'Kick in the teeth': Rodda opens up on 'dark' injury setback as Wallabies giant plots comeback

By Christy Doran / Editor

Izack Rodda says he has never felt “lighter” but admits hearing the dreaded news that his season was over before the Test season had even begun was a “kick in the teeth”.

Rodda is the forgotten man of the Wallabies. A side, according to the experienced Test lock, that looked “very flat going into certain games” and paid the price, with inconsistency the hallmark of Dave Rennie’s team in 2022, where they claimed just five of 14 Tests.

In a wretched year for the Walking Wounded Wallabies, which left an element of the unknown hanging over Rennie’s side and his own credentials heading into a World Cup year, Rodda’s absence flew under the radar.

While other “big name” players like Quade Cooper and Samu Kerevi went down before the Wallabies’ season really got underway, and former captain Michael Hooper flew home to take time away from the game, Rodda’s absence barely made a drop in the ocean. Strange given he had started 31 of his 34 Tests.  

Yet given the unheralded nature of Rodda’s game, as well as the fact he removed himself from consideration after moving to France midway through 2020 before returning to the Western Force in mid-2021, it is easy to see why the hard-working second-rower was somewhat forgotten.

Unlike the destructive Brodie Retallick or Lood de Jager, or even James Ryan, Rodda operates in the shadows, in the tight, slamming into rucks, and around the set-piece.

A foot injury at the backend of the Super Rugby season meant his year was cut short.

But it wasn’t until the international season had got underway that the full extent of Rodda’s injury came to light.

“My ankle started to get a bit sore during the games, but I thought it was just minor,” Rodda told The Roar.

“After having eight weeks off, further scans revealed it was a lot worse than we thought, which was a bit of a kick in the teeth.”

Izack Rodda says it took months to get over the disappointment of missing the entire Wallabies season. Photo: Chris Hyde/Getty Images

Rodda doesn’t hide behind his disappointment.

“It really sucked,” he said. “Thinking you’re only out for a certain amount of time, and that was coming around, and they were like it’s no good, it’s going to be the rest of the year, it was devastating.

“We all play to play the highest level. It did suck missing the full year of Test matches this close to a World Cup as well. It’s no fun being on the sidelines and watching the guys play because you want to be out there and doing your best. At the start it was a bit hard to take.

“Rugby’s tough mentally because it’s a rollercoaster – the highs are very high and the lows are very low. With the injury, you get pretty dark for a while because you’re all doing it to try and get to the end goal. To have it all taken away from an injury hits you real fast. It takes a while, a good two months, to get your head around it and stop having those negative thoughts about it.”

Rodda credits the support network around him as well as the Western Force psychologist, Jodii Maguire, for keeping him positive.

“You’re just a bit negative, a bit short tempered, I didn’t get full depressed but it could easily swing that way if you don’t talk about it and let it spiral,” he said.

After coming to grips that his season was over, Rodda says he feels better than he ever has before.

The bumps and bruises and the mental toll of training and playing weekly, riding the wave of high-performance sport, making way for a freer version of himself.

“I definitely feel a lot fresher and lighter, but it’s hindsight, you don’t know if it helps or it doesn’t because you don’t know both sides of it,” he said.

“Rugby’s such a mentally challenging and draining sport. You’re so invested in the goal; bad performances and team performances really weigh hard on the guys because you’re so invested, it’s all or nothing, and after a while you start to see people really struggle mentally and after a few years of playing you just get that mental drain because it takes so much out of you week-in, week-out to perform.”

Izack Rodda wins a lineout during the 2019 World Cup pool match against Wales. Photo: William West/AFP/Getty Images

The hallmark of Rodda’s game throughout his career has been consistency.

They are the same characteristics that defined his former coach Brad Thorn, who never left a stone unturned throughout his two-decade-long career at the top.

Rodda didn’t dance around the Wallabies’ issues, believing players had to be accountable for delivering on a weekly basis and the experienced lock said he was hopeful he could prove that in 2023.

“The biggest thing I probably picked up was just consistency,” he said.

“I don’t think the boys were consistent enough. That’s something I’d try to work on in my game is trying to give the same performance week-in, week out. There’s no point killing it one week and not showing up the next.

“Some of the guys looked very flat going into certain games and they were starting slow, and some guys looked like it was taking them 10-20-30 minutes to kick into gear. That’s something that you’ve got to manage throughout the week … because if you’re off in either your mental or physical side it’s going to weigh you down either way.”

Simon Cron has joined the Western Force from Toyota Verblitz. Photo: Kenta Harada/Getty Images

Rodda will return to full training along with Western Force teammates in the new year.

His fitness will be integral to their chances of mounting a push in 2023, with Simon Cron taking the reins as a Super Rugby head coach for the first time.

He says he has been “surprised” by Cron, who he says is “very smart, very switched on” and is “big on the mental side of things” and the “detail”.

“From a coaching point of view and an environment, it’s very hard to fault. I think it’s leaps and bounds better than last year,” he said.

“He holds people accountable. I guess from a technical point of view, something will happen at training and then we’ll have a review and he’ll fully break it down. I’ve noticed the little things, he picks up the finer details.”

Having played under Michael Cheika at the 2019 World Cup, Rodda says it’s essential not to run your race too early.

He will compete with a number of burgeoning young second-row talents, with Nick Frost one of the finds of the Test season.

Rennie, who caught up with Rodda ahead of the Tests in Perth and Adelaide, will also be weighing up whether to call up overseas-based pair Will Skelton and Rory Arnold.

It means competition in the second-row, with Brumbies duo Darcy Swain and Cadeyrn Neville regulars throughout the year, will be fierce.

For Rodda, however, he says form is everything.

“You can’t get so fixated on the World Cup because there’s a full Super Rugby season first and then there’s four or five Test matches before they select the squad, so there’s probably 17 or 18 games before they select the team,” he said.

“You can’t be so fixated on the end goal without doing what you need to throughout the Super Rugby season and into the Test season. Form is the biggest thing this year.”

As for Rodda, he just wants to be known as a “competitor”.

For a Wallabies team lacking consistency, that is an ingredient Rennie will likely dearly want in his side.

The Crowd Says:

2022-12-18T15:35:36+00:00

Mo

Guest


Swain is good enough at lineout time but questionable at scrum time. We need a lineout caller and that means Rodda and probably Jed h sneaks in. Not sure Matt p can make it back in time from his knee? He can call a bit and is good but I think he’s competing with Rodda. Lsl would be back to Skelton. Good ball runner so means you don’t need to change the struture as much. Frost is the only lock fast enough to cover 6. Hoping he becomes a psdt type. Hanigan too small as a lock. Good honest player though. Leota way too small as a lock.

2022-12-16T08:26:06+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


Skelton, Rodda, Philip and Frost would be my choice. I've never been convinced by Swain. His mauling work is high quality but I see no other parts of his game that are test class

AUTHOR

2022-12-16T03:16:15+00:00

Christy Doran

Editor


Agreed. A battle within a battle. Lots on the line every week.

2022-12-16T03:03:00+00:00

Mungbean74

Roar Rookie


If Rodda can channel Darcy Swain’s mungrel , then he might be ahead of him. Swain has that but also lacks discipline at times. Both are good for Auz , but both need to work on a few things. This super season should be fun to watch the internal battles at provincial level.

AUTHOR

2022-12-15T23:24:01+00:00

Christy Doran

Editor


Thanks for reading.

AUTHOR

2022-12-15T23:22:57+00:00

Christy Doran

Editor


Agreed. They have a squad who should challenge top four.

AUTHOR

2022-12-15T23:22:22+00:00

Christy Doran

Editor


Glad you read the story and enjoyed hearing from him. I know sections of the rugby community value Izack highly. But, more broadly, his name hardly was mentioned. I think Darcy Swain will go close to the World Cup squad. It's up to him to show he can improve his discipline throughout SRP.

AUTHOR

2022-12-15T23:19:28+00:00

Christy Doran

Editor


Because earlier people commenting were suggesting five locks would be taken. The reference to the All Blacks was to show that international sides rarely take five locks.

2022-12-15T13:37:59+00:00

Kashmir Pete

Roar Guru


Um. My comment was about Rodda. KP

2022-12-15T10:10:18+00:00

Lurk

Guest


Of course. He’s a kiwi. The game will die. And you lot, with it.

2022-12-15T09:44:43+00:00

Kashmir Pete

Roar Guru


Really impressive and interesting piece. Thanks Christy for insights into IR. No surprises for me but good to read. Cheers KP

2022-12-15T07:13:33+00:00

Dam0

Guest


With respect, what does the ABs lock choices have to do with the price of Eggs Christy? You are quite preoccupied with the 3rd ranked team.

2022-12-14T23:55:38+00:00

bigbaz


?

2022-12-14T23:35:40+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


I was thinking 5 when I had a go at picking a squad. Christy says the thinking from Rennie is for 6, extra cover needed due to concussion protocols.

2022-12-14T23:19:10+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


You’re right he signed OS but he was the best lock in the Reds system. Not playing him was a child’s call.

2022-12-14T23:12:40+00:00

Cassandra

Roar Rookie


6 props sounds like the old school thinking on props Jez - 2 playing, 2 injured and 2 suspended.

2022-12-14T22:24:36+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


He’s our best carrying lock after Skelton. For me it’s about not having to change drastically if Skelton sits out a match. Even providing a one-two punch with Skelton, while the other lock (Rodda or Frost) goes the 80.

2022-12-14T22:14:14+00:00

Trevor Robertson

Guest


As far as I understand the initial problem was he was given a downgraded contract by RA and the Reds then couldn’t come to close to matching the OS offers so he signed OS. He also spent a fair bit of time injured. It seems after that Thorn prioritised getting other locks up to speed - although don’t know if there was more to it then that.

AUTHOR

2022-12-14T21:27:43+00:00

Christy Doran

Editor


Lukhan won't be anywhere near the World Cup squad (that's not an anti-Lukhan sentiment) but rather he was looked past continually over the past 18 months, including at provincial level.

AUTHOR

2022-12-14T21:26:40+00:00

Christy Doran

Editor


From memory, the All Blacks only took three locks to the World Cup in 2015. Yes, there's one or two additional picks these days but it'll still likely be tops four specialist locks.

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