Time for a Wallabies shake up

By Zac McLean / Roar Pro

The Wallabies face a number of obstacles in their quest to become the best Test side in the world. We need to make some big changes in selections in the remaining Tests this year, to see what talent we have at our disposal.

I think we have some problems in a number of areas that need examining.

Our lineout isn’t up to international standard, and we lack world-class second rowers and locks.

Kane Douglas is the best of a bad lot, while Sam Carter only seems to find form at Super Rugby level. Rob Simmons while lacking punch around the field, is our best option in the air, and has an ability to call the lineout effectively if nothing else.

Second row is an underrated position in terms of determining wins and losses, but I think Brodie Retallick and Sam Whitelock are a major reason for New Zealand’s dominance in the forwards in recent years.

Our bench in the second row department isn’t much better, with Dean Mumm possessing no determinable strength or competitive edge over players like Lopeti Timani, yet he still receives regular selection.

Dean Mumm, Rob Simmons, Sam Carter and Rory Arnold also do not make it over the advantage line when running the ball, which is frustrating to watch.

Australia’s scrum has significantly improved, so our coaching staff should be relatively happy with front row personnel for now, but we should be looking at blooding a young hooker for the future.

If we want to start laying an effective platform for our backline in coming years though, we need to develop better talent in the second row. Luke Jones isn’t a promising upstart anymore, and Arnold needs to have a few more impressive games for ACT before he deserves reselection.

I’ve long been an advocate for selecting Scott Fardy at second row, allowing us to pick Ben McCalman or Sean McMahon at blindside flanker, with David Pocock at lock and Michael Hooper at openside.

However a common response to that proposal is that Fardy isn’t ‘heavy’ enough, which I think is an obstacle that can be overcome.

Jack Dempsey from the Waratahs should be pushing to make the Wallabies squad in a year or two, he continues to impress both as a physical ball runner and a lineout threat.

Pushing Dempsey into the squad could allow McMahon to play openside, with Pocock at lock, and Hooper relegated to the bench.

I think we need toinstila culture back into the Wallabies of fighting for reselection in every Test. It keeps players alert and self aware at training and on the field.

It’s a blessing to have this abundance of talent in the backrow, I only wish this depth existed for other positions.

If we are going to succeed in the test arena, it’s our backline that is going to need the biggest revamp. The opening fifteen minutes of the first Test against England this year was some of the most impressive backline play I’ve seen in years from an Australian side.

It’s disappointing that brief period of excellence hasn’t been repeated in 2016, but it’s comforting knowing this collection of players can link together that well.

Still, I think the days of Quade Cooper, Matt Giteau and possibly Bernard Foley need to be put aside. Giteau has been a revelation since returning in 2015, but he is becoming too injury prone and regularly leaves the field very early in a Test, throwing the team’s gameplan out the window within ten minutes of play.

The devastating effects of these early exits were especially noted in last year’s World Cup final, and this year’s first Bledisloe.

Bernard Foley, despite many critics, does belong in the Test arena. He can command a backline as long as he has an effective second playmaker at inside centre.

Foley has lacked form during Kurtley Beale’s absence, with Beale and Giteau playing a vital role in taking the attacking pressure off him. Similar to Quade Cooper, Foley can’t seem to lead a backline as the primary ballplayer, and he isn’t a good enough goal kicker to warrant constant selection.

Michael Cheika saw this and opted to swap Foley out for Cooper in the second Bledisloe, but the plan didn’t work. Foley deserving to be dropped does not mean Cooper deserves reselection, especially against New Zealand.

Cooper isn’t good enough to play for the Wallabies against top tier sides anymore. Teams know exactly how to defend against him, simply by applying the slightest sense of defensive pressure. His goal kicking is also highly unreliable, as well as his kicking in general play.

I’m not one to usually call for dramatic reselections, or major team overhauls. I believe our big strength since the appointment of Cheika has been the consistency in our team line-up, and how that has built chemistry and combinations.

However like any sporting team that achieves a measure of success, as we did in 2015, teams learn to adapt and defend against you. We need to make change not only to personnel but to strategy.

Avoiding the strategy component for today’s article, it’s time we tried a new five eighth altogether. It’s also time we looked at selecting a backline player purely based on goal kicking ability.

