AUS vs SA studs and duds: Coach or cattle behind Wallabies' troubling 'psyche' flaw, and what's up with Giteau Law pick?

By Tony Harper / Editor

Three times the Wallabies have won opening Test matches against their rivals this year, and three times they’ve been well beaten the next time out by the same opponent.

Wallabies coach Dave Rennie complained his team “didn’t fire a shot” as they were humbled on home turf by a South African team playing with an intent and fire that Rennie’s men couldn’t match.

“We’ve got to be better. We’ve got to win those key contests and and we were well short in that area tonight,” said Rennie.

“There are key areas where we’ve got to be better. And the tempo we needed to play at against South Africa, which we did well last week we couldn’t emulate it tonight and it’s disappointing.”

So, is this inability to find consistent success a Rennie problem, or does he really not have the cattle, as his apologists suggest?

Rennie was in a prickly mood before the game, even coming off a fine win in Adelaide, and this surrender at the new home for rugby in Sydney will have soured it even further.

He went for a 6-2 bench split for the second time in his Wallabies tenure – and second time in two weeks – and it blew up in his face with Noah Lolesio and Hunter Paisami forced off and now in doubt for the first Bledisloe Cup match on September 15 in Melbourne. The game ended with Nic White out on the wing, and a hot mess in midfield.

Perhaps those who’s stock rose the highest, on a night where you really had to strain your eyes to find a positive performance in a gold jersey, were Bernard Foley and Kurtley Beale, who have been in training with the squad. What’s that about cattle again?

‘Man of the match, five stars’

The studs were all wearing green jerseys on Saturday night. Damian Willemse won the man of the match award, but that probably should have gone to Siya Kolisi, who led superbly.

“When you have a forward performance like that, you can’t give [MOTM] to a back,” said Jim Tucker on The Roar’s Instant Reaction podcast.

“Just when Australia were getting a sniff, he’d grab a lovely pilfer, or just when it looked too wet to do anything with the hands, he did a beautiful little pop ball to one of his attackers. Kolisi was outstanding. You need a leader to lead out of that disaster from Adelaide, so Kolisi, my man of the match, five stars.”

Harry Jones agreed with Tucker’s assessment but was also impressed by Willemse’s performance at No.10, standing for injured Handre Pollard. Willemse has been hampered by his versatility at times but was excellent on Saturday.

“He’s always had the knock of being the super athlete, great hands, multiple sports, tops in Cape Town. But what was his actual position?” said Jones.

“He had the unfortunate position of being so good at 12 and 15 at the Stormers that he played there to accommodate someone else. He finally he got thrown in the mix and look at him. He was composed.”

Jacques Nienaber, the South African coach, took a gamble with eight changes after the defeat in Adelaide and will keep tinkering through to next year’s World Cup. On Saturday he unveiled a bright new thing in the form of winger Canan Moodie, whose impact reminded Tucker of another tourist earlier this year.

“I really love seeing a new player come through and Canan Moodie, his expertise, grabbing that high ball on the fly and scoring a try was outstanding,” said Tucker.

Canan Moodie of the Springboks makes a break to score a try. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

“This season Australians have seen Henry Arundell from England leave an absolute mark in Perth and now Canan Moodie  We’re seeing players who will come through at the World Cup next year who are absolute gems. I want to see an Australian doing the same thing.”

Brett McKay summed up Australia’s issue in trying to find a beacon of light on a night of gloom.

“Tom Wright was really good under the high ball – and he hasn’t necessarily had a good time of it and particularly the second game in Argentina when he was playing fullback,” said McKay.

“He probably redeemed himself, and I’ve got to give Allan Alaalatoa a shout for playing 80 minutes and he actually got better as the game went on. He was having a little bit of impact in his carries, his defence was strong but [good performances] were few and far between from a Wallabies front.”

‘Blotted out completely’

The Wallabies were a bear market, no doubt, and the cause of their wild fluctuations is open to debate.

For Tucker the issue is “the overall Wallaby psyche where they need an absolute rocket to get up to win games.

“And just their ability to fluff their lines. This is the opening of a new stadium. The whole of Sydney wants to get behind the Wallabies and what do they give them? Absolutely nothing.

“So the Wallabies have beaten England, Argentina and now the Boks in their first game. And a week later lost to the same team. There’s no consistency and you can’t hope to get that wonderful wave [of support] behind you if you don’t win consistent matches.”

“The Wallabies weren’t able to play any meaningful football and that involves two sides. The Boks blotted them out completely. Then we got into this ridiculous thing in the second half where, okay, we’ve got to play territory so we kick it away. Oh, we don’t have any ball at all. That all comes back to how South African played.”

Rennie lamented the kicking games of Nic White and Reece Hodge after the match, suggesting they hadn’t executed his plans well enough.

Eben Etzebeth of the Springboks and Allan Alaalatoa of the Wallabies scuffle. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

But he sent out a team against one he must have known was seething after the events of Adelaide and they were limp in response.

“Wonderful stadium, fireworks. good looking crowd. The food is amazing and very expensive,” said Jones. “The crowd was so hyped up and then it was 20 minutes of nothing. Just nothing.”

Jones said Rory Arnold’s performance summed up the Australians issues.

“Rory Arnold is one of the three that is selected under the Giteau Law so you really have to do a little bit plus. You have to be even better to justify one of those,” said Jones.

“He missed some tackles where he was reaching a lot on those tackles. There was no commitment factor for me.

“A lot of the collisions were really unbelievable. You need the biggest guy in your team, the six foot 10 guy, on that sort of night to say ‘okay, guys, we’re gonna them around and repel them.”

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

It was a tough night for the Giteau Law picks as Marika Koroibete followed up his stunning MOTM effort in Adelaide with a big downgrade.

He was suffering a cork that left him hobbling, but was embarrassed for Moodie’s try and then suffered the indignity of having Makazola Mapimpi score through him to seal the game.

McKay was also critical of the Australian loose forwards.

“I think the back row connection was really off,” he said. “There just wasn’t any. It didn’t really seem like McReight and Valetini and Holloway were playing in unison like we’ve seen in recent weeks anyway.”

Who were your studs and duds from Saturday’s Test?

The Crowd Says:

2022-09-05T15:07:46+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


It is rare. But similarly rare is a Bok backline outplaying anyone!

2022-09-05T14:52:47+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Yes, at the stadium, it was hard to see all the breakdown activity (especially as we were in row C!) but when I watched the replay, I saw that in basically the first ten breakdowns, the Boks flooded the zone and turned it into a nightmare for Nic White. Like you, I felt that was when leadership on the field had to take over: there is a way to present and protect which would have triggered Ben O’Keefe the other way, but the Wallabies were too slow to adapt. He was happy to whistle side entry, but it had to be obvious. Also, he was not a fan of the ball being idle at the base. Jaden Hendrickse (who did not get a shot at Adelaide) comprehensively outplayed White on the night: his pace, clear, decisions, occasional snipe, quick tap, outstanding box kicks, and clear head all evident. The Bok camp was happy to have White as a focal point for their rugby. I don’t think TV captured how loud the boos were every time White touched the ball, and plenty of Wallaby fans around me nodded along. He made his bed. I might have started Jake Gordon for this one, at home, and Tate off the bench; keep White for the Bledisloes.

2022-09-05T14:38:01+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


It is the game I am asked to play each week! It’s tougher than you might think! Especially without stats at the time. But I do have a method. If one goes back pod to pod, it’s clear I tend to only grade veterans hard. Not rookies. They are penny stocks to begin with. So, Vermuelen’s stock fell at Ellis Park. Pollard’s at Adelaide. Arnold’s at Sydney. Beauden’s in Nelspruit. And so on. I think all of those players would say the same about their own performances. I am connected enough with the Bok squad to know that’s how Duane saw his performance. Not up to his own standards. And they’ll be back. On stock rising, I tend to choose the younger up-and-comers, or a player not chosen to start much (Pete Samu, Malcolm Marx). May not be the right way, but it’s my consistent philosophy. If I pick you as a stock faller, I probably think you’re a very good player who had a bad night!

2022-09-05T14:15:08+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Do you have to play that game? Would you like to be player 'rated' in such a manner?

2022-09-05T13:47:30+00:00

Dida

Roar Rookie


I've never seen Wilson bend the line at test level. Love the guy but for some reason doesn't get the go forward.

2022-09-05T13:45:30+00:00

Dida

Roar Rookie


Totally agree. For me there're a lot of times where the wallabies need to go back to basics. It's like they can't consistently find the balance. 100% when in own 22, under the pump and setup, you have to get the ball to hodge or similar for a big, raking clearance kick. Box kick is definitely useful but not all the time and not much when deep in your own half. I think the wallabies need to look to the basics more and play much more low risk. Which means they have to sort the lineout. They have points in them but against the top teams and rush defense you have to be able to play in oppositions end.

2022-09-05T13:39:53+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


If you had to name a “wallaby stock faller” a few minutes after the game, who would you have said, Nick? If not Rory, who? (One name).

2022-09-05T13:15:18+00:00

Chivas

Roar Rookie


Nice way to miss what I asked. I didn’t just insult him…”all you do is insult him”… I offered more than that as stated. The fact you only focussed on that one sentence is a bit sad, but that is social media.

2022-09-05T11:21:40+00:00

Busted Fullback

Roar Rookie


Thanks WL, feeling well. Just finished an enjoyable school season. Selecting for the 4ths is tough but you try to do the best for the team and the school. Should be the same for the national side.

2022-09-05T11:18:10+00:00

Rhys

Roar Rookie


He’s a utility, definitely can play lock but I thought he did very well in the back row for the Force and now for Auckland in the NPC. I think he could be an option at 7 in the Liam Wright mould if given some opportunity but he’s got more mobility. As you note though, Force have an interesting mix of hybrid forwards with him, Callan, Anstee and Williams.

2022-09-05T10:12:05+00:00

Check-side for the boundary

Roar Rookie


More dummies than Baby Target ...Quote from another website.

2022-09-05T09:38:34+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


According to DR in his post game interview by Stan, the 9 kicking was not the game plan. Given that he criticized the kicking from 9 and complemented how Gordon played in the same sentence it is safe to say DR is not happy with White.

2022-09-05T09:38:23+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


"The Bok pack are never bested (and especially the second row, and Frans Malherbe)"!

2022-09-05T09:33:57+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Yes he was tighter but still not good enough for Test level. Work in progress player.

2022-09-05T09:30:10+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Not about sacks, it's about stops and SA did not score from a maul in the 22 in either game because Arnold got hands on Marx/Dweba at the back - all you need to do to make Boks play away! That's zero from two from the strongpoint in their game. Lineout steals 4 to 2 in Australia's favour as well. Set-piece was not the source of WB problems in Sydney and the picture presented of a colossal Bok performance in that area is plain wrong. BD far more important and was a Bok win. Rory may get overtaken by Rodda when he returns, or Swain (who's played well off the bench) before the WC but he still adds value and deserves a more balanced review.

2022-09-05T08:50:41+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


Exactly. Either he tried to hide the injury and/or didn’t communicate it to the coaching team, or they took a risk which blew up in their faces. Either way, I’d be amazed if there was no sign before the ‘mid-game warm-up.’ I’m racking my brains, but can’t think of a comparable incident. Your TH had to go the full 80. It all seems very weird.

2022-09-05T08:37:49+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Isn’t Pugh a lock? Are you thinking of Olly Callan?

2022-09-05T08:14:22+00:00

Rhys

Roar Rookie


I’m also keen to see how Jackson Pugh develops, thought he was great for the Force. Needs a few kg but poached the ball, tall guy who did well in the lineout and has some nice skills. Would be an interesting option at 7.

2022-09-05T08:13:59+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Gary, I have nothing but love for Aussie rugby. Had a great time at Easts RC in the rain, talking to old forwards who’d battled in the wet morning. Rory Arnold is the best lock in Australia. But the pack was beaten in Sydney and never gained the upper hand in Adelaide. They were pushed around in San Juan. The LO is lowest efficiency in RC and the scrum sort of hangs in even if AAA has been good. Valetini probably has had the best tourney so far among the forwards. Hooper is missed. So I can’t be apologist; I’m just trying to call it as it is.

2022-09-05T08:06:04+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


No legal sack in this match; he got pinged for an early sack. Swims were slow or blocked; Jaden easily read them and got the ball away safely after good 5 m rolls. And he missed 3 tackles and ran once for 0 m. With a Giteau. He plays much better in France. Always liked his game. But he’s not in top form. I see a fair portion of Wallaby folks are wanting him benched. You’ll probably show me wrong on Coach’s Corner! Haha! Do it …

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