Can Matt To'omua guide the young Wallabies to victory in Brisbane?

By Oscar / Roar Rookie

With young Brumbies flyhalf Noah Lolesio taking the reins at number ten for the first match in Brisbane against a youthful French outfit, experience and composure will be crucial for both sides, looking to stamp their authority on the three-match series taking place across Melbourne and Brisbane.

The Wallabies’ back line has been hit with injuries to experienced internationals Nic White and James O’Connor, who would have been the first-pick nine and ten to lead the Wallabies.

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The Aussie back line is now thin on experience, with an average of just 16 caps for a player in the new-look back line. Only three players in the back line have over ten caps, being Tom Banks with 11 caps, Marika Koroibete with 32 caps and the all-important Matt To’omua with 54 caps.

The inexperienced halves pairing of Jake Gordon (five caps) and Noah Lolesio (two caps) is an exciting yet worrying pairing for an Australian team desperate to get back to winning ways in 2021. But how crucial will seasoned veteran Matt To’omua be to this young side?

(Photo by Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

The 31-year-old Matt To’omua will line up at inside centre, after beating the clock to get himself fit to play, after battling with a neck injury since the end of Super Rugby Trans-Tasman where he missed the Melbourne Rebels’ last game versus the Crusaders.

The Melbourne-born inside centre/flyhalf has struggled to find form behind an underperforming Rebels outfit. The Rebels had three wins from eight games in Super Rugby AU and failed to qualify for the finals.

In Super Rugby Trans-Tasman, the Rebels lost all five games, struggling to find their feet in the short five-week tournament. Poor set pieces and a lacklustre attack were the glaring issues for the Melbourne team, which had key players Dane Haylett-Petty and Reece Hodge out for the majority of the season.

Matt To’omua led the team from number ten early in the season and then from number 12 later in the season with Carter Gordon wearing the ten jersey.

To’omua struggled throughout the year to find form but we saw glimpses of his best playing ability when running direct lines in attack, goal kicking and defending in tight off set-piece crash balls. His goal kicking was at a fantastic standard early in the season, especially against the Reds and Brumbies in Rounds 2 and 3. But he missed the winning penalty kick versus Reds at Suncorp Stadium early in the season.

To’omua scored a try against the Waratahs in Round 5 at AAMI Park in Melbourne, where he made a break through a gap near the breakdown then chip kicked the ball over James Ramm to score in the corner. He had the ability to identify the gap from the other side of the ruck off a poor pass from Joe Powell, then hold the ball in two hands and finally dummy while keeping his hips straight. That showed the attacking prowess that To’omua yields.

To’omua’s direct running and ability to hold the ball with two hands to keep his offload and kicking options unpredictable brings something different to the new-look Wallabies outfit. While in Round 8 versus the Western Force, To’omua’s supporting run behind Stacey Illi to receive the pop pass and then unlock Frank Lomani along the edge showed his ability to run different attacking moves between direct and evasive lines.

Then again in Round 9 versus the Brumbies, To’omua had the ability to run a supporting line behind Trevor Hosea to receive a short pass and then attract the defender of Folau Fainga’a and finally pass to Campbell Magnay who made a 50-metre break up the field and then passed to a supporting Joe Powell, who scored to the right of the posts.

(Photo by Teaukura Moetaua/Getty Images)

The experienced inside back has a unique ability to run supporting lines, direct lines and also organise attack when other phases are occurring not involving him.

To’omua’s in-play attack kicking has improved in the past three years. In Round 10 versus the Waratahs, the opening try of the game was from a Rebels turnover on the Waratahs’ line. To’omua immediately rushed in from his defensive position downfield and slotted in behind the forwards to receive a pass from Joe Powell, then recognised the space on the wing due to the turnover, then booted a cross-field kick over to Stacey Illi, who scored a try in the corner.

To’omua’s ability to run direct lines in attack will provide a solid platform for set plays and kicking options, while his versatility in running support and playmaker roles to unlock Hunter Paisami at outside centre will bring flair to the Australian back line.

To’omua’s defence at inside centre was extremely impressive during the first two matches versus the All Blacks in 2020, before his international season was cut short by a groin injury.

Matt To’omua’s experience and ability in attack and defence could be vital to a Wallabies win come Wednesday night.

With the young Brumbies flyhalf Noah Lolesio inside him, the 54-Test inside back could be vital in guiding the number ten, and in the bigger picture, the whole Australian team, who will be desperate to win the first Test of the series.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2021-07-08T02:11:21+00:00

Oscar

Roar Rookie


the answer to this article was no, but yes at the same time

2021-07-06T21:16:14+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Nothing to decide. Kick it into touch :silly:

2021-07-06T21:04:08+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Don't know about his current form but last year he was very important, the wallabies started to play significantly worse after he got injured

2021-07-06T20:30:59+00:00

Diamond Jackie

Roar Rookie


He’s the right man for the right position at the right time. I can’t help but think though what that NSW Blues backline could do in Wallaby gold (right , fantasy over… back to reality!)

2021-07-06T07:37:57+00:00

Tooly

Roar Rookie


Toomua has rarely led any side anywhere. Lealiifano was the man when they were at the Brumbies. He does little at the Rebs, Meakes made breaks and put players through gaps. Toomua was a bench player at Leicester . No more. As for his defence it is what it should be adequate for the provincial player that he is.

2021-07-06T04:12:46+00:00

numpty

Roar Rookie


yes no doubt that noah will look alot better with some experience next to him. I'd actually love to see noah and joc in tandem, both play so quick and flat to the line when allowed. When JOC is back I'm happy for him and toomua to start but with Noah getting some proper minutes off the bench to grow into the role.

2021-07-06T04:04:23+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


International form was good Dead right. I'm actually happier JOC didn't recover so Lolesio gets a shot with MT outside him. Combinations are never exactly the same but I like the Ford/Farrell axis and I think this dynamic may have similar demands.

2021-07-06T03:49:30+00:00

Obes

Guest


I thought as Hooper is Wallaby captain and on 6 million dollars it`d be his job to guide the team to victory, not toomua`s

2021-07-06T03:02:48+00:00

hugo verne

Guest


To'omua is a very fine defender, but he'll take a thrashing once that big French pack gets rolling and Vincent and the hefty Danty start running the ball.

2021-07-06T02:23:51+00:00

JC

Roar Rookie


Nice, Numpty. When To’omua’s playing well, others shine.

2021-07-06T02:00:30+00:00

Machooka

Roar Guru


'A good communicator he is...' Very good... reads the game well :thumbup: He was JOC's 'eyes' there for awhile...

2021-07-06T01:48:45+00:00

Lara

Guest


Toomua when fit is a top player, brave in the tackle, can distribute, kicks astutely n run great lines. The Wallabies backline is not big n with a bit of a question mark over Toomua fitness n you need to take a bit of a leap of faith. The French will target the midfield backs , soften up Toomua, dull his game n the Wallabies will be in trouble. Toomua can not n should not be the key …. DR must have an alternative plan, l hope he does.

2021-07-06T01:06:18+00:00

GoldenEye

Roar Rookie


Bobby, I wonder whether Toomua had an underlying injury he was carrying throughout the season, or if his marriage breakdown affected his head-space. He improved once he moved to 12. Hopefully, his calming influence will provide Lolesio the foil he needs to keep his head, and some starch in his commitment to defence.

2021-07-06T01:03:56+00:00

stillmissit

Roar Guru


I think he is the glue in the backline when the going gets tough..How many cliches in a sentence? Matt Toomua will not let Australia down, I hope he gets through the game, as his loss last season left a big hole to be filled (just to finish on a cliche!).

2021-07-06T00:08:37+00:00

numpty

Roar Rookie


I do think he was tarred a bit with his early SR form when he was really forcing the issue, but it is hard to judge when the team was so up and down, affected by injury etc. I definitely thought he had some good involvements in the few rebels SRTT games I got to watch. Definitely agree on your last point.

2021-07-05T23:41:26+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


His super rugby form was poor at 10 but a lot better at 12 his better (natural) position. What the article misses and doesn't get mentioned much is his 'talk', he organises the backline defence which with such inexperienced players is very important.

2021-07-05T22:44:28+00:00

Billy Boy

Roar Rookie


I got the impression he was trying to do everything at the Rebels 100% spot on JC, fingers crossed he doesn’t decide to do the same tomorrow night.

2021-07-05T22:43:11+00:00

numpty

Roar Rookie


His international form was good last year which still counts for alot, and I thought his super form wasn’t bad during the TT (of what I saw). But, yes agree his biggest asset is his experience and ability to guide those around him. His talk alone will be invaluable. Also, regardless of his attacking form, his defence is always rock solid which will be important in such an inexperienced backline. Hopefully he just lets everyone shine around him in attack and slots his shots on goals (assuming he gets the tee).

2021-07-05T22:40:20+00:00

JC

Roar Rookie


Nice work, Oscar. The Gordon/Lolesio/To’omua combination has a nice stable feel to it. To’omua is a smart, smart player and will give Lolesio plenty of confidence. I got the impression he was trying to do everything at the Rebels, which affected his form. That won’t be the case during the Tests so hoping to see the best of him. :thumbup:

2021-07-05T22:26:03+00:00

Riccardo

Roar Rookie


With JOC out Toomua will be the general of the back-line. His experience, skill-set and value as a second playmaker will give Noah and Hunter time and confidence. A good communicator he is also part of the leadership group; with new combinations and personnel that is important too...

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