We need to experiment this year, by the Spring Tour at the latest with a new five eighth and possibly a different centre combination. Reece Hodge was impressive on debut in the second Bledisloe, and his goal kicking is better than Foley’s or Cooper’s. He should be considered for a starting spot at inside centre before the end of 2016.

As for outside centre, our coaches do seem very happy with the big ball runner model, which I think has served us well. Tevita Kuridrani is a polarising player for many fans, but he does fill a useful purpose that doesn’t make the highlight reel.

Kuridrani, and Samu Kerevi may not make the big line breaks or impact plays that we’ve become accustomed to with outsides in the past, but when they run they suck in multiple defenders, often forcing overlaps on following phases.

In saying that – anyone who has seen Billy Meakes’ highlight reel for Gloucester knows he is a rare talent. (If you haven’t seen it please stop reading and watch it now.)

Meakes has a unique ability to get past the first defender, running hard and straight and getting over the advantage line almost every time. He’s also a punishing tackler, and more mobile than Kuridrani. I only see it as a matter of time before he’s in the international fold, after signing with the Force for 2017.

Number 10 is trickier. There aren’t many clear cut players putting their hand up, which I think has been part of the problem in adding a layer of complacency on Foley and Cooper.

I wouldn’t object to Cheika and Stephen Larkham making some wildcard picks such as Kyle Godwin or Jack Debreczeni. I don’t think Jake McIntyre at the Reds is in the ballpark for selection and nor should he be.

I’m not advocating Cheika to throw caution to the wind and pick different players every Test hoping for a magical result. But I think we can’t keep playing the same way we are, with the same players, and hoping for a win.

We need a full time reliable goal-kicker, we need a shake up in our second row stocks and we need to make regular incumbents fight to keep their spots more than we are now.

Michael Cheika turned Australian rugby on its head when he got the top job – and achieved immediate success with NSW and then the Wallabies.

All I’m saying is its time for a shake up.

The Crowd Says:

2016-09-07T07:04:51+00:00

Smiggle Jiggle

Roar Guru


ah, remember that time James O'Connor was in the 10 Jersey.

2016-09-06T08:50:53+00:00

piru

Guest


I disagree, I think it's the crux of the issue.

2016-09-06T08:45:55+00:00

piru

Guest


+37

2016-09-05T14:46:11+00:00

McCaw was onside?

Guest


Gold is yellow. Just like aqua is blue.

2016-09-05T12:10:41+00:00

Kirky

Roar Rookie


Gold mate not yellow, so I've been told many times but I have been seen as having bad eyesight but I can distinguish yellow from gold!

2016-09-05T12:07:15+00:00

Kirky

Roar Rookie


As you say mate, not according to Mat Burke, O'Driscoll. Mr. Pichot and a plethora of others, the All Blacks are a favoured entity as a rugby team, never a top team and beating all in front of them, they are simply favoured by Referees etc.! Forget that Clown and Welsh so called Rugby Journalist one Stephen Jones, he dislikes the All Blacks with a passion and always has, whereby he has never ever paid any compliment of any sort to the New Zealanders ever. He has never as far as I am aware had anything nice to say about the best team around the rugby International traps and considers them to be a favoured lot by all and sundry involved with adjudication of rugby~

2016-09-05T11:53:43+00:00

Kirky

Roar Rookie


I remember in the 1940s in New Zealand all rugby teams lined up as ~~ Fullback, two Wings, Centre, 2nd five eight, 1st five eight, Halfback, Number 8, Two Breakaways, two Locks two Front row Props and a Hooker. It is still the same. The only thing that has altered slightly is the loose forward being now named as Open and Blind side Flankers! It's never changed!

2016-09-05T03:57:45+00:00

Kirky

Roar Rookie


Cut across the ditch Chook, get one from Aotearoa, they're falling all over each other for a decent game, plentiful mate!!

