Rugby in Australia will die in isolation. The only cure is to break out of the circle of insularity, not reinforce it

By Nicholas Bishop / Expert

Close your eyes. Can you hear the faint jingle of bells in the night sky? Do you hear the struggles of a large, ageing man in mid-chimney? If you’re lucky, he may have dropped off a gift for you. Go on, open it. If you’re an Australian rugby supporter, it might contain a wish-list of all those who have left home, to better themselves as rugby players and men.

Read it now, it could look something like this:

  1. Scott Sio
  2. Dave Porecki
  3. Greg Holmes
  4. Adam Coleman
  5. Rob Simmons
  6. Dean Mumm
  7. Julian Salvi
  8. Dave Dennis
  9. Nic White
  10. James O’Connor
  11. Solomone Kata
  12. Kyle Godwin
  13. Curtis Rona
  14. Lachie Turner
  15. Mack Hansen

James O’Connor has been parachuted in from Sale, but all the rest of those players come from just three teams in England and Ireland. Connacht provide two from the Galway Bay, London Irish four from West London and the Exeter Chiefs nine from deepest Devon. There would be other good ‘uns populating the bench, like Ollie Atkins, Mitch Lees and Ryan McCauley up front; John Porch, Nick Phipps and Joe Powell behind.

Exeter, London Irish and Connacht may not constitute Australian academies, but they sure do provide the finishing schools. The trio stand out like a sore, red thumb against the backdrop of Rugby Australia’s mooted proposal to cut, rather than increase the number of overseas picks Dave Rennie is able to make for the World Cup next year, reported by Christy Doran on The Roar last week.

RA believes that ring-fencing the five Australian franchises in Super Rugby Pacific will attract Australian players back home in time for the 2025 Lions tour, and the World Cup two years later. The main problem with the theory is that those five teams have never been fully competitive in the tournament with their Trans-Tasman partners New Zealand.

Look back to 2021, where the cross-border matches only produced two Australian victories in 25 games. You only start building walls when you have something of value worth protecting.

RA would be far better off strengthening ties with those three clubs based in the UK and Ireland, rather than cutting its nose off to spite its own face. Why not build into those business relationships, and invest on a contractual basis rather than trying to break them off?

In on-field terms, clubs like Exeter Chiefs have been doing Australian rugby a big favour for many years by developing players who could no longer foresee a pathway for themselves within the domestic game. Nic White’s career was flatlining when he arrived at Sandy Park from Montpellier:

“I have never shied away from saying that my time in England with [Exeter] Chiefs certainly turned my whole career around. I felt like I was plateauing and my time with the Chiefs certainly helped me go to the next level with my game, and reignited my international career,” White told the club website.

(Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

“A lot of what I have worked on from then is what I am taking forward, each and every season. I felt this year I went up another gear and I feel like my rugby has been getting better and better over the last few years since I started with Exeter…

“Exeter was a pretty special time for me and my family. We had our two little boys down there and as I say, the club had a huge impact on my rugby career.”

White is far from alone. Queenslander Greg Holmes also returned home from Devon re-energised, feeling that he had become both a better rugby player and a more rounded human:

“I look back to four years ago and I was a little apprehensive at the time. I was going from a club which I had been at for 12 years to the other side of the world. Beforehand, you hear bits and pieces from people about the place, but it’s not until you are actually here that you realise what Exeter and the Chiefs are all about,” said Holmes.

“These past four years have been amazing and this is a very special place to not only come and play rugby, but to live in and be part of a special rugby community. Some of my fondest rugby memories have come from my time here in Exeter and I’m just so glad I’ve been able to experience what I have – and be a small part in what has been a successful period for the club.”

At his best, White is one of the three best halfbacks in the world, while Holmes has the potential to become a top-drawer scrum and forwards coach both in, and for Australia.

