Seven talking points from Bledisloe Game 3

By Oliver Matthews / Expert

If you didn’t see the game and you’re skimming through the news, it would very easy to see the 37-20 scoreline and assume that it’s the same old story.

However, this was an interesting match between two old enemies that delivered plenty to talk about. Sadly there are still plenty of negatives for the Wallabies, but there are some positives in there as well so that we don’t all feel like there’s no point in following them any more.

It would be easy to write about the great things that the All Blacks did. Some of the skills that Beauden Barrett showed with hands and boot were quite incredible. Ben Smith had yet another good game, and the All Blacks were dominant in almost all aspects. But instead of lavishing more praise on them, let’s focus on the areas where the Wallabies need to improve.

Forcing it when you don’t have the skills
It’s often been said that one of the ways to beat the All Blacks is to play them at their own game and challenge them with playing a rapid style full of pace and energy. It’s worth noting that there aren’t enough examples of the All Blacks losing to form a consensus on what actually works against them, but playing fast rugby is always going to be hard to deal with for any team.

The problem the Aussies have is twofold. First, when they tried to play fast rugby in the first half they did it by trying to get the ball wide quickly. Second, to catch and pass at pace and under tackler pressure requires nailed on ball skills.

So when they try and go wide early they are not actually giving their quick men space to exploit – they are losing ground with every backwards pass, and then two things happen: either the winger gets the ball but is caught by tacklers well behind his forwards, making ball retention very hard, or the Wallabies skills let them down and the ball never reaches the wing but is instead dropped or lost as the defence swarm all over them.

Some of this is tactical and some of it is just basic rugby skills. Too many times the Aussies tried to force things and give one pass too many and it went wrong – just look at how Israel Folau tried to pass out of contact and the pass got intercepted by Ben Smith. Yes, the game was almost gone by that point, but that doesn’t excuse poor skills.

(Matt King/Getty Images)

The two major issues in defence
Watching the game has led me to believe that there are two major issues with the Aussie defence: awareness and technique.

Poor technique led to the first try of the match. The All Blacks had built up some good pressure and started to stretch the Wallabies defence, but when the ball came out of the final ruck there were still plenty of gold shirts to cope with the men in black.

The ball came out to Liam Squire and Kurtley Beale was right there. Unfortunately Beale then just slid off the backrower. Squire is a big man, sure, but he didn’t bounce Beale off him; Beale just slid off him and Squire was clear to the line. Even if Beale wasn’t going to knock the Kiwi off his feet, he had to stop him and slow him down, but that just didn’t happen. This simple poor technique has caused the Wallabies issues before and it’ll keep causing them problems.

The second issue is awareness, and that also led to a try for the All Blacks. Kieran Reed’s try came in that crucial period just before half-time and was the result of Ned Hanigan and Will Genia making a proper mess in defence.

With a scrum just five metres from the Wallabies line they would have known that Reed was a threat. There was a healthy enough blind side too to suggest that the attack could come from either side of the scrum if he did pick and go. Hanigan was far too slow off of the scrum, and by the time he got onto Reed the Kiwi No.8 was level with him, if not past him, and any tackle was going to be weak.

Meanwhile Genia chose to shift out and stop the potential threat from the wing instead of staying in and dealing with the very real threat of Reed with ball in hand.

These decision points crop up in every game in one way or another and the top teams make good decisions quickly. The Wallabies need to sharpen up if they want to go deep at the World Cup.

(Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Speaking of awareness
Genia didn’t have a great game. Not only was there that decision of his not to help tackle Reed as he went over, but he also made a poor decision in the 56th minute at a ruck. The ball was slow to come out as Ardie Savea was in there competing. Genia was the only Aussie nearby, but instead of getting in there and clearing Savea out, he waited. The result was a penalty to the All Blacks and another period of pressure that the Wallabies were trying to build totally ruined.

It’s of course tough for a No.9 to make the decision to get involved in a ruck, but in that moment it was more important that Savea was cleared out and Genia didn’t react.

What did your school coach say? Run straight and hard!
As mentioned earlier, the Wallabies struggled when they tried to go wide early. However, when they started to play simple rugby and ran straight and hard they made a real impact. In the later stages of the first half the Aussies were really difficult for the All Blacks to deal with and the try to Sefa Naivalu came as deserved result from great hard, straight running.

The same was true in the second half against the Pumas a few weeks ago. When the Aussies went back to basics they looked very good and the opposition couldn’t cope.

So why on earth don’t they do this from the first minute? That is the maddening thing about this side – they seem to have the ability for the most part and have shown that they know how to play, yet they seem to deliberately choose a different strategy even when it’s been proved time and again to fail.

Is this coach or players failing? Or both?

(Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Deep restarts – why?
One last rant about the Wallabies – why did almost every single restart get kicked deep and was uncontested? Restarts are known for being a crucial contest in a game, and with Israel Folau, the best player in the world in the air, the Wallabies have an amazing weapon that can cause carnage at the restart. But time and again Foley kicked the ball long and no gold shirt was anywhere near the catcher.

Sometimes a deep restart could well work, but every time with no variation? Where is the awareness that this wasn’t really working and that maybe they should mix it up a bit and put the All Blacks under some pressure?

Referee judgements are so frustrating
Time and again fans, players and coaches alike complain about the referees. In this game Romain Poite was actually pretty good and I had no major complaints, but his decision to send Tolu Latu to the naughty step was really poor. Fortunately it didn’t decide the game, but it was a bad moment.

We all get that players can’t be allowed to punch each other, but Latu did nothing like that. It was a bit of handbags, and anyway, Cody Taylor started it. Schoolyard cliches aside, all the ref needed to do was have a stern word with Latu and Hooper and remind them that they should stick to rugby and not face slapping.

Yes, Latu should not have reacted like that and players need to keep their discipline at all times but come on – that was not a yellow card.

Kerevi looking good as he comes back
So there were some good points for the Wallabies – Rob Simmons played pretty well and Foley actually had some great touches. One of the most encouraging things from this game though was the return of Kerevi, who looked good in his first game back from injury. He ran with power and caused the defence some issues.

The Wallabies need him back fully fit as soon as possible. If he can run hard and straight and get his offload going, he will bring a much-needed weapon to the Wallabies midfield.

The spring tour begins now and the Wallabies have three matches up north. They should win against Italy and they could well beat both Wales and England. However, they could also lose both of those clashes, which would mean a bad end to a bad year and lots of questions still up in the air as they move into a World Cup year.

The Crowd Says:

2018-10-31T17:51:09+00:00

mania

Guest


read wasnt genia's man to stop. it was hanigan and pococks job. latu deserved his send off. smacking the face twice and the second time so obvious? latu was asking for it. then when he cmae back on and backchatted to the ref? how illdiscipline is it when kepu becomes the voice of reason? most encouraging thing isnt kerevi's cameo; its how korobeite delivered for the whole game. kerevi imo still has a limited game, cant tackle and has been at it for longer. korobeite is becoming a complete winger despite only playing union for 2-3? seasons. best power wing since tuqiri and digbyIoane but he's also showing he's working on his craft. tupou was targetted and ABs will keep targetting him every game. that is respect for the big guy in that ABs cant afford to let him have a good game.

2018-10-30T11:14:18+00:00

Blessing

Roar Rookie


No! Latu was the instigator, watch it again. Look at the taped arm. Thor has not done anything, he's just untangled from the scrum and has his hand in the air. Definitely Latu.

2018-10-29T22:50:04+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


The "obstruction" was looked at by the upstairs guys according to the commentators on the day and they didn't call it illegal. At some point the fans needs to accept the referees rulings.

2018-10-29T22:44:24+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Thanks Oliver. Good points except for the yellow card. The referee was acting absolutely according to the rules when he sent Latu off. After a cheap shot by Latu on his opposite number who had his arms behind his props and couldn't defend himself and then 15 seconds later a strike to his head what else was the referee supposed to do? The first merited a warning (to both players) but after the second he had no choice but to issue a yellow card. If you don't like the rule change the rule , but don't blame the referee who is doing his job.

2018-10-29T10:29:30+00:00

ClarkeG

Roar Guru


don't scratch too hard Garry. You will exacerbate your problem.

2018-10-29T10:25:04+00:00

ClarkeG

Roar Guru


They're meaning offside in that he is in front of the ball carrier for which you can only be penalised if you interfere with play. But not sure why so many have focused on this point however. The only question that needs to be answered is - did he obstruct a defender. Whether or not he is in an offside position doesn't really matter. If he had been behind the ball carrier and caused obstruction would that have been ok - of course not.

2018-10-29T10:02:26+00:00

ClarkeG

Roar Guru


"DHP had a try disallowed for doing less than what Smith did " Hardly.

2018-10-29T09:57:58+00:00

ClarkeG

Roar Guru


Difference with the DHP one was that DHP's obstruction was absolutely blatantly obvious leaving the officials no choice. Not sure about this one. Would have liked to have seen a head on shot.

2018-10-29T09:13:36+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


Well, Cheika plugged him from 15/14 to have a run at 13. He might actually know how to play a bit more effectively at 13 if he had regular stints there at super rugby IMO.

2018-10-29T08:31:53+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Latu slapped him the second time because Taylor was chasing him and shoved him. Taylor was chasing and shoved Latu because Latu had already slapped him. Latu slapped him the first time because Taylor stood up in the scrum. Taylor stood up in the scrum because Kepu had angled his drive inwards under pressure. Piote was going to penalise Kepu before the push by Taylor, then planned to reverse it until Latu had his full brain snap.

2018-10-29T04:41:40+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Hi mate - as the season progressed it was Hanigan that got relegated to the reserves (until Hooper got injured). By mid to late season 4-8 was Holloway, Simmons, Miller, Hooper and Wells. (Staniforth and Hanigan being the two that made way for Holloway and Miller) The knock on Holloway as you say is that when he plays wide his work rate drops. Since the Wallabies play the front row as one central pod, with the other made up of the two locks and a backrower. I think Cheika has rocks in his head not to select Holloway at 8. Hooper and Pocock can play the two wide positions in attack and Holloway brings both the lineout option needed, back of scrum skills and has shown all year how well he performs when he plays in the central pod which he can do with the locks. It's a no-brainer to me. I'd also happily see Timu given more chances, or Cottrell given a go, Ned just isn't up to it yet and should be sent away to work on his deficiencies. Hanigan would benefit much more from a solid off-season in the gym building size than he will from being on this tour.

2018-10-29T04:17:12+00:00


You seriously calling Foley useless?

2018-10-29T03:51:20+00:00

frank

Guest


When you are playing flanker, whilst still bound, you can, and should, watch the ball through opposition scrum legs from a low body height so you can react as soon as No 8 picks it up. I remember this from playing flanker at school (about 100 years ago). Yeah?

2018-10-29T02:42:36+00:00

mjseesred

Roar Rookie


I am so loving the nitpicking on the refereeing and rulings. As someone said on another thread. 115 to the darkness, 45 to the Wobblies. No refereeing decisions have an impact to that level.

2018-10-29T02:29:35+00:00

Rob

Guest


Well didn't they?

2018-10-29T02:22:30+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Which All Black would you replace with Folau?

2018-10-29T01:52:34+00:00

frank

Guest


(I have not yet read other comments so apologies if I'm repeating but..) So so many of Wallabies in- game failings seem to come from things that would be coached and game tactics (e.g. re-starts as you mention Oliver). I don't consider myself the greatest rugby mind but with a rushing defence could you not put the occasional chip over the top to put the defence in two minds? (even with sweeping 2nd line defence if its there) And surely Hannigan's fate is sealed? The miss on Read was schoolboy stuff. He should have nailed him as soon as he came around the corner.

2018-10-29T01:45:14+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


Why, oh why would you want to hire Gatland? This is the coach who hasn't been able to get his team to beat us in how many starts? His team didn't have the smarts to beat 13 Wallabies during the WC with all the ball? Yeah, sure... lets hire Gatland...

2018-10-29T01:07:21+00:00

Smiggle Jiggle

Roar Guru


Hanigan also missed the tackle.

2018-10-29T01:03:04+00:00

Smiggle Jiggle

Roar Guru


It is hard to have go forward basic at 13, when you are defending on the wing.

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