Five talking points from the Wallabies vs Fiji

By Connor Bennett / Editor

The Wallabies kicked off their June international season with a comfortable 37-14 win over Fiji in Melbourne.

All the wash-up from Wallabies vs Fiji
» Read the full match report
» LORD: Izzy’s back!
» Wallabies player ratings
» Forum: Wallabies changes?
» Full match highlights

Australia bagged five tries to two in an undulating clash that saw the home side shoot out of the gates before grinding through the contest on either side of halfway, breaking away again late to take the game.

With a few debutants, some stirring Fiji rugby and a result to please aching rugby fans in Australia in the midst of a tough Super Rugby season, here are five talking points from the game in Melbourne.

Karmichael Hunt must stay in the Wallabies for the long run
A very well deserved debut for the triple code-hopper, Karmichael Hunt’s first foray into the canary yellow of the Wallabies was not quite what anyone would have been expecting, himself included.

Despite training for a good portion of the week at fullback and word running rampant of Folau being shifted to the wing or No.13, Hunt was thrown into the inside centre role for his first game.

It’s not a position he’s too familiar with and being the best fullback in Australia at the moment throughout a very rough Super Rugby campaign, you could forgive him for being a little off.

Not Hunt though, as he has all season for the Reds, he just threw himself at the role, excelling with his aggressive style of rugby, not afraid to take on the big boppers from Fiji.

“I was very surprised (to start at 12) and my head started spinning but I managed to get my head around the plays,” said Hunt.

Not only was he a force in attack, but he is one of the most defensively underrated players on the planet right now. I’d go as far to say he’s the best defensive backline player in Australia and possibly beyond.

No one gets past him and when he hits, he hits damn hard, making sure the poor bloke he nails thinks twice before coming his way again.

Hunt proved in his first game that, despite diversities of position and otherwise, he belongs in the Wallabies line up. His versatility in positioning is now a massive factor that Cheika can work with as well, although, I would like to see him take that No.15 jumper some time in the future.

Hunt is a long-term Wallaby.

(AAP Image/Dave Hunt)

What is Folau doing for the Waratahs?
Speaking of the fullback position, Israel Folau continued his love-affair with international rugby, bagging a double to add to his continuously increasing tally.

The question that’s begging though is where is this Israel Folau for the Waratahs?

This was a completely different man to the one we’ve seen struggle uninterested through the Super Rugby season so far, looking nothing like the player that took Australian rugby by storm back in 2013.

His form was the catalyst behind the aforementioned talk of moves to the wing or Hunt taking his spot at the back.

He played seamlessly across the backline and on the counter in particular where he is so dangerous in broken play on the kick return.

Waratahs coach Daryl Gibson will be wondering where this form has been throughout the year, hoping he can bring it back to the New South Wales side to finish a disappointing season on a high note.

(AAP Image/Joe Castro)

Have the Melbourne crowd given the ARU signs to drop the Rebels?
The opening Test of the season, a bumper Wallabies side lining up against an always fiery Fiji outfit, afternoon rugby at it’s finest under the Saturday sun. Should be a big turn out right?

Unfortunately not.

Just over 13,000 turned out in Melbourne, less than half the capacity of AAMI Park and it didn’t look great with a sea of empty seats around the stadium.

This same time last year Melbourne rugby fans set a record for the same stadium, filing 29,871 into the 30,000 capacity stadium in what was a massive contest with England.

The poor turn out just 12 months later could go down to a few things, but it’s an image that should be seriously concerning the Rebels Super Rugby franchise.

With debate still firing on dropping the Force or the Rebels, the Melbourne side needed a big crowd here to prove to the ARU that there is a thriving rugby base in the Victorian capital to work with.

They needed an impressive showing so the ARU could see that they have a market and they have the support to survive and thrive.

A reportedly record-low attendance for a Wallabies game since the professional era took over, this was not a good image for the hopes of Rebels fans and rugby in Victoria.

