ANALYSIS: So little time to fix so many holes with RWC 2023 rushing at the Wallabies

By Jim Tucker / Expert

The disjointed 32-15 loss to England was a major jolt that reminds us all of how much improvement the Wallabies must find before the 2023 Rugby World Cup.

The Wallabies now have just 20 Tests before they run out against likely pool opponents Georgia in Paris in September, 2023.

That’s a very short time to teach Hunter Paisami how to pass from left-to-right, find a fullback, improve all our hookers by 20 per cent and settle on a blindside flanker.

(Photo by Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)

They are just some of the most obvious points and all were apparent even before skipper Michael Hooper led the team onto Twickenham early on Sunday morning (AEDT).

You can pick apart the Australian performance in myriad ways once we look beyond the bravery, hang-in quality and character that the Wallabies did show.

For two weeks in a row now, the Scots and English have shown us what precision passing and setting up holes for punchy runners looks like in the backs.

We should all be over the idea that the Wallabies have somehow inherited the “running rugby” expertise of glory teams of the past. We show it in fits and starts, at best, and only once in this Twickenham Test when it was already lost.

Inside centre Paisami made two superb low tackles to fell steamroller Manu Tuilagi and made the one decent break for the Australians.

More critical was how dire was his awful, high, left-to-right pass to Kurtley Beale midway through the second half when there was a hint of something on.

Fullback Beale’s days as an exhilarating figure are now behind him. At his best, he was always a metre quicker than the rest of the game because of his anticipation, ambition and timing. At 32, he has dropped back to the same pace as the rest of the game. That’s no knock, just reality.

His bungled right-foot grubber kick in the closing minutes was less about him than the Wallabies’ attacking pattern lacking any cohesion.

Coach Dave Rennie got some real rhythm to the backline when Quade Cooper-Samu Kerevi-Len Ikitau was the axis in The Rugby Championship.

All the best sides keep their patterns when one or two players drop out but the Aussies are not yet at that evolved level. The glimpses of back play were untidy and always under the pressure applied by England.

The English have unearthed a good one in Marcus Smith, the Manila-born flyhalf. He’s only 22 and this was his fourth Test. The feint before the pass that put fullback Freddie Steward over for the first try was excellent and in the face of the defence. It’s not yet something that Australia’s young gun Noah Lolesio has consistently in his arsenal.

This Test performance was a step backwards.

Fans dreamed that twice beating world champions South Africa really had bumped us up to No.3 in the world.

In reality, the Wallabies are still in a band of nations beside the Springboks, England, Ireland and Scotland but chasing the All Blacks and the French. Maybe, that’s too generous considering England, Ireland and Scotland have all had the edge on the men in gold in recent times.

The Wallabies don’t have one big, dominant trait like the Kiwis’ high-tempo attacking skill or South Africa’s physicality to swamp opponents. It’s slick execution to win or it’s nothing. This was a nothing and it was very poor at times, especially with the ill discipline of two careless high tackle yellow cards and 18 penalties conceded.

It’s overdue for the English to change the O2 sponsorship logo on their jerseys. At the very least when they next play the Wallabies it should read 08.

The Wallabies have had more success against the All Blacks in their past eight Tests with a win and a draw than against England (eight straight losses).

Flanker Rob Leota has been a good find but all the blindside flankers tried by the Wallabies this year have to stay in the game more.

When you see the mark that England hooker Jamie George had on the Twickenham Test with his well-timed ball-carries, you have to accept that Australia’s hookers aren’t showing extra dimensions.

So to Wales in Cardiff next Sunday morning (4.15am AEDT).

It’s a match-up of great importance because Australia v Wales in Lyon on September 24, 2023 will again decide how favourable is the Wallabies’ advance to the knockout stages of the tournament.

The Wallabies must win in Cardiff to finish the year on a high. It would mean we could grab onto the positive results of 2021 rather than be stuck with a three-Test losing streak to diminish it.

The Crowd Says:

2021-11-20T01:19:47+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


We have no system is the problem. NZ has a conveyor belt of former players coming through the NPC. That can partly be solved by centralising control of elite rugby so that RA is scouring community rugby across the country looking for potential coaches to step up into Tier 3 coaching teams for NRC, and managing the pathways from there. I am going to speculate here and maybe some can comment. In another sport I have watched the down grading of accreditation and education of coaches. Too much focus on qualifying numbers, maybe for legal and compliance reasons, or maybe just to impress ourselves how well we are doing. Practical tuition to lift quality goes backwards. You can have the appearance of increasing coaching standards whereas you are probably burying potential talent under layers of mediocrity where the aggressively ambitious and politically astute are likely to be more "successful" in gaining appointments.

2021-11-19T02:44:23+00:00

jcmasher

Roar Rookie


I really don't get the love for Skelton. He was lazy and slow when he last played for the Tahs and Wallabies and never lived up to the media hype. Now in two games in a row he's demonstrated that he's still lazy and slow. He's always late to rucks because he doesn't move fast and instead of hitting them low to drive people off he just flops onto them. In two tests he's had about 3 or 4 carries for about 1 meter of ground. There is nothing he has demonstrated that shows me he should be there instead of some hard working players like Matt Phillips.

AUTHOR

2021-11-19T02:14:32+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


Definitely agree that a structure to coach the coaches is as important as one to coach the players. We definitely have suffered with no Marks' successor. It has befuddled me why no system is in place to get Chris Latham into a Super Rugby program because he wants to coach and has background. He's now coaching Souths in Brisbane for 2022. That's a great grounding but eyes need to be on him so he can be advanced in double-quick time

AUTHOR

2021-11-19T02:11:08+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


Wouldn't we all love a super-exciting, steppy fullback to emerge from nowhere and a Dane Coles-style hooker. Then we are cookin'

AUTHOR

2021-11-19T02:09:15+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


Skelton is a role player and very good when he has a sense of timing when the ball is headed his way. A few days in 5 years with a team doesn't give him that. He'll get vastly better. Kurtley has had great days but none of those are now ahead of him

AUTHOR

2021-11-19T02:00:39+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


There are definitely good signs in the pack Harry. Plenty of locks and a strong corps of props. Hooker is a mystery.

AUTHOR

2021-11-19T01:59:35+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


The qualities to stay in the fight are excellent. So team harmony is very strong. It's a sign of a smarter game plan than concede a turnover out wide and a 70m, one-pass try.

2021-11-17T10:14:25+00:00

Rush Gunawardena

Roar Rookie


Mate, I only saw 2wice the ball was handed over to Hunter.. Hunter was one of the best players in the super rugby and if he is no good, very few will be better than him in the backline .. I dnt see any other option rather than still counting on JOC and QC as 10.. Just watch the game again mate, we never attack by working the ball through backline ? how can we make any linebreaks ? We just kept on box kicking just like South Africa , cuz we thought we lack punch hitters.

2021-11-16T09:33:43+00:00


Thought the Wallabies played well considering everything! They were in it right up to Hooper going off and then lost direction. The score was much closer for most of the match and could’ve gone either way. To not have Coops, Hoops, Kerevi & Marika alone is a tough enough ask, let alone Thor and your starting FB not in the team! I can see signs that they keep on fighting regardless. Wallas on the right track indeed

2021-11-16T00:07:57+00:00

Objective Observer

Roar Rookie


GJ - banging you head against the brick wall. There is a view that this Coach is responsible for everything good that happens on the field but nothing else.

2021-11-16T00:01:48+00:00

Objective Observer

Roar Rookie


Thanks captain obvious - we all know that - the post was a commentary on coaching staff.

2021-11-15T23:10:37+00:00

Wobbly Knees

Roar Rookie


Throwing rose petals as he went by

2021-11-15T23:09:44+00:00

Wobbly Knees

Roar Rookie


If that’s the case why didn’t he bring any of that form with him.Whether he comes on for 20 mins or starts he should be at full speed to play but he’s not and if he started he wouldn’t last the distance either. I’m not convinced as are many others ,I stand by comment.

2021-11-15T22:43:19+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


You blokes may be right but was 16 minutes on the weekend where a primary ball carrier wasn’t passed the ball evidence that he couldn’t contribute? I’d start him this weekend so we can actually find out.

2021-11-15T14:34:32+00:00

Stu

Roar Rookie


Pity Skelton can’t be turned into a hooker - he, Tupou and Bell would shove just about any opposing front row back metres on their own.. Skelton’s got seemingly more brute power than anyone in world rugby.. what a criminal waste he’s seemingly ineffective as a test lock.

2021-11-15T11:45:27+00:00

gooch

Roar Rookie


Kerevi doesn't need to pass.

2021-11-15T11:34:31+00:00

gooch

Roar Rookie


They need to find a way for Perese to start. Paisami lacks basic skills in so many areas. He's nowhere near test quality.

2021-11-15T11:32:37+00:00

gooch

Roar Rookie


"Guys like Kellaway by contrast, who don’t have anywhere near that raw athleticism, have shown that minimising mistakes is the biggest asset to bring to Test rugby." So true, especially for the WBs

2021-11-15T09:25:25+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Australia is sitting well. My counter view is posted: https://www.theroar.com.au/2021/11/15/the-2023-rugby-world-cup-preliminaries-just-began/ Proper pack, and a very good backline can be selected. Depth isn’t awesome, so even these losses can help.

2021-11-15T05:34:21+00:00

Handles

Roar Guru


There are hundreds of players across the last 25 years who dominated at provincial level but failed at international level. In Skelton's case, the pace and skill level of the international game negate the size and strength advantage that he brings to provincial.

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