The best weekend of Australian rugby in 2016 was…

By Brett McKay / Expert

After four and a bit months of pretty solid slog through the National Rugby Championship and some radio producing into Christmas, it’s been nice over the last few days to finally have some down time to think back over the rugby year.

After a year of consistent inconsistency, I wanted to try and narrow down the one weekend this year that I enjoyed the most.

The task I’d set myself was to think of a single weekend on which I’d properly had my rugby fill by Sunday afternoon. A weekend where I was completely satisfied; couldn’t possibly ask for anything more.

It meant that I could pretty much rule a line through Super Rugby straight away.

Though the Brumbies, Waratahs, and even Rebels all had their moments in 2016, they were never on the same weekend. There’s no doubt it was a disappointing year for the Australian Super Rugby sides, and even though the Brumbies sneaked into the finals, it’s fair to say their best rugby came much earlier in the season.

I did quite enjoy watching the New Zealand sides this season but, then again, who didn’t? And at this point I’ll just re-iterate the headline and the task at hand.

The two semi-finals were both excellent games, to be fair, and that was probably the best weekend of Super Rugby for the season. Those two games produced a final between two thoroughly deserving combatants, and I know I watched the Hurricanes and Lions in the decider comfortable with either side winning. The Hurricanes were wonderful in victory, but the Lions lost none of their 2016 reputation in second.

I had the absolute pleasure of sitting ringside for two test matches this year, but Wallabies’ thumpings at the hands of England and New Zealand meant that those results are best consigned to a memory purge as quick as possible. The sooner they’re forgotten about, the better.

Both games were difficult from a broadcasting point of view, too. None of the England players were keen on talking on radio post-match until Chris Robshaw felt sorry for me after he completed his lap of honour. And then, like the injured James Haskell pre-match, he was wonderful to talk to.

Then, after the All Blacks wrapped up Bledisloe 1, I was forced into the unprecedented situation where their players were off limits to ABC Grandstand – despite being broadcast rights holders – until after TV was completely done. And after the Wallabies had suddenly lost their tongues – Israel Folau walked away from me mid-question – it made for an interesting post-match wrap.

So this means I’m pushing into late August still without an obvious weekend to choose.

The Wallabies’ rugby championship form was very hot and cold – very cold initially but warming up as the competition went on – but thankfully improved markedly by the end, and the same goes for the spring tour. The win over Wales was excellent and the wins over Scotland and France were just good enough.

Despite the loss, the Ireland match was probably the test I enjoyed the most in 2016, and I do wonder if this match might be the start of a new rivalry between two rebuilding sides trying to climb world rankings ladder. As far as tour highlights go, they finished with that game, too.

Probably because I was so heavily invested in the coverage, I have to turn toward the National Rugby Championship to find a standout weekend.

The 2016 NRC season was the best of the three seasons played to date, and this became apparent within the first few games played. The pace of the game was up and, importantly, so was the skill level across the board; the decision to go back to eight teams and from four NSW-based teams to three was quickly justified; and the quality of players throughout the competition was noticeably higher.

That genuine conversations were being had about not just one but possibly three or four Wallabies spring tour ‘bolters’ from the NRC is confirmation of this.

And it was great, too, that heading into the last round before the finals series three quarters of the competition was still in contention for the playoffs.

Therefore the best weekend of Australian rugby in 2016 was … the NRC semi-finals weekend in mid-October.

NSW Country’s 50-24 win over Melbourne in Newcastle followed by Perth’s 42-24 win over the Sydney Rays at Pittwater the next day were two days of cracking rugby, and they were games in which both eventual losers looked likely to win at different points in their games.

What the two games delivered was four teams and 92 players playing with natural attacking intent. There were ten tries on the Saturday and nine more on the Sunday, but neither game featured porous defence or tries being run in for fun. Tries were scored because the team worked hard to create the opportunity and were then good enough to convert that opportunity into points.

As we’ve seen throughout the NRC this season and seasons past, the basic pillars of the game – set pieces, scrum, defence – all remain paramount, and all four teams could play the way they did during the semis because they did the basics right.

It was wonderful to watch in person – even more so given all bar one other game of the competition I’d covered from my office.

But it was wonderful to watch because the players enjoy the style of the game and the coaches enjoy letting the players play this way. If you missed the competition this year, then you missed some genuinely top-shelf, entertaining Australian rugby.

The Crowd Says:

2016-12-21T09:43:47+00:00

The Saint

Roar Guru


Nice try guys. Rio Olympics opening ceremony was on the evening of a Friday . Womens 7s competition started the very next day - Saturday. Continued on Sunday and ended on a Monday. That weekend stills counts

2016-12-21T06:38:46+00:00

piru

Guest


Perth Spirit winning the NRC after the forgettable Force season

2016-12-21T03:13:08+00:00

Terry

Guest


Yes Quade is already daylight in front of Foley but he will never get a decent crack as he shows up Bernard evertime he plays and is a Queenslander... Quade has had more try assists than Bernard this year in less than half the tests than Foley and Foley has more try assists for other countries this year than his own.. hahaha... Lance we`ll never ever know with him, because he wont get a crack as well.... THE ICEMAN is Chiekas pet and can do,no wrong.....He will be 10 till 2019.... It doesn`t matter how horrendous he has played his entire career, he will still get picked whilst Michjael Chieks is coach. We will not beat the very good teams with that 9 10 combo..You blokes can`t see how bad they are??? I pity you..

