The Wallabies’ plan for the World Cup

By terrykidd / Roar Pro

It is clear from the 2018 Spring Tour and the 2019 Six Nations what basic game plan will confront the Wallabies in the 2019 Rugby Championship and the Rugby World Cup.

The Wallabies will have to contend with a rush defence seeking to close off the wide channels, choke the middle and force errors, turn-overs or kicks out of trouble.

Teams will then seek to counter-attack through high kicks, kicks behind the line or running if they are close enough – exactly as we have seen from Wales, Ireland, England and to a lesser extent from New Zealand and South Africa.

Only Fiji, Argentina, Scotland or Italy will allow a more open running game.

The Wallabies will need to counter this style with a game plan of their own and select teams that are best able to execute the attack and defence plans.

Australia needs a very good defensive structure that includes players able to defend in their position, who make a high percentage of effective tackles, and who make good defensive decisions, including a few organisers or talkers who can direct others and bring the line forward quickly.

The Wallabies also require at least three players who can kick reasonably long and accurately, and at least three players who can spot opportunity quickly and kick intelligently to find space and put a rush defence in two minds.

The forwards must be a pack of pigs who are strong in the tackle, strong in the carry, effective in the clean-out and cohesive in the maul.

We also need a good scrumming pack who will win all of our own feeds and pick off a few penalties, plus a well drilled and effective attacking and defensive line-out with at least four genuine targets that will secure our own throws and steal a few of the opposition’s.

The pigs need big engines that can go all day, alongside a set of backs with good hands, good speed and who understand support and running lines, and are also able to give effective passes to supports.

(Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Lastly, the Wallabies require a couple of assistant coaches who can help Michael Cheika instil the game plan.

Dave Alred from the Reds is a must to assist our kickers with the technique to increase distance and accuracy. There is no one better.

The Brumbies have the best forward structures and techniques in Australian Super Rugby – the scrum, line-out and maul – therefore Laurie Fisher must be the forwards coach.

The Rebels have arguably the best back line structures, support and running lines, so their backs coach has to get the nod.

The defence coach has got to be Queensland’s Peter Ryan, as those players all use correct technique, put their bodies on the line, and have very good tackle effectiveness percentages.

Secondly, lets look at a pack of pigs who scrum well, maul effectively, clean out strongly, tackle and carry hard, offer line-out targets and go all day.

These men are in form and can do these things.

Why the Pooper? Because Pocock and Hooper are our two best players.

Why Hanigan? Because he is a genuine line-out target, has good hands for the carry, rarely gets turned over, rarely misses a tackle and can go all day.

Now let’s look at the backs. Will Genia picks himself at No.9 so Quade Cooper has to be the fly-half because of the combination with Genia and because he probably possesses the best potential to counter the rush defences.

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

He is better than Bernard Foley at spotting and taking opportunity. Samu Kerevi picks himself at No.12. He is the form player and it is his best position. No more debate.

No.13 selection is a lot more problematic.

Tevita Kuridrani is seriously off the boil. Tom English cannot nail down a starting spot at the Rebels. Adam Ashely-Cooper is solid and dependable with all the skills but maybe lacking a yard or three of pace.

So who do we pick? My suggestion is Billy Meakes, because he knows the position, has good hands and pass, can put away supports, runs good lines and is usually a good one-on-one defender.

The back three must be good in the air and dependable with long kicks, plus possess good speed, safe hands, good defensive skills and a hard-chasing game.

For those reasons, Alex Newsome (No.11), Thomas Banks (No.14) and Reece Hodge (No.15) get the nod.

Newsome gets few opportunities but never puts a foot wrong, is never out of position and has all the skills stated. Banks is similar but with an extra yard of pace. Hodge at fullback also has all the skills, plus can knock over long-range penalties.

The rest of the bench is Matt Phillip (lock), Lachlan McCaffrey (back row), Jake Gordon (halfback), Kurtley Beale and Bernard Foley (utilities).

I would select my entire squad prior to the Rugby Championship and bring them all together to train and practise their roles all the way through the tournament then the World Cup.

The Wallabies must bring something new to the table if we are to go deep into the World Cup.

What worked in 2015 will not work in 2019 as has been proven in 2017 and 2018.

We have to settle a basic playing style, select the players who can best execute it, then use all the available time – with the most astute coaches – to practise it.

This plan would produce a resurgent Wallabies performance we could all be proud of.

The Crowd Says:

2019-05-15T10:17:54+00:00

Hawtdawg

Guest


Yep , easy way to destroy the game . Alienate half the fans in the name of pc bs.

2019-05-15T07:53:34+00:00

Istanbul Wingman

Roar Guru


Meanwhile, Maori are going to play Fiji in July and everyone is acting like this is the most exciting news ever. But personally I'm just wondering why a nation ranked 9th in the world (ahead of Argentina) can't get a test in against its Kiwi neighbors...

