Rugby News: DC's bold Latu prediction, 'character flaw' exposed by Foz critics, RA Razor warning

By The Roar / Editor

Controversial Wallabies hooker Tolu Latu has completed his move to the Waratahs while the club is farewelling young hooker Tom Horton to the UK.

Fox Sports’ Christy Doran reported late Sunday that Horton, 25, was heading to English champions Leicester on a short-term deal with NSW coach Darren Coleman opting for Latu and Mahe Vailanu to understudy new Wallabies first choice Dave Porecki.

Latu, who has signed a one year deal with an eye to the 2023 World Cup, is an intriguing signing for a coach who has made a big deal out of forging a strong culture after the miserable season in 2021 and Coleman nodded to that when the Tahs announced the deal on Monday.

“We’ve all seen when he’s on point there are not many more damaging hookers in world rugby,” Coleman said. 

“I’ve coached Tolu twice before in NRC and he was always a positive team member. 

“We will be working hard to iron out some of his weaknesses and I believe he’ll not only get swept up in our positive team culture but add to it over time.

“He’s a proud Waratah champion who is very motivated to play a part in getting the organisation back to its winning ways.”

Latu said: “I’m so excited to be going back to where it all started for me,” Latu said.

“Sydney is, and always will be my home, and I’m so fortunate to be given the opportunity to represent the Waratahs once again. 

“I can’t wait to get started.”

Latu’s last act on the field saw him with an 11-week suspension after a red card in the Heineken Champions Cup, and was accused of having a drinking problem by his club owner, continuing his long running issues with ill-discipline.

Latu was sent off in the second half of Stade Francais’ match against Racing 92 after dangerously clattering into Baptiste Chouzenoux in the air.

Tolu Latu’s back. (Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

The ban came three months after he was banned for a game for abusing referee Wayne Barnes.

Latu was picked by Dave Rennie for the final match of the Wallabies Spring Tour late last year, and the Wallabies coach acknowledged the former Waratahs player had had a “chequered career”.

He was stood down by the Tahs over a drink driving charge in 2019 when police found him motionless behind the wheel of his car while stopped at a set of traffic lights on Cleveland Street in Sydney in the early hours of the morning.

He has also struggled with on-field discipline and was suspended for six weeks during the 2018 Super Rugby campaign – the same year he was sin binned against the All Blacks for pushing Codie Taylor in the face.

Stade Francais owner Hans-Peter Wild, angered by the red card offence, told L’Equipe that Latu was struggling with alcohol issues.

“We talk about discipline and Latu is still sent off against Racing,” he said.

“Latu is a problem… mostly an extra-sporting problem with alcohol. You have to admit it, otherwise you will never solve the problem.

“Latu spends more time off the field than on it and, with regard to young people, it is not a good example.

“He has to heal himself, reorganise his life. We can help him, but as with any addiction, Latu is like an elephant in your living room. To solve the problem, you have to take out the elephant and not take out the objects that break.”

‘Deep flaw of character’

Former Waratahs and Scotland coach Matt Williams has gone to town on Kiwi rubgy fans and media for their treatment of under fire coach Ian Foster.

Williams, writing in the Irish Times, said “not for the first time, the reaction to defeat by the New Zealand media and their wider rugby community has exposed a deep flaw of character.

“The treatment of Foster by his own community has been nothing short of shameful. As a coach criticism comes with the badge but the personal vilification he has had to endure is simply not acceptable. Hansen also said the relationship between the New Zealand players and New Zealand Rugby is at an all-time low.

“After trampling all over Super Rugby, then alienating every national union in the south and possibly forcing the Springboks north, is it any wonder New Zealand Rugby and its team find themselves isolated and boxed into a corner created by their own self-serving actions?”

Aussie should lead Wallabies next: Cully

Rugby Australia have been warned to tread carefully if they’re considering a move for Crusaders coach Scott Robertson.

Razor raised some hackles this week when he made it clear he was ready to coach an international team and it didn’t matter if it was an All Blacks rival.

Paul Cully, the chief rugby writer for Stuff, had words of warning on Robertson.

