All Blacks aren't waiting for the Wallabies to catch up

By Matt Porter / Roar Guru

There’s plenty of good news, but there’s a major piece of bad news for the Wallabies following their solid win against Los Pumas in Perth on Saturday night – and that’s aside from the injury to sabbatical-bound David Pocock.



The good news first.



Despite going for large tracts of the game without the ball and in the wrong end of the field, the Wallabies managed an emphatic five-tries-to-two bonus-point win.


They did this by blitzing the start – racking up three converted tries inside 12 minutes – then tackling anything that moved in blue.


By halftime the Aussies had made 98 tackles to Argentina’s 22 – having had just 24% of the ball, yet controlled the scoreboard 21-6.


By game’s end the home side had been forced to make 143 tackles on the rampantly off-loading Pumas and had the ball just once for every three times their opposites did, yet were runaway 36-20 winners.


The huge defensive effort was led by giant new second rower Adam Coleman who should suck his food through a straw more often, having been forced onto a liquid diet all week after splitting his lips in three against the Springboks the week before.



The new lock on the block threw himself into everything, with 16 tackles on top of flying into roughly 3,000 rucks. It was another impressive, full-blooded display from the Force enforcer who, in just four Tests, has established himself as the Wallabies dominant second rower.


Not far behind him was fellow big-unit newbie Reece Hodge. The left winger made a habit of stopping burly South Americans in their tracks with a series of crunching head-on hits.



Others from the class of 2016 who came of age: outside centre Samu Kerevi had easily his best game in gold, literally finding his voice at this level, while Dane Haylett-Petty showed that he is an inventive attacker to be reckoned with, despite playing out of position on the right wing.



But it was the brilliance of one of the team’s elders, Will Genia, nudging career-best form, that was the most decisive factor.


A knee injury had restricted the 28-year-old to a handful of games for Stade Francais since he signed with the French club following the World Cup. The enforced lay-off looks to have done wonders with Saturday’s dazzling two-try effort a return to his brilliant, instinctive, game-changing best.

Form that’s rubbing off on his old partner in crime Quade Cooper. The enigmatic pivot is a more considered beast these days, maybe due to his rather humbling experience in Toulon when shunted out of his favourite position by the stars studding that backline before bailing halfway through his two-year contract to re-join the Reds for 2017.



Seemingly where there’s a Will, there’s a way for Cooper to get back to his best work, which keeps defences second-guessing.

It was telling that the only two inside balls Cooper threw all Test sent players directly to the try line, with Haylett-Petty’s score in the opening minutes and Michael Hooper’s in the closing.


Throw in Hooper’s typically workaholic display and big, bullocking impact off the bench from Sean McMahon and Tatafu Polota-Nau and you had a visibly pleased and relaxed Wallaby coach Michael Cheika in his post-match interview with Fox Sport’s Rod Kafer.


He conceded a big work on is with the ball in the collision zone “we lost a few balls there we really shouldn’t have… (we have to) try and get a bit more continuity in attack.”


However, he was pleased that his “biggest work ons, our D and set pieces… we’re improving those, a bit at a time, it’s coming.”

Which brings me to the bad news.


After the series whitewash to England and two thumping losses to the All Blacks, the Wallabies look finally to be on the right track with some settled combinations, the unearthing of some young nuggets in gold, new-found spark on attack and resolve in defence.
 But on the right track to where, exactly?


To a place where they can seriously challenge the All Blacks in the third Bledisloe at Eden Park on 22 October?


Because, the problem for the Wallabies, and every other international team for that matter, is while they strive to catch up to the All Blacks, the All Blacks don’t oblige by standing still.


Instead they continue on their age-old quest to evolve and redefine themselves as an even better version of what they were before.

There was evidence of this in their six-try-to-one mauling of the Springboks in Christchurch on Saturday night.


The All Blacks unleashed a super-flat attacking backline alignment in the Test. 

A flat attacking backline, which can probably draw its lineage to Mark Ella as its first brilliant exponent, has long been a trademark of coach Steve Hansen’s All Blacks and is a particular pet of bis former attack coach and current defence coach Wayne Smith.


Traditionally backlines were aligned deep to enable teams with the ball maximum time and space to cut their capers and manoeuvre the quick outside backs into gaps at top speed.


The flatline attack turns this theory on its head by minimising the time and space of the defending backline by getting in its face with players of speed of feet and hand, skill, size and courage willing to “take the line on.”



When done properly, square-shouldered attacking players in a flat alignment will ‘fix’ defenders by committing them to the tackle. Here they have the option of beating with footwork, getting a pass away before contact, during contact (an off-load), or taking the ball into contact to get across the advantage line and set up a quick ruck in which to go again against retreating, hopefully offside defenders. 


