Bring back Beale: Tahs veteran the key to fixing Wallabies' astounding lack of attacking variety

By Christy Doran / Editor

DUBLIN – Sometimes the grass isn’t greener. Even in Ireland, as the weekend’s Test defeat to Andy Farrell’s world No.1 side showed.

Once Quade Cooper was the most vexed player in Australian rugby but that tag now certainly rests with Kurtley Beale, who was left at home for the Wallabies’ spring tour.

That won’t please many to hear, with the scars surrounding Ewen McKenzie’s messy departure a sore point that will forever remain for many, but the cold hard reality is that a fit and focussed Beale, like Cooper, is streets ahead of many of the current players on tour with the Wallabies.

Keeping Beale at home was not a bad option in 2022.

After all, Dave Rennie needed to find out more about his team one year out from the World Cup but with every passing Test it is more apparent the Wallabies need a Beale-like figure in their matchday team.

Without Beale, or a figure like Isaac Lucas whose absence from Australian rugby is a blight that must be rectified, the Wallabies lack creativity and a player who can cover multiple positions off the bench.

As soon as Hunter Paisami left the field with a MCL injury, the Wallabies’ attack was always going to be one-dimensional with outside centre Len Ikitau shifting one position in.

Ikitau is a fine player but he’s not a bash the line bully like Samu Kerevi nor a triple threat option like Paisami, who for all his mistakes is still a potent option on both sides of the ball.

Ikitau is an out-and-out outside centre, who is only just starting to find his voice on the field.

If he was going to shift to inside centre, he needed a ball-playing option outside him but neither replacement utility back Jordan Petaia nor fullback Andrew Kellaway is that. While for the third time in his turbulent international career, playmaker Noah Lolesio was once again left shivering on the sidelines in yet another dent for his confidence.

It was no surprise therefore that the Wallabies rarely threatened the line despite dominating territory (67 per cent) and possession (61 per cent) in the first half.

Two instances in the first half showcased Ikitau’s shortcomings at inside centre.

The first was when Ikitau missed a clear chance to put the ball on the toe in the back field when there was no fullback cover in the 26th minute.

Later, in the 33rd minute, Ikitau simply had no answers and spilled the ball in front of the Irish line.

After Nic White found space and should have scored in the opening minutes, the only times the Wallabies looked like scoring were when wingers Tom Wright and Mark Nawaqanitawase had the ball.

Mark Nawaqanitawase. (Photo by Timothy Rogers/Getty Images)

Wright was his typical elusive self and regularly looked like breaking the line when taking the ball.

He might not have the control needed to be a long-term fullback option, but the former Manly Sea Eagles five-eighth could be considered as a first or second-five option for the Brumbies next season.

If he needs inspiration, he needs only to look as far as his coach next year, Stephen Larkham, who was controversially moved from fullback to fly-half and turned out to be one of the Wallabies’ greatest.

As for Nawaqanitawase, the 22-year-old has already transformed the little attack the Wallabies did show in Dublin.

It has been nothing short of extraordinary to see how the Wallabies’ attack has digressed over the past three seasons.

When Rennie took over, he and attack coach Scott Wisemantel spoke of evolving the Wallabies’ attack, which had become one-dimensional under Michael Cheika.

Initially they did, with Paisami regularly used as a kicking option at inside centre but the short, creative, attacking kicks had dried up increasingly this year as the defeats and pressure continued to build.

The sight of Rob Valetini, whose mighty season has ended with a syndesmosis injury, run continually into contact from set-piece play were further examples of a side looking to dominate the contact zone but nothing else. Quite simply, the lack of variety was astounding.

But Nawaqanitawase’s aerial ability has at last given them a point of difference and a notable threat out wide.

The Wallabies’ kicks weren’t quite where they needed to be but his ability to win the ball back, just like Freddie Steward for England, should be enough to see the coaching staff realise what they have in the long-limbed outside back.

Australia’s decision to kick more came after the All Blacks delivered a kicking clinic at Twickenham, where they opened England’s narrow defence up by brilliantly finding their wingers out wide.

Yet it didn’t mask their flaws in the midfield, where someone of Beale’s pedigree would have been invaluable off the bench.

Rennie, it is understood, doesn’t see Beale as an inside centre.

It’s no real surprise given he has regularly opted for a bigger ball carrier in the No.12 position like Kerevi and, prior to that, Bundee Aki at the Chiefs before the damaging ball-runner moved to Ireland.

But even if Rennie wanted to persist with a bigger ball carrier at 12 it doesn’t mean he can’t have a ball player at 13, with Beale playing outside centre for Racing 92 during his two-season stint at the Parisian club.

Beale’s great strength remains that he provides the Wallabies with attacking prowess and covers multiple positions. He is a spark that has yet diminished and the Wallabies could do well to keep it alive for next year’s World Cup.

(Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

Too often Rennie’s selections, including off the bench, have been exposed. It was again against Ireland, with Lolesio not required despite the casualty ward the Wallabies’ bench resembled.

Beale, just as he did in 2015, can provide balance for the Wallabies on the bench.

The Crowd Says:

2022-11-25T06:07:47+00:00

oldoneeye

Roar Rookie


New editor please

2022-11-24T22:11:20+00:00

graymatter

Roar Rookie


Utter BS. Beale provides nothing. He does't challenge any incumbant or alternative in any position. Not sure if CD is on the Beale fan club, but suggestions like these are not helpful, show little insight and no way forward.

2022-11-23T20:58:44+00:00

Vince Martin

Guest


Spare me!!!! Noooooooo!

2022-11-23T12:20:15+00:00

SDRedsFan

Roar Rookie


Noah would be 20kg lighter than most international level 12's - the poor guy would get smashed like Lenny smashed Bundee

2022-11-23T12:07:39+00:00

SDRedsFan

Roar Rookie


Gordon is quick so I'm pretty sure that's why he was on the wing rather than Lolesio.

2022-11-23T11:57:57+00:00

SDRedsFan

Roar Rookie


No thanks, you'd have to double Suli's salary to get Sua'ali'i to rugby. I'd prefer we keep cultivating our guys that are genuinely playing rugby for the love of it. Plus I think Vunivalu will surprise people in 2023 if he can remain uninjured and get some decent time on the paddock for the Reds.

2022-11-23T05:50:54+00:00

Rocky's Rules

Roar Rookie


@King yeah that's exactly why so many people are saying that KB hasn't been Test standard since 2015. He'll probably struggle to make a Waratahs run on team in 2023. They're got a bunch of better backs than him now :)

2022-11-23T05:47:22+00:00

Rocky's Rules

Roar Rookie


@Packerd Yes and Ned has consistently proved he's a non Test standard no 6 too :silly:

2022-11-23T04:48:57+00:00

Adam

Roar Guru


And turns out Kelloway is also a better fill/back up 13 anyway. So why not take the people who are currently putting up their hands

2022-11-23T04:43:15+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Roger Gould..

2022-11-23T04:34:42+00:00

Adam (Though An Imposter)

Roar Rookie


He was immediately good in that position and has gotten better over time (unlike, say, Lolesio who was OK at best and hasn't gotten better). Also his consistency is the best in the backline by far. That's why he got the minutes. They tried others, like Paisami, and always went back to Len.

2022-11-23T04:32:39+00:00

Adam (Though An Imposter)

Roar Rookie


That and putting him at 13 would displace our most consistent backline player: Len Ikitau. Ludicrous.

2022-11-23T03:56:13+00:00

Zak

Roar Rookie


Oh dear Christy!!!! I’m dumbfounded to read your thoughts about Beale.

2022-11-23T00:03:49+00:00

Tez

Roar Rookie


Bring back Beale ???? No, no, no and no again. We saw the future last weekend .... Jordy P and Marky M on the wings and Wright at fullback.

2022-11-22T23:47:25+00:00

Geoff

Guest


The three amigos were Kurtley Hooper and AAC.

2022-11-22T21:39:15+00:00

jcmasher

Roar Rookie


Well those three will ensure the Wallabies don't get out of their pool let alone the Qtrs. QC is good but too fragile and will break at some point. Foley proved on this last tour that he is 10 years past his best and Beale has proven time and time again that his best was when he was at school. The idea that they will save the Wallabies in 2023 is a poor bad taste joke at best

2022-11-22T20:33:15+00:00

Trevor Robertson

Guest


He has the opportunity of next years Super rugby to press his case and, if he does that successfully, good luck to him. But I personally disagree with the premise of the article that he is far better than the other options. His errors outweigh his positives IMO.

2022-11-22T20:24:16+00:00

Phil

Roar Rookie


Beale and Hodge both offer a lot of the bench covering multiple positions and long range kicking. Beale would offer something in attack, but he’s rocks and diamonds. Take last year against Wales. Kicked the goal to win the game then took the ball off the kick off and with 90 seconds left, only had to maintain possession - find support or take the tackle - instead he tried to kick, turned the ball over, they scored and we lost.

2022-11-22T17:59:12+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Christy is giving expression to his inner David Lord.

2022-11-22T17:47:43+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Australia’s best playmaker since Larkham. I think you’ve memory holed it.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar