Where have all our flyhalves gone? The lost generation and why Bernard Foley can successfully fill the void

By Jim Tucker / Expert

Nothing puts the microscope on a country’s rugby systems quite like a dire Test loss and the recall of a veteran flyhalf from left field.

In a blink, we are debating the haphazard production line of No.10s in this country and how the Wallabies are going to step up against the physical might of South Africa in Adelaide on Saturday night.

Second answer first. The Springboks are bringing to Adelaide what they have for every decade they have played the game.

Even hit-and-hope South African sides are very dangerous. This one has the brutally sharpened method of world champions which is the formidable force confronting the Wallabies this weekend.

The Wallabies tamed the Boks on two occasions last season with playmaker Quade Cooper and Samu Kerevi at the core. The victories on the Gold Coast (28-26) and at Brisbane’s Suncorp Stadium (30-17) were both of the highest order.

The Wallabies were clever and organised, put down a game plan and constructed some fine tries on top of the physicality they had to bring. That in a nutshell is why Bernard Foley has been recalled for the Rugby Championship.

There will be plenty in Australia hyperventilating over a single number…32.

Few bothered to even mention that Ireland’s Jonny Sexton turned 37 during his country’s epic takedown of the All Blacks just last month in New Zealand.

Or that there was a cameo role for Springbok Morne Steyn at 37 when he potted those late penalty goals to sink the British and Irish Lions last year.

If age is irrelevant to any position in rugby it’s probably at prop and flyhalf more than anywhere.

What you can’t do at No.10 is rush 200-plus games of top-level experience, composure and game management into a young No.10 in a few weeks.

Foley was out of form rather than suddenly without his skills at the 2019 Rugby World Cup. The seasons since in Japan may have freshened his body, mind and fire for this recall as they did Cooper.

Foley has more than 200 games of rugby behind him at Test, Super Rugby and Japanese professional level.

Bernard Foley. (Photo by Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

It is this volume of games that is most missing from the education of Australia’s younger flyhalves.

Noah Lolesio is learning. He has plenty still to do but has definitely crammed a good deal of education into his 22-year-old head. His 12 Tests and frontline Super Rugby role since his Brumbies debut in the opening round of 2020 has been the best education possible under Australia’s current rugby structure.

Not the best structure but the current structure.

Over that period, there have been no midweek Wallabies tour games and no provincial games against touring teams, both wonderful learning arenas in amateur rugby and, spasmodically, in the professional era.

Until this season, there was no chance to play Australia A games, a revived tier of value for three games in Fiji and, now, Japan later in the year.

There has been no National Rugby Championship over that 2020-22 period which has stripped out eight or so games a season of learning and game practice for a young No.10. The valuable NRC was to be a casualty of economics and Sydney-centric apathy even before COVID killed it.

There have been no young No.10s sent off-shore to learn in NZ a la backrower Angus Scott-Young using his own nous to head to New Zealand’s NPC last year.

Even our best schoolboy No.10s have their GPS schools in Sydney and Brisbane restricting them to school games only, devoid of club involvement, so they don’t risk an injury. We won’t even mention not playing when it’s too wet because a precious field might be scarred.

Our young No.10s don’t play enough games to advance as quickly as impatient armchair judges demand.

There is still a mindset within Australian rugby fans who imagine you can be a readymade Test No.10 at 21 like Mark Ella or Michael Lynagh.

You hear constantly that Ella played only 25 Tests. He played more than 60 times for the Wallabies when you include tour games. There’s the education right there that modern Australian flyhalves miss when they desperately need it.

That’s why it was heartening to see NSW Waratahs No.10 Tane Edmed shift from his Australia A exposure back to his club Eastwood last weekend. And dominate in the 32-26 win over Manly in the Shute Shield finals. Every extra game you play with knockout match repercussions is valuable.

There is a void in Australian rugby. You have Foley, 32, Cooper, 34, Toomua, 32, James O’Connor, 32, and even fill-in No.10 Kurtley Beale, 33, at one end of the flyhalf order. They are a group with overseas club experience as well as Test experience.