Flat attacks bring the old rugby adage of “the ball beating the man” to the fore. The All Blacks have based a lot of their attacking success around the structure in recent years and have imbued all players, regardless of position, with the ability to catch and pass – that most fundamental of rugby skills – like world class inside backs.

This was amply demonstrated by All Black hooker Dane Coles providing brilliant last passes for three of the All Blacks’ tries on Saturday.



His first required super-quick hands to send Israel Dagg over, the second used an off-load a few minutes later to a flying Julian Savea on the other wing, and finally an exquisite 20m effort latched onto by Sam Whitelock that any international scrum half would have been proud of.


But the All Blacks flat line attack looked flatter than I’d ever seen it before at the weekend.

No doubt it was a strategy to further optimise the lightening-fast pass of the best halfback in the game Aaron Smith and the astonishing attacking prowess of his outside half Beauden Barrett to set the All Blacks’ backs alight.


It was in no better evidence than in the 21st minute. The Springboks had actually capped off a great first quarter with a well-worked try to their ageing strike weapon Bryan Habana following sustained, almost Lions-like multi-phase pressure, to lead 7-3.


Unfortunately, young five-eighth Elton Jantjies undid all his good work to this point by spilling the ball from the All Black restart 7m out from his own line.

That was the beginning of the end for his team.

Sky Sport New Zealand commentator, former All Black halfback Justin Marshall, noted how flat the All Black backs were and how wide Barrett was standing from the ensuing scrum.



“I just really like this formation,” Marshall told the viewers.


“You might be sitting looking at it and thinking ‘there’s absolutely nothing complicated about it, they’re just flat, and there’s no real variation, there’s no transition runners in behind that would be easy to defend’ and there’s not. 



“If that pass goes really flat to Beauden Barrett, look at the amount of ground Faf de Klerk and his flankers have to cover before they can get to Barrett, look at that gap, that space and all of a sudden Jantjies, he has to turn in, just that formation would be hard, hard for the Springboks.”

And so it proved. Smith made a small run from the base of the scrum to commit defenders before feeding left to Barrett who had angled sharply back to get as much gainline advantage as possible before taking the tackle. From there the ruck was rapidly cleared for Smith to switch the play right with a great ball to Coles, who’s quick hands released Dagg for an untouched canter across the line – all before some of the Springbok forwards had managed to lift their heads up from the scrum.

Six minutes later the All Blacks flatline attack was at it again from a scrum 20m out from the Boks’ line that resulted in sending the Bus enroute to the line for his 43rd Test try.

The comparison to the Springbok back play, which was largely carried out deep behind the advantage line, was stark.

It’s the constant fine-tuning that keeps the All Black machine purring along while the likes of the Wallabies and Boks are forced to undergo full engine reconditioning.



Fortunately for the rest of the rugby world, England coach Eddie Jones has identified “significant weaknesses” in the All Blacks, all of which he is keeping close to his chest for the time being.



The trouble for Eddie is, that even if those weaknesses exist outside his imagination, they may no longer be there when his team attempts to exploit them the year after next.


So, flagging them now might instead suggest a weakness in Eddie’s thinking.

The Crowd Says:

2016-09-23T00:24:07+00:00

Ngati Tumutumu

Roar Rookie


Hey PS BL are a put together team that has little basis on combinations. It will be very hard for them to be on the same page because they have very different ethos on how they want to play the game. I'm not saying the BL can't beat the AB's but I will say they have a mountain to climb to do so. Combinations and understanding of your game is what wins test matches all of which the BL have very little of under that banner as history would suggest.

2016-09-21T03:58:19+00:00

Scrumma

Guest


WHAAAAAT ???, better give my notorious rogue Cuzn a call to chop any AFL posts down he comes across. ???

2016-09-21T00:58:44+00:00

Lindsay Amner

Roar Guru


Justin Marshall has not been involved with the All Blacks for more than a decade after retiring in 2005. There's no possible way he's giving out any of their current IP. He's talking merely as an astute observer of the game, using his knowledge of rugby as a whole. I wish he would study up on the current rules, but otherwise he's streets ahead of most other "expert" commentators in his reading of the game.

2016-09-20T10:58:47+00:00

Kirky

Roar Rookie


You're damned if you do and damned if you don't, lose. lose. lose situation. I find old Marsh' a refreshing commentator as most of the Kiwi broadcasters are and in comparison to Kearns ,Kafer, Marto' and that dreadful Maloney, give me those Kiwi boys and girls every time they're literally the best!

