Five talking points from Barbarians vs Wallabies

By Charlie Lawry / Roar Guru

The Wallabies snuck home 31-28 against the Barbarians at Allianz Stadium on Saturday afternoon.

The Baa-Baas were full of beans and raced to an early lead before the Wallabies reined them in with the help of two yellow cards.

It may not have been an official international match, but there was still plenty to talk about.

1. A scrappy old affair
Nine tries in an exhibition game is a fair return. And the Wallabies won in the end. So why wasn’t it as much fun as it should have been?

For starters, whenever you make 13 changes to your starting team, you expect a lack of cohesion. Sure, the Barbarians were thrown together as well, but they’re unburdened by the pressure of expectation and structure.

It was the Baa-Baas making most of the early running, offloading and breaking the line at will, only letting themselves down with a lack of discipline. In contrast, the new look Wallabies’ spacing, depth and communication was a shambles.

2. So, who staked a claim?
With Spring Tour spots up for grabs, there was plenty of intensity in the early stages, especially from the Barbarians.

Eto Nabuli looked dangerous in attack. Wycliff Palu rolled back the years to turn Jordan Uelese into a crash Test dummy. Taqele Naiyaravoro had his best game to date in any jersey ‒ the big man gobbled up two tries, three linebreaks and 172 metres from just eight carries.

Andrew Ready was probably the best hooker on the park. Quade Cooper was lively and faultless with the boot. Cheika also had praise for Brumbies-bound loose forward Isi Naisarani.

For the Wallabies, Jack Dempsey led the way until his injury (more on that later). Ben McCalman was dominant off the bench. But, by and large, it was a stuttering performance by the men in gold.

Billy Meakes was anonymous at 12. Duncan Paia’aua struggled with his game management and execution at fly-half despite grabbing two tries. Henry Speight also got on the scoresheet with a fine finish on the stroke of half-time, but otherwise looked like a headless chook.

3. Costly injuries to Dempsey and Tui
Hindsight’s a wonderful thing. But in an exhibition game with wholesale personnel changes, and the opposition down to 13 men, that’s probably the time to protect your key players.

As it happened, Jack Dempsey stayed on until the 76th minute when he twisted awkwardly in a ruck and had to be carried off with a completely lame left leg. The post-match report suggested his hamstring had been torn from the bone.

If that’s the case, it’s similar to the injury suffered by Lachie Turner a few years ago. He was never the same player afterwards.

Dempsey had put in another strong shift up to that point. The setback came after promising youngster Lukhan Tui also succumbed to a hamstring, though he was at least able to walk himself off the field.

Injuries will always happen in rugby. The logic behind Cheika’s changes in the first place was obviously to keep his stars in cotton wool. It’s just that much more frustrating when it happens in a game of little consequence.

4. Izzy phoned it in
Bearing in mind his upcoming sabbatical, there wasn’t much to be gained from the inclusion of Israel Folau (except perhaps to sell a few extra tickets). From the wing, he struggled to get involved in a fixture famous for attacking verve.

(Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

The lack of hunger was evident when he didn’t even attempt a simple tackle on an off-balance Tom Banks. The winger wriggled free, sparking a neat exchange between Palu, Tim Nanai-Williams and Naiyaravoro who strolled over for his first try.

To be fair, Folau wasn’t helped by those inside him. He’s not the kind of player who can win games on his own. He needs a coherent backline to create the space and he’ll do the rest. Enjoy the break, big fella.

5. You can take the Alan Jones out of talkback radio…
Brendan Pickerell’s refereeing was patchy, fair enough. You could argue that both yellow cards issued to the Barbarians were harsh. There’s certainly an argument that he didn’t act in the spirit of the occasion by killing off the contest for the fans.

Alan Jones is a no nonsense, keep it simple, ‘let the boys play’ kind of coach. No sooner had the final whistle blown than he was right back to his shock jockery. “Woeful…the bloke was out of his depth,” he said in an impassioned critique of the referee.

It was a snapshot of the cartoon outrage he routinely slips into on air ‒ an approach that surely resonates with many disillusioned fans whose only wish is to see the game flow. He might have had a point, but he was petulant in making it. Naturally, he had less to say about the Barbarians opening try coming from a forward pass.

Jones coached the Wallabies in the 1980s and it’s clear he hasn’t read a rulebook since then. He was baffled that Taniela Tupou’s try was disallowed after the old ball up the jumper trick.

It might be a crowdpleaser, but the fact is you can’t hide the ball in your jersey. Jones failed to grasp this even after having it explained to him.

As an invitational coach in a one-off game, Jones might feel like there’s nothing to lose by mouthing off. After all, he does it professionally and on a daily basis. Whether he cares or not, there’s still some semblance of dignity at stake.

The Crowd Says:

2017-10-31T21:01:07+00:00

P2R2

Roar Rookie


Oh Jeez another IMPORT from the Pacific.....must really gladden the hearts of up and coming AUSSIE-BORN players....way to go.!

2017-10-30T15:46:09+00:00

scottd

Guest


+100%

2017-10-30T13:12:46+00:00

In brief

Guest


Ready the human slug has opposition teams quivering- there is a rumour he once slobbered an old hooker to death.

2017-10-30T13:07:30+00:00

In brief

Guest


His opposition to coal is something he deserves great praise for. When it comes to coal our corrupt politicians are the disgrace. Everyday Australia needs to look beyond the facade of respectability and call them out for selling us off to the highest bidder.

2017-10-30T13:02:57+00:00

In brief

Guest


Yet our mainstream politicians support adnani coal ( love the donations at least); lock kids up in detention and built a virtual wall on our northern border long before Trump came along. That's not to mention the deregulation of land clearing and the proud record of having the second highest loss of bio diversity on the planet behind Indonesia. But I guess they come across as respectable business men and don't say offensive stuff which is what counts, right?

2017-10-30T12:38:25+00:00

DaveR

Guest


Wayne Smith's article in the Aus today covered a lot of the implications of this match, and of course his biggest news was on the end of Quade at the top level. But I thought an equally important result to come out of the game was the discovery of McCalman's great No 8 form - almost as if he hadnt had the year off. This comes just in time for the WBs as they face more traditional NH teams with big, tight No 8s. It is questionable how the "3 flankers" policy would have gone against England, Wales and Scotland, especially some of the 115kg players..

2017-10-30T10:07:06+00:00

ukkiwi

Roar Rookie


This Naisarrani looks the business. Can't wait to see him play international rugby!

2017-10-30T08:39:29+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


If you think being anti fascism is an extreme position... well...

2017-10-30T06:05:14+00:00

Timbo (L)

Roar Guru


They were down to 14. Ned Flanders was in at lock for Tui already, the reserves cupboard was bare.

2017-10-30T03:23:13+00:00

Neil

Guest


Not always i agree with you, Timbo, but this very succinctly put.

2017-10-30T03:05:45+00:00

Timbo (L)

Roar Guru


AJ didn't exactly shower himself in glory. He spent a lot of time complaining that he was doing it for free. I am not saying he was wrong, but he probably should have kept his mouth shut. Quade made a Dangerous tackle, Jumper Ball is Illegal. AJ threw his toys out of the pram over it. For a moment I thought it was WWF style staged outrage, but it wasn't.

2017-10-30T02:48:08+00:00

Mango Jack

Roar Guru


In attack, sure. That chip kick to the winger was top shelf. But, again, defence lets him down. Badly. He may have felt hard done by, being YC-ed in a Baa Baa game, but that "tackle" on Folau will see him binned at test level every time.

2017-10-30T00:53:11+00:00

The Big Red V

Guest


"Jones is the greatest sore loser the world has ever seen." The current Wallaby coach is is in the grand final of that competition as is some notable others - Ricky Stewart, Des Hasler (ok different codes but still over the top nonetheless). There is no doubt it must be tough fronting up game after game and having to put on a "brave face", but if more coaches were open an honest and say "we really were shite tonight" (the REAL reason for losing), then people would have more sympathy for them. Instead, losing coaches whinge like stuck pigs and the winning coach (who had exactly the same referee), well, they just smile and move on.... As for Allan Jones, pfft.....

2017-10-30T00:34:26+00:00

zhenry

Guest


Got a brain Rt? Look around the world for economic success, perhaps you might pick Chile, neoliberal economics in all its grandeur, personally prescribed by Milton Friedman, Buchanan et el la; now the most backward economically of all Sth American countries. Put business profit above all else, it’s gotta be the best system, don’t even think about it, Capitalism? With huge govt welfare ‘taking from rich households to the poor corporations;’ an unmitigated disaster. At the present rate non neoliberal economists tell us we are heading towards another feudalism. Look at the economic mess in the world if you have the eyes to see. ABC socialists? Since the sledgehammer fund cuts from both sides of politics the ABC has aped the private corporate media, there are ABC pockets who attempt fact based (rather than ideological) critical analysis, otherwise the AU media is a cultural desert. There is the Roar of course.

2017-10-30T00:30:50+00:00

Marto

Guest


JackEagle, Foley is Cheikas pet ..That is why he gets picked,not because he is anygood.

2017-10-29T20:37:36+00:00

waxhead

Guest


@ Ada - yeah don't disagree about Ready but Moore was 3rd imo. Uelese is only 20 though and will probly be world class when he's 25 :)

2017-10-29T18:17:57+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Guest


Looked like Naisarani just about tore him in half

2017-10-29T17:52:29+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Guest


Stillmissit. Spot on. Doesnt matter what 'wing' you favour. If you are unbalanced you will fly by in circles. I am regularly described by certain people as 'left' but I agree with you here. Prejudice is blind and needs no evidence.

2017-10-29T17:50:48+00:00

riddler

Guest


soappit.. no skin off my nose mate.. there are a few commentators who see the situation for what it is.. there are a few people here are very rugby wise but have an automatic bias against certain players.. and then there are just the pot stirrers who i have no idea why bother..

2017-10-29T17:38:58+00:00

soapit

Guest


riddler i dont really expect much from the extremes of either side. more those who are sposed to be the fair middle ground. mate ej has said he's tried to be fair and i said id take his word for it so i dont really want to go on and keep talking comparing his post to others etc if thats ok.

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