'I'd put my hand up to play 15 for sure': JOC on Wallabies backline battles and why he struggled on Spring Tour at No.10

By Tony Harper / Editor

James O’Connor says he’s fully fit and would be ready to step in at No.15 if he misses out as Wallabies flyhalf to Quade Cooper in next month’s series against England.

The Queensland Reds flyhalf missed the final weeks of Super Rugby Pacific with a hamstring injury but said he would have been fit had the team gone beyond the quarterfinal loss to the Crusaders.

JOC was one of three No.10s named in Dave Rennie’s 35-man squad along with Cooper and Noah Lolesio. Cooper is considered the favourite to wear the jersey for the first Test in Perth on July 2 but O’Connor’s versatility will likely win him a place on the bench.

Fullback has been a problematic area for the Wallabies. Tom Banks is considered the incumbent, although the injured Kurtley Beale wore No.15 on the Spring Tour, at a time when JOC was in the No. 10 jersey and not, in his own opinion, at his best.

On Thursday O’Connor told reporters he spoke to Rennie about a transition to No.15 last year but it had not been raised this year.

“This year’s been all about playing 10, improving my game there, working on the little things we’ve both discussed and I could benefit from,” said O’Connor.

“It’s just been about 10 but to be fair we haven’t had too much communication. When you’re in Super season it’s eyes on the prize there, now we’re in we’ll see what happens.

“If Dave wanted me to play 15 I’d put my hand up to play 15 for sure. “

O’Connor said the battle for the No.10 jersey was “high competition.

“We each play in our own way and we have our strengths and weaknesses,” he said. “To be fair it’s going to be a good battle and we’ll see what happens in the next few weeks, see where the cards lie.”

O’Connor stepped up in Europe after Cooper missed the end of season matches because of Japan club commitments.

“To be honest it wasn’t my best tour,” O’Connor said.

“I just found it a little difficult to get into the game. Whether that was the way we were playing as a group, also I was probably a step too deep.

“I was probably preparing for conditions that didn’t actually come. It was actually pretty quick over there, we were thinking it was going to be more wet weather footy.”

(Photo by Getty Images)

He said despite his injuries he felt in a better place now.

“Leading into Test matches it is a step up, you want to be prepared, at your physical best, so you can put your stamp on a game. I definitely feel I’m in that place now.

“My weight feels good and I’ve been hitting all the benchmarks I’ve been discussing with the coaches and it’s time to put it out there on the field.

“The goal for me is consistency every week – it’s not like having one huge performance and then dipping down, you want to be like a well-oiled machine when you get on the field so everyone knows you’re going to perform as a group  each time.”

Wallabies squad member Harry Wilson chats about his selection with Brett McKay and Harry Jones on the Roar Rugby Podcast.

Start or finish, O’Connor is likely to come up close with England’s much hyped young No.10 Marcus Smith.

“He’s quick, he’s got good footwork and he and he’s very elusive,” O’Connor said.

“If they can get their fundamentals down pat and get go forward, he can be really dangerous around the fringes.

“If he has [Owen] Farrell outside him that’s a steady head and a great ball player who controls the game very well, and [gives them] good balance across the field.”

O’Connor chatted with Smith after England’s win in November.

“There’s always pressure, it’s just how you deal with it,” he said. “I spoke to Marcus after the game last year and he seemed in a really good mindset and headspace.

“I think he’s coping with it really well. My personal experience – I had ups and downs at that age especially when I was put into that role at 10, leading the team around the field and knowing you’re orchestrating the attack. I wish him well and hope I can do a job on him.”

Smith could be boosted by being away from home and in a tour environment, although, as we saw with England’s Ashes tourists, best laid plans and cohesion can come tumbling down in an instant if the tour starts going pear shaped.

“It’s up to the person. Sometimes when you go away on tour you’re away from home so it can be a little harder,” O’Connor said.

“Other times it brings the group together and there’s a little less pressure on the fact you’re not at home, you’re out of the bubble I guess.”

England were poor during the recent Six Nations, with coach Eddie Jones under pressure again.

But O’Connor doesn’t see it counting for much.

“They’ll be a completely new team. They’ve got a great balance in their squad and I’m sure they’ll come out firing,” he said.

The Crowd Says:

2022-06-18T04:15:15+00:00

Malo

Guest


It’s amazing how much influence and power the 3 Amigos have when they are way past their use by date and should be yesterday’s news.

2022-06-17T20:09:40+00:00

Bentnuc

Roar Pro


I must say I am a massive QC fan. Have been before 2011 even. But... find it strange how he has gone to God-like statis after 4 very good matches in green and gold against SA and ARG a year ago. All at home mind you. Wont include the match v Japan cause he wasnt great in that IMO. Again, I am a huge fan but those 4 matches waere the best he has played in many, many years if not ever. He is currently playing in 2nd division in Japan. If we judged all our 10s on only 4 matches then you could make a case for any of them

2022-06-17T01:18:44+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


DR still mentions JoC as a valid option, and in fact before his injury had him as the likely starter

2022-06-17T01:17:11+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


If you had Petaia and Kellaway as your wingers then 1 could always drop back and assist with the highbombs, i.e hide the F/B. Hard to do if one wing is Koroibete. Mind you QC still drops back fairly often and takes the highball quite well

2022-06-17T01:16:25+00:00

Bobby

Roar Rookie


Tooly I think he's a leader of kids at the Reds the backs would listen to him. Not a leader at Wallaby level methinks.

2022-06-17T01:15:34+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


agree, still a far better option than Beale at 15 though

2022-06-17T00:52:36+00:00

Wigeye

Guest


Bluntly he is not a internasional 1st5 ,neither is Noah, qc won the tests against the boks as he was the general in 1st5 you know what happened after. Poms Will target white, Hooper,oconner and slipper. Need to forget about James at 15 and have your 2 best 15s from SRP stay and own the fullback spot.

2022-06-16T23:57:34+00:00

Dean

Roar Rookie


Grade I, II, or III Ring Rust? Sounds like a bummer of an injury.

2022-06-16T22:02:20+00:00

soapit

Roar Guru


hopefully. steel brush is the next step

2022-06-16T21:53:17+00:00

Tooly

Roar Rookie


Sums it up Bobby . OC is not a match winner at test level. Wonderful leader but .

2022-06-16T21:25:54+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


Wd40 should sort that right out. Use the nozzle rather than the long applicator

2022-06-16T20:57:04+00:00

soapit

Roar Guru


sounds very nasty that

2022-06-16T19:16:28+00:00

Oblosnky’s Other Pun

Guest


Yeah, interesting that there has been no real discussion of JOC vs Quade this year. The debate seems to be settled in the minds of most (at least for now).

2022-06-16T19:15:14+00:00

Oblosnky’s Other Pun

Guest


My understanding was the the was shifted in from fullback to centres in English club rugby because he was too vulnerable under the high ball. He has bulked up and slowed down since then. He might do some good things but just like if we played Beale there he would be targeted with high balls.

2022-06-16T18:26:54+00:00

Bobby

Roar Rookie


James realises that Cooper is far ahead if him at 10 and Noah hovering. His chances of playing 10 at RWC are neglible. The only spot in the team, with the exit of Banks, is 15 . Banks will be picked for England series but then Petaia will get a crack to show his wares. I had always thought JO C would make the perfect bench option but I think form, injury and age may see him may see him out iof the 23 by the time of RWC.

2022-06-16T12:00:15+00:00

Mick

Guest


Agreed. Remember how well JOC defused SA’s box kicking tactics when he first made the wallabies as a winger

2022-06-16T10:51:16+00:00

Tez

Roar Rookie


JOC .... playing 15? With your pop gun kick? Yeah, NAH

2022-06-16T10:48:52+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


I really liked this. He spoke honestly about his form on the EOYT and how he's ready to go. Quade won't play 14 tests this year, we need backup. Whether JOC can start at 15 is questionable but he can fill the backup role on the bench so I like him there. He can play all numbers over 9 so will be the Hodge guy this year

2022-06-16T10:31:48+00:00

Rhys Bosley

Roar Pro


It sounds to me like you are only thinking as far back as last year's EOYT Yim, when JOC admitted that he didn't play well. He is a very composed player, has plenty of experience covering the backfield at 15, 10 and on the wing, and is the best ball player of all our 15 options at a canter. I reckon with the big ball runners in the centres and on the wings, O'Connor would be the perfect playmaking compliment to Cooper at 10.

2022-06-16T10:07:44+00:00

SDRedsFan

Roar Rookie


:laughing:

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