REACTION: Everything Rennie said after beating Boks, including verdict on Quade's RWC chances

By Tony Harper / Editor

Could Quade Cooper make it through to the 2023 World Cup? “Of course he could,” said Wallabies coach Dave Rennie after seeing the 33-year-old playmaker enjoy a Hollywood ending to his long awaited return on the Gold Coast.

Rennie deserves credit for bringing Cooper in from the cold ahead of the Bledisloe Cup. There might be a little part of the coach that regrets not using him earlier in those games with Noah Lolesio fading in the furnace after an excellent series against France.

But even when Cooper was named last Friday to play against the Springboks, it was with the sense that he is merely a placeholder for the almost fit again James O’Connor. How could Rennie drop Cooper now?

On Sunday night Cooper brought a calm efficiency to the role, along with flawless goalkicking. But off the field he brings so much more to a sport that was waiting for fire to be lit within.

Those who doubt Cooper’s status as the biggest name in Australian rugby should pick up their papers this morning, scan the sports websites and get back to us with the last time one of the game’s players made this kind of impact.


Here’s what Dave Rennie and Michael Hooper had to say after Sunday’s game

“We have a structure how we wanted to play and I thought he was excellent,” Rennie said of Cooper. “He implemented things really well and was really clear. Credit to him.

“He’s got his detail down and being able to operate under pressure against the world champions is a hell of an effort.”

Asked if Cooper could play at the World Cup, Rennie had a sly dig at the Boks.

“He’s be a young fella if he was in the Springbok team,” Rennie joked. “Of course he could. But we’re not thinking too far ahead at this stage and neither is he.

“He was excited to get an opportunity and delivered big time. We’ll reassess and see how things go. I know he’s keen and available for the rest of the year and we’ll make a call beyond that.”

Rennie said he was proud of his team’s performance, and happy with their execution. A week ago he was visibly angry in Perth as he watched them make critical errors against the All Blacks.

“You play a side like [South Africa] you have got to dig deep,” said Rennie. “There’s a lot of collisions.

“Our work ethic was outstanding. We knew where they were coming. They’re very direct, they love playing without the ball so they were going to put a lot of ball in the air and I think we we are smart.

“We kicked appropriately, we played a fair bit of territory and got rewarded at the right end of the field.

“It’s a start. We’re not going to get carried away with this. It showed huge character and we’re proud of that.

“But we’ve got three more games coming up in the series and I’m confident the Springboks will be keen to reverse things next Saturday. So we’re mindful of that but we’re excited to play against the best teams in the world.”

Rennie said Tate McDermott had been replaced by Nic White because he was suffering an injured shin.

“It was quite noticeable late in the first half where he was struggling to get to the breakdown quickly. So we made that call at halftime.

“We normally go on with a bit of an idea around when we might sub some guys, but mostly, it’s game dependent. We were really rapt with the effort we got off the bench.”

Rennie wouldn’t bite on the 28 penalties blown by English referee Luke Pearce. At times it seemed Pearce, with his frequent and lengthy chats with the TMO, was running a refeering course.

“I really like Luke as a referee, had him a number of times when I was over in Europe,” Rennie said. “We’ll obviously we’ll have a close look at the game and give feedback directly to him.”

South Africa scored three tries to one, and all from rolling mauls, an area Rennie said would occupy some time ahead of next week’s game.

“We’ll tweak a few things this week,” he said. “You only need one person getting their role wrong and you can get hurt by a team like South Africa. So we’ve got to be better.”

But ultimately Hooper’s perfect eight from eight with the boot saw Australia clinch a close one – just as they did twice in the series against France.

“It’s huge,” said Rennie, joking about the big chance that Michael Hooper and Reece Hodge messed up that “if Hoops threw a dummy, we might not have needed a penalty late in the game.”

“There’s a lot of character in this group which is why we’re incredibly disappointed with the All Blacks series,” said Rennie. “We played a lot of good footy in there and had situations where, we just needed to be a bit a little bit more clinical and we could hurt them.”

Hooper equalled George Gregan’s record of 59 games as Wallabies captain on Sunday, a feat all but overshadowed on the night by Cooper.

“I thought he was calm and making good decisions around game calling,” Hooper said of the No.10.

“When the ebbs and flows of the game came, he was a really good person to call on to give us a bit of direction and lead us down the right path.

“It was really pleasing to have him out there and a great story for him. I was so happy for him that he’s able to have a game like that for Australia.”

Hooper said Australia played “smart”.

“We got down to their zone and we took points a couple of times and we built a score there today.

“It came down to the wire, which I think a lot of games tend to with South Africa and the way they play.

“I think we’ve got a lot more in us in the way that we can move the ball round and receive some of their kicks and what we can do to try and manipulate that. What we know is that when we go in next week it’s going to be a level up again, so we’re savouring this one for the moment.

Asked if the game was a “nice reminder” of the physicality South Africans bring to rugby, Hooper responded: “Absolutely. There’s some mountains of men in their team, and they just keep coming off the bench.

“That was a really South African style of game and they play that to the death, they lean into it more and more as the game goes on.

“You can’t shy away from the physicality they’re going to bring to the game. And we know that that’s going to go up again, next week.

“So we’re pleased with how we ripped into them tonight. I think we can be better in the maul side of things. We had a couple cracks and tried to pinch a few. But in terms of the game next week, it’s got to be levelled up there. ”

Here’s how the Springboks reacted

The Boks conceded 11 penalties – seven of which were in range for Cooper, and played for 20 minutes with only 14 players after Siya Kolisi and Willie le Roux were yellow carded. Australia, also lost two players to yellows.

“Poor discipline cost us – 23 points off the kicking tee (for the Wallabies) summed it up,” said South African coach Jacques Nienaber.

“In the first 20 minutes, I thought we dominated and had control over the game, and we were unable to do this in the last 20 minutes.

“We did well to come back late in the game and then we lost the match because we conceded a penalty. That said, Australia played well and they deserved the win.”

Nienaber said his team squandered two chances to score additional tries, as well as missing four out of their eight shots at goal.

“Without taking anything away from Australia, I don’t think we were great today,” said Nienaber.

“There were opportunities for us to score two more tries and we didn’t finish them. It was not a polished performance. We’ll have a look at the game, and we’ll have to fix those things and improve our discipline.”

Springbok captain Siya Kolisi was asked if being in quarantine for two weeks had any effects on the Boks.

“We’ll never use not being ready as an excuse – when we step onto the field, we have to be ready,” said Kolisi.

“I thought we prepared well this week, but our discipline wasn’t good. The Wallabies played well. This is a hard place to come and win.

“We didn’t play the way we wanted to on the day, and their plan worked better than ours in certain areas.”

The Crowd Says:

2021-09-13T21:56:10+00:00

stillmissit

Roar Guru


Gusto, I didn't realise that QC and Will Genia couldn't get Australian citizenship. I thought it was a rule regarding being allowed to play for your country!

2021-09-13T20:30:49+00:00

Gustofoe

Roar Rookie


I made this comment last week. Quote "I hope Alex Hawke is reading this. There is still this small matter of Australian Citizenship for his royal highness Mr Quade Cooper." Guess what? After being rejected 4 times QC is about to be conferred as an Australian Citizen this week. This reported in the SMH that Alex Hawke is set to announce a slight policy change that will allow individuals such as QC to be granted citizenship. I mean how more Australian is can you get by kicking the winning goal to defeat the world Champion Springboks? I hope this extends to Will Genia as well who like QC has tried and been rejected.

2021-09-13T19:05:00+00:00

Phantom

Roar Rookie


Barret is a far better player than mounga will ever be. Jordie to do the kicking and the problem s all solved.

