No rugby for a month and no answers for the Wallabies... Maybe that’s good?

By Brett McKay / Expert

Once again, Australian rugby fans find themselves in a disappointingly familiar position: promising early showings in The Rugby Championship smashed back down to Earth with another Bledisloe Cup fade out.

It’d be depressing if we weren’t so good at – or at least so used to – trying to deal with it.

After the 40-14 thumping in Auckland served up so many more questions than answers, it’s a matter of ‘what now?’ for the Wallabies.

And I was taking the proverbial just a touch when I suggested in the Instant Reaction pod on Saturday night that the Wallabies not playing for a month was one of few positives to come out of that performance, but there is also an element of truth in it.

Quite simply, I don’t know what the first string to pull is right now. If they were playing again this weekend, what would be the quick-win, little adjustment that could be made to deliver an impact?

I don’t know. And that worries me, for obvious reasons.

There are plenty of things that need attention, there’s no question about that. But where do you start?

“Is this a… ball?” Good start. (Photo by Hannah Peters/Getty Images)

So with that in mind, the point that there’s now five weeks before the Wallabies face Scotland at Murrayfield is something of a silver lining.

Discipline has been a huge issue all year, and progressively got worse as The Rugby Championship went on. Heading into the Auckland Test, the Wallabies’ 13.8 penalties conceded per game across the first five rounds already had them ranked as the worst team, but another 16 penalties against them on Saturday pushed that average out to 14.2 per game.

A quick scan back through my match notes tells me the opposition kicked 11 penalty goals from 14 attempts against Australia, which is nearly six points per game, and could easily have been worse had Handre Pollard not sprayed a few early in Adelaide, in one clear example.

“Selection, maybe hey?” Dave Rennie pondered post-match, to the obvious question of how this worsening situation can be fixed.

“If we’ve got individuals giving away lots of penalties maybe it’s a selection issue,” he said, turned in his chair to be almost facing his skipper James Slipper directly, comfortably the most penalised player in the tournament.

It’s a bit beyond this tournament though, with Dave Porecki’s 27th minute yellow card Australia’s 11th for the year, and 12th card in nine Tests. Remarkably, the Aussies have only had to defend with 13 players in one match this year, and somehow managed to not concede a yellow card in consecutive Tests – the last England match, and the first in Argentina. They’ve been down a man at some point in every other game.

But while playing the selection card makes for a great printed quote and news bulletin grab, the reality is it’s a card that Rennie just doesn’t have available.

If he wants to drop Slipper, to continue that example, then he’s looking at Angus Bell and Scott Sio as his loosehead options. But Sio is currently in his second injury-forced absence from the selection table this year, meaning the next best options will be someone like Tom Robertson or Matt Gibbon.

Rennie might want to send a message, but he’s not going to drop 123 Tests worth of experience and replace him with a guy with one Test to his name.

Sio’s current injury highlights another crisis to completely engulf the Wallabies this year, and will give cause for some form of check-up – if not a full-blown review – during this break.

A list I put up on Twitter on Sunday saw more omissions identified, and now runs to 29 different injuries suffered in-game or in camp this year, to 26 different players. And I’m still not 100 per cent sure I’ve got them all.

This doesn’t include James O’Connor’s nasty ankle injury in Brisbane club rugby finals a fortnight ago, Izaak Rodda’s foot injury during Super Rugby, or Lachie Swinton’s shoulder injury suffered in the first Waratahs game this season and still keeping him out of action now.

Lachlan Swinton (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

Of those injuries, 14 would be unavailable or still under a serious cloud if there were a game on this weekend.

That’s not to offer up injuries as an excuse, only to illustrate the length of the list. 30-plus injuries in a year is significant, and almost a full XV out of action is a concern within an Australian playing pool context.

And so while, yes, some depth is being created by the opportunities forced by all these injuries, the argument is that the depth is having to be created in the wrong place.

It’s been wonderful to have the Australia A program resurrected in 2022, but this is where depth should be being built, not filling empty spots in the top squad. 13 players went unused in the squad for the South Africa Tests, and it was ten for the New Zealand matches. That – and the injury list – are a pretty strong sign that players 24 and beyond aren’t nearly as strong as appears the case in opposition squads.

And also yes, it would be correct to conclude that this all falls at Rennie’s feet. The discipline, the injuries, the squad selections, and certainly the game plans and the performances.

The question as to his hold on his job is being asked slightly louder with each loss, and frankly, the only surprise in the Daily Telegraph calling for his head on Monday is that they held back this long.

But what does sacking him now solve? And never mind who are you planning to replace him with.

Making a change now would only be for the sake of making change, and may not actually change anything anyway. The last couple of coach changes didn’t really, so why would now be different?

Plenty of things need attention in these next five weeks, and maybe as many things off the field as on it. And if things needing attention don’t get it or can’t have it provided, then that certainly falls on Rugby Australia’s decision makers.

But where do you start? What takes priority?

If a week is a long time in rugby, then five weeks is an eternity.

But worryingly, it’s hard to say confidently that it will be anywhere near enough time fix everything that currently needs fixing.

The Crowd Says:

2022-10-06T09:39:11+00:00

Phil

Roar Rookie


I wonder how Wayne Smith would go as Wallabies coach? He’s so excellent to listen to. Impressive coach and record. Will be interesting to see how the Black Ferns go with him guiding them at RWC.

2022-09-30T07:09:02+00:00

Butch

Guest


I think those commenting on aspects of DR’s strategy in a game are touching on a big point. There is no indication the players are addressing basic matters that even Cheika sometimes thought important- eg kick offs and receipts and clearing out. As well it is a concern that no game strategy is easily discernible.

2022-09-29T16:12:45+00:00

Two Cents

Guest


You're probably right about Deans. However, I can't help but feel that McKenzie was as divisive a personality as Cheika was and maybe he didn't have the same pep-talk and post-game explosions, but he was just as partisan in his team selections.

2022-09-28T23:59:47+00:00

gatesy

Roar Guru


I have one web browser set up with about 15 Rugby sites, where I get my Rugby fix every day (The Roar being number 1), so I have not read a newspaper in about 2 years. My local coffee shop had the Australian but, as you say, reading Alan Jones is tough going.

2022-09-28T17:43:57+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


Doesn't get mentioned here much, but i hope/trust Rennie etc are keeping him in mind.

2022-09-28T14:44:59+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


I will be at BCS this Saturday for the match against Bath. I haven’t seen the team sheet yet as they had a Gallagher Cup match last night (we lost) and I assume that delays the announcement. He didn’t play last week but skippered us in the second round. He might be hurt. I’m not sure. I will know more after Saturday. He was in good form the first two matches. Running wild, hitting people, lineout weapon.

2022-09-28T14:07:51+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


I think i remember reading you are in England, Ozinsa. If so, do you see any of Adam Coleman playing for London Irish? How is he going? I'd imagine he could be a handy Wallabg again

2022-09-28T07:14:54+00:00

Phantom

Roar Rookie


Mckenzie was the real lost opportunity. IMHO Deans being a kiwi would only have been accepted with RWC win.

2022-09-28T06:09:39+00:00

Joel Hill

Roar Rookie


Well again, I don't think I said or did anything catastrophically wrong did I? I just made a comment without enough context and not to undermine original point. Anyway, doesn't matter.

2022-09-28T06:03:44+00:00

Joel Hill

Roar Rookie


Yes mum. Sorry mum (;

2022-09-28T05:10:20+00:00

Two Cents

Guest


Yes, you are absolutely right. I wasn't going to bother addressing my mistake until someone commented, so good on you. I suppose I just forgot that Cheika was the boss then because I really didn't want to give him any credit for anything. However, I stand behind the remainder of my points about him and MacKenzie wasting the depth that had been handed to them.

2022-09-28T05:06:07+00:00

Two Cents

Guest


That's the right attitude. Nothing wrong with making mistakes as long as you acknowledge and learn. Something I'm sure we all hope we will see from the Wallabies over the next 9 months.

2022-09-28T02:05:29+00:00

Joel Hill

Roar Rookie


Two Cents, agreed. There was never any disagreement to begin with. My comment about playing in NZ was not to correct anything that had been said. My fault for being lazy though haha

2022-09-27T22:06:57+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


BPA for sure.

2022-09-27T21:38:40+00:00

Wooliej

Roar Rookie


I seem to remember in the Deans and Ewen McK days players just doing dumb things, or not able to play to the plan. I think you are right Brett, this has been going on for a long while. It has transgressed many coaches. Surely they can spend the next 5 weeks training around discipline? In my own playing experience I think discipline issues occur when you are frustrated and just not good enough to win the battle against your opponent. You are desperate to win and take crazy chances. That looks like us-trying to make something happen to shift the game in our direction that is ultimately illegal (usually our defence) or mistimed (usually or inpatient attack).

2022-09-27T20:25:16+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


You are not THE twocents are you? The youtuber? If so, great to have you here. (if not welcome anyway :happy:

2022-09-27T20:23:36+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


All looks plausible/good except I am surprised you wouldn't want or expect BPA in there. I think he's better than either of the current hookers. Will be disappointing if we only see Loelisio as the starting 10. Rodda and Skelton could be a big upgrade in the 2nd row.

2022-09-27T17:30:06+00:00

Wallabies_Larkham

Roar Rookie


RT...if we do get a W against Scotland than that would be because of Scottish warriors first choice players not available as that match falls outside the test window..the other win will come from Italy...

2022-09-27T17:24:57+00:00

Wallabies_Larkham

Roar Rookie


I wonder Jez by the selection of H Wilson in that backrow is making it a lot harder for Laurie L..if I recall Pistol pete and Robbie V usually swap roles between 6 and 8 at the brumbies but the no 7 is usually an out an out fetcher...also why have Wilson in there if Pistol Pete can be asked to play wider..

2022-09-27T17:16:28+00:00

Wallabies_Larkham

Roar Rookie


Tooly..if I recall of all the SH coaches that have won a WC none of them have succeeded at winning a super rugby title..and those that have won a super rugby title has not won a WC...so perhaps we should look somewhere else...

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