“The temptation here for Rugby Australia is obvious. The Wallabies may need a new coach after the Rugby World Cup, and the surf-loving Robertson wants a job,” he wrote.

“It’s easy to see him kicking back at Manly, with RA taunting their New Zealand opposites about the world-class coach they let slip through their fingers.

“But, caution is required.”

Crusaders head coach Scott Robertson. (Photo by Peter Meecham/Getty Images)

He said part of the reason was the step up from Super Rugby to the Test arena, but more so the need to have an Australian in the job after Dave Rennie’s tenure.

“There is an undeniable appeal of having an Australian voice at the Wallabies – if they are good enough – and this was reinforced by Eddie Jones’ recent time in Australia with England,” wrote Cully.

“Some of what Jones says can be left to go through to the keeper, but I thought his thoughts on rugby’s diminished stature in Australia were accurate – bordering on poignant. Even though he is on the RFU’s payroll, he clearly did his best to elevate the Wallabies-England series with his media appearances. No wonder the ‘traitor’ slur provoked such a response. The bloke had been out there batting for Australian rugby for the previous three weeks.

“It was a reminder of the value of a uniquely Australian voice and perspective.”

He concluded: “Don’t get me wrong about Robertson. His Midas touch with rugby players is likely to be transferable. As a player it is well documented that he spent time in France, and before his career really kicked off he enjoyed a spell in Northern Ireland. To this day he can pick an Ulster accent – it’s a great ice-breaker and shows the level of emotional intelligence. He knows how to connect to people.

“But, if you were to ask me what the Wallabies need post-Rennie, I would say that a sense of Australian-ness is important. Rennie’s replacement is already in the country.”

The Crowd Says:

2022-08-03T02:05:58+00:00

Paul D

Roar Rookie


On his day he's world class. If DC can get him operating at his peak while in a good head space he is indeed at that level

2022-08-03T01:56:29+00:00

Markus

Roar Rookie


World class is a stretch. Sure he was one of the best Aus players in the 2019 RWC, but that is more due to how awful the rest of the team was. Like when Dave Dennis was the Waratahs best in 2012 because he was the only one that bothered showing up each week.

2022-08-02T10:14:50+00:00

adam smith

Roar Rookie


Yup, shameful on NZRFU’s behalf.

2022-08-02T07:19:46+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Let's hope the added pressure will bring the results from DR and the coaching team around him.

2022-08-01T23:18:33+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


There are lots of things W could stand for DA if mentioning Wallabies :laughing:

2022-08-01T14:57:20+00:00

adam smith

Roar Rookie


No worries Faith, happy to be of service! There is a “snippet” of an interview with Kobe on YouTube where he tells this story. And yup, Steph is my second favourite player after “The Big Fundamental” Tim Duncan. Coincidentally, when interviewed after their most recent title, Steve Kerr (who won a title with Tim at the Spurs) & Steph sited Tim as a major influence on the Warriors outlook, ethos & squad dynamics.

2022-08-01T14:50:17+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


I hope you're wrong about this but it is beginning to look like you are not. We'll have enough data to be sure by the end of this year

2022-08-01T13:29:15+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


I would welcome Razor Robinson to wallabies job. That man knows winning.

2022-08-01T13:26:42+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


We don’t appear to have a winning edge under Rennie. We still lose 50% of matches right now. A win rate of 65-70% is what we need heading to a World Cup. We are building experience together as a team and I hope I’m proved wrong. It’s tough.

2022-08-01T13:24:01+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


Latu is a terrific rugby player but he also is a man who needs some help off the field. I really hope/believe he will get it with DC at the Tahs.

2022-08-01T12:49:42+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Coaches loosing and going into the last season of meaningful Test matches before the RWC are always going to be under pressure. This is not unique to Rugby, roar or Australia for obvious reasons. It has been proven across professional sports around the world that the coach is the key element to a teams success. This was learnt back in the 2000s with the Olympics and the outstanding success from the creation of the AIS....hence every other nation has copied it and bought all our coaches particularly our swimming and cycling coaches....cough England, cough. It is not a coincidence that great coaches have talented players and bad coaches have ordinary players.....

