Selecting a Wallaby WC squad and the SIX Giteau picks (plus a debutant) to bring back Bill

By Lachie Mark / Roar Rookie

I do not envy those who will sit down next year to select the Wallabies’ World Cup squad.

In fact, I can’t think of a more difficult task.

But in the spirit of Christmas and armchair Roaring, I’ve given it a shot.

Mostly because it’s fun but also I’m keen to see how my picks stack up with Wallaby fans and the broader Roar community.

My parameters were simple – pick the best players available.

I’ve also prioritised Test experience (particularly at World Cups) and club combinations.

The result is an interesting mix – 27 Super Rugby players, 6 overseas picks and 1 uncapped player.

The Super Rugby breakdown? 11 Brumbies, 6 Reds/Tahs, 2 Force/Rebels.

If you’re keen to rip straight in to the comments section, scroll to the bottom for a list in full with clubs etc.

Australia players celebrate at the final whistle (Photo by David Davies/PA Images via Getty Images)

For those who can resist the urge, here’s the positional breakdown and why/why nots (players with * are based overseas):

Props: Scott Sio*, James Slipper, Allan Alaalatoa, Taniela Tupou, Angus Bell.
(Standby – Tom Robertson)

When it comes to a World Cup front row, there’s no substitute for experience.

That’s why my first international pick goes to Sio – a 70+ cap Wallaby collecting vital data at Exeter who has well-established combinations with Slipper and Alaalatoa.

And those two pick themselves.

Slipper is a Test centurion headed to his fourth World Cup –he leads the side and will start the big games – while stablemate Alaalatoa is a guaranteed pick and should skipper a few pool games.

Regardless of his 2022 form, Tupou is a gamebreaker when fit and should be played at RWC 23 – provided its for no longer than 40 at a time.

Bell offers a more streamlined version of Tupou’s dynamism across the paddock and completes the quintet – Robertson’s versatility makes him my front row standby.

Hookers: Dave Porecki, Lachlan Lonergan, Folau Fainga’a
(Standby – BPA)

Our hooking stocks are a concern.

Porecki has installed himself as our best set-piece operator but has been injury-prone in 2022.

Fainga’a continues to frustrate at lineout time and has ongoing disciplinary issues but offers strong mauling and general play.

Lonergan will have first dibs on a Brumbies’ starting role with Slipper and AAA. That alone puts him in the box seat for France and potentially the No.2 spot behind Porecki.

Any head-to-heads between NSW, Force & ACT are essential viewing for armchair selectors.

Pending an unmissable season from the likes of Jordan Uelese or Billy Pollard, my standby would be Brandon Paenga-Amosa for match fitness, French inside knowledge and reduced travel expenses.

(Photo by Ian Jacobs/MB Media/Getty Images)

Locks: Nick Frost, Will Skelton, Izack Rodda, Rory Arnold
(Standby – Cadeyrn Neville)

Nick Frost shot into the international scene like a rocket in 2022 and bar injury will be one of the first names on Dave Rennie’s teamsheet.

Will Skelton offers something no-one else in Australia can – sheer brute force.

And Izack Rodda and Rory Arnold are experienced bruisers in the best way possible. We need rucks cleared, bodies beaten, and lineouts won. Sign them up.

I’d be keeping Neville on standby over the recovering Phillip as he’ll be getting a full SRP season in with plenty of Wallaby faces at ACT. No fault of Phillip’s but ACLs are no joke.

Backrowers: Rob Valetini, Jed Holloway, Michael Hooper, Pete Samu, Fraser McReight, Harry Wilson
(Standby – Tom Hooper)

Holloway, Hooper & Valetini are my starting backrowers for Fiji, Wales and the knockout stages.

Samu will continue the super-sub tag and I’d love to see him get 30 minutes a game to keep Hooper fresh.

Samu should also taste time at 6 with Wilson and McReight completing the backrow for Portugal.

McReight plays the closest style to Hooper while Wilson offers a high-carry game like Valetini – throw in their club combination and they should complete the backrow contingent.

My standby would be Tom Hooper – our depth at 6 is troubling for mine and I’d be very keen to see him in gold come 2024 – perhaps his time could come sooner with a big Brumbies season?

