ANALYSIS: Why Rennie had to go and the ruthless Eddie edge that makes the Wallabies World Cup contenders

By Christy Doran / Editor

The Wallabies are once again World Cup contenders. Eddie Jones’ appointment is what the Wallabies need to wake up from their slumber.

When the Australian replaced Stuart Lancaster in late 2015, he took over an underachieving English side and immediately turned them into a rugby powerhouse.

Jones led England to 17 straight victories to equal the All Blacks’ tier-one record of 18 consecutive victories once he took over.

Eddie Jones led England to a record equalling 18 Test victories after taking over England in 2016, which included a 3-0 series victory over the Wallabies in Australia. Photo: David Rogers/Getty Images

Along the way, England won the grand slam, a historic series clean sweep in Australia over Michael Cheika’s Wallabies, and backed it up by winning a second Six Nations title in as many years in 2017.

Jones didn’t reinvent the wheel. Instead, he simplified their game plan and made subtle tweaks by bringing in an outsider, Dylan Hartley, and appointing him captain.

He made bold calls along the way, dragging Luther Burrell in Brisbane and Teimana Harrison in Sydney from the field to turn the Test in England’s favour in the first half. Seven years later, he did it again by replacing Danny Care at the SCG before half-time.

He spotted talent, bringing in Ellis Genge and Kyle Sinkler. Neither played first up, but the duo would become key figures under Jones.

Others like Chris Robshaw and James Haskell were given a new lease on life.

Haskell, along with a number of current players including Owen Farrell and Anthony Watson, was scathing of the Rugby Football Union when they sacked Jones in December.

“You’ve literally taken the most successful World Cup coach, with a 90 per cent [World Cup] winning record, and binned him nine months before a World Cup,” Haskell told Sky.

He added: “I had five international coaches with England, and they were some of the worst environments I’ve ever been part of. Eddie Jones is by far and away the best coach I’ve ever worked with. He understood how to get the best out of the players, created a competitive and professional environment.”

Farrell, who lost the captaincy under Jones for the 2-1 series victory over the Wallabies in July, said he was “disappointed” by the Australian’s axing.

Veteran England halfback Care, who spent almost four years in the international wilderness after being dropped in 2018 before returning for the 2022 series in Australia, said Jones was the “best” coach he had worked under.

Danny Care spent almost four years out of international rugby but said Eddie Jones was the “best” coach he has played under. Photo: Will Russell – RFU/The RFU Collection via Getty Images

His comments on the BBC came after he was hooked before half-time during England’s win over the Wallabies in Sydney and despite missing selection for the November Tests.

Jones, who led England to the World Cup final in 2019 and orchestrated a brilliant victory over the All Blacks in the semi-final, was sacked despite holding England’s greatest winning percentage (73).

His former assistant coach Anthony Seibold told The Roar he had never worked under a better person in “coaching in the moment”.

What Jones will bring to the Wallabies is a sense of discipline.

He won’t leave a stone unturned, and he will bring a ruthless edge missing for years.

Under Rennie, the Wallabies were too nice.

The players liked him. An edge was missing.

It led to the Wallabies losing matches they should have won. Rennie went in to the Christmas break holding a 38 per cent winning record – the lowest of any Australian coach (minimum 30 Tests).

Dave Rennie could not settle on his halfbacks during his three-year reign as Wallabies coach. Photo: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images

It’s understood players first saw Rennie start to crack during the Spring Tour, where the Wallabies suffered a historic loss to Italy.

It was no surprise that players publicly came out in support of Rennie. Doing anything else would be shooting themselves in the foot.

Before then, Rennie couldn’t settle on his selection.

It is in large part why the Wallabies only once consecutive matches once during this three-year reign, as a Quade Cooper-led side went on a five-match unbeaten streak in 2021 before losing momentum in the United Kingdom.

While the Wallabies suffered a record number of injuries and were forced to use 51 players across the 14 Tests in 2022, he told reporters he planned on rotating his halfbacks on the recent tour of the Northern Hemisphere.

Despite claiming the Wallabies had four “world class halfbacks” and that it was a “real position of strength”, it is extraordinary that Rennie could not settle on his preferred options after almost three years in the job.

A remarkable come-from-behind victory over Wales to finish the year saved the Wallabies from their worst year on record.

