WILL GENIA: 'Samu must start, Tate can wear No.9 jersey for 10 years and time to ditch Giteau Law'

By Will Genia / Expert

Will Skelton left Australia early in 2017 to take up a contract with Saracens, where he won two domestic titles and a European Cup.

He moved to La Rochelle in France and has been their best player all year. He’s dominating European rugby, and completely changed his standing in the game because of how good he’s been over there.

But Will, who played 18 times for the Wallabies before heading overseas, has been lost to the national team since 2016 thanks to an out of date ruling that needs to be abolished.

I’m glad to hear that changes to the Giteau Law are being considered by Rugby Australia. For me, there is only one correct decision. That means no tweaks or amendments, just move on and start picking the best Australian players for the Wallabies.

We don’t have the depth of talent to be so restrictive. I know the argument is if you stay it means you treasure the jersey more, but to be brutally honest that’s a load of BS.

Will Skelton. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

I went overseas and it didn’t mean I disrespected, or didn’t cherish, the jersey. I never, ever cherished it any less. The Wallabies was everything to me.

I came back and wanted to continue and was eligible through the Giteau Law – but if you speak to any of those guys overseas they will tell you they want to play for Australia.

Samu Kerevi has just joined the Wallabies squad but you’ve got Shaun McMahon, Rory Arnold and Will among the almost 100 players – myself included – with top class experience who are playing overseas.

Those guys would walk into the Wallabies starting team.

Some have made a tough choice between setting up their families for life from a financial perspective and continuing to chase that Wallabies dream. And it’s a very hard decision to make.

I have nothing but empathy for the guys who have made that decision to play overseas. They’ve sacrificed their dreams for their families, but those dreams to play Test rugby for Australia burn on.

But it’s not just wrong to deny these players their Wallabies jerseys. It also comes back to the fact we don’t have the depth in our player pool to perform as we want without them.

You’ve seen the wonders it’s worked for South Africa, getting rid of their similar policy, at the World Cup and even now.

To me the Giteau Law is old school thinking. It is thinking that says you should stay because you have to cherish the jersey. You should stay because it makes our Super Rugby competition stronger. You should stay so we can see you day to day and we can monitor you.

None of it holds water any longer. Competitions around the world are strong enough and professional enough.

People criticise Japan but look at Brodie Retallick – he hasn’t missed a beat. He literally has come back to be the player he was – the same physical, dominating presence.

That old school mentality doesn’t fit any more with the fact the game is more global and more professional in more parts of the world.

The top rugby teams in Europe, the UK and Japan would beat most of our Super Rugby teams in Australia.

And it’s not just what it’s costing us right now, but about how much more it will hold us back. You look at Marika Koroibete, who is set to play in Japan and doesn’t qualify under the current law.

Can we afford to have him out of the Wallabies set up? He’s been the best player for the Wallabies in the past two or three years.

You can’t blame him for taking the opportunity because he will be paid a lot of money for three years there. But why can’t he play for Australia at the same time?

It’s a situation that is no good for him, or our national team and its chances of being competitive.

I understand the argument that we want to keep our best players in the country to strengthen the local product but you’re not going to stop the bleeding by saying you’re not eligible if you go. The best players in the country are going to get offered big money and they’re going to take it more often than not.

They tried it, but its time is over.

We will struggle to be competitive in games like Saturday’s defeat without the best players available.

I genuinely think we don’t have the level of talent that sides like the All Blacks have. Yes, we’ve got talented players who can be nurtured and grow into players of that ilk and ability, but right now we aren’t there.

But if you look across the globe we have players of that level already, who aren’t old and who are hungry to play for Australia.

Some of the guys who are playing now for the Wallabies might not start if those guys come back from overseas but what an opportunity for them to learn off guys like Samu, Shaun McMahon and Will.

‘We don’t have the skill level’

That loss hurt on Saturday night.

If you look at the first half, we played well in patches. But our problem is we’re not consistent enough with it.