2022-08-01T12:38:08+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


To add to the terrible performances is that we seem to only be able to beat SA (Kerevi factor) and Japan. The Northern Teams have completely dominated us and we have literally only beaten the France B team and an experimental Wales team. What was DR coaching record in the northern hemisphere like?

2022-08-01T12:32:31+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


I think both sides of the ditch are rightfully questioning the coaches. Wallabies win record is poor by any countries standard and the ABs at 50% is a dramatic fall. We are both at that point of change or stick with our coaches so close to a RWC. Both coaches have had the time and players to get the results so rightfully deserve the questions being asked of them. They could turn it around but it is now or never for them. My concern for the Wallabies is our record against the northern teams. We have only beaten B teams of Wales and France and we struggled to beat them. NZ is atleast challenging their first pick teams still.....

2022-08-01T12:07:36+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Professional coaches have to win, that is the reality. DR has a healthier talent pool then we have had in Oz for a long time plus the overseas players he has been able to bring in. Like we literally had coaches with a better win record even when the Wallabies scrum was a guarantee 3 points and a yellow card...DR needs to adapt to Test Rugby. This is his problem.

2022-08-01T11:28:15+00:00

Rolando

Roar Rookie


They did and they still have him. Not one Roarer has argued how another coach would be certain to be better. Instead they just point to winning percentage as if that proved there must be a coach out there sure to do better..... with the current average playing group. Clutching at staws.

2022-08-01T11:02:20+00:00

James584

Roar Rookie


Robertson surfing at Manly? No, he must move to Bondi and go on the dole. It’s tradition. :stoked:

2022-08-01T10:58:05+00:00

James584

Roar Rookie


No Tim, Rennie is not, on any relevant measure, doing a ‘great job’. He gets a grudging pass, but there are not many chances left for him. It’s sink or swim at the RWC, for his career. And now we have Kiwi Cully giving Australia advice on who we should have as coach. Thanks, but no thanks. If he truely believes in “the value of a uniquely Australian voice and perspectives (WTF?)”, he would shut up, and let us decide. Robertson would be hard to beat as a candidate. And to steal his availability from the All Blacks would carry all sorts of mental 7u@kery. :stoked:

2022-08-01T09:26:39+00:00

Rolando

Roar Rookie


Yes. Your sentence beginning with “the gate sharing demands…..” is on point though don’t you think?

2022-08-01T09:23:51+00:00

Rolando

Roar Rookie


Agree Tim, WB’s supporters are turncoats like in NZ and everywhere when we don’t maintain our ‘deserved position’ of no.3 in world rankings. As long as you follow rugby in Australia only one coach has ever been lauded: McQueen. ( Spoiler alert: he had a playing group equal to or more talented than any other Rugby nation). Dwyer gets a special mention. The rest, including Jones and Connolly and Deans and McKenzie and Chieka just get bagged on the Roar. Aussie or not. Reason? When a team goes brilliantly well ( let’s compare to NZ during last two decades) it’s because every single input is going well: coach, assistant coaches, a happy coincidence of a fantastic playing group, admin in sync with coach and players AND MOST IMPORTANTLY OF ALL, the same synthesis of positives isn’t happening with rivals at that time. Any one of those factors that changes for the better or worse…and the team rises or drops in ranking. For example, a team that had McGaw and Carter and Read and Whitelock and Retallic and… was always going to go well even had they had a different NZ coach.( A mention to Wayne Smith’s influence though…) I personally think the coach is less of a determinant than the playing group. Rennie has been great for Aus rugby. The team are with him. Given France’s fantastic current era and Ireland’s because all inputs mentioned above are really great, it’s natural that Aus and NZ) get overtaken for a while. In other words it’s FA to do with Rennie being less than a really good coach even though there may be some who are a little better.

2022-08-01T08:58:02+00:00

Double Agent

Guest


I always thought WWW stood for "Wallabies Woz Wobbed"!!! :shocked:

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