Are the Wallabies great or terrible? We're still not sure

By Jack Quigley / Expert

The Rugby Championship wrapped up Sunday morning as the Wallabies defeated Argentina 37-20 in Mendoza.

The record will read only two wins from six games for Michael Cheika’s men, but also only two losses – both coming at the hands of the best team on the planet.

The two draws against South Africa have made this Rugby Championship a really tough read for punters attempting to evaluate where this Wallabies team is at.

The June tests against Fiji, Scotland and Italy only serve to cloud judgement further. The Wallabies were poor in June, they may describe it as ‘underdone’, but either way they made extremely hard work of mediocre opposition.

Have the Wallabies turned the corner since June? Win those two drawn matches and you’d say absolutely. One blowout loss to the All Blacks in Sydney that could justifiably be recorded as an outlier given the titanic performance in Dunedin a week later and home and away wins over South Africa and Argentina.

Lose those two drawn matches however, and the picture darkens dramatically. All of a sudden the Bledisloe loss in Sydney appears to be the norm, with the performance in Dunedin considered the anomaly. The wins against Argentina are then dismissed as victories over an obviously weak opponent.

Not helping the confusion was South Africa copping a 57-point hiding in New Zealand in between the draws with Australia.

After Perth the general consensus was that the Wallabies had secured a hard-fought stalemate against a Springboks squad seemingly on the rise. Then the ‘Boks went to North Harbour Stadium and were blown away by the All Blacks, causing Australian rugby followers to wonder if the Wallabies should perhaps have done better a week before.

So are the Wallabies great or terrible right now? It’s hard to say for sure. While we’ve seen flashes of brilliance from Australia at times during The Rugby Championship, we’ve also seen some pretty ordinary stuff, too.

Bernard Foley is almost a perfect microcosm of the side. He regularly shows glimpses of being a word-class 10 – squaring up defences, making line breaks and slinging precision passes to put team mates in for scores. But in between he’s putting the ball dead in-goal kicking for touch or spraying conversion attempts everywhere but between the posts.

In Foley’s, and the Wallabies’ case, as the year has gone on, the good has clearly started to outweigh the bad.

The disorganised mayhem that was the Wallabies’ defence earlier in the year appears to be finding its feet. There are still moments of confusion defensively, but that can be in part due to the fact that the Wallabies rarely take to the field with the same combinations defensively two games running.

In attack, Israel Folau has been white-hot. In June it was almost in isolation, but now he’s got Kurtley Beale, Foley and newcomer Marika Koroibete getting close to his level. Reece Hodge deserves to call the left wing position his own for the foreseeable future.

(AAP Image/Joe Castro)

Skills coach Mick Byrne’s influence appears to be having an impact in the ball-handling department. Byrne comes from an Australian Rules background where getting the arms free and getting rid of the ball in the tackle is critical, and the Wallabies are offloading and recycling the ball more often and at greater speed than they have in a long time. Having the aforementioned backline threats running at backpedaling defensive lines is a recipe for success.

in the forwards, Adam Coleman shone in every match and at 31 years of age Sekope Kepu is in career-best form – though Stephen Moore’s best days are so far gone that it’s hard to understand how he continues to rack up caps.

The breakdown remains an area of real concern, though. Michael Hooper has been playing on a different level, but has lacked support. Sean McMahon has looked the best of the rest in that department, but his future in the gold jersey appears cloudy due to his decision to turn his back on Super Rugby. The Wallabies still have David Pocock up their sleeve, but Cheika knows the Wallabies lack quality depth across the back row.

The Wallabies now get a dead-rubber crack at the All Blacks in Brisbane before heading to Europe.

The northern hemisphere tour will make fascinating viewing given the hard to interpret results of Rugby Championship 2017 – especially the matches against Scotland and England – where the Wallabies will have a shot at redemption against teams that have given them highly-publicised grief in recent times.

The Crowd Says:

2017-10-13T21:50:16+00:00

Tipene Roar

Roar Rookie


4 frim 9 is nothing but rubbish

2017-10-11T09:15:59+00:00

wardad1

Roar Rookie


Good ,not great [ yet] but flashes of something good under the hood.