2016-09-20T10:51:34+00:00

Kirky

Roar Rookie


Eddie Jones is a power mouth and one of the very best at it, the thing is Hansen and the All Blacks never in any way take Eddie Jones too seriously one bit. Eddie' is a Journeyman Coach and will go anywhere to do it, remembering of course he was possibly the 6th or 7th Coach approached by the ERU with the likes of Hansen, Henry and whoever else not wanting to have a bar of the ''poisoned chalice'' that is England rugby! The only thing Eddie Jones has done of note, is to more or less get shed of ''the old school tie'' which dominated English rugby. ~ a bit like the Australians and their ''Australian way", Aussie, Aussie', Aussie, which if there was any such thing, it 's never worked yet and apart from the farcical Clive Woodward era, it's never worked for England either. Jones has instilled change and the players are reacting accordingly, ~ but remember they beat the Wallabies in 3 Tests at a time when the Wallabies were woefully bad and it showed, and in mentioning those 3 wins against Australia, the English didn't play that well. and I find it a bit dodgy them being at number 2 in the World rankings and I suppose the Aussies' are more or less the best of a bad lot in 3rd spot. See how much Jonesy' opens his mouth when they finally get to play the All Blacks, because if it does so happen that in the most unlikely circumstances that England do beat the Kiwis, then and only then I'll lay a kudo or two on Eddie Jones and his prowess as a Coach, he's done nothing as yet of note, but possibly his most memorable non event was his sacking as Australian Coach!

2016-09-20T01:08:21+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


"slither" is the best description of 5,000 to 1 odds I have ever heard of :-)

2016-09-19T23:31:54+00:00

Coconut

Guest


Mein Gott, there is a whole other thread which hashes out this debate yet again... please lets leave RL out of this forum, it does neither code any good to do these endless comparisons.. just sayin.

2016-09-19T23:02:35+00:00

Matt Porter

Guest


Good points KiwiHaydn, Shag Hansen, Read & co are definitely seeing it like a beach ball just now.

2016-09-19T21:00:53+00:00

Upfromdown

Guest


Having been involved in rugby in Australia for 20+ years there is no way there are 230,000 registered rugby players in Australia. There may have been the many that tried rugby (mainly kids through a version of rugby such as Walla rugby) in a year but not regularly playing week in week out for a season.

2016-09-19T20:21:58+00:00

Upfromdown

Guest


You can't really compare international rugby with club RL.

2016-09-19T19:17:21+00:00

Jerry

Guest


Yeah, there was nothing wrong with the grounding. Watching it in real time he clearly gets it down and when Gardner arrived, it was sitting on the turf hence no need to review that.

2016-09-19T18:51:23+00:00

RobC

Roar Guru


Thanks Matt. Nice review The turn point for me was how ABs exited and got to the red zone on the 2nd try. Kick chase from a 21m box.

2016-09-19T12:34:13+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


Well that's true, but at least they all had a slither of hope?

2016-09-19T09:45:39+00:00

moaman

Roar Guru


Love your writing and analysis Matt; keep it up please.

2016-09-19T09:38:52+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


Leicester City, Japan RFU, Greece FC, Alan Bond, Buster Douglas, France RFU, Erin Brokovich, Bobby Fischer. They were determined, they had a plan, they stuck to it, they turned up, and.......kerboooom.

2016-09-19T09:38:08+00:00

Roey

Guest


Yeah I remember as a kid in NZ, seeing a league match on T.V, between NZ and Oz, thinking it was the AB's (I was quite young), and thinking yay All Blacks, then, hang on, why did they just stop after he got tackled!? What is this horrible game that looks like Rugby but fake? -My introduction to league. Thank the lord above for Union is all can say.

2016-09-19T09:22:42+00:00

One Eye

Guest


The problem with Marshall is he tries so hard to be impartial he goes too far the other way and is often wrong in his assertions and many of his penalty rants have in fact been shown as incorrect application of the laws.

2016-09-19T09:20:08+00:00

One Eye

Guest


The thing that really stands out from that and Julian's subsequent try is just how many defenders Aaron Smith's pass takes out in one pass and having Coles' the receiver is an insurance policy if he needs to take it into contact. The only problem I have is it may become too predictable with opposition teams just marking him in numbers, I guess though that leaves space elsewhere...

2016-09-19T09:16:22+00:00

One Eye

Guest


The replays didn't show the entire movement, Ardie may not have grounded it immediately but he certainly did ground it by the time he came to a halt it's just the replay cut away before the movement was complete but after he had crossed.

2016-09-19T09:05:27+00:00

Jacko

Guest


Foxtel is annoying the way they dont have any post match info or analysis any more. I have noticed it in Super rugby and now tests where they go to a long build-up for next match rather than complete the post match stufff in NZ based games. I think they may find lots of kiwi's subscribe only for the NZ rugby and can they really afford to lose those customers. Also League needs to learn to schedule Warriors games at different times to Union games but they always pick staurdays at 5.30pm. Not maximising their audience at all

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