What’s the top priority for our Super Rugby sides?

By Brett McKay / Expert

Following on from the questions and really good debate that arose from last week’s discussion, the logical follow-up is to try and identify the number one priority for each of the four Australian Super Rugby sides.

Obviously, all four teams are going to want to good pre-seasons, and come through their trial games and the Brisbane Tens in good shape, and even turn all that into a Round 1 win. Notwithstanding that the Rebels and Reds play each other in Round 1, everyone will have those same obvious priorities.

But what about specific to each team?

Thankfully, this is why speculation was invented.

Queensland Reds: Combinations
Combinations were always going to be key for the Reds with the move toward youth in 2018, and with the off-season shock about Quade Cooper and Karmichael Hunt still subsiding, combination among the 2018 youth is going to even more important again.

Monday’s news that the Reds have signed ex-Western Force flyhalf and Melbourne Rebels recruit Jono Lance is really good news, and a crucial missing piece for the Reds’ 2018 puzzle found. Instead of having to fast-track the development of Hamish Stewart in the no.10 jersey, coach Brad Thorn can now call on a seven-year professional with more than fifty games’ experience at this level, and a couple of Super Rugby titles to boot.

Off-season experience in a different competition, with English Premiership side Worcester, will also be really important.

And though the announcement made it sound like it has just happened, it’s my understanding Lance as been training at Ballymore since he returned from the UK. And this can’t be underestimated; the sooner Lance gets used to the guys around him and the Reds gameplan, the better off everyone will be.

(AAP Image/Dave Hunt)

Lance ticks so many boxes for the Reds, too. They get an experienced flyhalf who kicks well and defends up front, and is even returning home. They can also put Stewart through something of a playmaking apprenticeship from fullback, thus filling the hole left by Hunt’s absence. I’d go as far as saying it’s the best Reds news this year.

NSW Waratahs: Forwards platform
The Waratahs need to fix a lot of areas from 2017, most notably their excruciatingly porous defence and their inability to play for eighty minutes, but none of that matters until they get it right up front.

The arrival of Rob Simmons from the Reds, and Tom Staniforth from the Brumbies is really important, and will definitely improve their lineout, which was certainly an issue at time last season. The arrival of the wonderfully named Shambeckler Vui from Perth is similarly important for the Waratahs’ scrum.

Those three in particular, add some quality to the NSW tight five and set piece, and that’s the sort of thing you can build a game plan around. Even with Jack Dempsey’s return from injury somewhat uncertain, the ‘Tahs remain well resourced in the backrow department, too, meaning they can hang on to that attempted up-tempo game they played last season.

And this, in turn, will make life easier for Kurtley Beale’s return out wide. Before the forwards additions were confirmed, there was an underlying assumption that Beale being back would solve everything, which would have been as ambitious as it is naïve.

The Wallabies’ finish to 2017 proves that even Beale need a forwards platform, and the Waratahs are now better placed to provide that in 2018.

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Brumbies: The next Pocock
Injuries rarely strike at convenient times, but the Brumbies will certainly argue this week that it’s better they lose David Pocock for up to three months right now than in, say, May.

(AAP Image/Tracey Nearmy)

Regardless, it’s a bit of a bummer that Pocock won’t be right for the start of the season, particularly given his injury-enforced and voluntary absences since he first arrived in Canberra.

But, if there’s a silver lining, it’s that the Brumbies are really well equipped to deal with injury or other misfortune within their backrow stocks. Though at the end of the 2017 season, as the overseas departures started rolling in, it looked like the Brumbies would be hit hard.

Pocock returning would help, but losing a starting backrow of Scott Fardy, Jarrod Butler, and Jordan Smiler was significant.

Despite those losses, and now even with Pocock’s return delayed, there’s room for optimism among the Brumbies faithful. Dan McKellar still has to flip a coin between Lachie McCaffrey and the hugely exciting Rob Valetini at blindside, and he has to pick between Lolo Fakasoliea and Isi Naisarani at number 8.