2016-09-04T13:41:34+00:00

Kirky

Roar Rookie


Good write up Zac! and you've pretty much answered the title of your Post write up yourself! To be the best in the World you certainly have to have everything perfectly in place like Administration and the willingness to be able to transform the playing style as it changes as it always has. To do this you need top quality players who are dedicated to the cause and will sacrifice willingly everything that needs to happen to get that "best in the World" status. Then of course you need top Coaching irrespective of where that Coaching staff comes from it's an imperative ingredient. Scrub the well hacked "Aussie way" as they say with the necessity for all staff to be of Australian Origin! There is not, and never has been and likely never will be, any such thing as "the Australian way" ~ there is no such thing, and if there has been such an identity, it's never worked in the history of the Australian game of rugby to date. The problem here in Australia is, they don't have a good Coaching and build up structure as per the NZRU has, so seeing as there is no top drawer Coaching staff in Australia, you get them from anywhere, as pretty much every rugby playing Nation has, ~ an International Coach from elsewhere overseas. New Zealand for example has something like 9 or 10 International Coaches doing the business overseas, and to top that off there is still a plethora of top rugby Coaching left in the Country. The sooner Australia loses this ridiculous notion of Aussie, Aussie, Aussie, being the imperative format needed to be "the way", the better and then if it ever comes about, you'll see the needed transformation start to kick in. Top Administration is also an absolute, and it doesn't mean to say it should come from Australia either, to get the best to do the best, you pay for it from wherever it may come from. So with the likelihood of it happening being quite remote, Australian rugby just won't improve from where it's been and from where it sits at at this moment unless the logical reconstruction of the whole Organisation occurs. Finally, there just isn't the top rugby playing talent pool needed locally so it should be theoretical common sense to import some of that precious commodity of quality from overseas also. Consistency of players as you say is all very well, but there is a very small group of talent here to be consistent with so it'll always be, ''back to the status quo", or the same old, same old, it needs to change dramatically if you ever want to be at the top of the heap!

2016-09-04T13:10:16+00:00

Internal Fixation

Guest


Thanks Big Dog. Number 8 may be a great spot for Timani and I think Cheika needs to insist he plays there regularly. If my memory serves me correctly Pocock losing control at the back packing at 8 for the Brumbies may have cost them the first final against the Highlanders in the last 10 minutes. It takes experience at a high level to control that ball under pressure and I still don't think Pocock has that sorted.

2016-09-04T12:29:43+00:00

Charcoal

Guest


We had a promising specialist number 8 coming through, Pat Sio, brother of Scott, but he moved to France because he couldn't get a run with any of the Super Rugby franchises. Another talented player lost.

2016-09-04T11:42:10+00:00

roydon

Guest


chiekas job is to grow the game;lucky to reach rwc finals but did well with waratahs. now he has to bring or keep players from overseas so super rugby can continue to field 5 teams in Australia; must be hard for michael to be exposed as ordinary after winning great award for beating a depleted wales,a hopelessly coached England,and an unlucky Scotland.the brilliance shone in argentine game but spoilt with loss to Nz. reds will benefit from imports of superannuants hope they are paid well and play all games injury free.

2016-09-04T10:55:04+00:00

coldturkey

Roar Rookie


That was a pretty puzzling read. It seemed a bit circular. I think my conclusion is that I don't agree with pretty much everything you said.

2016-09-04T10:49:07+00:00

buddy boy

Guest


My apologies, I meant Alaalatoa...no disrespect intended.

2016-09-04T10:46:08+00:00

buddy boy

Guest


My forward pack, Alaatoa, anyone else, Slipper, Coleman, John Eales, McMahon, Pocock, Timani...backline, Genia, Cooper, Samu, Folau, Speight, Naivalu, Haylett-Petty. Yes I know I picked J Eales.

2016-09-04T10:20:08+00:00

Phantom

Roar Rookie


They have to defeatSA ARG and England regularly before they worry about NZ

2016-09-04T10:19:10+00:00

Big Dog

Guest


"Aussie", mate. It's "Aussie".

2016-09-04T10:16:43+00:00

Big Dog

Guest


Why bother to comment if you dislike them so much?

2016-09-04T10:12:58+00:00

Big Dog

Guest


What prompted this outburst?

2016-09-04T10:10:15+00:00

Big Dog

Guest


Lopeti Timani may have spent most of his time playing in the second row with the Rebels but he certainly was in the back row (mostly at 8, sometimes 6) at club level with Southern Districts. I don't remember ever seeing him in the low row then, so I'd wager he's probably more familiar with the back row than the second row. I'd surely love to see him given a run at number 8 with the Wallabies, Leroy Houston as well.

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