2016-12-20T21:54:38+00:00

Machooka

Roar Guru


Well done Daveski... and sadly it would appear that 'comprehension' by the majority is somewhat lost! ' Personally the costume and beer filled Sydney Sevens was a pretty hard to top weekend of rugby.' Very true... except the end bit :)

2016-12-20T21:33:05+00:00

Box the Younger

Guest


Surely the inaugural Olympic Gold Medal by the women overshadows everything else that happened this year.

2016-12-20T16:13:30+00:00

Rt

Guest


Yep. That was fantastic!

2016-12-20T12:59:54+00:00

Daveski

Guest


You are talking Jono Lance as the alternative at 10 right instead of Foley? Please please don't tell me you're hanging on to the Quade's our Saviour Fallacy ?

2016-12-20T12:57:17+00:00

Daveski

Guest


Ah yes I'm sure the NZ girls prefer their Dubai 2016 Champions caps than an Olympic gold medal Jumbo. As for Brett not mentioning the Pearls I think that game wasn't played on a weekend was it ? I mean that was the point of the article - the best weekend of rugby for the author, not the rugby highlight of the year as decreed by the majority. Personally the costume and beer filled Sydney Sevens was a pretty hard to top weekend of rugby.

2016-12-20T09:33:02+00:00

Jumbo

Guest


They were spanked by the kiwis last week. Gloss gone already..

2016-12-20T08:03:36+00:00

Machooka

Roar Guru


'I'm fair ..' Yep... even more reason to keep that hat on Terry! Merry Christmas... and I hope all your wishes come true. Well sort of :)

2016-12-20T07:21:44+00:00

John360180

Guest


Odd that both weren't mentioned in the article.

2016-12-20T06:17:59+00:00

DanFan

Guest


Amazing that you didn't consider the women's sevens gold medal as being the highlight. Shame.

2016-12-20T05:37:56+00:00

Karl Knuth

Guest


Thanks for the article Brett. Always good to get a little feel good attitude going before Christmas! I too enjoyed the NRC and the wonderful rugby it has to offer. The standard of play was indeed a lot better this year, and gave us some some good quality footy to watch. Love the fact that I have a team to barrack for in Qld country and also that some of the blokes I play footy with made the u20s. It really does make you feel like there is legitimate pathways out there now for country kids. Personally my favourite weekend of rugby this year was TDRU gf weekend, where our little club took out the 3rd grade final as well as the u17s going back to back premiers. The 17s were most satisfying as they've held pretty well the same team together since under 12s where they used to get pumped 50~0. So to come from that to consecutive premiers with the right guidance really makes me feel great about what we're doing with our club and gives encouraging signs for the future. Once again thanks for the article Brett! Hope you have a safe and merry Christmas.

2016-12-20T05:33:53+00:00

Terry

Guest


I`m fair ..Kepu is the only player on merit from the TAHS that should be there and TPN should have had more game time as Moore was atrocious in the first 8 games of 2016..Hooper and Folau have been out of form for half the season, so they should have been dropped like many many others have ( Other franchises ).. Only one Waratah has been dropped in 2016, but he was also made captain of the WALLABY A team.... William Skelton... Foley Phipps and Mumm have played over 150 tests between them, and they still are not improving.. Those 3 i have an issue with, not the others as much. When their are blokes who are better than them sitting on the pine or not in the team at all, it really frustrates everyone bar Baby blue tinted monocle wearing tinfoil hat wearing wallatah fans..

2016-12-20T04:48:31+00:00

Celtic334

Guest


Great work as always Brett, we really do need more rugby journalists like you in Australia. As for best weekend, there was one weekend in June when unfortunately Australia lost to England (great tussle), Ireland won for the first time in South Africa (a man down), New Zealand played some scintillating rugby against a stubborn Welsh team, Scotland and Japan produced some close contests (with one try being the try of the year for me from Japan) and France appeared to be showing signs of improvement away to Argentina. But..... as a whole i thought any weekend over the recent Spring tour, all matches around the continent were superb, with results that were great for rugby as a whole. Looking forward to a great 2017 with the Wallabies having a stellar record coming off a respectable Super Rugby season.

AUTHOR

2016-12-20T04:19:41+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Indeed. And yet...

AUTHOR

2016-12-20T04:19:20+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Cheers Akari, and I'll do my best!

AUTHOR

2016-12-20T04:18:00+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Yeah, I wasn't necessarily expecting to land at the NRC when I started this Chookman, but everything you say there is bang on the money - the NRC IS unearthing the next wave of talent like we hoped it would, but the rugby is bloody good to watch, first and foremost! And thanks for the best wishes, mate, Hope it's a wonderful time in Chookland this weekend...

2016-12-20T02:07:45+00:00

Cassia

Guest


Shute Shield GF was superb. Women's 7"s was awesome and inspiring. Both gave me hope for the future of our great game.

2016-12-20T01:47:05+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


Well done mate - more power to the NRC!!!

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