Hanigan would also be a solid standby option for his lineout. There are plenty of Hanigan baggers out there but if he’s humming in a winning Tahs side I’d have no objections to him flying in as cover.

Halfbacks: Nic White, Tate McDermott, Ryan Lonergan

(Standby – Jake Gordon)

Nic White is a world-class 9 and our clear number one.

Tate McDermott’s Spring Tour offered glimpses of his offensive arsenal, particularly during the first and final games against Scotland and Wales, and he’s two.

But that’s where the easy decisions end.

Jake Gordon’s been a rock for the Tahs over 70-odd Super Rugby caps but in my opinion hasn’t been able to replicate that form for the Wallabies.

He’s a player I immensely respect but I can’t see him winning games and winning key moments for us in France.

So do we take him, and if so, in what capacity? Does Australia really benefit from Gordon playing a few bench games?

My gut feel is no – and the alternative number three is Ryan Lonergan.

I’d picking him for his existing Brumbies combination with Valetini and Lolesio, performance as Australia A skipper, and goalkicking.

If proverbial hits the fan and we lose the likes of Quade Cooper and Nic White, I’d much rather Lonergan steering his 8-10 clubmates around.

Jump in Tahs fans – hit the comments and tell me why I’m wrong.

Flyhalves: Quade Cooper, Noah Lolesio, Reece Hodge.

(Standby – James O’Connor/ Bernard Foley)

QC rules the roost when/if fit. Read Nick Bishop’s excellent article here if you disagree and if you still aren’t convinced I’m not sure what to tell you.

Noah Lolesio is on the plane as his deputy. I’d be giving him least 30 minutes against Wales, Fiji and Georgia before a 50-60 minute starting stint against Portugal.

I’ve blabbed on about Lolesio’s international development ad nauseum (most recently here) and would be genuinely gobsmacked if he’s overlooked for selection.

I’ve named Reece Hodge as a third flyhalf option as he’s stepped up in big Tests and played the part. His big boot helps, as do 60+ caps in gold.

Put me in Rennie’s shoes and I’m on the phone to Kevin Foote strongly urging him to play Hodge at 10 all year.

Nothing against Ben Donaldson, who I’m certain has a massive future, but I’d love him to have two or three dominant years at the Tahs and clearly outplaying Lolesio before parachuting him into the Wallaby No. 10 again.

For mine, James O’Connor would be standby for his McDermott combination & WC experience but I imagine Donaldson or Foley would be shoulder-tapped first by Rennie.

Centres: Samu Kerevi, Len Ikitau, Hunter Paisami, Lalakai Foketi

(Standby – Jordan Petaia/ Izzy Perese)

Kerevi is an easy pick when fit – arguably our best Wallaby back – and partners Ikitau in our strongest XV.

I’ve tentatively picked Paisami as he can cover 12-13 despite an up-down 2022 and have also included Foketi off the back of an impressive debut international season. I rreally liked what Foketi’s offered off the ball as well.

Either Petaia or Perese could play themselves into squad contention but neither would make my 23 for a knockout clash. Keep them on standby – gut feel says Petaia has inside running against a Perese returning from one of the all-time nasty injuries (ruptured patella tendon).

Outside backs: Marika Koroibete, Tom Wright, Mark Nawaqanitawase, Andrew Kellaway, Jock Campbell
(Standby – Kurtley Beale)

Koroibete & Nawaqanitawase are out-and-out finishers who can turn games. If fit, they’re my big game starters on the wing.

Wright and Kellaway are versatile and can slot in wherever required (plus 13 in Kellaway’s case).

My final spot goes to Campbell who provides a genuine fullback option with Beale a standby – realistically that’s down to his WC experience and versatility but again so much is reliant on Super Rugby form in 2023.

Who else could fill that final slot?

