SRP Round 13 Talking Points: Faessler the hooker bolter, playing to Marky's strengths and Philip's late charge

By Jim Tucker / Expert

As World Cup bolters go, Queenslander Matt Faessler keeps simmering away in conversations about the hooking spots.

Queensland Reds coach Brad Thorn rarely blows the trumpet for his players when it comes to Wallabies selections so you have to rate his upbeat Thursday endorsement of Faessler.

No.1, Faessler can throw. He’s the best lineout thrower, on stats, of any Australian hooker and that counts. Eddie Jones must have thought so to include him in his first camp.

You can be a dasher, a bludgeoning runner or a try-magnet at the rear of a rolling maul in the open but if you can’t throw don’t apply for a World Cup job.

Faessler runs low to the ground naturally and he’s bigger, at 110kg, than many give him credit for because he’s added 6kg since joining the pro ranks.

Queensland Reds’ hooker Matt Faessler. (Photo by Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images)

“Every position has its core basics. For a hooker, it’s around throwing and scrummaging, the set piece, and then you’ve got your general play, defence and whatever,” Thorn said.

“The pressure comes on at Test level around set piece. He’s well placed, he’s a heck of an athlete, he’s a lot bigger than people realise and he runs like a back. He’s played some good footy and if he keeps doing so you’d hope there’s opportunity in the green-and-gold.”

Dave Porecki has 2022’s Test experience behind him as a head start, Jordan Uelese’s lineout throwing is not his strongest attribute, Folau Fainga’a has a case and Lachy Lonergan’s fine skills package will always come in the smallest frame of any contender no matter how many protein shakes he drinks.

Plenty to weigh up.

Upsets make the game

The beauty of the upset is a sporting gift with few parallels, certainly for the fan rabidly cheering at the TV, the diehard at a game on the road or the fair-weather supporter opening a text with disbelief.

The Queensland Reds’ 25-22 overthrow of the Chiefs in Round 12 is in Super Rugby’s all-time pantheon.

After a bit of head-scratching, I rate it as the Reds’ biggest upset on the road in 20 years since the 41-20 upset of the Stormers in Cape Town in 2003. The Queenslanders played that one with 14 men for more than 70 minutes after the early red card to hooker Tai McIsaac.

Better Reds sides have taken bigger scalps against the odds – Crusaders (2010), Chiefs (2010), Stormers (2011) and so on – but not one so unexpected.

The value of the upset to earn a surge of support is immense. The NSW Waratahs pretty much built this season’s top four hopes on their worthy upset of the Crusaders last year.

Where do we see another upset in the crucial final three rounds that will decide the order of the top eight into the play-offs?

The Reds are in the thick of the possibilities.

The Reds over the Blues, minus Rieko Ioane, Finlay Christie, Dalton Papalii and Caleb Clarke, is some chance of unfolding at Suncorp Stadium on Friday night.

Equally, the Fijian Drua knocking off the Reds in Suva in the final round is a fair shout although that would hardly be an upset based on the home ground vibe.

Fabricated play-off hopes

It’s not just me but, philosophically, you have to be against a 3-8 side still being in the play-off hunt.

The best the Melbourne Rebels can finish is 6-8 to squeak into the play-offs. That just shouts “too many teams in the play-offs.”

Top six seems a better fit with a 12-team competition.

Anyway, the Rebels and the 3-8 Highlanders go at it on Saturday in Dunedin where the winner is still a finals hope.

Nawaqanitawase re-signing

The NSW Waratahs winger is such an asset, so why is he on rations in terms of getting the ball?

Mark Nawaqanitawase is one of the few starting Wallabies to rack up 10 80-minute games this season. Even Michael Hooper has missed 10 minutes in his 10 outings.

Nawaqanitwase did register for 10 ball carries against the Rebels last round but rarely in any open space.

Nor have the Waratahs really used him as a kick-catch target on attack. Odd.

Perhaps, this outing against the Fijian Drua at Allianz Stadium on Saturday night is his chance for a big running night and adding to his five tries for 2023.

He’ll certainly play with a smile after signing a new contract until the end of 2024.

Rage on Brumbies

The Brumbies just can’t afford an unexpected slip-up over the final three rounds.

The value of a top two spot to ensure home ground advantage in the quarter-finals and a possible semi-final is immense.

