Five things we learned: The day Australia's playmakers arrived in thrilling RWC audition for Eddie

By Christy Doran / Editor

Ever since he landed back on Australian shores, Eddie Jones has spoken about the importance of using the ball.

Not over double-digit phases of slow ruck speed and poor transition. Immediately.

“We’ve got to be junkies for winning, not junkies for possession. Possession rugby is dead. It’s dead for the moment and it’s probably going to be dead for a long period of time,” he told an Australian Schoolboys audience in Sydney.

“That’s just stupid to even think like that anymore, and unfortunately there’s that thinking still in rugby.

“The game’s about being fast now. You’ve got 75 per cent of tries being scored in three phases – 75 per cent.

“So why would you keep the ball for 10 phases?”

Jones would have enjoyed what he saw on Sunday as at long last Australia’s Super Rugby sides showed the counter-attacking potency that has been the hallmarks of New Zealand rugby since day dot.

A new sense of ruthlessness was on display, with a couple of brilliant counter-attacking tries from first phase.

Nor were the conditions in Melbourne easy, with the ball greasy after morning showers.

Two young men finding their feet rose to the occasion as Noah Lolesio and Carter Gordon delivered the most encouraging and compelling performances this side of the ditch in years.

At long last the next generation of Australian playmakers has arrived.

Lolesio scored a quick-fire double and stood flat at the line.

More than anything else, he had presence. He wanted to take control, and he did. Now he needs to do it again.

Carter Gordon delivered another commanding performance for the Rebels. Photo: Daniel Pockett/Getty Images

Gordon meanwhile was marvellous.

It was his most complete game of the year. It was also the best performance of an Australian No.10 this year.

His two left-to-right passes which sent Lachie Anderson in to score twice were straight from the Quade Cooper playbook. No other pass in Australia has matched Cooper’s since he burst onto the scene in 2007.

But it wasn’t just that, he played flat and was in motion. It was poetry.

His composure was there for everyone to see while his physicality and durability were also on show as he copped hits and never look fazed.

It was an outstanding performance that will have Jones thinking bullishly about the future. It could be sooner than both know.

Fiji’s statement to the south

The Drua proved to their Super Rugby rivals that beating the Crusaders was no fluke.

On that Saturday back in early March, the Crusaders were without several world class players, including Richie Mo’unga. But they still had enough talent to win.

Over the weekend, the Hurricanes took close to a full strength side with them to Suva and were well-beaten by Mick Byrne’s men. Byrne’s ability to bring the squad together and get them firing shouldn’t be glossed over.

The scoreboard showed a nail-biting affair, which it was, but the Drua left out on the field a few tries and a couple of missed penalties in the opening half.

Their success has shown how difficult traveling to Fiji will be for any opposition team.

Just like a tough trip to South Africa or even across the ditch to New Zealand, playing away from home is half the battle – and fun – in Super Rugby.

The Drua are the best addition to Super Rugby since its exception. Their voice was painfully neglected and missed for decades, but thankfully Super Rugby’s powerbrokers have got their addition right.

Playing at home has been crucial.

Now the decision must be made for Moana Pasifika to play more matches in Apia – and not on a Friday afternoon but over the weekend – so that they stand a chance and their people can breathe new life into the competition.

Playing predominantly in Auckland never felt right.

Apprentice shades master

First blood to Fraser McReight.

It’s not like McReight was starting from miles back at the start of the year, but he had some way to make up on Michael Hooper.

Why? Experience and leadership as well as a massive work rate and physicality.

With time of the essence for Jones, a few core players will be crucial for the returning Wallabies coach.

World Cups, after all, aren’t won on the back of pups.

Fraser McReight’s stocks went up against the Waratahs on Saturday despite their defeat. (Photo by Will Russell/Getty Images)

Yet, having been the best player on the pitch by a mile against the Force, McReight continued his exceptional year by again starring against the Waratahs.

His link play was there to see, his work-rate was top-notch and his timing at the breakdown was superb.

Only former Wallaby Richard Hardwick, who will play for Namibia at the World Cup after featuring last year in their qualification, has come close to McReight for timing at the breakdown this year.

The gap is certainly closing between McReight and Hooper. Both have a role to play at this year’s World Cup.

Rebels find the formula

In years gone by the Rebels have simply wanted a sugar hit.

They’ve signed the first available flashy thing and concentrated on the here and now rather than three years down the track.

But, at long last, the Rebels are learning from their mistakes and it’s bearing fruit. It’s why the decision to offer their coaching team contract extensions is smart business.

Whether or not they make the finals remains to be seen – three of their final four games are very much winnable – they are on the right track.

It has started with getting their tight five in order.

A shirtless Lachlan Lonergan is tackled by the Rebels on the stroke of half-time at AAMI Park, on May 07, 2023, in Melbourne. Photo: Daniel Pockett/Getty Images

They’ve got depth in the front-row. The losses of Taniela Tupou (Reds) and Angus Bell (Waratahs) has shown that Australia’s Super Rugby sides are still far too dependent on one or two tight-five forwards.

It’s why the Waratahs and Reds will likely not progress deep in 2023 because they don’t have the muscle up front.

Missing element that needs to be addressed

Queensland once again just fell short in the Super W final as the Fijiana Drua claimed back-to-back tournaments.

It was a stunning victory by the Drua, who had faced adversity through the campaign due to the financial struggles of their Union. They need to be addressed urgently.

What else must be addressed moving forward is a crossover finals campaign with New Zealand’s Super Rugby Aupiki.

The Drua celebrate after defeating the Queensland Reds to win the Super W at Queensland Country Bank Stadium on May 06, 2023 in Townsville. (Photo: Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images)

At bare minimum the respective winner’s from each competition should play, but in reality the two finalists and even the four making up the semi-finals should play in a quick-fire knockout comp.

It would help give the competition’s more credibility, advance the women’s game and include another final, which is where the cream rises to the top.

Christy Doran’s Australian Super Rugby team of the week:

James Slipper, Lachlan Lonergan, Harry Johnson-Holmes, Nick Frost, Trevor Hosea, Rob Valetini, Fraser McReight, Langi Gleeson, Tate McDermott, Carter Gordon, Lachie Anderson, Lalakai Foketi, Len Ikitau, Suliasi Vunivalu, Tom Wright.

The Crowd Says:

2023-05-11T23:15:05+00:00

Dusty10

Roar Rookie


Mate, it drives me nuts. It really does. Even past greats have employed the box kick poorly, including Gregan for a period of time, and I consider George to be our best ever 9. George was at his best when he distributed quickly or ran, and White was a far better 9 when he varied his game and ran the ball. I recall him cutting up the ABs and embarrassing Aaron Smith when he ran the ball. Bloody hell, what happened to that??

2023-05-11T23:08:08+00:00

graymatter

Roar Rookie


Dusty, Bravo. This is the best account of the stupidity of the Box Kick I have read. I had exactly the same discussion with Jake White when he first came to the Brumbies. I tried to explain to him that its not a popular tactic in our junior rugby or club rugby - so consequently players are not accustomed to the tactic. The result is that the kick is very rarely chased and even lesser contested. So the result is simply giving possession to the opposition often in their attacking zone! Further the opposition knows its coming from the posturing of strutting roosters like Nick White. I have said elsewhere and I'll repeat here, the Brumbies backline and in particular Noah Lolesio will be far more effective and succesful when White has moved on!

2023-05-10T04:06:27+00:00

Wig

Roar Rookie


yes he's starting to it helps to have a good team and attack coach around you.

2023-05-10T04:02:03+00:00

Wig

Roar Rookie


Oh yea the powerbola (sounds like ) big dishes on the roof yep got that. Be looking at it as soon as back. Whos got the TV rights ? I could look it up for wc

2023-05-09T18:31:25+00:00

Rugbynutter

Roar Rookie


Hodge was right where made a pie decision to take the tap rather then the scrum when brumbies down a player as would have given more space to attack the line with a player overlap.

2023-05-09T14:33:25+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Let's face it he ain't behind Brooke and Buck...

2023-05-09T11:36:20+00:00

Chivas

Roar Rookie


Its not about fashion, its about impact. I don't think he would have the impact he does in SR and yes it is just my opinion :happy: I don't know if you saw John Mitchell play. He was highly and widely respected as a hard nut who led from the front. He could put in big hits and drove well off the back of the scrums and rucks. Waikato had a dominant forward pack. I gues he was unlucky he was in an era where we had Buck Shelford and Zinzan Brooke, who could do the hard stuff but had an edge. So don't think I am discrediting Wilkins when I put him in Mitchells class. John Mitchell was given the reins on a tour to England where he captained the mid-week team in which they won. As a waikato supporter Mitch was the man and when he wasn't on the field we struggled (like when he was sidelined with a broken leg), but he comes back we take the shield and once again we are putting the fear of god into opposition forward packs. Wilkins is one of the reasons I watch the Rebels. He's not hidden and he makes smart decisions. If he was on the field Rebels win on Saturday just past.

2023-05-09T10:30:40+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Fair enough it's your opinion I like the guys that do the unfashionable stuff in a potentially big hard running pack who opposition teams will pick off with one out runs I'm impressed with his skill of securing the ball in attack...

2023-05-09T10:14:05+00:00

Chivas

Roar Rookie


Once upon of time in the days of long tours he would have got a run as a mid-week captain as a mark of respect of how valuable he is to Australian rugby. John Mitchell was a case and point in NZ, a few like Reuben Thorne should have been in the same boat as opposed to being given a jersey. It's a shame they aren't able to honour stalwarts of the game like him. Also, it aint about flashy. I would give him a crack against some of the lesser sides to see how he goes, but I think he would struggle against teams like the Bok, France, Ireland or even NZ, but I would have him amongst the top three in Aus with Hooper and McReight the other two. I do have huge respect for him as a player and like what he brings. I'd rate him above Liam Wright as a 7, especially considering Wright is not playing in that position.

2023-05-09T05:52:23+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Yeah I live in South Pattaya I get premier sports.

2023-05-09T05:50:46+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Makes it look easy wish our forwards could do it... uncoachable probably.

2023-05-09T05:49:33+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


He won't get crack at top level unfortunately so we will always guess he ain't flashy and the Reds vs Tahs 7 derby rules out third option..

2023-05-09T05:47:23+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Let's not get pally Chivas albeit that I enjoy your comments your a Kiwi and come WC it's hating you guys for your polished team and superior skill level but that doesn't diminish the fact we don't like you guys especially during that tournament nothing personal..

2023-05-09T05:42:46+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Think it was slipper hard to blame Lonergan.

2023-05-09T05:40:59+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


I live in Thailand all my mates are northern english and a midweek Manchester it's game is big nite and I somewhat enjoy it..bagging ref has no boundaries but not even watching WC in Brazil can make me like soccer more than a social evening allows unfortunately.

2023-05-09T05:32:33+00:00

Khun Phil

Roar Rookie


OO,I was actually watching it on 9,not Stan as I can't get Stan on my phone app.

2023-05-09T05:30:21+00:00

Khun Phil

Roar Rookie


Yes,Wizz.Get good rugby coverage on Premier Sports.They even throw in a bit of NRL occasionally!

2023-05-09T01:03:50+00:00

Lukas

Roar Pro


I agree that Gordon has looked good against Kiwi opposition, especially in a losing team. I'm not sold on Lolesio. Against the Hurricanes frankly it was the usual story. The forwards we strong as usual, and Wright provided some spark at the back. Brumbies are going to play finals football, he'll get his chance.

2023-05-09T00:49:45+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Update on Wilkin injury?

AUTHOR

2023-05-09T00:49:07+00:00

Christy Doran

Editor


Big Pietsch fan. He had his moments on the weekend but he also lost the ball in contact from a couple of restarts after the Tahs scored points. Huge area for all Aussie Super sides to fix.

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