Like it or not, rugby is now a global game and the energy of powerhouse European clubs like Exeter should be harnessed by Rugby Australia, not shut down. The rugby reasons why learning to play and live in different environments is so important can be illustrated with a few key stats:

Team Ball-in-play time Time-of-possession Tries 5+ phases Rucks per game LQB [0-3’ ball] %
Exeter 38.9’ 22.4’ 54% 119 66%
Brumbies 32.7’ 15.4’ 24% 65 31%

The best team in Australia is the Brumbies, but they play a specific style and one size does not fit all. If you want to learn how to play in a multi-phase attack in a high ball-in-play time league, then Exeter is definitely the career ‘holiday hotspot’ for you.

That is what White did. He went to Sandy Park and learned how to service over 100 rucks per game. All three of his passing game, his manipulation of defenders near the ruck and his physical conditioning improved as a consequence. Now imagine Tate McDermott or Noah Lolesio or Ben Donaldson making the same pilgrimage, and try to calculate the benefits for Australian rugby in the future.

Exeter had two Australian representatives in the recent Heineken Champion’s Cup match against the Bulls province from South Africa: prop Scott Sio and centre Solomone Kata, both late of the Brumbies, and both enjoyed notable games for their new club.

Sio was responsible for three of the four scrum penalties in a 4-0 count to the Devonians, up until his substitution in the 53rd minute. His experienced opponent Jacques van Rooyen could not cope with the Wallaby loose-head on either feed:

Van Rooyen looks uncomfortable at the initial ‘set’, and all Sio has to do is lift and flex his upper body for the Bulls’ tight-head to buckle completely under the pressure.

Sio was also highly instrumental in the Chiefs’ first driving lineout try of the game, knocking the great man, Bismarck Du Plessis out of the outside corner of the defence to create a hole for his hooker Luke Cowan-Dickie to touch down. It is the same role that his ex-teammate Allan Alaalatoa plays for the Brumbies:

The resemblance to the Canberra outfit ended at that point. At Sandy Park, Sio was required to operate as the first receiver in a three-man pod on four occasions versus the Northern province:

The new add-ons just apply a little more polish to the gem, whether it is the pull-back pass to number 10 Joe Simmonds, or the tip-on to his brother, England number 8 Sam.

Kata also played an important part after entering the fray in only the 15th minute of the game. Exeter deploy him as a centre, not on the wing as he was used in Canberra:

Quick bust, quick ball at the ruck and another surge by Sam Simmonds takes play all the way to the Bulls’ goal-line. Kata had six carries for 52 metres and three tackle breaks in the game, and he seems well-suited indeed to a more central role in the back-line attack. He even got himself involved in another Exeter try from a driving maul:

The underpinning reason for any individual improvement is the jolt given by necessity – the need to adapt to a new environment with different expectations. At Exeter, both Sio and Kata, like White and Holmes and many other Australians at Sandy Park before them, are required to play in a multi-phase attack which asks more questions of their skill-sets and conditioning.

Just before half-time, Exeter showed their true mettle. From a scrum on halfway, they strung together 16 passes and seven rucks in just under two minutes of possession time to score an outstanding try:

More is being asked of both ex-Brumbies during this sequence: Kata makes a run on the right before recycling himself on the left to make another pass and attend a cleanout, Sio has to be both decoy in midfield and then carry when the ball bounces back in off the left side-line. Both actions occur on consecutive phases.

Tempo has to remain high, with quick ruck ball provided by decisive cleanouts. It is the kind of education which has benefited generations of Australian players in seasons past, and would profit them greatly in rugby’s uncertain future.

Summary

If Santa is coming down the chimney for Australian rugby this Christmas, the gifts he bears for Dave Rennie will be labelled ‘via air mail’. The likes of Quade Cooper, Marika Koroibete, Samu Kerevi, Will Skelton, Rory Arnold, Brandon Paenga-Amosa and Luke Morahan all have valid claims for inclusion in Rennie’s World Cup squad, and at least four of those are indispensable to Wallaby success in the tournament itself.

The value of players who have experienced successful environments in Europe and Japan cannot be overstated. They are exposed to new coaching philosophies, and a wholly different set of expectations which improve their skill-sets, their ability to withstand adversity and live through it. Ask White. Ask Holmes.

Just why RA may be feeling the need to circle the wagons around a failing professional structure in Australia is a mystery worthy of the festive season. It is hard to hold players hostage when they see a chance to win more silverware, make more money and fulfil their potential quicker elsewhere.

Would it not make more sense to build on the strong relationships which are already in place with clubs like Exeter and London Irish in the UK, and Connacht in Ireland? Two of those clubs are coached by Australians (Andy Friend and Les Kiss) after all, and Rob Baxter has proven over several years his affinity for the Australian game.

Why not make those relationships more transactional, via structured loan or exchange schemes for players and coaches alike? Keep primacy of contract, but accelerate the improvement of rugby skill-sets and IP at home by the transfer of talent and information between hemispheres.

Rugby in Australia will die a slow and unpleasant death in isolation, and the only cure is to break out of the circle of insularity, not to reinforce it. The festive season can deliver in both North and South, if Santa can make it down the chimney and common sense prevails. A Happy Christmas to All!

The Crowd Says:

2023-01-06T02:10:58+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


G'day Lichtfield, in terms of runs on the board Leota's definitely my preferred if they are both fit and we are picking a team to play tomorrow. He's more physical, has a higher work rate and is a lineout option. By the end of Super - who knows. Langi is progressing incredibly well and Rob will miss most of the season. With regard the personal insults - It would be great if Realist/Gentle George/Knock On/King of Kings/Proud to be Black or any of the other half a dozen guest accounts he uses never interacted with me again. Unfortunately asking him to be more polite has led to him stalking and making up stuff about me for two and half years. I feel sorry for him. He's trying to pretend I'm not naming Gleeson/Uru due to colour (rather than where they are at in their development) to do so he has to ignore that I'm naming Leota, Valetini and Samu in the roles that they could be considered for. His comments are a cry for help and attention.

2023-01-05T23:10:22+00:00

Lichtfield

Roar Rookie


I would drop Leota, but for Wilson rather than Gleeson at the moment. Gleeson has had a good tour but it's a bit early yet. I wouldn't be surprised if Gleeson. Are the personal insults necessary fellas? It's just a game and just our opinions and everyone has their favourite players. It's not as if the Wallabies selectors are going to scroll through the comments and make their decisions based on what we say....at least I hope they don't because everyone who doesn't agree with me is obviously wrong (that is a joke in case anyone missed it).

2023-01-05T22:35:38+00:00

Lichtfield

Roar Rookie


I think it's fair to acknowledge Ray Williams contribution too. But also, it's fair to acknowledge it for what it was. Ray Williams assisted in establishing a system in Australia, we didn't seek to appoint him as head coach of the Wallabies and hope his knowledge would trickle down through the system to the U8s, we used his experience and knowledge to improve coaching at all levels. Also I am not sure about the stocks of head coaches from NH. At the moment, Ireland is coached by an Englishman but, as you credit Ray Williams, you could argue a lot of that development occurred under a NZ coach, Josef Schmidt. England have been coached by an Australian for the last 7 years. Wales have just gone back to a NZ coach in Warren Gatland (after a failed experiment with another NZ coach). Italy is coached by NZ coach Kieren Crowley. Scotland's coach, Gregor Townsend, has been in the position since 2017 and followed a NZ coach. And France have always picked a local but I would argue that a lot of their success has come with improvements to their systems under the France test team that are feeding into the top level, rather than just the coaching at the top level itself. You could also argue that a degree of the improvements in Ireland have come under the administrative work of Nucifora (an Australian). Why can't Wales develop a coach through their own system good enough to lead them at an international level. And if there isn't a pathway to produce one, if there aren't coaches in the Welsh system good enough to rise to that level, what does that mean for development of players through the Wales system?