It comes back to level of skill. A lot of times when we execute right we’re getting in behind, getting good front foot ball. It’s allowing Tate to get out and run, it’s allowing Noah to flatten up and allowing us to find space through the middle and on the edges.

We’re just not doing it for long enough. Under fatigue and under pressure we don’t have the skill level just yet.
The best way to learn is in the pressure cooker. Being in that environment with the Bledisloe on the line, learning to execute those skills under pressure.

No doubt we’ll be better for it. Maybe for now it might be better simplifying our game plan just a little bit in order to find that balance between winning now and also building for the future.

Marika was excellent coming back in. He brings a lot of high energy, works hard off the ball, carries well and he’s getting so much better under the high ball as well. And Andrew Kellway was very good.

I didn’t think the centres combined well or played particularly well.

I was expecting Matt To’omua to make a bit more of an impact and a difference around dictating play and being more of a general. I thought we were a bit lost in the backline around managing the game.

Some of the decisions we made in respect of our kicking just put us under a lot of pressure – some of the grubbers we were putting in, we were kicking the ball straight back to them.

It’s an area of the game we need to work on in general but in isolation, in the Test just gone, I thought we were quite poor in that area.

That falls on the senior guys in the backline, Matty and to an extent Tom Banks.

With Samu Kerevi back in the squad for the third game in Perth I’d be picking him straight away at No.13 with Hunter back to No.12.

Hunter is a good player and I rate him but I think there are levels to it.

(Photo by Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

Samu is on another level in terms of his ability to create things around him, his ability as a ball runner to beat defenders, make breaks and create opportunities with the offload.

He’s really grown his game since he’s been away in terms of his kicking and passing. And his presence – you can’t not have an eye on him, which then creates more space.

I really like Noah and Tate at 9 and 10. I think Noah is starting to find his feet a bit. You have to persist with him. Hs upside is very high.

I’d love to see Quade Cooper get an opportunity, even if you put him on the bench and bring him on as a senior player in the similar role to Matt To’omua in the first Bledisloe – to bring experience and composure.

Dave Rennie said at the start of the series that Quade’s like everyone else, training and putting his hand up to be selected, so off the back of a few poor performances, maybe it’s time to give him an opportunity.

‘Tate’s electric and starting to look more comfortable’

Tate McDermott can have that No.9 jersey for 10 years. He’s that good. As long as he continues to work on that pass, so that it is never an issue, so it’s consistent and it’s on the money.

The second half for everybody is a write off, because it was an absolute demolition, but his first half performance was outstanding.

We managed as a team to get in behind and play front foot forward and put them under pressure because of his ability to attack around the fringes. He was finding space himself but he was putting players around him in space.
He had the defence in two minds every single time. He has speed of foot, which we saw in that try just before halftime. He’s electric, he’s got good feet.

(Photo by Getty Images)

I thought he kicked well, too. There was a passage of play where he put the box kick up, we get the ball back, he identifies there’s space over the top again and executes it perfectly.

He looks like he’s starting to feel a lot more comfortable in that arena. His pass is improving as well. I’d like him to continue working on it and I know he will be.

If he’s getting comfortable in that arena and expressing himself, that’s what you want because you can build a game plan around guys like Tate and Noah once they feel comfortable to express themselves.

He’s got everything else. He’s got a high footy IQ. It’s all instinct. He plays what he sees and he more often than not makes the right decision and he’ll get better at that the more he plays at this level.

I’ve always known he can kick, through the work I’ve done with him. He’s an excellent technical kicker but also excellent at reading when to kick the ball. It’s no secret how big of a fan I am of his.

He’s a natural footy player and has the gift of youth. You can go out there and do all those things because you don’t have baggage of memories that have happened before.

Everything is new, everything is ‘how good is this!’ The key is to continue the mindset of growth and improvement as you go along.

For someone who was there for 10 years, I found the middle was where it got challenging.

It can be a lot of things. I got to a point where my first start was 2009 and I was starting halfback until 2014 when I got injured. I got benched for a game in in 2013 but was brought back in the game after.

Maybe you get a little comfortable. It’s not like I didn’t do the work that I’d always done, but maybe in your mindset you get a little comfortable and perhaps that’s the reality check you need to get that edge again – the motivation to continue to give everything.

That’s the challenge. Ask anyone who has played high level sport for a long time – in those lulls that you have, finding something that continues to drive you, being creative in how you so things so you keep it fresh, so you stay driven, motivated and in a good frame of mind to continue to be the best you can be.

The Crowd Says:

2021-08-19T21:59:46+00:00

Kaivitibati

Guest


NRC is something that should have been kept & grown over time. COVID-19 & lack of support from NSWRU ruined that. It allowed the likes of Reds & Rebels to be more competitive whereas the lack of support from NSWRU was evident in the misery the Waratahs have gone through. Maintaining quality players is 1 part of the equation for the Wallabies sucess, another is the development of players which the QPR & Shute Shield aren't able to do adequately whereas the NRC was able to achieve that as was evident with Fiji, QLD & Vic.

2021-08-18T06:45:42+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


RA doesn’t have the ability at the moment though to sign players on a contract long enough to allow them to take a sabbatical in that time was my point.

2021-08-18T01:38:18+00:00

Rugby Geek

Roar Rookie


JD, take your point on Super Rugby. But if the Super Rugby is broken then the Wallabies are broken. That today seems to be true. We need vibrancy over everything else in rugby for the players. Let them come and let them go, they will want to be a Wallaby if good enough et at al (Kellaway 2021). On the home front, we have a bunch of fantastic young men coming into the U16 & U20 every year. managing them is the key. Premier Colts and Premier Domestic comps are where we should focus. The Super and Test teams come from this.

2021-08-18T00:07:20+00:00

Morsie

Roar Rookie


Gee buddy, please don't make me watch the game again to give you a time on it but he did win a lineout jumping at 2. Check it out buddy.

2021-08-17T22:28:55+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


Its a complex argument, but claiming that test players do not have adequate skill levels is the reason to bring back other players overlooks the major issue. It does not matter how good the half dozen or so expats, it only increases the number of appropriately skilled test players available for selection by a half dozen or so. The fact that we do not have players who have the skills is a result of a lack of investment in coaching and development from the earliest grass roots to professional rugby. Twenty five years and counting and no rugby administrator prepared to do anything about it in sight. The only difference post RWC2023 is that the numbers of appropriately skilled Wallabies will be smaller, no matter where they play.

2021-08-17T21:58:50+00:00

Ozrugbynut

Roar Rookie


Good post. Not necessarily, but I should think it would improve the probability of winning and at the very least improve the performances from the 30+ bollockings we are receiving at present which are not helpful. That’s a good list of practical constraints and limitations but I should think even having a handful of players back in any given year will be a positive thing. We will see what form these ‘changes’ will take, it seems unlikely it will be the South African solution from Marinos’ comments.

2021-08-17T21:54:39+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


Cheers mate. A good thing about these arrangements is that the overseas club can pay the wages for a while, then you get the players back!

2021-08-17T21:47:43+00:00

Ozrugbynut

Roar Rookie


sorry, I was just picking up on the earlier comment in your post around 'shrinkage in the base' and just presenting that this could be addressed by investing in the top, but I 100% agree with you on parochialism and self-interest - it is absolutely rife. I've long been supportive of the idea of a centralised administration (for contracting a la Ireland and of course NZ) but try convincing anyone in the 'regions' of change for the greater good...If somehow McLennan and co, perhaps led by private equity were able to crack this nut then I suspect it will be a big step forward.

2021-08-17T21:37:25+00:00

Hhhmmmm

Roar Rookie


Our centres have thrown two intercepts in 2 games so maybe not passing is a bonus.