The victory showed he still had the players on board, but the stunning 21-point comeback against a poor Welsh side, who suffered defeats to Italy and Georgia in 2022, also painted a gloomy picture.

The Wallabies suffered a historic maiden defeat to Italy on November 12, 2022 in Florence, Italy. Photo: Timothy Rogers/Getty Images

Tactically, too, the Wallabies had become a side attempting to dominate the collision when physically the Australian team was far too lean.

Even from a player development perspective, the likes of Taniela Tupou had plateaued while others like Jordan Petaia and Folau Fainga’a remained inconsistent.

Noah Lolesio’s opening three years of international rugby could not have possibly been more turbulent, while Reds backrower Harry Wilson, someone Scott Robertson had said he had “fallen for” in 2020, had been extraordinarily left out of back to back Spring Tour campaigns.

Suliasi Vunivalu had not played more than three minutes of international rugby and was similarly left out of the World Cup.

While Nick Frost was incredibly a plane ticket away from being lost to Australian rugby before Dan McKellar managed to intervene at the 11th hour to stop the Brumbies youngster from joining Robbie Deans in Japan.

Mark Nawaqanitawase, too, was set to miss the tour of Japan with Australia A before selectors had a last-minute change of heart and opted to rest another Wallabies outside back. The decision opened the door for the Waratahs talent to go to Japan.

Rennie was shrewd enough to pick the outside back after an incredible showing against a Japan XV.

But it revealed some of the shortcomings of Rennie’s selection policy.

The New Zealander arrived in Australia with the governing body imploding and the game at its lowest ebb.

It was never going to be easy for Rennie, who was widely regarded across the ditch, endorsed by the great All Blacks servant Wayne Smith, and had built his reputation after winning consecutive titles with the Chiefs in 2012 and 2013.

But that was almost a decade ago, it was in Super Rugby, and it was coaching a New Zealand franchise.

Rennie was a first-time international coach, coaching in a distinctly Australian landscape. This was always going to be an uphill battle.

Eddie Jones shakes hands with Nic White ahead of the 2022 series against the Wallabies in Australia. Photo: Mark Kolbe/Getty Images

Jones, meanwhile, has been coaching at the top for two decades, across four nations and been to three World Cup finals, including two as a head coach, and orchestrated the greatest upset in rugby history in 2015 with Japan.

The Wallabies can still make a late run in 2023.

There is more than enough talent in Australian rugby to shock the world.

The fact Vunivalu was left out of the Wallabies’ January training squad tells you that.

The timing of last week’s World Cup camp on the Gold Coast was less than ideal.

But rarely has there ever been a good time for a coach to go.

Rugby Australia believes Jones is their man not just for 2023 but for the British and Irish Lions series in 2025 and the home World Cup in 2027.

Not only does RA have the most experienced, credentialled figure in world rugby, but they have a mouthpiece that will do more to sell the game than anyone else.

It is why the governing body could not sit on Jones.

It is why Jones’ appointment is the right one for Australian rugby.

The Crowd Says:

2023-01-23T03:05:36+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


Not really hate Christy, but more so treacherous lying input, as we saw during the Yank elections! All traitors should be dealt with accordingly mate.

2023-01-23T03:01:57+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


Yep, but Rennie has never been to the RWC as a head coach.

2023-01-23T03:00:46+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


Yeh true, as I myself consider Eddie a very good coach, as he’s been around for a day or two, but in that time, he’s never won a RWC as head coach. As we’ve seen during this time, he’s compiled a very good record of falling at the last hurdle.

2023-01-22T11:57:59+00:00

campo11

Roar Rookie


Then he sacked him before his contract was up. Great confidence. Fool

2023-01-18T07:29:03+00:00

Graeme Evans

Guest


It’s the obsession with winning. We are a minor rugby nation now and, even though we can still challenge the top sides, we don’t have the local competition or players to be ranked very high. And we don’t follow the Socceroos example where most of the first team plays overseas. We should pick the best players available regardless of where in the world they play. Rennie should have been allowed to finish his contract. How much is it going to cost to pay him out. And how long will Jones last if he ends up in a similar position? He just got sacked for being the best coach England have after a few lean years.

2023-01-18T04:37:16+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


Triple thumbs up on that one Phil

2023-01-18T03:42:43+00:00

Warwick Todd

Guest


The only things still at RA from the 80's and 90's and the trophies.

2023-01-18T01:27:37+00:00

Happy Scrappy Hero Pup

Roar Rookie


5 years would have been demanded by EJ... and RA have just said "yes" to whatever he wanted to get him. Gut feel says it was always going to be 4 years... starting 2024 and covering lions & home WC..but they brought it forward 1 year when he got ditched.

2023-01-18T00:34:21+00:00

KiwiHaydn

Roar Rookie


I seriously think Rennie would’ve got them to the semi. They’ve got good depth, have been playing reasonably well despite the close losses and have a reasonably soft draw.

2023-01-17T23:46:54+00:00

numpty

Roar Rookie


The performance was poor, but I still argue it's not reflective of the wallabies. It was nowhere near a full strength team given injuries and 11 changes. That is not an excuse as the changes were not forced, but just an observation. I was critical of those selections at the time whereas many liked the rotation. It's actually very insightful to go back and see what was said and by who when that team was named. You are right that maybe the rest was needed but I would've rather seen 2-3 changes each game over the 5 so that all players get a rest rather than just bulk one week. South Africa v Wales game 2 showed the folly of bulk changes for one week.

2023-01-17T22:48:22+00:00

Cassandra

Roar Rookie


Fair point numpty, it wasn't a full strength Wallabies team that day, by any stretch, but I agree with Peter that our woeful performance that day was not down to the quality of the players available. I actually didn't blame DR for the selections that day. I think the fault for that laid fairly and squarely with the board. Five tests in 5 weeks! Whoever agreed to that was really not thinking about player welfare. TBH, I was a bit surprised that no one from the Players Association spoke up about this. With the Italy test occurring between France and Ireland and given the horrendous schedule, I thought he had little choice but to call up the fringe players.

2023-01-17T20:45:09+00:00

Phil

Roar Rookie


All good. I agree really poor from RA and the Kumbaya comment about Rennie after sacking him says a lot about McLennon’s character.

2023-01-17T19:32:27+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


I really don't know anymore :laughing: All in all I am just disgusted with RA about how they handles these matters, over many years. Its not the right way to do things in a managerial sense, or within the vales of rugby. I am intrigued by Nick B's views that both Rennie and Wisemantel may not have fully owned the Wallaby performances, does mean that both were on the outer?

2023-01-17T18:54:27+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


I agree as the NZRU is incompetent particularly around choosing a head coach that will progress the team now and in the future… :thumbup:

2023-01-17T13:57:59+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


Happy new year’s MK :thumbup: Joseph is wicked! It’s going to be very interesting which way NZRU goes.. I’d like to think they’ve already got an idea and whoever it is has been informed already. I’m saying this because if they want Razor they should of told him already or they’ll lose him for at least 4 more years. I’m a massive fan of Joseph & TB.. Hopefully they still have a few tricks up their sleeves. But would they take the job?? I’m starting to wonder if NZRU isn’t burning bridges to a lot of our best rugby minds.

2023-01-17T13:17:28+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


No doubt, he’s done some amazing things in rugby. Probably go out as one of the best coaches around. But! You’re only as good as your last results in this game. ARU is a huge task to turn around, considering the cashflow issue, player depth, school age rugby skills, ARU grassroots is almost non existent, pity they didn’t use those millions to buy Jones and pay out Rennie with to better use than a sticky plaster.

2023-01-17T12:55:55+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


Hahaha & do you honestly think I still don’t have contacts from those that are still there?? Ffs some!

2023-01-17T12:16:30+00:00

Cannonball

Roar Rookie


Yes, I can see that is what most employers would do. Winning management strategy :laughing:

2023-01-17T12:04:11+00:00

James584

Roar Rookie


80’s and 90’s? Muzzo, it’s 2023.

2023-01-17T11:15:00+00:00

Stone

Roar Rookie


I agree with your points, as far as a Saffa with limited grasp is able to. My observation is the WB’s have gradually lost identity – a widening schizophrenia that’s shown in their gameplay over recent years/decades. A far cry from days of my younger school mates who were told, ‘get hold of ’84 WB tapes’! Because Durban schools wanted to play like the WB’s (esp those WB’s) & not the AB’s. If nothing else, EJ has a passion for WB rugby that will surely impact & the wily old fox should restore ‘steel’ & unlock ‘thinking’ in the adventure that’s been missing for ages. Am excited for Oz rugby – in my limited view that is ????

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