WILL GENIA: Dave and Quade show folly of our obsession with shiny new things

By Will Genia / Expert

When Quade Cooper stepped up for his shot at winning Sunday’s Test against South Africa I thought ‘he’s never missing this kick’.

We have a laugh about it all the time, and have done for years. I’ve always said to him, ‘bro, for whatever reason you always like to miss easy kicks but when we need you to make a big kick to put us one or two scores ahead, you always make it.’

They don’t come much bigger than that, so as soon as he lined it up I knew it was going straight down the middle.

He spends a lot of time on days off, hours after training practising. I’ve watched him meddle around with his approach to the kick, his run up, the type of tees he uses, the way he slants his ball.

I find it fascinating – like watching anyone working on a craft. You can tell there are intricacies involved that you don’t fully understand, but you can appreciate and enjoy the pursuit of perfection.

I don’t know if anybody else had that sense of anticipation, but to me that felt written – that there was going to be a moment where it was on all Quade to ice the game.

(Photo by Matt Roberts/Getty Images)

There was some discussion in the moment about who should have the shot, but I’m glad he took it because I’ve always known Quade to really enjoy and embrace those big moments.

I’m glad Australian fans got to see that moment, too, and understand how much Quade has grown.

His reaction represented his growth
At times the journey has been a tough one for him. Having had all that success as a young kid coming straight out of school into Super Rugby, thrust into the Wallabies, pretty much in his second or third year out of school, having experienced such highs.

People don’t understand, when you then go through the lows, whether it’s being dropped or not picked on a team, or getting cut completely from the Queensland Reds, what that does to you as a human being.

When you watch someone playing, you think that’s his job, he should be doing that. And when they don’t perform, it’s drop him or get rid of him or something’s going on.

But there are emotions attached to all of those things. And it can hurt you as a person.

Sometimes you lash out, sometimes, you can go off the rails.

Quade’s had his struggles, but he has chosen to become better from them.

The biggest thing that I’ve noticed in him is he so much more focused on the process and journey that he’s on, as opposed to the results and the consequences.

We’re the same age. You get to that point in your life as a footy player, where you appreciate the game for what it is, you don’t identify yourself as being Quade Cooper the Wallaby, for example.

You understand that you’re a man and a human being first and foremost, who’s fortunate to be in that position.

He summed it up perfectly when he said those moments are nice, but when the sun comes tomorrow what can I do to be a better person and a better player?

I spent a lot of time in Japan with him having conversations around things like that, trying to learn from him and trying to give him some of the things that I’m feeling. He is just in this zone where he understands, ‘I enjoy what I do, I love what I do, but it’s not who I am’.

His reaction after that kick won the Test was certainly a representation of that.

You could tell his impact by the players’ eyes
You could see from early on that what he brought to the table was exactly what the Wallabies had been missing – someone to implement their gameplan.

Quade has the skills to do that. He’s got the kicking game, the passing game, the vision and the knowledge. What doesn’t get spoken about enough is the experience he brings.

With that experience comes confidence. When he runs on to the field he understands it. He’s accumulated all this knowledge and experience and you couple that with the fact that his body is in really good nick, he has every confidence in his ability to go out there and execute.

He’s never rushed in his mind, which means he’s never rushed in his body.

He seems comfortable in that zone and it radiates out like the warmth from a fire. To see the main play caller is poised and calm in his communication makes a massive difference to how guys feel in and around the field.

Quade Cooper. (Photo by Jono Searle/Getty Images)

That was really noticeable – the team had a guy out there whose voice had confidence and strength.

You could see it perfectly clearly in breaks in play; the level of communication and direction he was giving to guys around him.

You could see his teammates listening intently. A lot of times on the field when people speak, guys can wander with their minds and with their eyes.

They were tuned right in. Guys understand that he’s been there in those moments, and they went with him.

We get obsessed with shiny new things
Dave Rennie deserves credit from bringing Quade back into the fold this season. Should he have brought him back earlier, against the All Blacks ? Not for me.

This is just my opinion, but there’s a big level of gap between the All Blacks and South Africa in the way that they’re playing.

I’m not trying to be disrespectful to the Springboks, but the All Blacks are at a different level right now.

I’m not saying that Quade wouldn’t have performed well, but I think it would have been throwing him to the wolves to make him face them in his first game back in four years.

It was the right move to give Noah an opportunity to play those games and get some growth and learning from it. And it was the right move to introduce Quade against the Springboks, historically a team Quade has played really well against in years gone by.

I like how Dave is thinking. It was suggested to him before the game that selecting Quade was a moment of panic. I never thought that.

I knew that like, at some point, he was going to get an opportunity because we weren’t getting the results, and you need to make change. And from all reports that I was hearing, he was training really, really well.

In the course of a game, the talk has gone from panic to ‘can he play at the World Cup?’.

We get so obsessed with the future and the next new shiny things, that we disregard what’s right in front of us.

We worry about players being overseas. We worry about players being a little bit old. None of that matters.

If you’ve got a player that has the ability and a drive to want to be the best that they can, and they’re performing, who cares how old they are?

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If he’s still the best in the country, what does it matter that he’s 33 or 34? It’s not like he’s 37. In my opinion, he’s got some of his best footy ahead of him.

As for the immediate future I see Quade and James O’Connor as somewhat interchangeable.

Their stories are very similar in terms of where they’ve come from – being in the wilderness to come back to be performing at a high level.

To me they’re the 1 and 1A in terms of the guys who are wearing the number 10 jersey. They play a very similar role – the leader within a team that’s a dominant, confident voice, very similar skill sets, and a mature head in and around the guys.

For now though, I think it’s Quade’s jersey to lose.

You hear Dave Rennie speak so often about how you have to earn the right to wear the jersey, whether it’s at training or performing in games. Based on that, you’d imagine that you’ll see Quade in that 10 jersey and him being given a bit of leeway in terms of his performances to keep it.

‘It’s in their DNA’
Beyond Quade, I was really impressed with us physically, particularly in general play where we really matched up with them in terms of our defence, with our ball carriers, and with our work at the breakdown.

From a set piece of view we struggled to gain parity, and at times we got dominated, but our game management was really good.

I know the Springboks were disappointed with their performance, but they won’t be changing their style – it’s in their DNA.

They didn’t execute very well. I didn’t think that they would be as rusty as they were, and if they can shake off that they will be a very hard team to beat.

They made uncharacteristic errors – a couple of kicks out in the full, some too shallow and you will rarely see Handre Pollard miss that many kicks a goal.

They’re a quality side. And they know if they execute better it can be a different story on Saturday.

The Crowd Says:

2021-09-15T09:26:55+00:00

Leroy14

Roar Rookie


Probably no need for a running flyhalf if you have a sniping halfback in tate McDermott and a strong ball runner at 12

2021-09-15T06:04:22+00:00

CW Moss

Roar Rookie


KP, we wuz robbed!. I think we might have been the holders of the Bledisloe Cup back then?. I’d be careful calling yourself ‘KP’. He wasn’t a very likeable cricketer.

2021-09-15T01:08:42+00:00

jcmasher

Roar Rookie


Fair call sorry mate I didn't read that properly. Yeah they certainly were on top for a while. I still remember listening to some of those tests on the radio at night with Mum and Dad and then reading about all the cheating referees the next day in the paper. Great times.

2021-09-15T00:40:13+00:00

JP

Guest


The key takeaway Peter is QC has not lost the "speed" between the ears :boxing:

2021-09-15T00:37:13+00:00

Beefa

Guest


" When he played for the Rebels, I can’t remember one great performance. " Thanks for telling us you know nothing about Quade, without telling us you know nothing about Quade.

2021-09-15T00:02:37+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


Ignorance is a bliss, aye, woodie??

2021-09-14T22:28:08+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


Well masher, if you're not sure, try looking at the period between 1937 & approx. 1997, where the Bokke were clearly ahead during those years. I'm not referring to the overall stats of for & against, I'm talking about a period of time, when the Bokke had it over our AB's, something no other nation on the planet has ever been able to get anywhere near. What you are talking about, is a hundred year history, & of which I clearly stated, was a period of ' approx. 60 years '. Read it again Bro.!!

2021-09-14T15:27:02+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


Actually Argentina have been kinda dissapointing, I personaly spoke them up but so far they've let me down.. On paper they have a helluva side.. There is surely a good game in them this comp. Surely....I'm holding thumbs cause Im pretty sure I'm correct.

2021-09-14T15:20:22+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


Their is a big difference in the way SA and NZ are playing.. I agree.. Huge.. Totally different philosophies.. Actually barring a few failed experiments when the Boks tried to embrace NZs style in past years, . And you know what happened then, there has always been the 2 approaches…… But… A question for you Will….Would rugby be more interesting if that werent the case?

2021-09-14T15:15:51+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Your best, so far.

2021-09-14T14:39:48+00:00

Darren WA

Roar Rookie


Awesome article Will Genia!!

2021-09-14T13:07:16+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


Territory 69% possession was 62% overall.. the previous stats were in the first half. Apologies

2021-09-14T12:20:29+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


Coker.. Interesting name by the way. Agree to a point. We certainly weren’t perfect.. I noticed Foster wasn’t that excited after the game either. The ABs set piece wasn’t ruthless, far from it! Especially in the line outs, not sure if it’s from the loss of Whitelock or a combination of changes? But that definitely needs addressing before we meet South Africa. We still won 18/20 so it’s hard to be to critical. But we did resort to shortened throws to make it easier. If you look at the stats we shouldn’t complain to much. 91% success rate in tackles 31 defenders beaten to Arg 11 14 clean breaks to Arg 2 8 offloads to Arg 1 71% possession 80% territory We did conceive 11 penalties and 16 turnovers, that’s something to also look at. But overall. We ran 786 meters compared to Argentina’s 204 meters. Five tries to zip! Not a bad day at the office?

2021-09-14T11:40:24+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


What Dave Rennie needed desperately was experience. The back line were struggling, Noah Lolesio clearly wasn’t up to it and it was costing the Wallabies. QC might not have his speed, but he can still step and see areas that can be exploited.. Not to mention his kicking skills. I hope he steps up his role again this week :silly:

2021-09-14T11:35:58+00:00

Mike perry

Guest


It was a managed game from the wallabies perspective. Not so much the springboks...its their style to overrun teams with strength but as you know that style has come undone in the past against the wallabies. Their style allows the wallabies to play the game that suit them. Will be interesting what happens this week.

2021-09-14T11:32:07+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


Let’s not turn this into a racial issue. QC was notorious for cheap and lame shots. In his earlier years. Don’t believe me.. you don’t have to look to hard to find old YouTube videos or articles about it. He deserved some of what he got. Yes it went on far to long… That’s ancient history now. Woodard. I was at a few games, I saw plenty of Tangata whenua giving him heaps too my bro. Anyway!! I’m proud of him, he’s started a new chapter in his career. Hopefully it’s just the beginning of new things to come

2021-09-14T11:30:05+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


So great to get your insights Will. And no you weren’t alone. Quade had to be the one to take that kick. Fantastic for him to have that moment and so good to hear about his growth. What a mentor for the young guys in the team and he played a phenomenal match.

2021-09-14T11:15:41+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Considering the Wallabies had a 12 who was parachuted in last test and a 10 this test surely they have room to grow also

2021-09-14T10:29:00+00:00

Kashmir Pete

Roar Guru


CW And what a brilliant semi France v Oz was (witnessed in person) :stoked: Cheers KP

2021-09-14T09:54:34+00:00

jcmasher

Roar Rookie


Out of 99 games NZ has won 59, Boks have won 36 and 4 draws. Not sure how that comes out as SA having it over the ABs.

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