What game plan?

By Tipsy McStagger / Roar Pro

It was with much anticipation that I got up at 1am on Sunday morning to watch the Wallabies play the Springboks due to the rumours from inside the Australia camp of major overhauls to the game plan, both on attack and defence.

Michael Cheika and co had spent time with Randwick colts teams trialling new game plans and it was rumoured that Nathan Grey had a new defensive system in mind. Shaun Berne’s elevation from the Rebels as Wallabies attack coach also strongly hinted as to what style the Wallabies would adopt in their attack.

My anticipation was short-lived. I say with much disappointment and frustration that this article is necessarily short due to the lack of subject matter which to work with, namely, the new Wallabies game plan.

Attack
The 1-3-3-1 structure has been retained. This means the Wallabies are playing the same attack pattern as every other team in the World Cup apart from New Zealand. So much for something fundamentally different. I was hoping to see a slight variation here. Maybe playing a 3-3-3, with Samu Kerevi included in one of the forward pods. At least this would have suited what the type of game the Wallabies brains trust are trying to play and also their continued selections. Anything different would have been refreshing.

(Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

The disappointing part of the Wallabies execution of their 1-3-3-1 was their impatience and lack of organisation. This was in part due to their new attacking philosophy, which I will touch on in a bit. The set-up of the individual forward pods was flat, which meant they overran the breakdown almost every time and had to backtrack to secure ruck ball.

In general the ruck work from the Wallabies forwards, especially Sekope Kepe, Folau Fainga’a and Lukhan Salakaia-Loto, was disappointing. Because the pods were set up so close to the gain line, the forwards had no time to build a run before meeting a very quick South African rush defence. This also inhibited them from angle running. But more on this in a bit.

The Wallabies retained their old habit of always hitting the first pod of three, which stops dead any momentum they may have had or built. This has been happening for quite a few years now, and it is alarming to see that nothing has been changed here.

Other than that, the Wallabies just passed the ball from side to side, close to gain line, reminiscent of what the Springboks used to do before Rassie Erasmus took over. There was no patience in attack and rarely did they surpass three phases before passing it wide.

(AP Photo/John Cowpland)

It is evident that the players have been given freedom to pass and offload, but this needs to be done within a structure and after a good number of phases. A fundamental rule of the 1-3-3-1 is that you need to build and wait for space to appear or at least build in such a way which creates the space. The Wallabies had success when they played it close to the ruck on attack, and this is the best counter to a rush defence, but this was only done very briefly.

As per last season, and especially when playing against the Springboks, they again attempted to get outside the rush defence with long passes. This ploy failed last year and it failed again on Sunday morning. The Boks rush defence leaves the space out wide on purpose to pull the attack into that area of the field. It is naive of the Wallabies brains trust to think they were going have good outcomes with these plays, especially at the World Cup, where almost every team pulls play to that area of the field on defence.

The underlying cause for all these problems was the new Randwick-style flat line attack that has been introduced. This worked for Shaun Berne and the Rebels in Super Rugby until they met the first rush defence system and then the whole thing collapsed.

Randwick played this style of rugby, with success a very long time ago, way before the introduction of rush defences. It was, again, naive for the Wallabies brains trust to think this style of attack will work come the World Cup, where almost every team uses the rush defence.

(Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

Flat-line attack placed Bernard Foley and Samu Kerevi under all sorts of pressure. At this point it also has to be asked why Quade Cooper was not considered seeing he basically ran the trials of this type of attack with the Rebels the whole year and he is the only flyhalf in Australia with the passing game to pull it off, despite his other shortcomings.

It also did not allow the forwards to breach gain line properly due to lack of build-up and ability to run angles and it also compromised the forwards’ ability to secure their own rucks properly. The hasty and error-ridden offloads on the gain line were also symptomatic of this.

It is of some concern that in a World Cup year the Wallabies brains trust expect this sort of skill level under such intense pressure when the players didn’t have the skill sets to execute these plays last year when running from depth, with more time.

In perfect contrast, the Boks attack stood much deeper. Their forwards hit the line with good momentum and their angle-changing was much better than that of the Wallabies. This was the major reason for their success and gave them the ability to get front-foot ball from which to attack. Elton Jantjies never took the ball flat, in perfect contrast to Foley. The Boks deep attack also very likely affected the Wallabies defence.

(Paul Kane/Getty Images)

Defence
It is a mystery as to what defensive system the Wallabies have adopted. At times it seemed that they have adopted a safe and secure up and out defence. At times there were one out runners rushing the Boks attack. In general the defensive line connection was poor. One thing was clear: they were not adopting a rush defence, and this may well have been a masterstroke by Rassie Erasmus.