2017-10-09T23:18:22+00:00

Timbo (L)

Roar Guru


I felt that for a big chunk of the game that Argentina ware a good chance of winning. This is not a sign of a team that is playing well. The last try was scored after a red card. I think Creevey was hard done by. There were a couple of rucks his boys cleaned out and hes stepped into the grab the ball, only to have Poite blow the pea out of his whistle. There is still a big problem with Wallaby Ruck defense and the Poms and Welsh are going to exploit it. In contrast, the AB's and the Boks looked like a clash of the titans in the ruck. 2 Sides well drilled in the arts and not afraid to do the work. SA won that battle by a small margin but as usual, the Kiwis made their points opportunistically.

2017-10-09T18:12:01+00:00

Loftus

Guest


I would say the Boks' biggest flaw is their halfback pairing

2017-10-09T05:33:51+00:00

Dan jones

Guest


Well said totally agree

2017-10-09T03:11:59+00:00

Davis

Guest


Is that you chek? Deans and knuckles never got this many chances. He's embarrassing to watch, especially the press conferences.

2017-10-08T23:10:55+00:00

enoughisenough

Guest


How anyone could be asking if the Wallabies are great is beyond me. Lets see, they've lost 3-0 to England, in Australia, they beat Fiji, they were beaten by Scotland in Australia, and in the RC they won 2 games from 6. Greatly disappointing, greatly frustrating, greatly inconsistent perhaps, but not great by any measure. Perhaps the optimistic among the fan base can point to an improvement from a very low base, however to hear the team and management talking up coming second (first of the losers, and winning just 2 games) in the RC was embarrassing. And lots of signs of Cheika's style leading to greed and selfishness in the backline......

2017-10-08T22:44:42+00:00

Old Bugger

Guest


Yeah quite right. They need to be primed from the get-go....it'll come.

2017-10-08T22:23:05+00:00

wally

Guest


I think the concern shouldn't be if Foley is injured, but if Beale is injured... he's the one getting the backline to function. Without Beale, methinks Foley's backline would go back to being pedestrian...just like we saw in June.

2017-10-08T22:02:45+00:00

zhenry

Guest


Joke? You have never convinced me, Northshore Swede.

2017-10-08T21:58:16+00:00

zhenry

Guest


Soccer/Football is the number one winter game in SA, by far.

2017-10-08T20:30:40+00:00

soapit

Guest


yep winners are always worthy but placings in a four team comp with home and away often dont mean much. 2nd and third usually coming down to bonus points or aggregate. anextra team would help a bit (not suggesting they do it tho)

2017-10-08T20:23:18+00:00

soapit

Guest


give him the benefir and asume he wont do it against better defences for now, not a bad option against arg. there was one where we kicked for touch for about 28 out i think and then won a penalty from the ensuing play and then went for a shot at goal from that. that was a bit weird

2017-10-08T20:18:39+00:00

soapit

Guest


theyd all be playing for tonga

2017-10-08T18:24:38+00:00

Fionn

Guest


Simpler explanation: I think he's at best a reserve string 10 who prevents the team from reaching its potential.

2017-10-08T18:05:09+00:00

DrTootr

Guest


Agreed!

2017-10-08T18:03:59+00:00

DrTootr

Guest


Dare I say , if Union was our national game would our cabinet be similar to that of Leagues – 10 cups and counting ! ...Truer words were never spoken!!

2017-10-08T17:06:56+00:00

adastra32

Guest


Wins are always encouraging to help develop the habit. I'd be very wary though of too much talking up for the November NH internationals, on the basis of a victory against a team ranked five world places below. To put it in perspective, in June last, England beat Argentina 2-0 in a series in Argentina, with a team comprised largely of third-ranked players: effectively, a development squad.

2017-10-08T16:14:07+00:00

Taylorman

Guest


Hes a Quade fan. Any positive comments about Foley, even when deserved, distract from the ultimate aim of having Cooper back, something we know aint gonna happen anyway.

2017-10-08T14:11:48+00:00

Jerry

Guest


So the wallabies are 2-2-2 in the Rc and came second? says a lot about the competition, its just aswel the abs are depleted this year with injuries and a sabbatical. Meanwhile chek is patting his delusional self on the back.

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