2019-05-15T04:25:59+00:00

stillmissit

Roar Guru


Chris I agree, we should be able to pull on the best players from anywhere, we are not exactly overflowing with talent at this time. I thought Skelton would come back to have a tilt at the RWC.

2019-05-15T01:15:07+00:00

ChrisG

Roar Rookie


Hard to judge overseas players - Will Skelton another case in point. I hope the selectors are looking to change the rules on eligibility

2019-05-14T21:44:47+00:00

Bobby

Roar Rookie


AAC looks out of the mix altogether

2019-05-14T01:51:35+00:00

Timbo (L)

Roar Guru


Post ruck rule change I think Gill is equal if not better. He has more to offer, including being a genuine line out target. This is not a bad reflection on Poey, he is awesome, but until they start being serious about enforcing the player safety laws, he will continue to struggle with injury.

2019-05-14T00:02:46+00:00

TC

Guest


Hanigan struggles to get over the advantage line against the weaker teams in super rugby, even after beefing up over the off season. In my opinion, nowhere near international standard.

2019-05-13T23:23:07+00:00

stillmissit

Roar Guru


ChrisG: I wish we had other straws to clutch at. Liam Gill is never mentioned but I think he is our 2nd best 7.

2019-05-13T22:12:55+00:00

ChrisG

Roar Rookie


Pocock's in form? Clutching at straws there I think.

2019-05-13T09:08:36+00:00

GZA

Roar Rookie


Agree; The Sharks have shown in recent weeks the value of big and fit loose forwards. Even Hooper noted in the after game interview how the 'Tahs were smashed by The Sharks loose forwards.

2019-05-13T09:04:36+00:00

Gloria

Roar Rookie


Probably right.

2019-05-13T07:49:56+00:00

Timbo (L)

Roar Guru


I think you have some conflicting requirements. Scrum, line out, ruck protection, all things that get sacrificed when you play dual 7's. It also makes a mess of your bench, your 6 needs to be a proficient lock for injury protection, and this is why we see soft 6's like Ned and Mumm instead of hard 6's like Cotterel, Fardy Dempsey, Jones etc.. It might work in super rugby, but at an international level, it is all hands on pumps. There is no room for "floaters" that moonlight in other positions. The Game has changed. Everyone is a potential Jackal and is able to bridge and defend a ruck. The time for passengers expecting Hoops to do their dirty work for them is over The 7 will have enough of their own work to do. If you are a 12, you defend the 12 channel. So what happens? 4-4 or 2-4-2 pods with the "2" pods supported by a solid 13 and 11. Forwards fatigue less, miss less tackles, fumble less balls, sustain less injuries, have better line out throws, lose fewer tight heads. The bad news is that the backs need to shoulder more load, and the 5-3 bench needs a big utility center and a second Fijian wrecking ball.

2019-05-13T03:16:57+00:00

Felix

Guest


I'll "buy" this!!

2019-05-12T23:05:00+00:00

Censored Often

Roar Rookie


They have a plan?

2019-05-12T22:00:43+00:00

Harty

Roar Rookie


Meakes is certainly a solid dependable player particularly in defence. Maybe he could be our Conrad Smith? Surely we have to fit Hodge’s massive boot for punts and long range penalties as well. He offers less in attack and defence but our kicking game is such a deficiency that I think he has to be included. But where?

2019-05-12T18:38:03+00:00

Mike88

Roar Rookie


Great shout

2019-05-12T18:36:52+00:00

Mike88

Roar Rookie


Just like the RA administration and coaches. Unbelievable. I genuinely can't think of a worse idea than ol Ned being 8 or anywhere near the team.

2019-05-12T18:35:29+00:00

Mike88

Roar Rookie


Foley, Quade, Foley, Quade. Any chance ANYONE in Australia could consider Lealiifano. Criminally underrated. England and Sarries have a 10 who isn't razzle dazzle but solid and defensively strong. Watch the champions cup, someone, please. See how much fun Sexton had.

2019-05-12T18:32:28+00:00

Mike88

Roar Rookie


Spot on. Like Chieks and every other blue eyed supporter. Completely bereft of reality.

2019-05-12T18:31:19+00:00

Mike88

Roar Rookie


This surely has to be one of those 'tongue in cheek' articles. Big Ned as an 8! Maybe AAC! Deary me. See right there and without needing to ask, I can identify you as a waratah fan. The real problem with the waratahs is that everyone in NSW feels their province stacks up against the rest of the world. Here are some real facts, the waratahs would not feature in the top 20 provinces/clubs in the world. You would finish near the bottom of the English premiership, wouldn't beat any of the Irish sides, again the top third of the French league and we know where you are comparatively in terms of NZ, Sth Africa and domestically. All you have done is taken the Cheika squad, mixed it around a bit and thrown a few guys in who have proven they can't stop up internationally. Why is 10 ONLY a two horse race? Theres four 10s in our domestic team and one who is criminally underrated in Christian Lealiifano. No better defensive 10 in Australia. Is your Pooper argument based on anything other than the 2015 world cup? Honestly, opinions in Australia are becoming so tedious

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