Coach Quade? Always intriguing, Cooper reflects on what follows his last dance

By Tony Harper / Editor

Around 3pm AEST on Friday, Australian rugby fans will know if Quade Cooper’s surprise recall to the Wallabies fold this season will culminate in a 71st Test cap or if his five-year wait stretches on, likely to be ended only through retirement.

Cooper will know some time before that – he might have already been told – if he has done enough to get some game time in Bledisloe 3.

As always with Cooper, nothing is straightforward. Dave Rennie has spoken glowingly and often about Cooper and his impact on the group, and especially its younger players, since the Kiwi coach talked the enigmatic playmaker into travelling with the team to New Zealand, while on a break from commitments in Japan.

It was a move that raised plenty of eyebrows. He’s hardly been the model pro throughout a career where he struggled to keep his thoughts, no matter how destructive, to himself.

We are a few weeks short of nine years since Cooper’s infamous “toxic environment” comments tweeted out and then reaffirmed on a Fox Sports rugby show, which caused great hurt to another Kiwi coach of the Wallabies, Robbie Deans.

(Photo by Getty Images)

“There’s a lot of people who are afraid to say what they feel so they just go along with it and nothing is going to change,” Cooper said at the time.

“That’s why I feel so strongly as a player. I don’t want to be involved in the toxic environment, and that’s how it is at the moment.”

The comments cost him a $40,000 fine from the ARU, now Rugby Australia, and he acknowledged: “I understand that I fell well below par in what it means to be a Wallaby.

“I’m just looking forward to the future, hopefully having a big year, with not only my state but the Wallabies.”

That future held plenty more intrigue and turns – boxing career, playing club rugby on superstar wages, multiple failures to secure citizenship, and now this latest dalliance with the Wallabies as a mentor.

“He’s been fantastic in the group. Can’t speak highly enough of him,” Rennie said last week.

“Even when we had a few days off at the front of the week, he was driving a lot of the training and additional stuff a number of the boys were doing out on the field here or down at the gym.”

Even this week has seen a few plot twists in the Cooper drama.

He was put up for a Wallabies press conference on Tuesday. But does that mean he’s a shoo in to get a jersey on Sunday?

Fox Sports’ well-connected rugby writer Christy Doran wrote a story suggesting the decision to put Cooper up may have been a Rennie ploy – a red herring aimed at leading the All Blacks off the scent.

We shouldn’t be surprised, then, by any scenario on Sunday. Wherever Cooper goes, drama will follow.

And who would bet on that ending any time soon? Just maybe, if Rennie’s right about the impact he’s making, he has a future as a member of the Wallabies’ coaching staff.

“When I was playing club football at Souths in 2018, that was probably the first time I actually really enjoyed passing on knowledge,” Cooper reflected this week.

“Before that, I didn’t really have the patience for it, at this level. Super Rugby and Test level, I would kind of get frustrated if someone didn’t understand their role or missed the jump on a play or forgot a little bit of knowledge because I thought you should automatically know it, being at that level.

“I think that was an error in judgement on my behalf; instead of putting in time and effort to help other people.

“Everybody learns in different ways and when I went to Souths, obviously a club that doesn’t have much resources, doesn’t have much money, the coaching around the players that came in – talented players – but they were raw.

“For myself – being fortunate enough to have great coaching, great resources and everything from such a young age – I was able to find patience in myself and things that I had learnt. That was the first time I really enjoyed and got more satisfaction out of seeing other players learn.

“You’d be out on the field, and there would be something you’d had a conversation about, and you see a lightbulb moment when they realised and understood what was going on.

“Those moments – I got so much satisfaction out of it.”

Former Wallabies back Dane Haylett-Petty spoke on Thursday on what Cooper can bring.

“He’s one player that’s never stopped learning. He’s getting better and better,” said Haylett-Petty.

“I know the players around him would be learning so much from him.”

Overall, though, Cooper was non-commital about a future in the coach’s box, but accepted it at least made more sense now than it might have nine years ago, when his “toxic” comments brought howls of protest from angry teammates, a situation he struggled to come back from.

“It’s not something that I would say, yeah, that’s definitely something I want to do,” Cooper said. “But I feel like now, where I’m at as a man and as a football player, I definitely have a lot more patience for that.

“There’s a lot of pressure on coaches. They have a very difficult role. With a lot of players who transition into coaching, they don’t realise the amount of work that goes into coaching, the hours of watching footage, the hours of planning.

“And then there’s selection. As players we don’t have any say in that.

“That would be something that I feel where there is a lot of pressure.”

“You’re breaking a lot of people’s hearts by telling them that they’re not involved but you’re also giving them areas and things that they can work on to push for selection.”

If it is all just mind games, and Rennie decides against putting Cooper into service, you could forgive the man a twinge of disappointment, if not quite a broken heart.

His reaction would certainly give a insight into just how far he has travelled in those nine years.

“That hasn’t been a focus of mine at all, it’s not something that I have come in here thinking ‘I just have to play a Test,” said Cooper.

“Coming in here has been about learning. Whether I go back to Japan after this game, whether it’s after the Rugby Championship, I’m not 100% sure, just yet, I’ll have a wealth of knowledge in terms of football, in terms of things I’ve been able to gain and learn about myself and being back inside this environment.

“If I can grow as a man, grow as a rugby player, take that back to Japan and pass that knowledge on to other people, that’s a great reward for myself.”