PREDICTED WALLABY WC SQUAD – ALPHABETICAL

Alaalatoa (ACT)
Arnold (OS)
Bell (NSW)
Campbell (QLD)
Cooper (OS)
Fainga’a (WF)
Foketi (NSW)
Frost (ACT)
Hodge (MEL)
Hollaway (NSW)
Ikitau (ACT)
Kellaway (MEL)
Kerevi (OS)
Koroibete (OS)
L Lonergan (ACT)
R Lonergan (ACT) *uncapped
Lolesio (ACT)
M Hooper (NSW)
McDermott (QLD)
McReight (QLD)
Nawaqanitawase (NSW)
Paisami (QLD)
Porecki (NSW)
Rodda (WF)
Samu (ACT)
Sio (OS)
Skelton (OS)
Slipper © (ACT)
Tupou (QLD)
Valetini (ACT)
White (ACT)
H Wilson (QLD)
T Wright (ACT)

BEST MATCHDAY 23

1. James Slipper ©
2. Dave Porecki
3. Allan Alaalatoa
4. Nick Frost
5. Will Skelton
6. Jed Hollaway
7. Michael Hooper
8. Rob Valetini
9. Nic White
10. Quade Cooper
11. Marika Koroibete
12. Samu Kerevi
13. Len Ikitau
14. Mark Nawaqanitawase
15. Andrew Kellaway

16. Lachlan Lonergan
17. Angus Bell
18. Taniela Tupou
19. Rory Arnold
20. Pete Samu
21. Tate McDermott
22. Noah Lolesio
23. Tom Wright

The Crowd Says:

2022-12-28T20:00:01+00:00

Jamie Saunders

Roar Rookie


Sio needs to go. White to captain. Locks pick themselves. Back row interesting conondrum they could start Skelton at 6 and have two line out leapers ,could have breakout season for an upcoming 8 and put Valentino in 6 .Holloway has done nothing wrong got better by the game .But hard edged line bender needed at 6 to win world cup. Halves White Lonergan and who cares for third .Fly halves will be Cooper Foley and. Beale will back up for 15 as well.(no hodge) Centres Iki Kerevi Foketi and Kellaway can cover them plus back three .Back three Marky,Wright ,Marika and wouldn't be surprised if Vunivala has not too be denied super Rugby season.Players that won't go but assumed will in my opinion Paisami,Wilson and possibly mc rieight.Wont lose sleep if someone like Hannigan goes as he is athletic and there's further scope for his development.Giteau law needs scrapping not that we need loads of foreign based players but three ain't enough.It will cost us winning world cup.

2022-12-20T19:27:13+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


'Brandon Paenga-Amosa for match fitness, French inside knowledge and reduced travel expenses', if I pay my way to France, will RA and DR give me a gig? Surely RA can't be that cash strapped that it would try to save money in that way? 'Tate McDermott’s Spring Tour offered glimpses of his offensive arsenal, particularly during the first and final games against Scotland and Wales, and he’s two.' Two? Imagine how good he could be when he reaches twenty. On a more serious note, predictable selections given Rugby's circumstances in Australia. On paper a strong squad, but contains quite a few injured and injury prone players. I would suggest also quite a number of mistake prone players, at RWC level this could be the Wallabies undoing.

2022-12-19T23:03:55+00:00

Hooter

Roar Rookie


I think my granny is a more likely candidate.

2022-12-19T22:53:29+00:00

Passit2me

Roar Rookie


Yep, it deserves a lot of reflection on my part.

AUTHOR

2022-12-19T22:35:49+00:00

Lachie Mark

Roar Rookie


Gutsy call to leave our only World XV player out of a starting side! Agree MM can cash a few aerial cheques but Marika has been consistently elite for about 3 years – only injury would stop him being the first name on the teamsheet every week in 2023.

AUTHOR

2022-12-19T22:29:49+00:00

Lachie Mark

Roar Rookie


Would take an unstoppable SR season for Suli to come into consideration. Well down the pecking order now - Koroibete, Kellaway, Wright, Nawaqanitawase streets ahead imo

2022-12-19T09:13:18+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


Why would you say that Chris? Sio was picked ahead of Robertson in every test this year where they were both available.

2022-12-19T07:13:50+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


G’day Hooter. Pone is probably the prop of that group vulnerable if Slipper found form. Am sure it will be moot anyway. Very unlikely that RA go open slather on o/a selections and bound to be some injuries in play

2022-12-19T05:12:41+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Sorry - your position is that a player has to be part of a team that wins a competition to be selected or tops their conference. Is that right? So by that logic, all the players on the winning team become the Wallabies. Did he influence games in 2022. Dude, did you watch any Super games in 2022? He influenced a lot of them in his team's favour. Did you watch his performance when the Tahs beat the Crusaders? Or when they beat the Highlanders in NZ?

2022-12-19T04:40:18+00:00

Hooter

Roar Rookie


One positive is that nobody is advocating for Vunivalu......

2022-12-19T04:27:54+00:00

Hooter

Roar Rookie


I almost thought you were serious until I got to Bernard Foley.

2022-12-19T04:24:11+00:00

Hooter

Roar Rookie


"Please leave at home AA, Holloway, Lonagans’, Ikitau, Hooper, and pick anyone else who is in form from SR or club." So you are advocating leaving the most inform centre and one of the best sevens at home? Glad you aren't a selector who decides what "form" looks like.

2022-12-19T04:20:17+00:00

Hooter

Roar Rookie


Beale is a better option than Hodge who really is not test class . You made me spray my coffee all over the keyboard when I read this. Beale has not been test class since about 2014.

2022-12-19T04:15:40+00:00

Hooter

Roar Rookie


I would take Slipper over Fa’amausili, better scrumager and all round footballer. I would not be taking any of those hookers forward. Latu's indiscipline could easily cost a crucial test. BPA has a worse thrown than Folau and Ulese has yet to survive a season uninjured let alone needing to play 6+ games in short order to win a world cup. Disagree on your "power carrying locks", for me Skelton has a poor work rate and fails to cross the gain line consistently, LSL is just overall inconsistent. I would have Arnold as one and possibly Holloway. Never seen Leota play No 8 so can't comment. For me Kerr-Barlow has done nothing to deserve being parachuted in as a Wallaby other than saying "I played for the All Blacks". Lonergan is the future and TKB is 32. Other than those changes the side you propose is solid.

2022-12-19T04:02:23+00:00

Hooter

Roar Rookie


You could argue that for the Brumbies as well.

2022-12-19T03:55:41+00:00

Hooter

Roar Rookie


Obviously a Waratahs supporter..... Whilst I think that Latu is a better, bigger, stronger body than Lonergan he is as likely to cost you a test with poor decision making. Lonergan has shown himself to be high work rate and an intelligent footballer. Hanigan was a much-improved player from the last I saw him when used in wider channels. When he tries to work close the breakdown, he is a poor carry option and is not as strong in defence. I will concede that he has a high work rate and contributes well at lineout time. Gordon has been poor not just this year but last as well. McDermott much better in my opinion but I think the number two half at the moment is Lonergan the problem is that we do not see enough of him because he is behind the best half in Nic White. You might be right for Gamble over McReight but will he qualify by the RWC? I have not seen enough of Perese to make a judgment, but Wright is diamonds or rocks. Nobody in their right mind is picking Robertson over Tupou if the latter is fit. More impact with the ball in hand and a much better scrumager. Beale over Campbell..... just no. Beale has constantly failed to deliver consistently at this level and takes too much on himself which robs others of the opportunity by using the ball badly (chip/grubber kicks) or crabbing across field taking space. Whilst we have not seen enough of Campbell I would take my granny over Beale and she has been dead for 40 years. Swinton over Samu? I like Swinton's aggression and intent. He has a good work rate but I think Samu brings more skill and accuracy with the same intent.

2022-12-19T03:41:25+00:00

Geoff

Guest


Oh yes James, it is only the mighty Tahs who are afforded chances to impress Rennie after a miserable zero win season, lucky for them .Pity the Reds players don`t get that same chance to prove themselves Wallaby worthy even after winning the comp in 2021 ,6 players out of 37 for the EOYT . That is not a fair reflection of how well the Reds played. They deserved far greater representation than 6. Unfortunately the Reds lads weren`t given gold jerseys to see how well they could have done, unlike Foketi and Perese, which galls me no end. Foketi at 12 still nowhere near Kerevi, Doesn`t have anywhere near the skill power or size. Has long way to go, but im sure he will get many chances.

2022-12-19T03:25:42+00:00

Revok

Roar Rookie


Has he won a competition yet? NO What did the Waratahs win in 2022? Did they top the Aussie conferance at least ? NO Did he play well in 2022? Nothing special. What was so good about it?. What games did he influence?

2022-12-19T03:12:53+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Tit for tat? Lift your game.

2022-12-19T03:11:48+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


So Geoff what's your opinion on Foketi now?

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