27T05:05:22+00:00

John R

Roar Guru


Ngatai is still sidelined as he didn't meet the concussion protocols. to be named. So we are spared (or are robbed, depends on how you look at it!) of that match-up.

2016-05-27T05:00:19+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


Totally agree, as I mentioned in my post. It's a season defining game I think. Nothing short of there best will be enough. Very windy in Sydney today so kicking game will be interesting.

2016-05-27T04:27:23+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Stirzaker has the chance to respond in the best way possible - on the field.

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