Tom Cusack was the standout openside flanker of the NRC in 2017 is ready to go at Super Rugby level.

Cusack didn’t look out of place in his couple of appearances off the bench for the Brumbies last year, either, and despite being only 24, has a surprising amount of leadership experience.

He’s travelled the world on the Sevens circuit, been to the Olympics, but more than a year on from his return to the XVs game, he’s shown he has the game and fitness to excel on the side of the Brumbies’ scrum.

And for what it’s worth; Cusack’s backrow partners in the NRC Team of the Year last season? Valetini and Naisarani.

Melbourne Rebels: Hit the ground running
They’ve assembled a crack-looking squad, and from all reports, the new-look Rebels have been getting on like a house on fire over the off-season before training that very same house down. Dave Wessels has them humming, baby, humming.

But the Rebels have a bit less than a month of the honeymoon left, before they run out onto the ground for real, with points on offer, and with pens poised and ready to analyse whether the whole stronger-by-contraction debacle was really worth all the pain.

If the expectations around the Rebels in 2017 were ‘up there’, they’ll be comparatively stratospheric in 2018. I know I wrote that 2017 was going to be “the year the Rebels take the next step”, so I’ve already got them pencilled in at a rung or two above that this year.

They can’t start slow; they just can’t. Wessels has to wind them up like a toy car for the next month and send them out in Round 1 with their wheels spinning. Whether they like it or not, the Rebels will be the Australian barometer this year.

Their first game together needs to look more like the twentieth or thirtieth. They have to know their first XV from the outset, because there won’t be time to experiment.

(AAP Image/Julian Smith)

They have to start well, because they need to be the good news story in Australia in 2018.

Yes, sure, Australian rugby will be stronger if the Reds and Waratahs and Brumbies are stronger.

But Australian rugby will be in the news – for good reasons – if the Rebels are stronger, too.

The Crowd Says:

2018-01-25T19:14:02+00:00

Redsfan1

Guest


Nabuli more then handy?! If he could catch a ball with his hands that would be handy.

2018-01-25T19:11:59+00:00

Redsfan1

Guest


It won't be hard to get bigger crowds then in Perth.

2018-01-25T16:55:46+00:00

concerned supporter

Guest


Attention Fionn, Unlike your go getting Brumbies mate,"Folau had the opportunity to play club rugby in Japan, but declined. ABC News : "But next Saturday's non-cap match against the Alan Jones-coached Barbarians at the Sydney Football Stadium will be his last outing for the year in a decision Wallabies coach Michael Cheika revealed had been made months ago. Folau had the opportunity to play club rugby in Japan over the summer as part of his flexible contract with the Australian Rugby Union. But after sitting down with Cheika, he opted to step away from the game completely, meaning he will not be involved in the Test matches against Japan, Wales, England and Scotland to finish the season. Cheika said it was a "good outcome" for all concerned." "It's a good time for him to have some time away from the spotlight, just sit down and relax. He doesn't get a lot of chance to do that," he said.

2018-01-25T05:14:02+00:00

Fionn

Guest


Yep, Concerned Supporter, go and check the facts on this, please.

2018-01-25T00:52:34+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Think what you like, the facts say otherwise

2018-01-25T00:42:46+00:00

Muzzo

Guest


Hi Chook, & to true it's on, in regards to the Rebels. I can imagine the flak, that will no doubt, be heaped upon them, if they fail to aspire, to the top of Australian rugby. So let's just wait & see how they will adjust, to this pressure, to consistently perform. The eyes of Australian rugby is upon them. Lol. Cheers, mate.

2018-01-24T06:06:13+00:00

Concerned Supporter

Guest


I think you are wrong

2018-01-24T05:42:01+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Folau made the choice, not the selectors Don't revise history

2018-01-24T02:13:47+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


And Kevin Walters.