2021-08-17T21:16:18+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


JD I take your points on don’t get me wrong. However what I’m noticing with Oz Super Rugby teams and RA is we’re not giving anyone anything longer than a 2-year contract at the moment – maybe they don’t want another Hooper, To’omua or DHP scenario. That makes it hard to allow a player to take a sabbatical because when they’re at the end of their contracts and realistically under no obligation to comeback if they do at that point decide to go overseas. I don’t know whether RA are banking on some PE money coming in the next 24 months, but as much as the sabbatical idea is great and I read/liked your other idea of developing relationships with ‘sister clubs’ overseas in Europe and Japan. I just think with RA financial situation at moment neither are possible for us right now.

2021-08-17T17:49:51+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


Hi TJ, I think you’re making two main points, so I will address each in turn. Re “losing them completely” there are ways to compromise so you don’t. Sabbaticals are a great idea – let the player earn some money overseas and get that overseas experience, knowing that they will come back. Hooper’s seems to have worked well, meanwhile we pushed the boat out for Brodie with 18 months. Maybe Australia should give that option to more players like NZ has. Another option is getting players back at the end of their overseas contract – I love how Australia said to White and Toomua, look you can play for us, but you have to come back when your contract expires. Way better than losing them altogether, it’s just a matter of compromise. The other idea I’d like to challenge is that it’s a trade off between the Wallabies and Super Rugby. I think the opposite – the stronger Super Rugby is, the stronger the Wallabies will be – look at 1996-2003. You don’t want a massive jump between Super and test, and you do want the kids playing with and against your best players. Also you want to be able to manage the players’ workloads, get them together for camps and bring them up in the Aussie way of playing.

2021-08-17T09:53:23+00:00

Mo

Guest


Long live the pooper

2021-08-17T06:40:56+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


Majority of Australians don’t know what super rugby is or care about it sadly. The average punter does know who the Wallabies are, and if they’re winning that’s more eyes and ears on rugby. That can only be good for the sport. Sadly super rugby died when they tried to over expand it to every area of SH. I’d love them to say no more super rugby. Let’s make a 6-8 team domestic comp, the rugby die hards in Oz will still follow it. Then let’s say the top 2-3 join NZ in a TT cross-border comp.

2021-08-17T06:29:06+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


I would have 5 in the starting side and 2 on the bench. Latu, Arnold, Skelton, Rona and Kerevi start. Then I would have McMahon and Morahan/Neyavoro on the bench. Next year you’d add BPA, Naisarani, and Koroibete.

2021-08-17T06:25:13+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


World Rugby states players have to be available for 14 weeks each year right to their national team. Well that covers the rugby championship and spring tour. Ok the July series might more local-based players. However, look at Argentina and SA, their players get released…

2021-08-17T06:22:17+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


Player numbers are in decline I read though in NZ? How are you combatting that right now?

2021-08-17T06:21:15+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


9 would be saying we want the wallabies on the main channel, but we need results. We need Wallabies winning. People still follow the NBL and we know it’s a pathway for Boomers and NBA.

2021-08-17T06:16:30+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


Japan is sadly going to become the biggest league in the world outside of the Prem and France and may become bigger. Finn Russell heading there (reportedly) is a good indicator the tide is turning.

2021-08-17T06:11:46+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


Are you losing them? Maybe to the domestic comp, but not to the national team. We’re losing them completely to Australian rugby at the moment because once they leave now they can have no place in Oz rugby unless they’re in the 2 OS players. The kiwi model works for NZ and applaud them for it. It doesn’t and hasn’t worked for Australia. This like the TT debate have a very similar tone.. ‘no Australian rugby you must keep doing what you’re doing’. JD got to remember in Oz, you and most of us on here who love super rugby are in a vast minority. It’s a lot easier for RA to get investment in the game if we have a powerful brand with the Wallabies winning.

2021-08-17T05:57:42+00:00

JP

Guest


Getting more money has never been a problem for the select few. Possibly only one now. Hooper ! Has been given $6 million over 5 years. The rest have to look after themselves. He is the highest paid layer in the southern hemisphere, yes more than legends Retallick Etzebeth, Steph- Du Toit, Aaron Smith, Coles, Whitelock etc etc.

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