Because the Boks stood so deep, they basically told the Wallabies defence to rush for a significant distance or to hold a more passive line. Only the Wallabies brains trust will know what the cause for the Wallabies lack of line speed was.

I am leaning towards the Wallabies not adopting the rush defence instead of it being a masterstroke by Erasmus. From the very start the Wallabies line speed was average. I can only surmise from the chop-and-change defence that they are using a passive up-and-out defence. And if this was the case, then it is the worst type of defence to couple with not competing at the breakdowns. Rush defences couple with not competing at breakdowns, passive up-and-out defences couple with competing at breakdowns.

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I did not notice that one elemental part of the Nathan Grey defence had changed, and this was players defending out of position. I did notice, though, that from lineouts they have Michael Hooper defending the blindside touchline with that winger moving over towards the openside touchline.

I can see the reasoning behind this, but the Boks worked this out in the second half and a good kick by Warrick Gelant in behind Hooper resulted in a Boks lineout close to the Wallabies try line. It will only be a matter of time before other teams see this in their analysis.

Conclusion
After much anticipation it was disappointing and frustrating to see that the ‘new development’ in the Wallabies attack is a Randwick-style flat-line attack. Not much thought has been put into this and it was essentially copied. This flat-line attack will only serve the exacerbate the current problems in the Wallabies attack and it stood in perfect contrast to how the Boks attacked.

At least the defence stopped the musical-chairs system, but Nathan Grey could not resist at least one defender being out of place, in Michael Hooper, and this will very soon be exploited by other international teams. I can only surmise that the Wallabies are adopting a passive up-and-out defence, as it was generally a shambles – which may well have something to do with Rassie Erasmus’s deep attack, which is again short on thought, especially when coupled with a tactic of not competing at the breakdowns, such as hit and fan.

The attack was copied and the defence has reverted to passivity. In other words, it’s not worth getting up at 1am on a Sunday morning for.

The Crowd Says:

2019-07-27T07:23:25+00:00

Tooly

Roar Rookie


Not bad. Things have changed a lot since Randwick ruled the waves. They were playing Club Rugby. The game plan seems to be not to get the ball passed Kerevi, and wonder why Kuridrani is quiet. Our attack is in the centre of the field, Kerevi makes a break and unless Beale, Banks or Foley arrive we lose the ball. The wingers are there to chase or catch high balls, not to run. The forwards have no real plan except to hope for a lucky break. They need time together. Ideally we need Rhodda or Arnold with a big persistent unit. I would have Carter, then Philip. Coleman is not an option. He’s big slow and lazy. Only one of Naiserina / Loto and one Pocock at 7. With Higginbotham at 6 .

2019-07-24T11:44:19+00:00

Ulrich

Roar Rookie


The caveat there is that the group would have had no time practicing this game plan until the big smoke. There's no telling how that may turn out in a group with Fiji & Wales in it. Unless, of course, the plan is to play Heyneke Meyer 2015 RWC 10 man Bok rugby. To implement that you don't need that much time, but you do need a cohesive and well functioning pack.

2019-07-24T01:50:12+00:00

Big Dog

Roar Rookie


I am under the impression that Michael Cheika is devising a master plan to fool all other coaches with poor performances leading up to the world cup with mixed tactics and selections in order for the wallabies to be underestimated going into the world cup. When we get into the world cup he will reveal his proper tactics and snatch the Webb Ellis from the other nations. Well I hope so at least.

AUTHOR

2019-07-23T23:26:54+00:00

Tipsy McStagger

Roar Pro


Hi Gishan, Mate, ANYTHING different and original would be a relief. There are many variations to the pod system and your proposed system could work too. This is the beauty of forums that allow open debate (unlike in some coaching dictatorships) - you are able to discuss all possibilities and thereby come up with novel and original ideas

AUTHOR

2019-07-23T23:20:32+00:00

Tipsy McStagger

Roar Pro


Hi Jeznez, TK would make a good pod runner. If that was the case, maybe they then need to pick another play maker at 12 or play a crash 12 (like Kerevi who also adds a bit of skill set) and then pick a traditional & skillful 13 (like every other international team)

AUTHOR

2019-07-23T23:17:39+00:00

Tipsy McStagger

Roar Pro


Hi Nicholas, Yes, the scrumhalf (Nick White) was defending the tram lines as per the norm and ended up there on general defence. I was referring to the line out at around the 52min mark. It seems that a kick/high kick by the attacking team to the far side triggers Hooper to run back to the near touchline whilst the winger (Haylett-Petty) runs to the far side. Will have to see if this keeps happening in the next test

2019-07-23T18:22:23+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Excellent piece. Thank you.

2019-07-23T14:49:38+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Well done, Tipsy!

2019-07-23T12:08:06+00:00

ethan

Guest


Given Cheika hates kicking and has said the team don't really practice it, the sudden popularity of rush defence could not have come at a worse time for us - it will be our death knell. He only has himself to blame though - its been around for a few years now, thres been plenty of time to adjust.

2019-07-23T10:04:57+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


G’day Tipsy. Wonder if Kuridrani might not be a better option in a 3-3-3, still a strong crash runner and would leave Kerevi as a superior hole runner and offloader to work with the speed men. Interesting piece by you.

2019-07-23T09:51:20+00:00

Gishan De Soyza

Roar Pro


Thanks for the article Tipsy. Have you ever given thought to a 3 2 3 Pod system for the Wallabies given their personal. Two main pods of three players on the both edges (Prop+Second row+Hooker & Prob Second row and Blind side flanker) with a central pod of Number 7 & 8 and the 9 and 10 moving from pod to pod and then distribute to either side with 12+15+11 on the left side and 13+15+14 on the right side with Full back being the common player on both sides of the attack? I feel this will play more to the Wallabies strengths but more analysis needs to be done on the pros and cons of this attack system.

2019-07-23T07:40:29+00:00

WB Supporter

Guest


When teams play rush defence (as SA did), space is created behind the defensive line. A few simple attacking kicks behind the defence is an excellent way to turn the defensive line around, which in turn, makes the defence think twice about rushing up. Similarly, pick and drives are much more effective against a rush defence as it doesn't allow the line to push forward on one out runners. I didn't see the Wallabies put one kick behind the defensive line until the 65th minute when Toomua put one through (albeit not greatly executed but at least the intent was there). It drives me nuts that this Wallabies team don't have the smarts to notice simple things like this and adjust their game plan on the fly. With Cheika as coach, Hooper as captain and Foley as flyhalf, this Wallabies team remains the dumbest Wallabies team to ever lace them up. We do not have the cattle at the moment to challenge at the World Cup. And if we don't play intelligently we stand no chance at all

2019-07-23T07:32:20+00:00

ethan

Guest


Thankfully I did not get up at 1am for it - my optimism wasn't as great as yours! Thanks for the excellent analysis. Things looked off right from the start when we were trying to spread the ball sideways right into the teeth of the rush defence, and it was very noticeable our players having to get up from attacking rucks and run backwards because we weren't making the ad line. This can't be good for energy levels. When you have the ball its the opposition who are supposed to hurt a little, not your own team.

2019-07-23T07:19:31+00:00

PiratesRugby

Guest


Didn’t work at Rebels in the second half of the season.

2019-07-23T07:18:26+00:00

PiratesRugby

Guest


Sack Cheika, Hooper and Foley. Play Maddocks at 10. Win RWC.

2019-07-23T06:39:07+00:00

Lara

Guest


A game plan is only a game plan ,once you analyse the opposition. If you are that good , you don’t need a game plan, you play the way you usually play, because you know the opposition isn’t good enough to worry you or hurt you. Most teams are not that good , not to worry about the opposition . Cheika , plays like his “game plan” whatever it is, is good enough for all comers....shall we move on....or enough said.

2019-07-23T06:37:02+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


I did not notice that one elemental part of the Nathan Grey defence had changed, and this was players defending out of position. I did notice, though, that from lineouts they have Michael Hooper defending the blindside touchline with that winger moving over towards the openside touchline. Thanks for the article Tipsy.... I was just a bit mystified by this comment. All of the lineouts I saw had Nic White in the trams and then becoming the end blind-side defender. Can you clarify what you mean?

2019-07-23T02:18:59+00:00

Leroy14

Roar Rookie


Great article. Insightful. However depressing the failure to execute the game plan was to watch at 1am. The rush defence pretty much nullified the wallabies attack. 7 Th is the best I see the wallabies doing in the world cup. Won’t make it out of the quarter finals. Not for a lack of trying no doubt. Need those ball carriers all across the park to make good metres. We won’t if we play this structure.

2019-07-23T01:41:12+00:00

Puff

Guest


Unfortunately this 3-3-3 structure maybe too technical for Cheika and the brain trust. Please don’t forward this post to his team. The Wallaby coaching staff have received additions and a deletion. Introduced training camps for prospective players at a very early stage, with the WRC on everyone’s agenda. Like TM, (great read) with the hour glass now less than half full the match at Ellis Park delivered little to excite the enthusiast. Perhaps on Saturday we will all be entertained and have the ability to again smile.

2019-07-23T01:18:38+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


the only not straight was against the wallabies and it was not as crooked as the ones the boks so no factually he did NOT allow it for both teams. However he only called 1 not straight, he didn't pay much attention to that aspect of the game.

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