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2021-09-04T02:20:11+00:00

Tony Harper

Editor


Cheers Puff. A couple of thoughts... The Wallabies put up 6 players frm the squad of 42 to talk to media this week and Quade was one of them. So maybe DR was going to play him, or maybe he never intended to, in which case, it's fair to ask 'what was that about?' Another, Christy is well connected to sources inside the Wallabies camp and ultimately was the only rugby writer who came out strongly two days ahead of the announcement to say Quade would not be picked. I have worked closely with Christy before and rate his intel and news sense highly, but we can all make up our minds.

2021-09-03T14:09:57+00:00

Wallabies_Larkham

Roar Rookie


Harry it seems RA will most likely create a staff role for him moving forward towards the WC and/or beyond that..it seems DR has taken a liking towards him and may push for this behind the scenes

2021-09-03T08:22:35+00:00

Tom

Guest


Ten years to late. But hope he can inspire a few young people in the future.

2021-09-03T05:55:17+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


Need to say Auckland you are in my thoughts and prayers, if the pandemic was not bad enough now a terrorist attack. 6 people stabbed and 3 in critical condition.

2021-09-03T05:19:43+00:00

Puff

Roar Rookie


The Fox Sports,’ well-connected rugby writer Christy Doran is connected to what? Did he honestly believe Rennie would use Cooper as a ploy? According to discussions in NZ, Coopers abilities were never ranked as special and DR would know that. Had he stayed in Tokoroa, NZ where he was recognized as been talented it may have been different. Sadly he missed finishing school classes in QL and has never become the complete package. In the last few years Quade’s SR performances were kind of ordinary and once you start chasing a retirement venture off-shore you are engaging at a very different level. Although Dave is an astute rugby analyst, time, space and ball placement using a flat line attack is a concern, perhaps in such areas his knowledge could be helpful.

2021-09-03T04:04:10+00:00

Tony H

Roar Pro


I don't think anyone was suggesting he should coach the scrum

2021-09-03T03:45:12+00:00

The Late News

Roar Rookie


Cheers mate. I find your writing style is very easy to read!

2021-09-03T03:38:32+00:00

Riccardo

Roar Rookie


Yeah perhaps... But if Quade can create light bulb moments for any group of footy players, even juniors who would be inspired by a genuine wallaby star... Just find his comments positive and refreshing; lotta negativity around the sport at the moment...

2021-09-03T02:19:56+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


Also I meant win and not when :stoked:

2021-09-03T02:11:38+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


Qurro, Great post mate and I agree with everything you said. Looking forward to reading more posts from you :thumbup:

2021-09-03T02:05:01+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


Agree TJ, We all make mistakes in life but what makes a person are not the mistakes. It is how the person grew from them and became a better man/woman, and they need a good support base around them also

2021-09-02T23:31:18+00:00

tsuru

Roar Rookie


I agree, bigbaz. I suspect I know the “clowns” you’re thinking of. I’ve been trying really hard not to respond to those negative and personal attacks, as it just seems to encourage them. And that makes The Roar so much less enjoyable and has lead to the loss of at least one valued contributor in Paulo and possibly others we don’t know about.

2021-09-02T23:26:26+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Hopefully I'm wrong but I don't see Quade making a good coach. I'd put Giteau in that boat too. The natural talents rarely do. I'd expect To'omua and Foley to be the types that make better coaches. Possibly Leali'ifano too.

2021-09-02T23:16:54+00:00

Bobby

Roar Rookie


Quade is such a polarizing bloke. I could see him as a Attack Coach of backs. Other than that, he brings little.

2021-09-02T22:37:00+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


agree, thats the point , he as most whistle blowers do gets crucified. He was right but was in trouble for telling everyone

2021-09-02T22:32:02+00:00

Riccardo

Roar Rookie


Quade's knowledge and experience would be a great platform if went further down the coaching track. What's really marvelous for me, a critic of his in the past, is the obvious maturity and positivity. Take's courage to publicly acknowledge mistakes and growth and I take my hat off to him. Referring back to Nicholas's excellent analysis earlier in the week, the Wallabies could do worse than get him to pull on the jumper in Perth, where I believe they are a real chance.

2021-09-02T22:26:06+00:00

Qurro Cooper Romero

Guest


Im from The South. Im trying to be awake till 3pm AEST time to see if hopefully QC is in the list of DR while im watching All the Queensland Reds Season year 2011... Cooper&Genia...what a couple!!! (Japanesse are more than clever) This has more quality than any netflix serie. Hope and Wish that The Magic appears near to the Swan River. I still believe in El Picasso del Pase QC. Good luck Aussies. The All Blacks are really Good but Faith and Respect are the Key of Everything. Viva Australia manquepierda. Go Wallabies!!! Go Forces!! Go Glory! Nothing beats in the SportWorld a game between Australia vs New Zeland. Thank you to keep this Pure.

2021-09-02T22:16:04+00:00

Nick Maguire

Roar Rookie


QCM, thanks for dropping in! Great thoughts about QC, love your passion. Cheers

2021-09-02T21:39:19+00:00

Doctordbx

Roar Rookie


The thing about the toxic comment... He was right. Maybe Deans was the unfortunate recipient but Rugby Australia has proven itself to be a madhouse.

2021-09-02T21:33:49+00:00

Leroy14

Roar Rookie


I guess we’ll find out soon enough if QC gets another crack at the all blacks. I certainly hope he does and in certain he will do well if he gets a chance. There is a lot more positivity coming from the media and those that have had much to do with QC recently and that’s good to hear. He deserves it. Perfect timing for him to have a game with a month in camp now and a test in Perth on home soil against the arch nemesis, the all blacks.

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