Ireland needs to show more respect to the Wallabies and to Super Rugby

By Spiro Zavos / Expert

The scoreline of Wallabies 18, Ireland 9 might seem tight but the victory at Brisbane has massive implications for the national side in the series, this year’s campaigns and, ultimately, during the 2019 Rugby World Cup tournament in Japan.

We saw from Michael Cheika’s Wallabies a new powerful, distinctive and effective method that built on the unique skills and physical strengths that the diversity in the squad offered the coaching staff to use in the team’s game plan.

The last time a Wallabies side was coached to play in a method that exploited the athletic strengths and skills of the players was during Rod Macqueen’s glorious era when every trophy available to his side to compete for, including the Webb Ellis Cup, was won.

The starting XV for the Wallabies at Brisbane contained nine players of Islander, Fijian, Aboriginal and Papua New-Guinean background. This is a startling change from the Wallabies sides in other years and should put an end to the nonsense put out, mainly from league adherents, that rugby is somehow a private school game.

A journalist always has to tread gently, trying to avoid stereotyping land mines, when writing about diversity of background.

But the fact of the matter is that the different body types offered by the Islander, Fijian, Aboriginal and Papua New Guinean background of the nine starters, and their four counterparts on the bench, has allowed the coaches to devise a game plan based on power and leaping skills that is unique right now to the Wallabies.

The Wallabies unleashed a power game on Ireland that embraced collisions on the ground and contests in the air.

The victory against the No.2 team in the world, unbeaten in their last 12 Tests, reinforced the truth that in the main the ground and air battles were won by the Wallabies.

I would make this comment about Israel Folau and his aerial skills, in this context of the new Cheika Wallabies. There is no player in the game right now, or in the past, that is so masterful in the air and so dynamic in his running once he comes to earth after one of his incredible catches than Folau.

He is rugby’s Cazaly. And for the first time for the Wallabies this “Up There Folau” talent has become a centre-piece of the Wallabies attacking method. About time, too.

(AAP Image/Joe Castro)

Ireland, with Rob Kearney and Jacob Stockdale leading the jumping, is actually a good team in the air. But they were virtually cleaned out in this dimension by Folau. It was this dominance in the air, from kick-offs, exits and high ball attacks, that lead to dominance in other areas of the game for the Wallabies.

The game plan was shrewd in that on defence Folau and Kurtley Beale dropped back. This two-fullbacks system allowed Beale to either race into the line on turnovers (Ireland uncharacteristically conceded 21 of these) where he is devastating with his running or put in bombs for Folau to chase and catch and create break-out attacks.

There was massive power in the tackle game of the Wallabies, too, where some of the hits registered high on the rugby Ritcher Scale for bone-shattering collisions.

On 164 carries, Ireland were reduced to only 9 clean breaks and 21 turnovers conceded. On 120 carries, the Wallabies made eight clean breaks and conceded 12 turnovers.

The Wallabies won the air battle, the scrum battle (with four of the five props and hookers being Islanders) and the battle of the advantage line. They scored two tries and held Ireland tryless.

There was a third “try” scored by the Wallabies by Israel Folau clearing out from the defence which was called back, correctly as Rod Kafer explained in his commentary, by the South African referee Marius van der Westhuizen, who did a fine job in his unruffled officiating.

Incidentally, David Pocock made a point of embracing Folau enthusiastically after this “try.” If Pocock can do this, why wouldn’t Fairfax Media at least drop its campaign to trash Folau on a weekly basis?

Getting back to Pocock, he had a masterful game at No.7, even though he was playing in the No.6 jersey. But the Wallabies lacked a real No.6 with height, weight and power running. 

The lineout problems experienced, especially in the first half, could have been more problematic against a side like the All Blacks that has a more dynamic approach to attacking play.

This gets us to Ireland and what seemed to me, at least, to show a certain disrespect for the Wallabies and Super Rugby before the Test.

If Ireland had real respect for the Wallabies, why did coach Joe Schmidt not run on his strongest team?

He told interviewers before the match that he wanted to test whether Joey Carbery was a Test starter at number 10. Since when have important Tests, especially the crucial first Test of a three-Test series away from home, be a selection tryout?

Depending on the outcome of the Test series Schmidt could have experimented with Carberry later on.

Does anyone think that Schmidt will carry out a similar experiment in next year’s Six Nations tournament?

Tests against the Wallabies should not be regarded as trials. They are the real thing. Schmidt should not have put his best player Johnny Sexton and his strongest prop Tadh Furlong on the bench.

(AFP PHOTO / PAUL FAITH)

The lack of respect came through with the way Ireland played, as well. Schmidt did not pay the Wallabies the respect they deserved by creating a game plan that was tailored especially to defeat the Wallabies.

There was nothing new in the Ireland gameplan. It was the same plan as last year. The Wallabies were able to read the moves, even when Sexton was running things on the field, and only rarely was their defensive line put under pressure because they knew what to expect by the dutiful Ireland side.

There was an outstanding piece of defensive work by Dane Haylett-Petty in preventing CJ Stander from scoring a try, by somehow getting his legs under the ball before it was planted over the tryline, which reflected on the fine spirit sparking the Wallabies.

Ireland, on the other hand, seemed to be going through the motions with their 201 passes. This attitude of going through the motions is always dangerous for a team and makes it easier for oppositions to get on top of them by reading what is going to happen. It reflects, in my view, complacent coaching.

Schmidt has not done what Michael Cheika (the Wallabies), Steve Hansen (the All Blacks) and Rassie Erasmus (the Springboks) have done with their teams, namely added to and changed aspects of last year’s methods and game plans.

And this brings us to the third mark of Irish disrespect.

Here is Donal Lenihan, one of Ireland’s greatest forwards, on the Super Rugby tournament: “To be honest with you, a lot of people don’t place huge stocks on what’s happening in Super Rugby anymore… there was a time when we’d all look in awe at the quality of the rugby, but now there’s a feeling that it doesn’t prepare people for Test rugby.”

This is the same nonsense that Stephen Jones has peddled for years. You would think that people like him and Lenihan would have learnt from the 2015 RWC semi-finals, when all four teams, New Zealand, Argentina, Australia and South Africa, played out of SANZAAR and fielded teams in the Super Rugby tournament.

Three of these semi-finalists, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa had stirring victories against three top Six Nations teams over the weekend.

The Springboks came back, for instance, from being down 24-3 after 17 minutes to win 42-39.

New Zealand came back from being down 8-11 to France at half-time to score at a rate of a point a minute to win 52-11.

Wales, playing Super Rugby ensemble attacking rugby, defeated a stodgy Argentina 23 – 10.

The point about the Springboks and the All Blacks, in particular, is that they scored tries from inventive and sometimes powerful play when they needed to.

This is what the Super Rugby experience teaches players in these two countries and in Australia, too.

An example of this is the emergence of Israel Folau’s leaping game as a match-winner for his side. The tactic really blossomed when the Waratahs were going through a rough patch with winning results and needed something, anything, to give them an edge in their attacking game.

(Photo by Speed Media/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

What worked for the Waratahs in Super Rugby has now worked for the Wallabies in helping to defeat Ireland in the first Test at Brisbane.

This sets up a crucial test for both coaches.

What will Joe Schmidt do to stop Israel Folau dominating the air game and a tough Wallabies pack from dominating the collisions in their ground game?

And what further refinements of the new Wallabies game plan will Michael Cheika unveil at Melbourne to get a check-mate result there?

The Crowd Says:

2018-06-13T15:33:12+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


True, regardless of it being easier to win. Obviously.

2018-06-13T15:05:43+00:00

Cathal

Guest


Because Ireland are building a team for 2019, it’s worth noting with the mostly 2nd string on Ireland were 9-8 up and having 71% of the ball, it was the first players that cost ireland the game.

2018-06-13T04:32:47+00:00

Markie362

Guest


What a joke the biased irish commentary.what about kearns and co.also gordons not called bray for nothing

2018-06-12T12:11:23+00:00

Derm

Roar Guru


There is no long season in Irish rugby. There is the season. And there is the off-season. Keeping up with pace of game and ball in play time might be more of a factor.

2018-06-12T09:38:23+00:00

Die hard

Roar Rookie


Barrett is just as capable of mucking them up too I think. I have hands over eyes whenever he does it in open field

2018-06-12T09:35:53+00:00

Die hard

Roar Rookie


You have such a way with words. Facts can be problematic to discussion here sometimes. We don't see enough rugby from north as there is so much going on down here. Which means also we don't get to appreciate the quality and achievements either. Impressive record when you spell it out like you do

2018-06-12T09:28:58+00:00

Die hard

Roar Rookie


Which is the way I see it also. With a few new options at eight coming along there is a chance things might change. At least there are new options on the board

2018-06-12T09:23:41+00:00

Cheik 1-2

Guest


Omg. How about rugby players just put their arms above their head like he does when they jump to either catch or disrupt - knock his hands away etc.. Gee. What a tough skill to master. They're all just too dumb. While no union or league players ever do it (cos they have all been taught to catch on the chest only), yeah, I guess he'll look better than the rest. Revolution - lift your arms boys.

2018-06-12T04:13:41+00:00

TIMOTHY POWER

Guest


+1

2018-06-12T04:07:09+00:00

Fionn

Guest


I was impressed with the performance but I want consistent good results, not a good result in amongst a bunch of truly pathetic performances as we've had the last two years under Cheika.

2018-06-12T04:06:23+00:00

Connor33

Guest


Thank you for this, Derm. When I think of the AU team, the following will probably be in the starting 23 herein: DHP Hodge Coleman Tui Rodda Tupou Koroibete Uelese or one of the new hookers Alatoa Possibly Timu, Robertson, Kerevi I just don’t know the Irish squad well enough, but do you think they would have at least 9 new caps since 2015 or even 12?

2018-06-12T04:01:02+00:00

Fionn

Guest


Not really, we had one good win and that made us higher in the rankings. Previous to that we were thrashed by Scotland and England, had a good win against the all Blacks, failed to beat a diabolical South African outfit, had a tight lose to New Zealand, had the most embarrassing loss to New Zealand I have ever seen, had a very tight victory over Italy in Australia and then lost to Scotland in Australia. Shows that the rankings outside of the top 1-2 are rarely indicative of form.

2018-06-12T03:53:14+00:00

Connor33

Guest


But you must be impressed that, as of today, we’re now No. 3. We must be doing something right.

2018-06-12T00:51:28+00:00

Fionn

Guest


There's not much depth in tier 1 rugby. And that really shows how the teams we've been losing to like Scotland, and not beating, like South Africa, have not been very good.

2018-06-11T23:57:46+00:00

Garry

Guest


Post match conference the Irish coaches mentioned that one reason for their starting lineup was that they only had 11 games before the RWC to build depth in their squad with international game time experience. Does Cheika have the same vision, or more concerned about preventing another Nth Hemisphere series loss at home? How close to the RWC will he be bellyaching about the lack of depth in Aus Super Rugby?

2018-06-11T20:42:41+00:00

Derm

Roar Guru


Yes Jim. In fact, Murray box kicked just twice in the first half. The other two were exit kicks to touch.

2018-06-11T18:14:51+00:00

Kane

Roar Guru


I wanted to look into that too, but as far as I can see you'd have to search each player on stats guru. Too time consuming.

2018-06-11T17:50:58+00:00

Derm

Roar Guru


Out of the 33 capped since 2016 for Ireland, there’s about 12 players Schmidt is unlikely to use again between now and post-RWC. The remaining 22 would be in contention for RWC 31 squad or wider squad for RWC consideration if injuries were to occur. C.J. Stander, J van der Flier, F Bealham, U Dillane, Q Roux, J O’Donoghue, J Carbery, G Ringrose, L McGrath, J Tracy, John Ryan, N Scannell, D Leavy, A Conway, J Stockdale, A Porter, James Ryan, Aki, C Farrell, J Cooney, T Beirne, J Larmour, R Byrne. Older caps: R Kearney, K Earls, R Henshaw, J Sexton, C Murray, K Marmion, R Ruddock, J Conan, M Moore, J Murphy, S O’Brien, P O’Mahony, D Toner, I Henderson, T Furlong, R Best, S Cronin, R Herring, C Healy, J McGrath.

2018-06-11T14:29:09+00:00

Neil Back

Roar Rookie


Always will be. To think otherwise is to completely misunderstand that tournament.

2018-06-11T14:23:04+00:00

Neil Back

Roar Rookie


Nah. Matt Burke is only marginally less bad than the joke that is Kearns. I can accept his patriotism but not his commentary. Take it down the pub Matt, many of us are interested in the contest, not your agenda.

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