The three greatest partnerships in Australian rugby history

By Jack Quigley / Expert

Success in team sports is, funnily enough, all about teamwork. Individual talent is amplified in the presence of supporting colleagues.

With that focus, here are the top three greatest partnerships in Australian rugby history, guys who not only had a great understanding on the field, but off it as well.

3. Tim Horan and Jason Little: Best mates off the park, world-beaters on it

Tim Horan is widely regarded as one of the greatest centres to ever play the game, while many regard Jason Little as one of the most underrated. At their peak, they were perhaps the most celebrated centre pairing in world rugby.

First encountering each other as 13-year-olds in a Queensland junior representative rugby league side, Horan and Little instantly hit it off. They would later both represent Queensland Schoolboys in cricket, as well as playing alongside each other for the Australian Schoolboys rugby side.

Club rugby teammates in Brisbane and for the Queensland Reds, the Little-Horan double-act provided scything attack coupled with rock-solid defence, which was boosted by their seemingly telepathic ability to understand each other’s movements.

The pair’s partnership even extended as far as getting injured together, both suffering knee injuries in the same game in South Africa which required both of them to leave the stadium in wheelchairs, back to the team hotel where they were, of course, rooming together – incredibly in room 1213!

Lining up at 12 and 13 for the 1991 World Cup final, Horan and Little would celebrate global glory together again eight years later in 1999, with Horan many experts’ pick as the player of the tournament.

Little, never one to seek attention or recognition, regularly credits Horan with much of his own success, often citing the fact that while playing alongside Horan, the pair were regarded as the finest centre combination in the game, and when Little made way for Daniel Herbert later in his career, the Horan-Herbert combination quickly became known as one of the best pairings in the world.

After more than a decade of international rugby, their Test records were incredibly similar. Horan scored 30 tries in 80 matches for the Wallabies while Little crossed the line 21 times in 75 appearances.

The pair are part of an elite club of players to have won the Rugby World Cup twice and remain close decades after their first encounter, spending Christmas together along with their families.

Tim Horan playing against the Springboks, probably trying to find his mate Jason. (David Rogers/Allsport)

2. George Gregan and Stephen Larkham: The ice-cool combo from Canberra

A quality scrumhalf/fly-half combination is often the foundation for success in rugby, so when two of the greatest halves the game has ever seen run out alongside each other 79 times in Test matches, it’s no surprise that it coincided with the most decorated period in Australian rugby history.

George Gregan – Wallaby captain and one-time world record-holder for Test caps – and fellow Canberra local Stephen Larkham provided Wallabies fans with some of their most memorable moments, from that tackle by Gregan on All Blacks winger Jeff Wilson at the Sydney Football Stadium to Larkham’s 48-metre drop goal against the Springboks at Twickenham on the way to World Cup glory in Cardiff.

Australian rugby was blessed with talent during the Rod Macqueen era. They had a forward pack that blended the smarts of John Eales with the physicality of Owen Finnegan, and a backline that boasted generational talents like Matt Burke and Joe Roff in their primes.

But the conductors of the show were the halves pairing of Gregan and Larkham.

Gregan was a fierce competitor, clever in attack and tenacious in defence. He was never lost for words when the opportunity arose to give an opposing player some constructive feedback or a referee some helpful advice while waiting for a scrum to pack down.

Larkham, however, was the original ice-man. Seemingly unflappable, he rarely spoke and was never flustered, a quality which earned him the nickname ‘Bernie’ from his teammates in reference to the character from the film Weekend at Bernie’s.

His languid running style made Larkham even more enjoyable to watch, as his ability to send defenders the wrong way with a surprisingly effective step was matched only by his proclivity to create a hole in the defensive line before sending a teammate through it.

It is often a trait of the best players in any sport that they appear to have more time than the rest. In an era where the game of rugby was played at a faster pace than it is today, Gregan and Larkham seemed to forever be operating in slow motion.

Larkham’s ability to read a game has seen him move into coaching, previously taking the reins at the Brumbies before joining the current Wallabies coaching staff under Michael Cheika. Gregan has shown that his smarts also extended beyond the touchline, and now has a hand in successful hospitality and fitness equipment ventures.

World champions in Wallaby gold in 1999 and Super Rugby champions for their hometown Brumbies, the pair accumulated a combined 238 Test caps and 263 Super Rugby appearances. In 2007, the eastern stand at Canberra Stadium was renamed in the pair’s honour in recognition of their contribution to the game.

1. John Eales and Rod Macqueen: Master and commander

Perhaps not the most instantly identifiable double-act, but without doubt the most successful coach-captain partnership Australian rugby has ever seen.

John Eales assumed the Wallaby captaincy from Rod McCall in 1996 already a Rugby World Cup winner, but it was his partnership with Macqueen, who was appointed national coach in 1997, that took the Wallabies to new heights.

During the period of 1997 through 2001, the Wallabies won every piece of silverware that was available to them. An unprecedented period of dominance in the Bledisloe Cup was just the beginning as Australia won the 1999 World Cup as well as a first Tri-Nations win in 2000, a feat they repeated a year later after they had also secured a first-ever series win over the British and Irish Lions.

Coming into the job as Wallaby coach, Macqueen had experienced success with New South Wales and had played a key role in establishing the success that the ACT Brumbies were about to enjoy. Regarded as an excellent motivator who possessed the ability to get the best out of groups of individuals in order to unlock their collective potential, Macqueen oversaw perhaps the greatest generation of Wallaby talent.

But it was not love at first sight. Macqueen took the Wallaby job on the back of a 61-22 loss to the Springboks that lead to former coach Greg Smith’s departure, and at first Macqueen aired concerns about John Eales’ role as skipper of the side. He even entertained the thought of ditching Eales in favour of George Gregan, who he saw as a better fit for his style of coaching.

However, after a short discussion with Eales, Macqueen stuck by the incumbent and it was to become a match made in heaven. In Macqueen’s search for perfection, his on-field leader was to become known colloquially as ‘Nobody’ – because ‘nobody’s perfect’.

Eales’ calm demeanour on and off the park belied his rugby abilities. 86 Test matches and 173 points (making him the highest ever point-scoring forward) is a remarkable enough record on its own, but Eales’ game was always about so much more than the numbers. His ability to stay ultra-cool in even the most intense of atmospheres set the tone for the whole team and was almost an extension of Macqueen’s arm down from the coach’s box.

Ask any Wallabies fan to recall their most fond memories and a common theme emerges. The 1999 World Cup win, Eales’ penalty goal in Wellington to win the Bledisloe Cup, Stirling Mortlock’s long-range penalty to win the Tri-Nations in Durban, Toutai Kefu’s Mr Gadget-like extended arm to retain the Bledisloe Cup in Sydney, Justin Harrison’s lineout steal at the death of the third Lions Test in 2001… all of those moments came during the Eales-Macqueen leadership era.

A truly golden age for the men in gold and the reason why John Eales and Rod Macqueen make up the greatest partnership in Australian rugby history.

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The Crowd Says:

2018-09-01T05:45:59+00:00

Peter

Guest


Sorry boys but there are two men in the wallabys at the moment who are any good and could get a game anywhere and that's pocock and Ginia the rest of the team including falou and beal are overpaid and under achieving sorry but it's true

2018-09-01T00:37:05+00:00

Peter Ferrier Carver

Guest


How can you say best partnerships ever without mentioning Mark Ella and whoever he played with ?

2018-08-17T05:46:44+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Historically maximising Wallaby results does maximise revenue...

2018-08-17T05:45:00+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Really? $1 sales are because a contract has to have some consideration. A sale for essentially no value for an asset that was previously deemed to have no value is uncommon? Surely that's more likely to occur in that case.

2018-08-17T05:43:16+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Well the good news is ASIC's investigation has wound up. They've found no wrongdoing.

2018-08-16T00:25:01+00:00

JP

Guest


Apologies jameswm but Matthew Burke was a better Fullback than Folau and even Phil Waugh was a better number 7 than Hooper.

2018-08-15T15:21:54+00:00

Bakkies

Roar Guru


No ASIC investigations and Senate Inquiries, no 13 reviews in five years and don't hire people like Castle and de Clyne. Don't get me started on the Sydney Uni dominated board nominations committee.

2018-08-15T15:20:00+00:00

Bakkies

Roar Guru


'As for player contracting matters – that’s exactly why. So they can focus spending funds on performance issues, player contracts, to maximise revenue.' Spin spin. Spending more funds doesn't maximise revenue. Next year your mob are going to get hit with a wrecking ball with no inbound tour and a shortened 4 Nations.

2018-08-15T15:16:49+00:00

Bakkies

Roar Guru


'$1 sales are extremely common.' Not for the same business that was sold for a dollar two years prior.

2018-08-15T05:46:14+00:00

Wal

Roar Guru


Folau appeared to get his nose a bit out of joint about that article too not an overreaction but hardly humble and knowledgeable of his status in the game. “Everyone is entitled to their own opinion and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that if he believes that,” Folau said. “From my point of view I’m always looking to get a lot better as a player and I never want to get comfortable. “It’s no hard feelings towards anyone who says what they feel. “It’s all part and parcel of what comes with it. “It’s something I’ve kind of got used to over the last couple of years. “It definitely doesn’t affect me in any kind of way.” That along with the insistence that his aerial technique is legal, hints to a guy who is not overly self-aware or willing to learn/change

2018-08-15T04:03:50+00:00

John R

Roar Guru


How would you define 'functional'?

2018-08-15T03:50:55+00:00

stillmissit

Roar Guru


Sheek: I suspect some of the posters below were not around during McQueen's time and missed how great it was. This article although close to the money does not applaud McQueen enough. He was not wanted by the ARU and although he did a great presentation about what he planned to do, it was the lack of anyone else sticking their hand up that got him the job. As opposed to the OP he took what he had and moulded them into a great team, added others to it and from that great team, great players emerged. He wasn't just lucky that there were a bunch of great players waiting to take over the world. Between McQueen, Bob Dwyer and Alan Jones they collectively established Australia as a leading rugby nation. Still waiting for the next McQueen, Dwyer or even Jones. Cheika will never be mentioned in the same bracket as these guys!

2018-08-15T02:08:46+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Yes. Needed to take control of franchises losing money and expecting to be bailed out after taking the profits when the going is good. Yes they are still paying incremental funds to the Rebels. That's because they are obligated to by a 2014 agreement. They can't just not honour it. The difference was that deal was in order to offload further liability. As for player contracting matters - that's exactly why. So they can focus spending funds on performance issues, player contracts, to maximise revenue. By forking out for worldwide searches, I assume you mean recruitment fees? I wasn't aware this was a luxury. All businesses use these services to recruit staff.

2018-08-15T02:05:44+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


$1 sales are extremely common. What value do any Super Rugby franchises, including the Force have? They can barely demonstrate any profit.

2018-08-15T02:03:55+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


No, you said you don't see it. Now to not see one of the most measurable potent attacking midfielders in Super Rugby - Well you'd have to be not looking. Petaia has played 2 games at 13 and not recorded a single line break. I'm not saying he is bad but saying it's the best the backline looked ignores the fact the in many ways, he was just "there" (good offload to Lance for a try though). Kerevi regularly ranks in the top 2-3 midfielders for meters run, line breaks and tackle breaks. He's a flawed player but he's one of the consistently most potent players running around in Super Rugby when you consider his attacking stats are on par with back 3 players who get more easy meters and better line break opportunities.

2018-08-15T00:20:15+00:00

Wal

Roar Guru


Sharpe probably played a year or 2 too long but was sorely missed post-retirement. The WB's lineout is only now starting to look menacing again.

2018-08-14T23:25:58+00:00

Redsfan1

Guest


Some serious legends of Australian rugby above--all from the same era! No one today holds a candle to these giants in Aussie rugby.

2018-08-14T22:34:22+00:00

ken gargett

Guest


not in any way to diminish ella, who was a wonderful player, but that is probably not a view shared north of the border. i suspect that names like loane, eales, horan, lynagh, mclean would all be discussed in advance. for those not old enough to remember mclean, there was a quote in an article by andrew slack, who played with and against them both (a quote which got him into a lot of trouble south of the border), made after they had both finished their careers. "anyone who thinks mark ella was a better player than paul mclean either never saw mclean play or doesn't understand rugby". no doubt, not a popular opinion south of the border but at the very least, must be in consideration for top fly half. not that one ever wants to give a nod to the kiwis for anything but i think that carter is the best i have seen. lynagh and mclean not far behind. then a logjam. although i appear to have gone off topic.

2018-08-14T22:27:40+00:00

Fionn

Guest


I don't think Beale has had the consistency of international results, James. He was great in 2010, good in 2011, poor from 2012-14, one of our better players in the RWC off the bench, absent in 2016 and very good for 5-6 matches in 2017 before having a poor Spring Tour. I think whether he goes down as a great depends on a lot on his performances over this year and next. Even then, the question marks over his defence mean that, to me, he won't go down in that exalted group of centres. Folau, too, maybe he is a great. Burke's criticisms were valid though. And he does sometimes go missing in matches where the opposition avoids kicking to him.

2018-08-14T22:26:03+00:00

ken gargett

Guest


wonderful combination. loane and mclean not a bad one as well. given what they did to turn the tide back then.

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