No.9s Power Rankings: No prizes for guessing No.1, but how do Whitey and the other Test halfbacks stack up?

By Harry Jones / Expert

The spring-autumn tours ignite in earnest this week as the unlucky Scots accept a different challenge from Fiji, the perpetually dinged up Welsh host presumably fired up New Zealand, the confident Irish clad in blue welcome swaggering South Africa in green, the highly touted French invite the Wallabies to a late night rugby discotheque and the chopped-changed English have the Argentines at Twickenham.

Nine of the top ten teams in rugby will put their contrasting styles and hopes on damp pitches, with points transfers in rankings allowing for a new number one through five.

Key to these clashes of styles will be the wee men at the base of ruck and scrum. Scrumhalves. Halfbacks. Number nines. Part gymnast, part irritant. Garrulous garryowen gunners. Verbose ventriloquists.

They tend to be flashpoints for their fans’ passions: unduly praised or bashed at times for things out of their control.

As Wallaby great Will Genia pointed out in our podcast this week, specific scrumhalf selection, from half to half, is crucial beyond KPI. The shape of play is more dictated from variegated nines than any other selection choice. Nick Bishop weighed in as well, showing and telling how these striations function.

Do you arrive in the same crablike position no matter what your plan? The more upright snipers and the martial artist passers have ‘tells.’ Should you see a picture en route to the base of the ruck? Or go on gut?

More rucks are built now than ever; phase-fractal teams like Ireland create the most and counter-defend teams like France and South Africa try to feast off rucks gone wrong.

If we made a depth chart of the No.9s playing this weekend, how would it look? Bear in mind that any scrumhalf playing behind a French or South African pack has a bit of an edge over an Aussie scrumhalf.

The precious gifts of time and space in a Test can make a Nine look slick;

13. Brad Weber is quick and compact. He seems to make things happen. He may come on in Cardiff with the table set; or it might be white knuckle time. He has never lacked for confidence and appears to be well-liked by teammates. It could be an important moment for Weber to elbow his way into more clear understudy status.

12. Jake Gordon has a strong two-way pass than Tate McDermott. In fact, he probably has a tighter trajectory than Nic White. He won’t make a lot of mistakes, but equally can fail to make a lot of highlights.

Unfortunately for his claims, he will have props Matt Gibbon and Tom Robertson to rely on when he runs on in the latter stages to likely chase the game. That does not sound like a solid plan. This points out the futility of comparing same-team halfbacks whose derivative and vicarious context is never simple to define.

11. Tomos Williams is an ultra fit halfback who fits the Welsh rugby story perfectly. Wales are not sweeping any team aside at the moment, but stay in the fight by reducing their own errors.

Williams is a tidy operator who will give Gareth Anscombe good chances to work. Wayne Pivac will just hope Williams can get to parity against one of the best and savviest All Black halfbacks ever to play the game; or at least not be outclassed.

10. Ali Price made last week’s Team of the Week, almost by default. He is a coach’s delight because he will execute a game plan without worry. With Finn Russell banished, Price carries more of a burden to call the plays. He needs to show a bit of a spark to pull Scotland up by his own bootlaces.

9. Faf de Klerk is a dynamo of aggression, particularly on defence. He is a unique version of halfback in this list because he has roverback carte blanche. Invading passing lanes far past his own defensive line, de Klerk loves to disrupt. He has just had a honeymoon, but his fairytale hold on the nine jersey for the Springboks is over. His off-and-on play has disrupted his own team. Adelaide was Exhibit A. He will want to show something in the final quarter, and this scenario sets up perfectly for him, with an outside chance he is the Bok goalkicker with the match on the line.

(Photo by Craig Mercer/MB Media/Getty Images)

8. Ben Youngs is back. Ordinarily he would be higher on this list, but the issue is how long it has been since he played Test rugby and the rough brilliance of Argentina’s loose trio he will become closely acquainted with this week. Youngs has seen off all challengers in the Eddie Jones era, but few of them have been given a run sufficient to show their wares. On the other hand, if Youngs were to have a poor game, it would open the door wide to Jack van Poortvliet.

7. Jamison Gibson-Park has been instrumental in raising the Irish tempo, scampering from ruck to ruck well over a hundred times a Test, and firing short passes to his runners. He has just managed to get back in time from an injury, but will be on the bench. His weakness is durability in heavy contact; a specific strength of the Boks, who apply a (legally) violent vice to wee men. The Faf vs. JGP tussle is box office.

6. Gonzalo Bertranou was a delight to watch in the Pumas’ wins this year. He has a stop-start style which baffles pillar and post defenders. He is not robotic. He is more of a rugby romantic with a big bag of tricks. Look for him to give England a few headaches.

5. Nic White would be fun to watch if he had a dominant pack in front of him like he sometimes does at his club. However, his strength is how he relishes every challenge and the game within the game. Thus, he tends to be an underrated part of the Wallaby puzzle, unfazed by back foot ball, annoying to one and all, and as pugnacious as a bare knuckle brawler pre-Queensberry rules. Perhaps of all the current nines, White has the best kick on him, and could have a key role in trying to force the French to play more rugby than they want to. He will need to temper his temper, though.

(Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

4. Conor Murray has a massive opening to win his starting place back just in time for a World Cup. He will guide the number one ranked team at home against the current world champions in a mouth-watering matchup of styles.

The irony is Murray may reduce the contrast simply because of his more deliberate rhythm. He will have his hands full because his opposite number is just as big and strong as he is, but about a decade younger. One would think the matchup tips the Irish way merely because Murray and Johnny Sexton have so many repetitions together compared to the Springbok pair (and about two decades of aggregate experience).

3. Jaden Hendrickse, a big casual nine, is only 22, but he plays like a vet. He has a PhD boot and a calmness to him in delivery. Genia called him ‘silky’ and ‘classical’ on Episode 42 of our podcast. That’s as good a description of the deceptively big and deceptively fast Hendrickse who has wrested the starting jersey from de Klerk and shows no signs of relinquishing it. He keeps his head when it gets heated. If the Boks were to take top ranking from Ireland at the Aviva, it would probably mean Hendrickse had matched or even outplayed fellow six-footer Murray, whose style he somewhat emulates.

2. Aaron Smith will surpass Dan Carter as most capped All Black back ever: 113 almost all excellent Tests. He still has the sweetest pass from the deck in the game. With his extra velocity, he can whip the ball to the third channel without looking like he is loading up. His finish is textbook, one hand pointing directly to his target, the other arm his balance, like a trapeze artist.

He has kept his fitness and joy for the game at a constant high. Every team, even France, would slot him into their 23, and everyone except France and maybe kick-heavy defence-first South Africa would give him the start. Even if Nugget’s new sensibility is as father more than cocky competitor, I have a sense he burns just as brightly underneath it all and his praise of Antoine Dupont is a bit calculated (as well as genuine) to get himself geed up

1. Antoine Dupont has Gregory Alldritt, Charles Ollivon, Anthony Jelonch, Cameron Woki, Uini Atonio, Julien Marchand, and Cyril Baille in front of him. All past evidence suggests that battalion will sweep aside the Wallaby pack.

This usually means Dupont has the momentum he loves and every scrumhalf needs. He has no obvious weaknesses in his game. He is a perfectionist on the simple things: lineout collection, soft passes to tight forwards and scrum feed timing. Jake White is a coach fond of saying you must focus more on the strengths of a foe than the weaknesses. His point is a great player like Dupont has developed a variety of compensatory methods to shield you from his minor deficiencies (he is not the best at long passes); but he can sometimes take his strengths for granted.

So, the only hope for the Wallabies to diminish Dupont could be to clog his support lines; flood the carry zone with bodies. Dupont is, after all, still short, and ever will be.

Have your say, Roarers! How do you stack the nines?

The Crowd Says:

2022-11-07T10:29:38+00:00

Objective Observer

Roar Rookie


But where was his best in the world kicking? I only recall one box kick (that was too long) at about the 4 minute mark.

2022-11-07T08:48:33+00:00

SDRedsFan

Roar Rookie


I agree, the Wallabies and Nick in particular did very well to keep him contained on the weekend.

AUTHOR

2022-11-06T12:51:01+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


White played Dupont to a draw

AUTHOR

2022-11-06T12:50:32+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


He was scragged a lot by WBs.

AUTHOR

2022-11-06T12:50:03+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


He was not “daylight” better than Smith or White on the weekend. He’s the best, but not by miles and not every match.

2022-11-05T18:31:44+00:00

Objective Observer

Roar Rookie


Yes, Australia is not a top 3 team and NW is not the 5th best 9 in the world. That is my point. In relation to Faf, NW took a dive! More often people who play outside the spirit of the game do so because they can not get the better of their opponents. Nothing to be proud of. My feeling was that Faf really got the better of him in that game. Not sure many from SA would like to swap. Best kick - then we must have the worst chasers in World Rugby. I think our opponents have scored more from his box kicks in the last 6 months than we have. He may be our best 9 but he is not of of the best in the world. In this Dave Rennie period we keep getting told everything Wallaby is really really good but the performances keep looking pretty pretty poor. Just more than a little over the over hyped assessment of the current players and performances. The first step to solving your problem is to admit you have one.

2022-11-05T07:31:40+00:00

Just call me Campo

Roar Rookie


but how does a 9 get to this level without having already sorted it out? Doesn't seem to have improved over the last 12 months. Smith obviously practices it bit doesn't look like Tate has much

2022-11-05T06:20:39+00:00

crumbfingers

Roar Rookie


Saw a comment recently something like - "TJP is one of the best 'rugby players' in the world, unfortunately there are just better halfbacks" Don't you just wish his pass was better because he's a such a weapon of a player

2022-11-05T06:16:18+00:00

crumbfingers

Roar Rookie


I agree watching Gordon in super rugby I felt there was no contest between him an Tate and I rate him but he hasn't seemed to have to the impact this year at test level. That said he and Tate's passing is incomparable

2022-11-05T05:53:21+00:00

SDRedsFan

Roar Rookie


As the headline says, Dupont #1 - daylight to the rest. Forget about the box kicks and passes, I love watching him find space and carving up defences with his sniping runs, and like all good halfbacks, he has such good game smarts to turn up in exactly the right spot in support play. He makes rugby fun to watch, much better than watching boring box kicks from the back of caterpillar rucks.

2022-11-05T04:41:49+00:00

Jezdexter

Roar Rookie


I still get the feeling Lonergan and Thomas will overtake Tate before Tate improves his pass.

2022-11-05T01:20:29+00:00

Short Arm

Roar Rookie


Sometimes they end in tries.

2022-11-05T00:20:15+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


https://www.theroar.com.au/2013/09/25/wallaby-legend-john-hipwell-dies/ Earlier this week I was reading about John Hipwell and his legacy. Here is what poster Frank O'Keeffe wrote in the comments, quoted here for truth. Harry as I read your discussion I had this in mind: "One of the most iconic photographs in Wallaby history is John Hipwell being carried off after Australia’s win against England in 1975. Players sometimes talked of the disappointment they felt that the Wallabies had this world-class player who they couldn’t allow to shine like he deserved to. When they beat England in 1975, the Wallabies forwards carried John Hipwell off on their shoulders. Was it his last Test? No. Did he break any records that day? No. They were just happy they could give him a win. That speaks volumes in my mind. Has that ever happened before or since? Here’s an excerpt from “Wallaby Gold”: “On a personal level, it was also the end of the Test trek for halfback John Hipwell. The final international against England was his 36th, including nine as captain, over 14 years. And for much of that period he played behind forward packs which struggled to match the technique and power of overseas rivals. According to Mark Loane, it only enhanced the Hipwell reputation, at least in the eyes of Australian team-mates. ‘He was right up there with the greatest players I ever played with’, Loane said. ‘Hippy was possibly the best halfback in the world at a time when his forwards, including myself, didn’t present him with a descent platform. But he was such a superb athlete. He had physique, he was a great defender, and a great attacker too. And he had that magnificent flat pass. It was instantaneous, no wind up, just a flick of the wrists, to give the backs that extra yard or half yard. I don’t know how he did it, and it was a rare gift. Even Gareth Edwards (of Wales), great player that he was, didn’t have the pass Hippy had. If he’d come along later, at a time when Australian packs did have equality on the Test fields of the world, his name would have been written up in gold.'”

2022-11-04T22:26:27+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Great work Harry. Thank you.

2022-11-04T22:19:52+00:00

Short Arm

Roar Rookie


Thanks Harry, you didn't touch on Dupont's strong running game & how much of an attacking threat he is? As a WB fan he makes you envious that we don't have such a half or do we?

AUTHOR

2022-11-04T22:19:06+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Sorry! At time of deadline, I did not have the Pumas team. So I went w GB.

AUTHOR

2022-11-04T22:18:28+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Howzit, Objective. Australia is not a top 3 team. The Wallabies are in the 7-8th or 6-9th range. Their pack is likely 8th to 10th best at the moment. So how are they 6th ranked and how do they compete so well in many Tests? Clever guys like Nic White. He has a big bag of skills. Check out how he banged that 50m kick over in Bled2, skidded it out to end it at Murrayfield, and (distastefully) got rid of Faf in Adelaide. He’s been the pillar of the season. And … imagine if White was behind a French or SA pack.

2022-11-04T22:00:54+00:00

Objective Observer

Roar Rookie


Hard to seriously believe that you see NW at number 5 halfback in the world. “… his strength is how he relishes every challenge”. So his greatest strength is attitude. Not passing, running or reading the game, Then: ‘White has the best kick on him.. “ Am I to understand that you are saying, in World Rugby, of all the 9’s in the world, the BEST kicker is NW? And yet, this still isn’t his greatest strength, he has the best kicking game of all the 9’s in the world but his attitude is just so good that is his real strength. We kept getting told all is really really good with the wallabies, they struggled to beat Scotland and the bookies see them as having no chance tomorrow against France. The Wallabies are a top 3 side with the 5th best 9 in the world. Is any of this believable?

2022-11-04T20:38:15+00:00

Riccardo

Roar Rookie


While Hendrickse's international career is in its infancy, he has a complete game and an aura of calm. He is also big for a half back and I would like to see him sniping and stepping more. He doesn't yet have the expressive game of Dupont but neither does he have the established partnership with his flyhalf either... yet. As Jaden grows in confidence he could hold that seat for some time and will only get better. Aaron is aging, despite the haircuts, not as sprightly as he was, and could have even be eclipsed by Weber, if the latter had been picked ahead of Fakatava or Christie, as he should have been. Fakatava's very real promise is not likley to win in France and Weber has more in his arsenal right now... No Cubelli? Cobus?

2022-11-04T18:37:11+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


I get the sense Dupont feels like he's a centre who just happens to have the skills to play 9. No silly b"*gers and sneaky stuff. Just a killer!

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar