Rugby News: RA reacts to 'alarming' Wallabies crisis, Wales coach 'out of depth', where ABs 'have fallen away'

By The Roar / Editor

Rugby Australia CEO Andy Marinos says the Wallabies’ diabolical run with injuries is “alarming” and will be reviewed at the end of the Spring Tour.

Dave Rennie has just 25 fit players to draw from for the final match of the five-game tour against Wales on Sunday, with Michael Hooper heading home after suffering concussion against Ireland.

The headline statistic in a year where more than 30 Wallabies have been sidelined with injury and 50 players have been used in test footy, is four Achilles tendon ruptures in the squad.

The latest hit was prop Taniela Tupou, who previously missed games with calf issues during the season.

After the second Bledisloe Cup loss in Auckland Rennie declared the Wallabies had “some of the best in the world” working on the team’s strength and condition staff, adding “I’ve got total confidence in our S and C and medical staff.”

The S and C team has been unsettled after the departures of Dean Benton and John Pryor this year, and they are looking to hire a head of performance.

Marinos told the Sydney Morning Herald the instability “is a factor. I don’t think it is an overarching contributor but our two S and Cs have moved on, so that was a bit of a disruption during the season.

“At the same time, we are very aware of player load and management as we go through. It is really important that we get a head S and C locked in for the 2023 season. That’s a priority for us.”

The injury list will be one part of a comprehensive independent review that will be conducted in December and it’s believed Rennie’s future will also be up for discussion. The Kiwi said he wants his post World Cup future sorted early.

“It certainly has been unprecedented,” Marinos told the SMH. “The part for me that is puzzling, as much as it is concerning, is just the innocuous nature of some of these injuries. It has all come as a surprise.

Taniela Tupou of Australia is taken from the pitch to receive medial attention during the match between Ireland and Australia. (Photo By Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

“But four Achilles tendons in one season is quite alarming, so absolutely there is going to be a review.

“It is a very high [injury] incident rate. I am looking at a list and there are 11 guys on this tour who aren’t available now. Rest assured, it is a concern to all of us. We have a World Cup looming and a big Super Rugby season starting up next year, we certainly want all of these guys back on their feet.”

Wallaby Jed Holloway, who also spent time on the sidelines this year, said the loss of players was “gut-wrenching” for the squad.

“I think I speak for the whole group we are gutted for any player we lose,” Holloway said.

“Our medical staff are doing everything they can to get the boys ready. We’ve just had a rough trot.”

Wales greats savage Pivac

Former Wales captain Gwyn Jones and ex-Lions rep Jamie Roberts have piled on coach Wayne Pivac ahead of the meeting with the wallabies this weekend.

The pressure is mounting on Kiwi Pivac after the shock 13-12 loss to Georgia in Cardiff last weekend.

Wales have only won three Tests from 11 in 2022.

“You don’t see any development coming through. I think he’s out of depth at this level and I don’t see Wales developing. He’s been in charge for three years, and we’re not a better team now than when he started,” Jones told Wales TV station S4C.

“He came to change Wales’ game, to play with a tempo and to score tries, and we’re unable to score tries against almost anyone.

“We’ve had one good championship where we had red cards going for us. But apart from that there’s not much to write home about. We lost against Italy, which was disappointing, and we won out in South Africa, but we’re back to exactly where we were.”

Pivac replaced Warren Gatland after the 2019 World Cup and has won 14 of 34 Tests. There have been calls in Wales for a Gatland comeback.

“A national coach needs to know who his best players are and how he wants to play, and those are two things he hasn’t got right. There’s no plan and I don’t see it changing,” said Jones, who described the loss to Georgia as “up there with the worst I can remember”.

“The players looked so flat, lacking in energy, lacking in spirit. Where is the heart?

“For me, the players are good enough to beat Georgia but if they don’t know what the plan is on the field then they’re going to look like they have no direction and that’s what the biggest problem was.

“I don’t think the team knows how they are meant to try and attack, what their plan is, how they score tries.”

Meanwhile Roberts, who spent this year at the Waratahs, added:.“I think there needs to be serious questions asked about the coaching side.

“We talk about motivation of players. As a player, yes, you play for your country, and you are wearing the three feathers, but you also play for your coach. And to see a Welsh side come out at half time and put in a performance like that is unacceptable. So there needs to be serious questions asked.”

Former Wales captain Sam Warburton meanwhile suggested there could be deep seeded problems in Welsh rugby.

“Taulupe Faletau, Justin Tipuric … these guys are people I loved playing with. They are real rugby warriors and tough men. I’m not questioning them,” Warburton said.

“But I wonder, if it’s not being expressed on the pitch, there must be some kind of deeper, underlying issues.

“The players – why aren’t they motivated? Why aren’t they desperate? I don’t know what the answer is. I’m not challenging the players. There are some tough, great competitors out there, some of the best players I have ever played with.

“But for some reason, it’s not translating onto the pitch and there’s something that we perhaps don’t know which is why they are perhaps not fully motivated at the moment.”

All Blacks progress questioned

All Blacks great Justin Marshall has questioned if the All Blacks have kept up with a modern trend in the game.

Appearing on the Evening Standard podcast with Lawrence Dallaglio he agreed with the former England star’s assessment that the Autumn Series had shown “the game has changed in terms of the laws, and it has brought the hemispheres closer than it ever had before”.

“I totally agree,” Marshall said. “And we are not seeing any more huge amounts of counterattack rugby. That is where the All Blacks were always so lethal – when the teams aimlessly gave them the ball back.

“You had a guy like Richie McCaw out there when you had a little more freedom at the breakdown, more freedom than you have got now particularly defensively to turn that ball over and catch the opposition out. That is where the All Blacks really kicked into action and caught teams on the hop because of their counter-attack.

(Photo by Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

“You don’t see them doing that as much now. They are a team much more orientated in playing territory.”

He said the All Blacks had not kept up with a shift towards bigger men in the backrow.

“I certainly feel and agree that the top two teams in the world at the moment are France and Ireland, and it’s pretty hard to separate both of them. They have got quality across the park,” Marshall said.

“Where we [New Zealand] have not adapted is we have not realised the game is now all about big, strong ball carriers, men that are hard to move away from the breakdown, and we haven’t adjusted to that.

“We are still a little light in those areas. I look at the back row of Ireland and France in particular, they are just big, men. The Argentinians, they are just big brutes.

“Big ball runners like that command two tacklers usually which leaves you defensively short, and we haven’t got that type of ball carrier at the moment.

“So, in a nutshell, I agree with you, the laws have slightly changed which is allowing teams to be a little less mobile but bigger and tougher, and then secondly it is because I think the All Blacks have fallen away.”

The Crowd Says:

2022-11-25T23:34:32+00:00

Rugbynutter

Roar Rookie


Nah if league players with talent or ex rugby backgrounds should cast the net wide.

2022-11-25T00:05:09+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


RA is just totally reactive, and then ineffective. Senior S&C staff left during the season. So what? They packed their wizard wands and magic dust and left in the night? There was nobody else in the five SR provinces or in the rest of the rugby world who knew what to do? Fitness and injuries have been a problem since 20XX, I would not like to say when. At the Waratahs things went backwards with nice guy assistant coach turning into Head Coach. The SMH article pointed out that 50 Wallabies were used this year with injury a big factor. 50 were also used last year. The SMH article talks about the massive 360 degree review being done post tour, because the RWC is next year so it is really important. Big 360 degree reviews are needed after a RWC to set a course for a rugby and financial success over the next four years. All that is needed now is for the RA Board to establish how best they can support DR. I often write about the corporate BS we have imported into the game on the false premise that rugby is a business. These post EOY tour reviews are an outstanding example of this. The season is over and the next season essentially set in stone. The only thing ever achieved is the outcome of the 2018 EOY review where it was concluded that we needed to review our rugby strategy with a view to hire an intermediary between Castle and Chieka. In an outstanding piece of strategic execution, the strategy was formulated, a world wide search conducted, candidate negotiations completed, release secured from current employer and a new fellow with his feet under the table in January. Plastic wands and sawdust.

2022-11-24T18:33:00+00:00

Intotouch

Roar Rookie


5 international rugby season in 5 weeks against one of the top ranked teams in the world and they’re surprised there are a lot of injuries? I’d be surprised if there weren’t. This is why the 6 nations has gaps. Other countries don’t do this to their players.

2022-11-24T09:25:02+00:00

Busted Fullback

Roar Rookie


Four Achilles. Four Achilles!!!??? Too much gym, not enough run!

2022-11-24T08:38:05+00:00

Phil

Roar Rookie


Some of the injuries are technique issues. I predicted earlier this season that Petaia, Paisami, White and Koroibete would knock themselves out with poor tackle tech. All but Koroibete have now done so. I raised it with some coaches - one a SR head coach and another a current Wallabies assistant coach - they both agreed. It needs to be fixed and can be.

2022-11-24T06:42:42+00:00

Doctordbx

Roar Rookie


We'll take Des as well.

2022-11-24T06:33:58+00:00

Kymbo

Roar Rookie


Pivac and Rennie from the same school of coaching?

2022-11-24T05:07:59+00:00

Thing Me

Roar Rookie


Reminds me of the daze when the 69 Springboks toured the UK. Insufficient warm -ups, no tracksuits worn to keep warm, no physiotherapists, no doctors, no dietician and above all no team padre.

2022-11-24T05:04:48+00:00

TheHighHoe

Roar Rookie


Donny Singe is an S&C coach.

2022-11-24T04:28:11+00:00

Thing Me

Roar Rookie


No more league players. We have some very good rugby players if RA are prepared to look outside Sydney and Gympie. Selecting the Super Rugby Squads right now is ridiculous and shows an obvious limitation. When was the last time Brad Thorn ever went to Mt Isa to view club players or school-boy talent this year?

2022-11-24T04:05:38+00:00

Hooter

Roar Rookie


Geeze you could do a "find and replace" on Pivac for Rennie and Wales for Wallabies and use the same message.

2022-11-24T03:53:03+00:00

Tooly

Roar Rookie


Strangely the injuries have made us a better team . Apart from Valentini , Banks , Paismi and White .

2022-11-24T03:11:32+00:00

scubasteve

Guest


Donny Singe ex Manly Sea Eagles has just become available. RA needs to make a few calls.

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