Lolesio is a lesson in how not to blood a Test flyhalf

By Lachie Mark / Roar Rookie

Wallabies fans have been left with plenty to ponder after another very Australian Test season.

This year has given us as many new heroes as villains, as many new problems as solutions and a 5-9 record that could have easily read 10-4 or 3-11.

It’s mind-boggling stuff, and I’m surely not the only fan relieved to be swapping rugby for the simple pleasures of Test cricket later this week.

But before doing so, I wanted to briefly touch on the Wallabies’ management of Noah Lolesio as an international flyhalf.

At 22 years old, Lolesio is already a very good rugby player.

He’s a well-rounded, high-level goalkicker – over the past two years he’s averaged 80-plus per cent off the tee in Super Rugby and Tests – and has found success steering the Brumbies in his 35-game Super Rugby career.

Sure, there are a few rough edges and plenty to work on skills-wise. But am I the only one thinking the Wallabies are making an absolute meal of his development?

Lolesio seems to yo-yo in and out of the side, more often than not straight from starting to out of the match-day squad and back again.

(Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

The stats back this up.

Lolesio’s naming in the matchday 23 to face Wales on Sunday morning marked the 20th time he’s been selected to don the gold.

But in reality he’s played only 17 Tests: 13 starts and four appearances off the bench.

As highlighted by Roar expert Brett McKay, he’s also ridden the pine three times in his career, twice in 2020 against New Zealand and Argentina and last week against Ireland.

Here’s the fun part.

Twelve of his 13 starts have come against New Zealand, England, South Africa or France, four of the world’s current top five.

That is, without question, a baptism of fire.

I’m all for testing young players, but tossing a 22-year-old Lolesio to the world’s best in the starting playmaking role seems a poor way to do so.

Why wouldn’t the Wallabies be introducing a young flyhalf to the Test arena more cautiously via the bench in smaller chunks?

And I don’t mean the five-minute Ben Donaldson against Italy variety; I’m talking 15 to 30-minute blocks during which players have enough time to get into the game.

Compare Lolesio’s induction to Test footy with that of current All Blacks playmaker Richie Mo’unga, now 44 caps into a sparkling Test career.

While Lolesio’s Test induction consisted of 80-plus minutes on the bench in a Wellington Bledisloe Cup opener before being tossed the starting role in a must-win rematch, Mo’unga’s first taste of international footy came in 2017 for a non-capped spring tour game against the French Barbarians with a 27-minute stint off the pine.

It took another six months and some super Super Rugby form for Mo’unga to make his Test debut – ten minutes off the bench at home against France – before going to play a further eight Tests in the All Blacks 2018 season.

Unlike Lolesio, Mo’unga started in only two of his opening ten matches in an All Blacks jersey – nine Tests, one non-cap.

A home Test against Argentina and then away on tour against Japan.

However, he was introduced for crucial 15-to-30-minute stints against Argentina (away) and South Africa (away) during the Rugby Championship.

He also played similar stints off the bench during New Zealand’s 2018 spring tour against Ireland, England and Italy for a season average of 33 minutes per game.

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

So it was only after a development tour and non-cap game in 2017, a 2018’s worth of extended bench minutes and multiple Super Rugby titles with the Crusaders that Mo’unga was entrusted as first-choice All Blacks starter in 2019.

Now, I’m not saying they’re the same player.

But imagine how much Lolesio and the Wallabies would’ve benefitted from similar management – a full Test season coming off the pine for 20 to 30 minutes at a time.

Imagine how much he’d have gleaned from touring Europe in 2021 or Argentina in 2022 and getting decent time in the saddle.

Instead Lolesio was passed over for the 2021 spring tour – where Australia went winless – snubbed for the Argentine leg of this year’s Rugby Championship despite a reasonable July series against England and by all reports was set to be dropped for this year’s spring tour in favour of a full Brumbies preseason before a late scheduling change.

And still the Wallabies continue to let him down.

With Quade Cooper and Bernard Foley unavailable, Lolesio again found himself out of favour after just six minutes off the bench against Scotland and the doomed Italian Test.

Unbelievably, it wasn’t until Sunday morning’s win in Cardiff that Lolesio played more than 20 minutes off the bench for the first time in his career.

And while he wasn’t the sole reason for Australia’s 21-point comeback, he was pivotal in setting up Mark Nawaqanitawase’s first try down the left touchline, distributed well and made his must-kicks off the tee.

Lolesio is a lesson in how not to blood a Test flyhalf.

And his major successes – France 2021, the Springboks game in Adelaide and this most recent Welsh victory – have come in spite of the Wallabies’ refusal to introduce him from the bench and ease him into the Test cauldron.

Quade Cooper is still our first-choice flyhalf and will start when fit.

But with Donaldson still finding his feet and Foley failing to impress, I believe Noah is the next-best option for our World Cup campaign.

If we’re serious about developing long-term No. 10s, give them the platform to succeed.

Give Noah 20 to 30 minutes per game in the lead-up to the World Cup and alternate starts with Quade during the pool stages.

And take these lessons from Lolesio’s development and make sure Ben Donaldson isn’t treated the same way.

The Crowd Says:

2022-12-04T17:49:33+00:00

Neville Booysen

Guest


Surely :Lolelisio is the future 10 of Wallabies rugby! Hopefully Stephen Larkham 's return to Wallabies rugby fraternity next year will mark this young prodigy 's settling in as Wallabies playmaker NR.1!

2022-12-04T16:27:21+00:00

Joshua Makepeace

Roar Rookie


Don't know how this entered my mind but Katy Perry's song Hot N Cold seems a remarkably good way to describe RA's treatment of Lolesio.

2022-12-04T07:48:55+00:00

Jordan Ryan

Guest


Do they just not know what they want? Ben Donaldson is good but lolesio should be there. Great points great article!

2022-12-02T12:45:30+00:00

Malo

Guest


Agree Noah and Donaldson are the answers and should be preserved with instead of fools gold of QC and Foley. QC has been the Roars messiah for 10 years now. When will they learn.

2022-12-01T21:18:56+00:00

RugbySheep

Roar Rookie


Great read and totally agree but wasn't he thrown in there due to the amount if injurys we have currently?

2022-12-01T08:04:46+00:00

SDRedsFan

Roar Rookie


:thumbup: fingers crossed

2022-12-01T05:25:58+00:00

The Ferret

Roar Rookie


Then maybe it can flow into the wallabies set up.

2022-12-01T03:27:12+00:00

Rohan

Roar Rookie


Great article. In previous posts I've called the selectors' and coach's lack of faith in Lolesio the "Curse of Noah" and compared his trajectory with that of Richie M. I've begun to believe it the result of internecine regionalism in Oz rugby - so many from Qld and NSW bemoaning his selection and place, calling for his replacement rather than incremental improvement. A study of his contributions in our scarce wins this season demonstrates his value to any astute observer.

2022-12-01T03:22:25+00:00

SDRedsFan

Roar Rookie


That might change under Larkham's coaching.

2022-12-01T03:18:37+00:00

SDRedsFan

Roar Rookie


I believe he did indeed go to school on the Gold Coast, so it'd be a homecoming.

2022-12-01T02:33:34+00:00

tuohyred

Roar Rookie


100% McKay would be great for him if BT allows some creativity. Who knows what might have been if NL had come under Peter Hewatt's tutelage? Does anybody know if David Knox is still involved in coaching/consulting/advising? Larkham learned from his innovation and a reprise at Brums might help Larkham a lot.

2022-12-01T02:25:19+00:00

Tinnster

Roar Rookie


Nailed it numpty. If JOC and Toomua (I'd add Christian Lealiifano as well over the 2019-20 period) not been hit with injury, they could have exposed Noah slowly. Similar to a transition across Carter, Barrett and Mounga. You can see why Rennie was so desperate to have a Quade or Foley available to cop the bulk and give Noah some protection. As it was Noah was best pick. But I suspect pulled out entirely on occasion to avoid burnout for a young bloke new to the level.

2022-12-01T00:48:59+00:00

Rocky's Rules

Roar Rookie


@Lachie yes I agree. I like Rennie as a coach but have commented before he lost the plot on the flyhalf selections in 2022. I agree Noah has been handled badly. Foley should never have been returned to a WB squad and Rennie has also started the managment of Donaldson poorly imo. Donaldson was fed to the wolves in a silly 5 minute cameo against France. And he then proved what most of us already knew against Wales - that he's much better than Foley. Lolesio, Donaldson and Edmed should have been selected for this northern tour with Foley left in Japan. Those 3 flyhalfs should have played all 5 Tests and been fully blooded with confidence building management. The tour was another lost opportunity imo

2022-11-30T18:37:16+00:00

The Ferret

Roar Rookie


and again we have a problem with player development. The tahs have 3 quality 10's who will all want to be the starter which is good for competition but bad for all getting playing time and developing better skills required to be the next wallaby 10. IF Donaldson is not the starting 10 for the Tahs, how can he realistically be an option for the wallabies moving forward?

2022-11-30T18:30:12+00:00

The Ferret

Roar Rookie


It also does not help him in his development when both the Brumbies and the Wallabies prefer Nic white to be the playmaker. Noah would be better ditching the Brumbies and either heading South or West where teams will allow him to play some footy and not just be a backup play maker to a scrum half.

2022-11-30T10:21:06+00:00

cinque

Roar Rookie


The heat will be on him from four sides - Rennie, Larkham, White, McKeller all with strong views about how he should play. He needs to run the attack.

2022-11-30T09:56:52+00:00

Tooly

Roar Rookie


A few points . . He is 22/23 . He has no weaknesses in his game . He defends well . Despite Nick giving him a rare failed tackle by Ikatau. . Rennie expects him to step out there like Dan Carter or Johnny Sexton . . He may well one day be as good but not under Rennie . . Foley has never been and never will be a world class 10 . . Give him Samu , Valentini , Holloway and White add Paismi and Ikatau and he will fire and defend at 10 . . Banks and Wright run off him so will Kelloway , Nawaqa , Koriebeti , Beale and Petaia . . Donaldson , Edmed , Harrison and Debrecazini are a long way behind him . . I have been told tha Weismantle arrived here because he was stuffing up Smith and that Farrell had enough .

2022-11-30T07:43:13+00:00

GoldenEye

Roar Rookie


Nice article, and I fully agree. Glad someone else sees what I see.

2022-11-30T07:41:10+00:00

GoldenEye

Roar Rookie


Will Donaldson play 10 at the Tahs? I liked what I saw with Edmed and surely he did enough to get first crack at 10 for the Tahs.

2022-11-30T07:23:54+00:00

Hugh_96

Roar Pro


Australian rugby has not been good at developing fly halves. Lolesio has been fortunate & unfortunate. His selection was more out of necessity as there were not a lot of options. He was a young fly half playing behind a strong Brumbies pack. As a result he got his opportunity before he was ready. On the flip side Will Harriosn was playing in a very poor Tahs team & then he has had 2 years of injuries. Personally I would have preferred using Lolesio & Donaldson on the Spring Tour, with Hodge as the back up. I have a concern about Quade's fitness & think we should move on from Foley.

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