(AAP Image/Joe Castro)

Is this the team for success?
While not a perfect performance from the Wallabies across 80 minutes, especially defensively, this was a very handy start to the season.

Looking over the game again, it’s hard to find positions that stands out as needing a fix, it’s hard to see anyone that glaringly needs to be replaced. The team just really worked for the most part.

With Folau and Hunt firing in their role, any backline positioning doesn’t need to be rejigged at this stage.

Higginbotham was a little quiet at the back of the scrum, as were the two props Allan Ala’alatoa and Tom Robertson.

Arguments could be made to have Sekope Kepu in the starting line up, but the point is, there doesn’t need to be alterations to the squad and the starting 15 did it’s job for the most part.

I could easily see this same side taking the park for every game throughout June and a similar line up take the field for the Rugby Championship later in the year.

(AAP Image/Joe Castro)

Taking the foot off the gas
The Wallabies absolutely bolted out of the gates, snagging two meat pies inside the first 11 minutes as they starved the Fijians of the ball, claiming 89 per cent of possession inside the first eight minutes.

That’s the perfect start basically. The issue comes with the rest of the half.

Fiji are certainly no walk over by any means, but Australia just allowed them to settle into the game, letting off throughout the middle portion of the opening half and through periods of the second 40.

Australia didn’t get their next try for another 44 minutes and, despite not conceding any points in that time, their defence began to open up and Fiji looked dangerous and threatening.

They had the early lead and finish to take the win, but to let up for long periods of time like that could prove much more costly in the future.

It’s nit-picking considering the overall result, but the Wallabies need that ruthlessness, that hunger to dominate for 80 minutes without giving their opposition an inch to move.

The Crowd Says:

2017-06-15T15:40:51+00:00

Timbo (L)

Roar Guru


Skelton, Hooper and Pocock. Cheiks had little respect for the line out last year and the results showed.

2017-06-15T15:36:27+00:00

Timbo (L)

Roar Guru


Here is the problem with perception. There is no problem with Folau in backfield. Because Foley or DHP are back there to do the kicking.and catching most of the time, there is no problem and we all think Folau is doing a great job when in fact the credit should go to Foley, he is the one carrying the load, following through his own kicks. Watch the Fiji game again and look for Foley deep on the right wing. I noticed because I was hoping DHP would have a good game, but it was Foley doing the defensive fullback duties,

2017-06-14T05:09:07+00:00

Hannes

Guest


I was comparing under cover seating at Suncorp vs nib stadium. Yes, you can sit in the rain for cheaper but then you do not compare apples with apples.

2017-06-14T05:05:32+00:00

Hannes

Guest


Agree.. better as five. The ARU has pumped more funds into the Rebels in the past five years than what they gave to the Force. Through the Own the Force campaign they can get some money back if they sell the IP rights back to the Force. Cox was brought in to turn the Rebels around. Will he be successful? On current trends his has a challenge and thrprevious private owner got out. Private ownership does not eliminate the financing risk as Cox can terminate the agreement. The Force managed to secure sufficient funded to see them through until 2020.

2017-06-14T01:51:25+00:00

Link

Guest


It`s all academic as Cheika doesn't rate the lineout.

2017-06-14T01:35:31+00:00

Hannes

Guest


Watch the game - there is no reason to get excited.

2017-06-14T01:33:37+00:00

Hannes

Guest


The biggest influx of South Africans were in 2005-2010 period not 80s. These were predominantly young families. Also do not underestimate the number of Kiwis that immigrated during this period. It is a generation of rugby players and supporters that could be lost of the ARU gets their way to axe the Force.

2017-06-14T01:18:21+00:00

Hannes

Guest


I think the Rebels and Force should stay as the investment in rugby will eventually pay off. However the ARU made it and either or... With 4 Force players in the Wallaby 23 and none from the Rebels and youngsters as injury cover at the Force playing well, the return from the Force is better at the moment. It is unfair as it takes about a decade to establish a team but the ARU have no patience. Many Wallaby under 20s do not make it to the senior side (about 1/3 or less does) and it is also not a good U20 Wallaby side as they failed to make the finals. By signing an experienced international(s) to cover for the lack of local talent is not a good look. I saw an article that the Force will continue to back the current playing group withh 11 verbal acceptances and 13 contracts already signed. It seems that they will only loose 3 players...however we have to wait and see...

2017-06-14T01:15:57+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Was that reason a large and wealthy South African influx around the end of the 1980s? No it was a massive amount of public support - I'm sure you remember the rallies

2017-06-14T01:15:07+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Sorry mate I was moved to defence mode by the utter rubbish posted above. Massive generalisation I know, but it seems to hold true, big events seem to attract a lot of attention, week to week sports not so much, except AFL of course.

2017-06-14T01:11:32+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


I think you're confused about what a fact is

2017-06-14T01:11:00+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


Yep. 10 stays at 10. Strike winger at 11 (Speight, Naivalu, Koroibete, whoever), Hunt at 12, Kuridrani at 13 (Kerevi can push to reclaim that spot when he's fit... competition is good) and then there's the sort-of-interchangeable 14-15 setup, with a kicking winger and the fullback (like how the ABs like to run Smith and Dagg)... right now I'd keep DHP and Folau but I wouldn't mind seeing Folau and Beale at 14 and 15 respectively when KB is back to fitness with DHP as outside back cover on the bench.

2017-06-14T01:06:12+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


Also might be why we only gave away 6 penalties. but not to take anything away from Hardwick. Good work from the kid. Should have a positive future in rugby.

2017-06-14T01:04:56+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


Mark, how much other sport was on in Canberra that weekend? I'm guessing there wasn't much. Call it a 15k crowd, multiply that by 10 (ratio of Can to Mel population) and we've got 150k.... there were over 310k punters at various sporting games in Melbourne last week.

2017-06-14T00:59:41+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


Let's wait and see what the Scotland and Italy tests dish up for crowd numbers before making any rash decisions... it wasn't too long ago that Perth had 16k for a RC game against the Pumas.

2017-06-14T00:54:46+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


Peter, one thing to note is that we only gave away 6 penalties which seems about half of what we normally do. That's (at least partially) a result of the reduced ruck presence. Still I'd like to see Timani get a run at 6 for some in-tight running and body shifting.

2017-06-14T00:51:39+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


But TWAS that doesn't conveniently support the narrative most are pushing!

2017-06-14T00:50:21+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


Melbourne has a decent (and growing) rugby scene while league is essentially nonexistent outside of the blokes wearing purple.

2017-06-14T00:10:28+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


And outsiders love painting an unfavourable picture and sterotyping wherever possible to make themselves feel better... Come on, Piru. You're better than that. It's like saying everyone from Perth works in the mines, has a drug habit and holidays in Bali... it's far from the truth but I can say it just as easily as any of the Melbourne hipster/faux-sport-fan/elitist B-S vitriol that gets tossed around...

2017-06-14T00:04:13+00:00

Browny

Roar Rookie


The Rebels development programs are actually going pretty well, it's the top level that's struggling. There's a healthy number of the Vic boys in the Aus U20s and several who aren't there because they've been playing with the Rebels due to half the squad being unavailable most of the time. The Vic U20s beat NSW then lost in the final to QLD last year. These are all the players who've gone through the spent time in the juniors/school/club pathways/development programs post the Rebels inception when the resources dramatically improved. Playing numbers have doubled since 2011 including a 38% increase from '15 to '16. I think there's 7 or 8 local kids on the Rebels list now, plus guys who left the system after school like Rob Valetini (Brumbies, Aus U20s), Pete Samu (Crusaders), Tala Gray (France), etc. The list management (signing backrowers and wingers like its going out of fashion while neglecting locks and inside backs/flyhalfs) plus Rebels S&C and a stack of unlucky injuries (McMahon, Toolis, Shipperley, Jeffries, etc etc) has all compounded into a torrid season for the top Melbourne team. Everything underneath is going pretty well.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar