The Roar
The Roar

Advertisement

ANALYSIS: Kellaway, Kerevi, Koroibete and Cadeyrn - four big ticks in Wallabies' triumph

2nd July, 2022
Advertisement
Autoplay in... 6 (Cancel)
Up Next No more videos! Playlist is empty -
Replay
Cancel
Next
Expert
2nd July, 2022
306
7648 Reads

I’m watching a series on Stan right now called A Million Little Things and that was the power to the Wallabies’ astonishing win over England in Perth.

It wasn’t one play that ended the Eddie Jones’ hoodoo but a whole lot of little things when the Test could have gone pear-shaped many times.

When you watch a Test, you want to see an ensemble cast in gold all contributing at various moments and that’s pretty much what the Wallabies needed to win 30-28.

INSTANT REACTION: The Roar experts Brett McKay, Harry Jones and Jim Tucker dissect a famous victory for Australia in a special edition of the podcast

The Petaia try was a beauty but never forget it was ignited by Marika Koroibete leaping to grab the kick-off.

England led 14-9 at the hour mark at that point and the tourists could easily have surged to win by 15 rather than it emphatically being the other way around.

Advertisement

Classy Andrew Kellaway’s straightening little run and pass to put Petaia over.

Skipper Michael Hooper winning a clutch turnover in desperate defence. Samu Kerevi’s appetite to truck the ball up direct and strong all night. Late inclusion Noah Lolesio saving his best for the final 20 minutes.

Flanker Rob Leota and his mullet making big ball-carries before half-time. Folau Fainga’a making a jolting tackle on his tryline. That try-saving Koroibete tackle. Hooker Dave Porecki nailing lineout throws without fuss. The list goes on.

England won the physical battle early but the Wallabies roared back and weren’t going to be bullied. This is the character that fans want the Wallabies to stand for.

You could pick out a few different heroes. I’ll settle for Kellaway, Kerevi and Koroibete and Cadeyrn.

Andrew Kellaway thought Test footy had passed him by. He’s been a revelation.

Andrew Kellaway

Andrew Kellaway (Photo by Getty Images)

Advertisement

He was at it again in Perth. He was taking high balls and those first valuable strides forward so his cavalry could arrive to support him. He’s a very good footballer.

This in the fullback role when it was thrust upon him by Tom Banks’ ugly broken arm.

The difference made to the team’s performance by revising the rules to allow Kerevi and Koroibete to come in from their Japanese clubs is huge. Adapting those rules was smart and essential.

This was a major step up for lock Cadeyrn Neville and he performed admirably at the most intense level for the full 80 minutes. Big credit.

He made the wider training squads of previous Wallabies coaches Robbie Deans, Ewen McKenzie and Michael Cheika but never scored a Test. No hidden story here. He wasn’t good enough. Lacking aggression, body height, inconsistency and skills needing polish .. all were valid crosses against his name in the past. He’s worked, improved, performed for the Brumbies and totally validated his call-up.

Turning point Tests are a thing. Coaches are not just selling real change to their players. Every diehard and peripheral fan needs to be convinced of real progress for the Wallabies because mirages have been so regular.

What unfolded at Perth’s Optus Stadium on Saturday night has given Australian rugby a seismic jolt of good vibrations.

Advertisement

Sure, it’s not beating the All Blacks but toppling England and Eddie Jones when the odds are so against you is pretty damn close.

It’s hard to devise a script with more shades of potential disaster than what was thrown at the Wallabies.

OK. You’re going to lose your playmaker (Quade Cooper) in the warm-ups. Your fullback (Banks) will break his arm just past the 20-minute mark. You’ll be down your front-row rock at tighthead (Allan Alaalatoa) with a head knock. Your top lineout target (Darcy Swain) will be sent-off for a dumb head butt.

Darcy Swain of the Wallabies receives a red card during game one of the international test match series between the Australian Wallabies and England at Optus Stadium on July 02, 2022 in Perth, Australia. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Darcy Swain of the Wallabies receives a red card. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

And you’ll have to play with 14 men for more than half the game.

Not since the Wallabies went down to 13 men against Wales at the 2015 Rugby World Cup have they found a way to win like they did in Perth.

Yep. The ill discipline has to be corrected and Cooper is needed to add more dimensions to the attack but this is a high to start a long Test season.

Advertisement

See, I went a whole story without saying it’s a great stepping stone to next year’s Rugby World Cup in France.

Forget the World Cup. This is a series, a hardcore battle, in its own right, not a warm-up.

Best of all, we do it all again at Suncorp Stadium on Saturday night. Can’t wait to see more wow from Henry Arundell. What a try touch to launch an England career.

close