WILL GENIA: There's no escaping the reality - the nature of that defeat means Noah needs to be held accountable

By Will Genia / Expert

My column yesterday about the changes I’d like to see for the first Bledisloe Cup caused quite a reaction and I can understand why people would feel that I’ve changed my mind drastically on Noah Lolesio.

It has nothing to do, as some suggested, about favouring mates. That’s not how I approach this job.

It’s mainly because of how poor that performance was. We failed to fire a shot at all. It’s not as if there were good passages or moments of rugby. We were poor in all areas, particularly in and around the controlling of the game from our drivers.

We kicked poorly, we organised the game poorly in respect of what we were calling, and in terms of the positions on the field we put ourselves in.

That falls heavily on your playmakers. From Noah’s perspective I genuinely back him. He’s a quality player and will continue to grow. But the nature of that defeat means people need to be held accountable.

Maybe it’s not just Noah. Maybe it’s others as well. But there’s no escaping the reality – he’s a big part of that because he’s the number 10.

I think the coaches are doing a good job as far as giving him an opportunity. But he must be brave and try to put those learnings into practice when he’s out there on the field. For me, he seems a bit hesitant to do that whenever the pressure comes on.

As a playmaker, you’re looking for cues on the field and you are looking at certain pictures to determine the decisions and calls you make.

When you’re on the front foot, rugby is the easiest game in the world as a playmaker because you’ve got all the time and space to be able to make the decisions.

On the weekend we were on the back foot and in positions of pressure where we had to manoeuvre our way out of those spaces.

As a young playmaker, without the experience of someone like a Quade Cooper, you can get lost. When you get lost you revert to carrying the ball yourself or to shifting pressure by passing a ball that you maybe need to kick. Or you’re not calling for the ball when there’s an opportunity. You sit back and allow the forwards to carry almost as if you’re waiting for the perfect picture when that’s never going to happen in Test footy.

Noah’s been given enough opportunities now to be able to put those learnings into practice. And he’s got to be brave to take that next step in his game.

It’s about identifying that at Test level you’re never going to get the perfect picture and you’re never going to get the obvious picture. You’re never going to three or two man overlaps.

What you will get are one on one matchups and you’ve got to be brave enough to identify that and take a gamble on it, rather than sit back and let the forwards carry, or shift the pressure to someone else and wait for a perfect picture to inject yourself in the game.

Wallabies coach Dave Rennie speaks to Noah Lolesio. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

That’s probably the area that he’s struggling with. Yes, it comes with experience but if the coaches are backing you, take that opportunity. I don’t think he has just yet.

If you look at that in regard to that performance on the weekend, it doesn’t look good as far as the  job that he did or our playmakers did as a whole in the game. That’s my thinking around potentially making a change for the All Black game, because they will put us under similar amounts of pressure, place us in similar positions of the field where they’re going to try and squeeze us.

Sure, we can put him back out there and allow him to learn and within that learning maybe weather the grief of another loss, or we can potentially make a change whether it’s at ten or somewhere else that that might give us the opportunity to play better.

So what are the options?

Reece Hodge can cover all types of positions but when he plays at 10, because he’s so detailed, and he does all his homework and works hard to understand the game, he can deliver a game plan. Maybe it’s a much simpler game plan to say when Quade or James O’Connor plays there. But he’s quite good at delivering the game plan in its simplicity. For me, that’s the biggest thing I think they want from 10.

Bernard Foley brings a really cool head and is a good communicator. He’s played in the World Cup finals, 70 odd Test matches. Because of all that experience, he understands when to pull the trigger, when to get the ball and what pictures he’s actually looking for as far as wanting to execute.

And he understands depth really well, much like Quade –  when to flatten up, when to sit back. Those things come with experience, but they also come from a certain mentality where you want to take the game on. That might stand the team well having that cool experienced head in, if it’s a good communicator to help in situations when things aren’t going their way but can also create opportunities because of the fact that they know what pictures they’re seeing.

What should Noah be doing? Start with homework. Look at other players and what their strengths are. Not just trying to be like them but looking at why they make the decisions they make on the field. Why they run, why they kick, when they flatten up and sit back.

What pictures are they looking at? Identify why they’re making the decisions. He can’t kick a ball like Richie Mo’unga, he can’t run like Beauden Barrett, but he’s got his own strengths.

You pick up particular things that might serve you well around how you see the game, and then you apply what you have in your game, your physical gifts and mental attributes to that.

That’s the biggest thing that you find at Test rugby – when you become successful at that level is you fully understand and know what your game is and you play the game based on what your strengths are.

One part is having experience, but also being a student of the game, watching the game, watching other players, what are they looking at, why they’re making these decisions?

Whoever the Wallabies send out next week they’ll spend time up against Richie Mo’unga, and there is plenty to be learned from him.

He’s one of the most complete players we’ve seen in a long time, very much in the mould of Dan Carter. He has excellent skills, is an excellent passer, kicker and runner. He’s a good defender, and he’s a good organiser and communicator within the game. When you watch him moving around the field he seems like he’s always quite calm and composed. That’s essentially  as complete a player as you can possibly get.

The biggest attribute that you want from a 10 is they’re a good communicator and calm under pressure. Noah has some more to learn.

The Crowd Says:

2022-09-10T10:09:40+00:00

Michael

Guest


Jesus Christ. Forwards set the platform to win but they don’t actually win it… or if they do it is a damn boring game.

2022-09-09T19:58:01+00:00

Johnboy

Guest


Gibberish?? It's well constructed and well written argument. I might suggest that it's a actually spot on!

2022-09-09T10:48:22+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Sorry dude you're the most important and knowledgeable person to yourself but to others Genia has more authority than you. That's how things are Expressing opinion is one thing. Saying Genia talking gibberish is you being pretentious ass

2022-09-09T10:38:30+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


How do you know he’s not good analyst just because you disagree? Yeah the most important thing for 10 is goal kicking.. what a great analysis

2022-09-09T02:46:02+00:00

The Strategist

Roar Rookie


There is nothing about Lolesio that suggests he will ever be anything but a serviceable test 10. I actually think he would struggle in any SR team other than the Brumbies. He will certainly never get better playing for the Brumbies. Lolesio is the current version of Foley. Not good enough and too many test caps. Unfortunately with Cooper out we have no 10's ready for test match rugby. So we need to pick the best option and stick with that player through to Cooper coming back or the WC. I believe that player is Hodge. As I posted last week, and Genia has mentioned above, Hodge is a player that we can build a game plan around and will then deliver that game plan. I am not a fan of all rounders but I believe that Hodge is the ultimate team player and will be a solid 10 for Australia until the WC. His boot will service us well from 10. Post WC we can sort out which of the young 10's will be the next Wallaby 10. I strongly believe that Lolesio will not be our 10 post WC. With Hodge at 10 we need to make the decision now that Nic White has to go. White has shown he is not a team man and his style of play, which is Brumbies play, is not suited to test match rugby. We allow Tate and Gordon to battle out who will start at 9. My money is on Tate. Tate is dangerous off the breakdown and will create space for Hodge to build a gain line position for our outside backs. I feel like we have enough quality in the outside backs that once we sort out the inside we will develop consistency, gain line ball for our forwards to build a platform from and most importantly the ability to build attacking pressure which is so important in test match rugby.

2022-09-08T21:46:06+00:00

Objective Observer

Roar Rookie


Interesting way of assessing the performance of an individual.

2022-09-08T16:34:22+00:00

Val

Guest


This is where Aus football falls down. You mention just say Smith as a young 10 thrown into international rugby. Smith had played something like 130+ games for Harlequins and guided them to a premiership before getting the England call up. We throw names around like Edmund who has played what 7 or so game for the Tahs! Its such a difference!!

2022-09-08T13:55:02+00:00

Englishbob

Guest


Really enjoy Wills take on events, he's thoughtful but more free with his opinions than most recently retired (internationally atleast) pros. There's not shame or surprise by being beaten up front by the boks, very rarely are the dominated up front two weeks in a row. I'm amazed by the lack of options for aussie 10s , bringing foley back is staggering, he may well be the best man but what does that say. Australia might be wary of trying to fix too many things at once, when you're failing at the basics make it simpler. If he's available, put hodge at ten, reliable and experienced, hes got a good kicking game and play territory.

2022-09-08T11:49:09+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Foley was definitely better than lolesio currently though not the greatest fh ofc. I have no idea how good or bad he’s now. And I don’t want to find out. Rennie should plan for future agree but your comment is full of bs otherwise

2022-09-08T11:47:43+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


— COMMENT DELETED —

2022-09-08T11:36:06+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Dunno. Team looked different partly because Sa showed up. I can’t say wallabies were slacking off this time(unlike in 2d game against pumas). Most players were switched on most of the game

2022-09-08T11:28:23+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Funny seems like the wallabies do better with instability. When cooper got injured right before the game they won. The next game it was the same team they lost. When hooper withdrew they won, lost next game. Won first test against Sa desided to keep the same team and lost. Never seen this before. I thought combinations are very important. Not in Rennie's team apparently

2022-09-08T10:55:07+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


I know the losses aren’t solely on him and the wallabies have other problems but the fact that when he left the field and the wallabies didn’t look way worse is not a sign of Hodge being good 10.. I’ve grown to like Noah as a person and he has great qualities to his game and I hope he will become great 10 but I wish for now Rennie wasn’t that cautious and tried other 10(not Foley, sorry Will:p) to see how it would work. Noah needs to be more present more initiative and read the game better. I think it’s not even his fault, it’s just the way Brumbies play. Wallabies still play more like tahs, despite getting DMK and now Fisher. It’s either he needs to spend time in the tahs or wait for DMK to turn the wallabies into brumbies :laughing: I hope the latter won’t ever happen tho:shocked:

2022-09-08T09:02:06+00:00

Loosey

Roar Rookie


Noone hits the ruck because they're afraid of using their arms.

2022-09-08T06:12:37+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Yes, SA would not have just kicked penalty goals instead of going for the try if they had the 6 points on the board....you think that....

2022-09-08T06:05:47+00:00

Greysy

Roar Rookie


Oh, ok then...

2022-09-08T06:02:59+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


Nice try Grey's, everyone know how it changes a game.

2022-09-08T04:11:28+00:00

Greysy

Roar Rookie


Right. That's just you speculating though that a different outcome would have occurred. By the same logic, if Pollard makes the first kick he missed then the second one never even happens. Seems a bit ludicrous to claim that as the "only" reason for Australia winning.

2022-09-08T03:33:42+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


6 points early game changes the complete dynamics of this game taking away the score board pressure

2022-09-08T01:41:10+00:00

Bourkos

Roar Rookie


Hodge is far and away the antithesis of an ideal 10. But what are our alternatives? At least with Hodge we can get back some running rugby and a decent worker around the ball.

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