2021-09-13T17:45:46+00:00

Rumblenuts

Roar Rookie


I met Quade Cooper a couple of years back struggling in club division. He was quite well spoken and very generous with his time . Nothing like the media portrayed him. I'm rapt he's back playing . I was one of his biggest credits regarding Dean's throwing him under a political bus in 2011. WC in New Zealand He used Cooper to antagonise New Zealand rugby after been over looked for Henry as head coach for the ABS As head coach for the crusaders he terminated alot of rugby careers if players stepped out of line in the media wearing crusader colours Yet with QC he used him to antagonise the kiwi public. By allowing him to rant in the media for his own gain which cost Cooper alot more than Dean's. Richie McCaw stated he didn't want Dean's taking over the ABs. After finishing Cullys career over the radio with Mitchell as assistant coach I've never rated him. Cooper is another he through under a bus. Deep water down south was boiling he took the Wallabies reigns as coach. He now lives in obscurity through his own selfish actions. So relieved he never coached the AB.s

2021-09-13T12:03:03+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


I am talking about players not being able to play, also Havili is not a first choice number 10.

2021-09-13T10:30:08+00:00

Mo

Guest


Dmac and havili can both play 10

2021-09-13T09:57:49+00:00

Objective Observer

Roar Rookie


Yes - but they are still RWC winners - and will be for some time to come. At lest their players are born in SA.

2021-09-13T09:30:10+00:00

Lara

Guest


The Bok coach admitted they were not great….what’s new, they play the most basic of game plans that an under 10’s can play, and they can’t get that right…..so l agree, not great. Not taking away from the Wallabies , who were ranked 7th in the World , because they were far from perfect , but thank goodness for the sake of Rugby Union , they won.

2021-09-13T09:16:16+00:00

Cheika_Mate

Roar Rookie


Well I hope our young 10s around the country watched carefully how Quade managed our game last evening. The was no razzmatazz often associated to Quade. He’d played the percentages, he made his passes, and when nothing was on he either turned the ball back on the inside or took the tackle, no Hail Marys. He made his tackles which he is not none for, he tackled in the front line, he was not hidden at the back, his general kicks in play we’re okay, his kicks at goal well he nailed everything on offer. But more than anything he brought a calmness to the side. He looks incredibly fit and with the backing of the coaching staff, he will only get better over time regardless of age. Investing in youth is great however throwing them to the wolves to learn their craft is not good policy. Quade showed regardless of age it also pays to invest in experience for long term success.

2021-09-13T08:10:43+00:00

DDSmash

Guest


DMac at 5/8 like Barrett - very poor impressions of the master Richie M. Anyone know if he is going to be back to play the Saffers - Mounga that is?

2021-09-13T07:54:03+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


??

2021-09-13T07:32:24+00:00

Glass-half-fullback

Roar Rookie


Wallabies were up for it against France and also now against South Africa. Why don’t they have any fight in them against ABs? Same thing happened in trans tasman super comp. The question has to be asked. How many of these Wallabies grew up supporting the All Blacks?

2021-09-13T07:24:59+00:00

Glass-half-fullback

Roar Rookie


You sound like Bill Gates complaining about paying tax.

2021-09-13T07:20:26+00:00

Glass-half-fullback

Roar Rookie


At least 3 months in a bubble. They will improve. Their new found freedom will do wonders for their mental health.

2021-09-13T06:31:13+00:00

Double Agent

Guest


Why do you hate the Wallabies so much?

2021-09-13T06:21:35+00:00

blackeyed

Roar Rookie


The Springboks are destroying the spirit of Rugby. I have never seen a more cynical rugby performance than that of the overweight unfit Springbok pack. Offside constantly, infringing as a matter of course under pressure, committing many many unlawful moves at the breakdown, slowing the game down under false pretenses with, untied shoelaces, torn jerseys, lost headgear, false injuries, unwrapping and rewrapping tape, all so the pace of the game doesn't find them their shalow, one dimensional and entirely predictable rugby. They are a blight on the game. World Champions huh! world chumps more like!

2021-09-13T05:58:39+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


JOC would be the ideal second playmaker from fullback. Good call.

2021-09-13T05:51:59+00:00

Laurence King

Roar Rookie


Like to see Harrison and Donaldson In the squad to bearound Quade for a bit of guidance as well.

2021-09-13T05:48:50+00:00

Laurence King

Roar Rookie


Look where Banks feet were. If Banks had not arched his back and got his arm down to slide along the ground a bit the young man would have been seriously injured. Cheers

2021-09-13T05:03:22+00:00

soapit

Roar Guru


Other thing is he hasn't really been playing at the top four a few years in there so good body might have missed some of the banging up a normal 35yo

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