ANALYSIS: The attribute that makes Will Skelton world class, and why he should start for Wallabies at RWC

By Sam Larner / Expert

A few weeks ago, I wrote an article talking about how Eddie Jones might find success with Will Skelton in the backrow. Understandably, most of you thought that was a stupid idea.

I’m not going to convince you otherwise, but I am going to take a closer look at Skelton’s game. To do this, we’re going to hyper focus on Skelton’s last outing , La Rochelle’s dominant European Cup semi-final victory over Exeter Chiefs.

La Rochelle’s game plan throughout the year has been to hoard possession. They lead the Top 14 by carries. Skelton’s job therefore is to contribute with carries, especially when things slow down. He doesn’t make many breakout carries. Instead he is expected to contribute by tying up defenders and getting over the gain line.

via GIPHY

This is a typical carry for Skelton. It’s not the kind of thing that gets the blood pumping, but he ties in three Exeter defenders but still gets quick ball back for La Rochelle. This is a massively underrated skill. It is rare that we fully appreciate this hard work. Lots of the highlight reel line breaks come from a carry like this which tie up defenders and create that space outside.

That isn’t always the case for Skelton. Against weaker opponents in the Top 14 he has been given the freedom to be more creative with his carrying. However, that wasn’t the case against Exeter. The Chiefs also lead their league in carries. The plan for La Rochelle was simple, force the Chiefs into a game they weren’t familiar with. La Rochelle kicked 22 times, relatively low by modern standards, but only eight of those were long kicks. The majority were short with the intention that they would be reclaimed. Exeter kicked just seven times as they tried to preserve what possession they had in the first half.

When it comes to carrying, Australia and Eddie Jones will likely want Skelton to take a similar approach. They shouldn’t expect him to become a barnstorming carrier in the mould of a Fraser McReight, for example. Instead, his job will be to make the holes for McReight to run through.

via GIPHY

You can see that in this ruck example. La Rochelle are looking to attack wide. If Skelton can’t singlehandedly secure this ruck, it forces La Rochelle to slow down, commit more men to the ruck, and lose that outside advantage. Instead, Skelton can secure the ball and the quick recycle allows La Rochelle to exploit the gap and score the try on the next phase.

It’s also an underrated skill, but Skelton has hit more attacking rucks than any other La Rochelle player in the European Cup. He also ranks in the top 20 by that same metric in the whole tournament. His work rate is often questioned, perhaps because he doesn’t carry that much. That is accurate, he ranks sixth for La Rochelle by carries. However, that is a bit like criticising Scott Sio for not kicking enough. It’s not his job.

A legitimate concern is whether Australia can afford to select Skelton over other locks who hit the rucks but also contribute in different areas. Take Richie Arnold for example. He has actually hit more rucks than Skelton and is Toulouse’s primary lineout option. Skelton, on the other hand, sits joint fifth for La Rochelle by lineout catches in Europe this year. Arnold has carried only two times fewer than Skelton as well.

via GIPHY

We shouldn’t paint too negative a picture of Skelton’s attacking ability though. He has more than a few moments of brilliance, including this offload from the weekend. It is really basic fact that someone of Skelton’s size and power will draw in defenders. The fact that he can then free up his hands and ship an offload is what makes him world class.

This isn’t just a one-off though. This is something he has been doing all year in the Top 14. He is simply a magnet for defenders and, whether the pass comes before or after contact, that creates space elsewhere.

There are very few players in the world who have a skillset like Skelton. It is what is earning him a small fortune over on the west coast of France. However, it’s a skillset which might be seen as a luxury for Eddie Jones and Australia. I have seen comments about using Skelton later in the game when the opposition defence is tired. That makes sense on paper. Except, we know that Skelton isn’t that type of carrier.

I think he will have to be used as a starter. His remit will be to dominate the breakdown and create space for the rest of the forwards. There is a precedent for the value of a player like this. For example, the rare times when Wales have played well in recent years, prop Tomas Francis has been integral to it. He barely carries or passes but he hits rucks constantly. That frees up the other big carriers to stay fresh and do what they do best. It might sound like damming with faint praise, but Skelton can do that same job for Australia.

As England coach, Eddie Jones incited the ire of fans by selecting functional players over the showmen of the Premiership. For a long time, it worked. Arguably, his downfall was to finally succumb to that pressure and select the showmen. Suddenly, without the hard-working ruckers, those showmen didn’t look so great. Will Jones learn this time around?

The Crowd Says:

2023-05-08T02:08:37+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


:laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

2023-05-06T21:57:30+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Sorry Mugs. Out of town camping. Saw missed call but that’s all I got.

2023-05-06T08:29:54+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


You dont answer my calls :crying: :shocked:

2023-05-06T04:36:09+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Donkey? HEE AW HEE AW HEE AWLWAYS calls me that! You’re bored today Mugs?

2023-05-06T04:28:27+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


Stop digging that hole Ken. Thoroughbred? Or do you mean they have the rugby sense of a donkey?

2023-05-06T04:21:51+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Well Mugs, I’ve been called many things, but ‘fine and sensitive’ doesn’t jog the memory. Regarding lack of expertise, I had no idea that expertise was a prerequisite for an opinion here. (Btw if a piggie can critique a thoroughbred in an 11 or 14 shirt,why cannot the reverse be true?)

2023-05-06T04:01:10+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


I can't remember Ken, although your lack of expertise would clearly be an issue when compiling that list. I appreciate that my last comment may have been cryptic. It was certainly rude and insulting, definitely unfit reading for the fine and sensitive people to be found on The Roar. Sadly that was three days ago and I have no idea what I was talking about. Funny, a lot of people have told me that, and I just realised they may not have been referring to my memory.

2023-05-05T01:01:41+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


The Brumbies are using Pete Samu as a lineout jumper this year as well and I am not sure Liam Wright would push Samu out of the team. In saying that, I would love to see both Samu and Liam Wright at 7. This will open up the number 6 position as well.

2023-05-04T10:12:30+00:00

tuohyred

Roar Rookie


Watch again ROG (et al) dismember Exeter. So, if Oz had Atonio, Bougarit, Aldrit, Kerr-Barlow, Hastoi and Dulin, Rhule & LLeyds/Tommy Thomas, then Big Will's presence would not be disruptive? Even while Botia off the field. Give me a break.

2023-05-04T08:19:17+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


But typically it will be. It’s very rare for a 7 to be a top jumper and not that many 6/8s are. For Aus probably only Swinton, Holloway and Leota are 6s that are lock quality jumpers

AUTHOR

2023-05-04T08:10:27+00:00

Sam Larner

Expert


That's only true if he is your 2nd best jumper. Wales for example have Tipuric, number seven, as their best lineout option. It just depends if there are enough other options in the team EJ selects.

2023-05-04T06:16:30+00:00

East Coast Aces

Roar Rookie


Can he jump in lineouts yet?

2023-05-04T00:05:09+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


LSL was my reference too Peter. Nick B was pretty blunt about his sleepiness on the side of the scrum, whilst praising his suitability in the row. I have a son who played 7 all through juniors. I suspect he got the jersey for sticky tackling. But a backrower also needs electric urgency, if not intense jackalling. I told him that, without an explosive response, he was playing more like workman 6 or a ruckholding rower. He ended up requesting a move into 5. As a general note, while I appreciate the necessity of flexibility, I would be very surprised if Eddie adopted a musical chairs approach like Cheika did. If Frost wears 6 he may wear it till 2024.

2023-05-03T23:44:50+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


MZ, I saw him as a 20 year old at a Tah fan day. Looked like another species of human and uncommonly silky hand skills. Obviously he had to develop beyond what came naturally to him. By a number of multinational accounts he has, and is, ticking boxes. Eddie, and we, need ticked boxes.

2023-05-03T23:43:02+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


not really. If a player can move from backrower to lock why not the reverse, if they have the right skills / physical attributes to make it work. LSL was tried but found wanting, lacked mobility and speed (especially lateral) But Itoje, Lawes, Barrett etc. If the right player and the need is there. It is no different to some players moving from backrow to front row (Kepu), F/B to flyhalf, centre to wing , wing to centre etc.

2023-05-03T23:38:07+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


While I see the value of Frost as a 6 (I am one of a number who has suggested it), the idea must float like a lead balloon to all those career backrowers out there. About as welcome as a multimillion dollar teenage back. But if little Nick can sprint off the side of a scrum in defence and find all the other field spots required of a 6, why not?

2023-05-03T22:20:51+00:00

Nick Maguire

Roar Rookie


:laughing: Giddyup!

2023-05-03T22:16:45+00:00

Nick Maguire

Roar Rookie


RD, "Skelton has hit more attacking rucks than any other La Rochelle player in the European Cup. He also ranks in the top 20 by that same metric in the whole tournament."

2023-05-03T21:51:13+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


I would bring on Holloway or L Wright and move Frost to maintain the number of jumpers. Samu to replace Valetini.

2023-05-03T21:49:54+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


frost, hooper and valetini are incumbent current members of the team. Skelton was in the team also last time he was available during a test window.

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