AUTHOR

2022-12-24T15:25:40+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


My articles (and the stats, clips and assessments within them) are always open to those offering honest, factual, well-founded critiques, which I wholeheartedly invite. It's why the forums are so animated! I don't think of you in that group (and maybe I never will) but we can all hope for improvement in 2023. Best of the season to you.

2022-12-24T11:00:55+00:00

soapit

Roar Guru


and the judgements i supposedly made........never to be heard of again perhaps i hope its clear by now that dodgy evidence can still potentially be used in support of correct conclusions. they just dont allow proper assessment of the base claim. once you make one thing up in an article it must leave the whole of the rest of it in question. this then leaves the claim as just that. and one that may be true or not true (or somewhere in between as these things often are). im not going to spend time researching to what degree the available evidence throughout the world does actually back up your individual claims about the game of rugby union. especially if if the paid contributor cant be bothered to do it properly for the original article in the first place. if and when i read an article of yours using dodgy work im not going to ignore it under a blanket rule (regardless of the topic - not sure why hooper made his way into this again). i can promise to generally be specific with the issue, as i think i generally have been (and now i know your preference will try and make sure). i cant promise that these specifics wont be described as imagined however. so... given there actually doesnt seem to be anything you need greater specificity on right now i'll leave this chat here and as i better start warming up the reindeer. i got a long night ahead of me.

2022-12-24T10:43:19+00:00

Jim

Guest


Rugby is Dying a slow death. But it's not the reasons you are suggesting. There are 2 big issues in Australia. Junior Rugby is only promoting kids with size and athleticism, but not skill. The real Football players are being overlooked. Those with skill are not being picked because no one has a clue what they are doing anymore, and Rugby League is investing in those that do. Those big skilless kids are not making the cut once adults. If you drop the ball 3 times a game the other teams will kill you. Just look at the Wallabies skill compared to 20 years ago. Not even half that previous level. The other reason is the Rules. The game has become woke and a poor spectacle. We let the Northern hemisphere control the game, so it has slowed it down and stuffed it up. No talented Rugby kid in Australia wants to stay in soft union, when they can play a much more reasonable game of Rugby league. The Australian public will also not show up to watch such a pathetic spectacle. We have better options. End of story.

AUTHOR

2022-12-24T09:42:58+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


It's actually a very old and consistent crusade, but why don't we make it a New Year's Resolution? Say another article about Michael Hooper comes up (as it undoubtedly will), instead of imagining holes in my methodology you produce hard evidence to the contrary which you feel has been excluded. How bout that? :happy:

2022-12-24T08:41:00+00:00

soapit

Roar Guru


in your new crusade for specificity you will no doubt be happy to be specific about which judgements you refer to that i need to back up with evidence.

AUTHOR

2022-12-24T08:26:24+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


When one person habitually offers evidence to back up their judgements, and the other doesn't, I think it's obvious where the source of the 'shady dishonesty' is. Chronic Evasiveness characterizes your responses perfectly in my experience so it gave me a chuckle. Thanks for that bit of festive cheer! :stoked:

2022-12-24T00:58:19+00:00

soapit

Roar Guru


perhaps one day. i cant see myself caring about a rugby player enough to justify wasting time doing that for free though. also, shady methodology doesnt mean the author is automatically wrong. it does make it harder to know where truth lies once dishonesty in method (conscious or otherwise) is evident though. it doesnt allow for agreement or disagreement. there is therefore little point spending time writing some kind of rebuttal article when the original aticle isnt able to accurately indicate the merit of its point.

2022-12-23T08:44:08+00:00


Thanks Nick, v interesting

AUTHOR

2022-12-23T08:44:04+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Yes you have to build from the bottom up, and maybe the pyramid was inverted during th4e John O'Neill era. :thumbup:

AUTHOR

2022-12-23T08:07:53+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


We are talking about the use of stats and clips. If you believe you can present a more typical or truer narrative than me, based on those, The Roar gives you that platform, so take advantage of it. As one example, if you disagree with me about Michael Hooper, then find an alternative sets of stats and/or clips which backs up your view, and publish it. Simple, and not time-costly.

AUTHOR

2022-12-23T07:48:25+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


I think it's fair to recognize Ray Williams' contribution. After all it was Carwyn James who sparked a revolution in NZ's game after 1971. It hasn't happened often (north coaching informing south) so important when it does happen! I think we are seeing the impact of a homogenous game where everyone looks to get the same experiences, learn from the same successful structures. The game has become largely defence focussed, attack is programmatic and pretty dull, even at the highest level. I don't think this is the case. Look at Ireland's win over the ABs, they played some great attacking rugby. The European Champions Cup contains a lot of different styles and/or approaches, and that is why it is now more interesting than SR for coaching hints. Something to be learned there.

2022-12-23T04:01:18+00:00

Lichtfield

Roar Rookie


Well as I understand it Nick, Australia coaches went over and visited Ray Williams first, saw how the Welsh scheme worked and he then came over and assisted in the implementation but didn’t stay and take a job with RA or the ARU as it was then. It was Australian coaches, travelling and learning and bringing the lessons back, and applying them to our situation. I was not overseas coaches coming in and coaching Australian teams. Nor was it Australian coaches coaching overseas and then bringing lessons back – they went across, observed what they needed to and then applied the lessons here – we didn’t feel at that time that they needed overseas experience. None of Alan Jones, Bob Dwyer, Rod McQueen, Greg Smith or Eddie Jones needed “international experience” as a coach. They all came up in our systems, systems that benefited from learning lessons from others but were our own. They were as successful or more successful than any other international coaches of their respective eras (I am talking about 2003 EJ by the way but he’s been pretty successful since, nonetheless). I think we are seeing the impact of a homogenous game where everyone looks to get the same experiences, learn from the same successful structures. The game has become largely defence focussed, attack is programmatic and pretty dull, even at the highest level. Even the All Blacks play a less exciting game as they did under the tutelage of Wayne Smith in 2011 and 2015. The game is getting like an international airport, outside you are surrounded by the magnificence and cultural of Singapore or Sydney or London or Paris or Tokyo, but inside its the same white walls and large white tiles, the same internationally recognised brands and stores selling the same products. I would rather Australian’s be bold, play an Australian style that makes the most of our key differences, and exploiting our point of difference. That’s not my idea though, I got that from reading an article you wrote in the last three weeks. We might just differ a little on how we get there though.

2022-12-22T22:45:11+00:00

soapit

Roar Guru


people will travel for good food.

2022-12-22T21:15:37+00:00

Passit2me

Roar Rookie


I hope so Nic, as I think it's a great idea :thumbup:

2022-12-22T21:06:58+00:00

soapit

Roar Guru


happy to provide specifics when asked (pending time constraints). i eg i gave you the option to hear specifics a couple articles back but you didnt take me up on the offer and when down the personal commentary on the messenger route tho i think i was pretty specific with the last issue that came up, (your quoting brian carney out of context to suit the narrative). i even provided a link to the statement in context. i dont think theres a lot more i can do to help understanding of that, most of the heavy lifting still needed to reach understanding needs to come from elsewhere.

2022-12-22T16:40:39+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


Only being in a professional environment with the same coaching staff for half the year must affect it too. If you are a WB you get half the year playing SR were breakdown might not be the best then 6months with Rennie working on breakdown. If you aren't a WB you get 6 months professional training then Randwick etc with someone telling you to just use your size and pace. It's doesn't help the SR coaches innovate as preseason is spent re-stalling last season's plan rather than building on last year and slow starts means season is gone so teams go back to basics to grind out results. In Europe it's only been 4-6 weeks since last season so easier to bring in small changes each week for 6 months before you hit the business end of the season.

2022-12-22T14:27:06+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


That’s the beauty of selection debate! I’d bank on locks being hurt or carded; and KO games being tighter (more like Sydney or Dublin than Bledisloes) and involving more high ball. Moodie soaring above Marika in Sydney makes me nervous for the Wallabies when they face LRZ or Freddie et al.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar