The Spirit of the Wallaby renewed

By Rickety Knees / Roar Guru

The All Black haka is a multidimensional ritual. For the individual player it is a statement of his “mana” or as the Romans described it as having “gravitas” – a man’s depth of character having successfully confronted adversity.

Mana is very much celebrated in New Zealand society. This is important in understanding that when an All Black plays he is making a statement about the depth of his manhood. To meet his challenge, prevail and being acknowledged in doing so.

Inspired by Kurtley Beale, four things happened versus the All Blacks on Saturday night that impacted the Wallabies victory:

1. The indigenous welcome to the country was performed pre-match for the first time and the crowd were invited to join in a traditional indigenous Australian Cooee!

2. The Wallabies, again for the first time, wore an Australian Rugby jersey embolden with magnificent indigenous art celebrating the 14 previous indigenous Wallabies (which sold out online in record time).

3. The Wallabies adopted their own ritual arrowhead formation to meet the challenge of the haka ritual.

4. Kurtley Beale excelled in his leadership and continued to exhort the warrior spirit out of the Wallabies, resulting in the customary professional cool of the All Blacks being lost.

What was most telling was that when the All Blacks lifted their intensity in the last five minutes, it was met head-on by the Wallabies and Lukhan Tui in particular, with a magnificent aerial take under immense pressure. Cometh the hour, cometh the man!

Cooee Kurtley Beale – the Wallaby spirit is renewed and may the conduct of last Saturday night – in its entirety – never be forgotten!

The Crowd Says:

2017-10-24T05:59:14+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


There was one in Perth before the Boks / Wallabies game

AUTHOR

2017-10-24T04:02:25+00:00

Rickety Knees

Roar Guru


Touche Phil

AUTHOR

2017-10-24T04:01:56+00:00

Rickety Knees

Roar Guru


Thanks Cliff - you may be right - but I can't remember a welcome to country before a Rugby test. Lets hope it becomes part of each Australian hosted test

2017-10-24T03:10:47+00:00

Phil

Guest


Just like most people would stop reading when they see your name on a post,Marto.

2017-10-24T01:50:51+00:00

Cliff (Bishkek)

Guest


Rickety, Are you certain that Saturday was the first Test where there has been an official Aboriginal Welcome to the land? I believe I have seen it at the start of past tests, possibly not the ABs vs Wallabies but there have been Aboriginal welcomes in the past. This Aboriginal welcome has been introduced some time back so I am amazed if it has never been done before at the start of a Rugby Test!! On another point - "The Spirit may have awoken, but I hold my thoughts on if it is leading to a consistent improvement". Been too many false dawns!! Cheers

AUTHOR

2017-10-24T00:53:52+00:00

Rickety Knees

Roar Guru


Agree mate

2017-10-24T00:47:37+00:00

Ralph

Roar Guru


I would go so far as to suggest that if this cultural foundation is the only lasting mark of Mr Cheika's time with the WB's then he will have left them in a much better place than what he found them - regardless of game results that may or may not come.

AUTHOR

2017-10-24T00:24:21+00:00

Rickety Knees

Roar Guru


Cheers Ralph

AUTHOR

2017-10-24T00:23:55+00:00

Rickety Knees

Roar Guru


Hey Marto - unfortunately I have no control over what gets published with my article

2017-10-23T23:49:52+00:00

Marto

Guest


Why have a photo of Ned Hanigan involved in this ??? He is the biggest lump of uselessness the Wallabies have ever seen .You want people to read your story don't you ? .I stopped reading once I saw his mug and started typing...

2017-10-23T23:22:34+00:00

Ralph

Roar Guru


Nice to see some celebration Mr Knees. Although I do believe it might be more accurate to say, the moment reveals the man. It is certainly a great foundation piece to see in the WB's..

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