At 9-2, they must beat the Western Force in Perth on Saturday and the Rebels in Canberra on June 2 at the very least to sustain that idea. Dropping the May 27 game against the Chiefs might still be feasible with the Kiwi chasers having games amongst themselves.

This equation is mentioned to highlight how vital this trip to Perth is. HBF Park has been something of a Bermuda Triangle for visiting sides this season. The Brumbies have to avoid such turbulence.

Matt Philip back

This is huge for the Rebels but even bigger for the Wallabies.

The grunt work that Matt Philip puts in is the glue to any pack he plays in. That’s cleanouts, hard carries, solid lineout wins, regular touches of good handling and always a big attitude.

He’s back starting against the Highlanders so that’s three games in which to make the right impression on Wallabies boss Eddie Jones.

Philip is an interesting case. Michael Cheika went a little cold on him. Dave Rennie loved what he brought. How will Jones rate him?

A workhorse lock is always a good partner for the jumping star like a David Giffin beside John Eales.

Philip is probably competing with Cadeyrn Neville for the workhorse role and right now the Brumbies lock has done everything right in 2023 with the bonus of being a better lineout target.

The Crowd Says:

2023-05-22T01:44:14+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


They are too busy telling people they are Assistant Referees and not touchies anymore Jim!

AUTHOR

2023-05-21T22:28:30+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


Awful. What do touch judges do these days?

AUTHOR

2023-05-21T22:25:05+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


Philip is what we all love to see…understated workhorse who never stops

AUTHOR

2023-05-21T22:23:37+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


Good case. Your Force observation played out

AUTHOR

2023-05-21T22:20:07+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


Lonergan is a superb Super Rugby hooker and a big factor in multiple wins this year

AUTHOR

2023-05-21T22:19:02+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


Liam Wright offers a genuine jumper in backrow. No ball carrying at all from him but you’d get that from Skelton plus Wright’s strong on ball work. Eddie will be weighing up them all

AUTHOR

2023-05-21T22:16:51+00:00

Jim Tucker

Expert


Philip the right work ethic for No6 but operates in middle of the field not in wider channels where he’d be needed. Not quick enough. A pure lock

2023-05-19T11:23:50+00:00

Bobby

Roar Rookie


Thanks

2023-05-19T08:50:23+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


at intl level they are very similar, mcreight does not have anywhere the same impact at that level agree McReight looks faster and hooper has lost a step

2023-05-19T08:49:41+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


not at intl level though, Hooper actually gets more turnovers than mcreight at intl level. However at super level McReight is in better form and Hooper's last year test performance was not very good so I would be all for McReight getting a chance to see if he can perform at intl level, which he has not to date.

2023-05-19T08:41:04+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


ESPN’s match reports. PeteK has put his figures up for Tooly as well.

2023-05-19T08:17:22+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


Fair point and a good one. Travel times and the demand for derbies does create distortion.

2023-05-19T07:25:29+00:00

Doctordbx

Roar Rookie


Needs a year in Europe.

2023-05-19T07:24:28+00:00

Doctordbx

Roar Rookie


And also true

2023-05-19T06:57:42+00:00

Bobby

Roar Rookie


Jez. Where do your stat's come from ?

2023-05-19T06:27:39+00:00

Joey

Roar Rookie


A perfect time for the TMO to get involved is when Swinton tries to decapitate a player with his shoulder.

2023-05-19T06:22:57+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Yes agreed big pack hard ball carriers and scrum being a weapon..Mc reight has to be small guy on side on form this year.

2023-05-19T06:08:49+00:00

Old school rugby

Roar Rookie


Faessler going great guns and his lineout having a big impact of getting us on the front foot. It’s hard to assess his scrum impact. He’s agile and coordinated.

2023-05-19T06:06:27+00:00

LuckyPhil

Roar Rookie


ATW they have found the solution to get the Waratahs into the top 6 - they have got rid of the Kiwi coaches.

2023-05-19T06:01:08+00:00

LuckyPhil

Roar Rookie


I think the TMOs are not knowing when to get involved and when not to. Also don't blame the touchie for not doing anything about it if he didn't see it. He can't get the TMO to review everything just because a player asks. While missing things during the game happens, these incidents should get pulled up by the match review panel.

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