2018-01-24T02:13:29+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Bennett's decision was based on Kevin Walters, a player with 50 NSWRL games and a premiership medal already, being Lewis' replacement. Hardly anything close.

2018-01-24T01:46:58+00:00

Fionn

Guest


No it wasn't. It was Folau's decision to take his sabbatical, just like it was Pocock's. Literally exactly the same thing.

2018-01-24T01:01:27+00:00

Will W QOS

Roar Pro


Ie beginning of May? Would love to see him back in the Red jersey!

2018-01-24T00:58:27+00:00

Will W QOS

Roar Pro


Thank Brett! It is hard for me to stay optimistic for so long as a Red supporter but we can only hope! IF George Smith is ruled out with this back injury, is Liam Gill any chance of coming home from Lyon? Doesn't his contract end there at end of European season?

2018-01-24T00:02:49+00:00

Mantis

Roar Guru


It starts with more community engagement. Im a primary school teacher in Canberra and we've had numerous Raiders and even GWS visits over the last few years - none from the Brumbies.

2018-01-24T00:00:15+00:00

AlisterS

Guest


Fair enough Gray Hand but I was more commenting on Bennett's decision to let a player go if he feels he doesn't suit the team or the strategy or that his best year's are behind him. He has done it so many times, even with blokes like Petro Civaneceva. I certainly don't think he gets it right every time but he has the courage (or pig-headedness) to make a call and live by it. I wouldn't be surprised if Bennett may have even given advice to Thorn on something like this. I realise that by even commenting on Quade Cooper I will upset around 50% of people if its a positive comment and the other 50% if its a negative one - for whatever reason he is a polarising character. I certainly wouldn't blame last year's Reds performance on him though the games I watched I thought he looked as if he was playing injured and had lost a bit of zip. He had a less than successful stint in France but he also had some cracking games for the Reds under McKenzie. Most people either seem to see him as the devil incarnate or the patron saint of running rugby. I am somewhere in the middle of that so people on either end of the extremes (where most people seem to be) don't agree with much that I say. Anyway I think, rightly or wrongly, that Thorn has decided that after 6 years of Reds not doing much and with a high turnover rate of coaches and little job security if he buggers it up that he is going to do it his way and that he's prepared to wear the consequences. And I would admire him for that even if I didn't agree with his selection decisions. Is it a wasted $800K? - certainly in a way it is and I am sure he wishes he had the cash to spend on others but the decision to bring Quade back wasn't Thorn's, he shouldn't have to build his game plan on other people's decisions (who were later dumped because of poor winning records).

2018-01-23T23:57:10+00:00

Mantis

Roar Guru


Best coach in Australia by default; two are rookie coaches and the other is Darryl Gibson. Dan McKellar will be 'the best coach in Australia' by the end of the season. That is, unless Eddie Jones comes home for a few weeks after England tour of South Africa.

2018-01-23T23:50:30+00:00

Mantis

Roar Guru


Not until they sign for the tahs...

2018-01-23T23:35:53+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


well said Robel

2018-01-23T21:52:33+00:00

AlisterS

Guest


Yes fair enough. I think they will be definitely be an improved side (even if they only got Dave Wessels I think it would be an improvement) but I feel it will take a while for them to gel and I also think that the Brumbies, who had far fewer deficiencies with the addition of Leilifanao, Pocock and Naisirani had the best season to date. I guess one thing we have both missed but that supports a better year for the Rebels is that the Force had the worst travel requirement of any Australian side - even home games were a minimum of a 3-4 hour flight - that in itself may benefit. Sorry if it seemed I was being anti-Rebels, I just don't expect too much too early from them and I think we will also see the best of the Australian teams improve too.

2018-01-23T21:35:50+00:00

AlisterS

Guest


Yes I agree, they will have to deliver something for all the benefits and advantages that have been given them. The coach is good but I guess what I was saying was merging an average team and a very poor team don't necessarily make a good one.

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