At the other end you have, Carter Gordon, 21, Lolesio, 21, Reesjan Pasitoa, 20, Edmed, 22, Ben Donaldson, 23, Will Harrison, 23, and Lawson Creighton, 24.

What has happened to the generation in between which should have produced a viable Wallaby No.10 option for this week?

At his best, a Jack Debreczeni hinted he might be capable but there were too many other days. Others like Jake McIntyre, Andrew Deegan, Jack McGregor and Nick Jooste have had the launchpad of Australian Under-20s or Australian Schoolboys but Super Rugby has proved their level. So to Duncan Paia’aua, who coach Dave Rennie had a quick look at in camp only.

Hamish Stewart, 24, has proved himself more of an inside centre than No.10, the position he first filled for the Reds in 2017. He has 72 games for Queensland behind him and is now in Western Force colours to play No.10 in 2023.

He tackles like a demon, communicates well, has distance in his right boot when he backs it and is a good reliable passer of the football without silky extras.

Mack Mason is still just 26. He piloted the Junior Wallabies to an upset win over New Zealand Under-20s in 2016. Both the Queensland Reds and NSW Waratahs just couldn’t back him for a big chunk of games. He’s playing nicely in Major League Rugby in the US with the regular game time he never had at home to succeed, fail with learnings and become more composed.

Queenslander Isaac Lucas is still only 23. He headed off shore to Japan to set himself up financially. He has had regular game time at flyhalf for the past few seasons with the Ricoh Black Rams.

He was given a season of grooming at No.10 in the NRC for the now-defunct Brisbane City. Japan has become his classroom. He will return to Australia and make a mark. He has the speed, footwork and developing game awareness to do so.

Playing more rugby is a major part of the solution to Australian rugby’s confusion at No.10 at all levels. The tricky answer is where do you get those minutes because the opportunities almost don’t exist on home soil.

Foley spoke of that value this week: “Time in the saddle to master the craft and steer teams around.”

Cooper’s skill against South Africa last season wasn’t slaying them with his own sword. He lifted the players around him and radiated a calmness so everything could hum better. The same will be asked of Foley.

The Crowd Says:

2022-08-26T04:29:44+00:00

Honest Max

Roar Rookie


I don’t really care what a private school does with its resources - I care what the union itself goes, which at the moment is very little. The unions leave much of the development work to the schools and they have different priorities.

2022-08-26T01:59:55+00:00

Pickett

Roar Rookie


Is this just an Aus problem? Aren't NZ having issues deciding between Mounga and BBBBB? Who is after these 2? In SA, isn't there a massive gulf between Pollard and the next? Why is 68y.o. Morne Steyn still recalled? Where are the playmakers in all sports? Why is 76y.o. Tom Brady still dominating in the NFL? Why are the big 3 in tennis still the big old 3? The NRL used to be a conveyor belt of champion halfbacks and 5/8's. Virtually bare now. Is it computer games? Is it helicopter parents? Kids learnt timing, space, hand-eye coordination while playing backyard footy with older brothers, neigbours and friends while getting grazed and blood knees and even the occasional broken bone doing so. It was a badge of honour. Pretty rare phenomenon these days.

2022-08-25T05:25:10+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


And that, Johnsy, may be one of the reasons this article was written.

2022-08-24T11:36:16+00:00

Harty

Roar Rookie


Yeah well he’s young and can be forgiven for a little hypocrisy. ???? I actually went to Churchie myself but before we joined the import/scholarship game. We’re all happy for the short term gain. The sugar hit of a premiership. Yet we both agree it’s doing very little for the growth of rugby in Australia.

2022-08-24T09:05:53+00:00

Banjo Kelly

Roar Rookie


Yeah, the playmaker is only to blame when you lose and your pack dominates. I honestly thought Jordan P and Tom Wright had more to worry about than JOC, after last week’s loss.

2022-08-24T01:28:22+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


OO, I doubt that ALL are okay with nothing being done. It’s at least seven years for me, alone, here and anywhere with an ear. It is criminal that we expect so much silk purse from a coach that we give pig’s ears to, every year.

2022-08-24T01:19:19+00:00

Objective Observer

Roar Rookie


I was content with Foley, he was the best option but I do have some close friends (from NSW) that were not supporters and I understand that. I have the same view about White at 9 - “adequate”. But why are we all OK with RA doing nothing for so long?

2022-08-24T01:12:40+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


“ I’m” very “clear on whether it was a lack of elite talent or development” We had one green shoot of flawed eliteness, and we bottled it. And then failed to develop any plantation timber to sustain us. If we had attempted to grow such seedlings we may well have gone logically where Rennie went – back to the evergreen Q-tree.

2022-08-24T01:06:55+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Foley in a 10 shirt was adequate, but adequacy is not want 10 shirts are tailored for. I will argue that the writing was on the wall in 2015. Cheika took a Super level 10 to a World Cup. He had some strong games, but such was his ceiling, his limitations limited the team also. We have not had an incumbent playmaker since Larkham.

2022-08-23T23:46:58+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


A friend of my wife had his boys at Churchie just before Kalyn Ponga was there. He loves his old school and Rugby. He was totally OK with Ponga being brought in on a scholarship and having already been on contract to the Broncos - then Cowboys, wasn’t able to play schoolboys rep rugby. Ponga actually played in the Australian schoolboys League team in year 12 at Churchie. However, when I mentioned to him over drinks that Rugby needs to look at recruiting Ponga (before the recent toilet episode) and Joseph Sua’ali’i as potential 10 & 15 Wallabies, he trotted out the lines like “we need to develop our own / we need to improve grass roots and pathways/ we need to promote SR players/ we don’t need mungos” We still joke about it but he also appreciates his own hypocrisy.

2022-08-23T23:25:05+00:00

Harty

Roar Rookie


Both Cheika and Thorn appear to be incredibly dogmatic individuals who had a my way or the highway approach. Structure is great but it needs flexibility and adaptability built in it. Rigid structures create consistently mediocre performance until they break under pressure.

2022-08-23T23:19:50+00:00

Harty

Roar Rookie


True but it won’t happen because short term thinking dominates the agenda. “Yes that’s all well and good but we need results now…”

2022-08-23T23:07:16+00:00

Harty

Roar Rookie


Not the same people Don. It’s not a matter of hypocrisy. It is short term thinking that makes many shake their heads.

2022-08-23T22:33:13+00:00

Mike Dickson

Guest


Some very good points but like Australia as a rugby nation stuck in some Victorian era was the Greater Public Schools are where the best and brightest are developed. Odd how inherited wealth determines capability. Imagine if rugby was a sport for all (it professes to be), and all kids played in one unified system. Australia would then have a pathway for the future.

2022-08-23T21:39:22+00:00

Objective Observer

Roar Rookie


I use 2019 as the time because, up to that point Foley had been adequate and that was when the changes started at RA. I am pointing the finger at RA. They are killing rugby in Aus and this will become very obvious over the next 6 weeks.

2022-08-23T21:23:58+00:00

Harty

Roar Rookie


I believe it is both open to all kids in the local area and selective for academic and sports.

2022-08-23T21:14:42+00:00

Harty

Roar Rookie


Well even more concerning is that many of these young players brought in to try and win a gps premiership are actually rugby league players. So we’re pumping development into players who have no intention of playing union to accommodate the vanity of schools. I was at a TSS rugby lunch recently where they proudly announced that their captain has signed with South Sydney Rabbitohs for next year… this is not a good thing for rugby.

2022-08-23T19:50:37+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Damn spellchuck!

2022-08-23T17:10:37+00:00

Mo

Guest


Mate if Tom banks is getting 2 mill in Japan why’d you stay? Havilli was a better 15. Hardwick would add value in Europe to any team and no one really cares about him here except us force guys

2022-08-23T11:16:43+00:00

Jack

Guest


Too much expectation on the 10s to be the “play makers” instead a backline that is better the sum of its parts. Larkham was a special 10. Give Simone a shot at 12. He’s shown a special skill bringing young 10s into top level Rugby. Noah and the young Tahs can play understated games as they learn if there is a player like Horan, Keffer and Mauger helping run the show. All the 10s who’ve played inside Simone have been better than without him.

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