COMMENT: Eddie has made one huge gamble - and it's not the No.10 call - as he avoids ruthless Hooper decision

By Christy Doran / Editor

Ben Donaldson’s inclusion was the eye-popping selection in Eddie Jones’ first Wallabies squad, but it wasn’t shocking. Perplexing perhaps given his underwhelming Super Rugby campaign, but not shocking.

After all, ever since sensationally being parachuted in as Wallabies coach Jones has continually namedropped Donaldson at every turn.

And with Andrew Kellaway set to miss the Test after an injury, Donaldson’s ability to cover fly-half and fullback was always a tempting option.

Too tempting in the end, particularly with Quade Cooper still to prove his body can withstand the physical onslaught coming his way and Carter Gordon the standout Australian fly-half in Super Rugby this season but untried at the international level of the game.

Had Donaldson not been selected, Bernard Foley all but certainly would have been included. But for what purpose? To carry the drinks and hold the tackle bags?

Utility back Ben Donaldson (C) was included in the Wallabies’ squad despite an underwhelming campaign. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP) (Photo by FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP via Getty Images)

Jones, for now, wants to see how Gordon and Donaldson go without another experienced campaigner like Foley in the mix. But this isn’t the end for the 33-year-old, who has been to two World Cup campaigns.

Nor was the co-captaincy model Jones enacted surprising either.

In March, Jones quipped that he might need to name seven captains because of World Rugby’s policy regarding concussion and Head Injury Assessments. His comments were likely influenced by the fact he had to appoint numerous England captains in 2022 as injuries hit hard.

What was surprising is that Jones has returned to Hooper as one of his co-captains despite his obvious courageous nature and leadership capabilities.

Four successive Wallabies coaches have turned to Hooper to lead the side. That tells you plenty about Hooper’s pedigree as a person and a player, with the openside flanker the nation’s most-capped captain (68 Tests).

Yet, his winning percentage of 41 per cent – one percentage point lower than the Wallabies’ win-loss ratio since 2016 – as captain is the worrying record that should have seen Jones turn to someone new.

After all, losing has become an infectious disease in Australian rugby.

Wallabies head coach Eddie Jones has named Michael Hooper as a co-captain along side James Slipper, but should he have moved away from the veteran leader? (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

That’s not necessarily down to Hooper, but fresh ideas were needed to spark the Wallabies. Indeed, for too long the rest of the Wallabies have looked for Hooper to provide the answer.

When Scott Robertson took over from Todd Blackadder as Crusaders coach, the Super Rugby juggernaut had failed to win the competition seven years despite going close on a number of occasions.

Robertson, who will take over from Ian Foster as All Blacks coach following the World Cup, made one crucial change immediately.

“Look, they’d been close,” Robertson told this reporter last year. “But they hadn’t won moments in games.”

Sound familiar?

“The first thing I did was put Sam Whitelock as captain. That was a big decision,” Robertson continued.

“Sam Whitelock came in and left his mark on the group for the first three years as captain; an incredible leader.”

The move paid off, with the Crusaders winning seven Super Rugby titles under Robertson.

Scott Robertson’s decision to switch captains after being appointed as Crusaders coach paid off. (Photo by Peter Meecham/Getty Images)

Jones’ decision to return to Hooper, who stepped away from the game last August and missed six Tests, is all the more surprising given he has rarely shied away from making a big call.

When he was announced as England coach, Jones named Dylan Hartley, the nation’s grubbiest player in its history with a disciplinary record that saw others bid him goodbye, as captain.

The move paid off, as England won their first 17 Tests under Jones to equal the tier-one record.

Eddie Jones’ controversial decision to appoint Dylan Hartley(R) as England captain paid off. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

Then there’s the matter of whether Jones has snookered himself by appointing Hooper as captain?

It was more than two decades ago that Jones chose Brett Robinson ahead of the emerging George Smith for the Brumbies’ Super Rugby final against the Crusaders. That was despite Smith shining all season.

Jones, it is understood, regretted the decision as Smith, arguably the Wallabies’ greatest openside flanker, almost got the Brumbies home after coming on in the second half.

This was Jones’ chance to give himself freedom.

While Dan Carter showed in 2015 that big players can stand up in big moments and rally again for another surge, Hooper’s ineffectiveness at the breakdown should have been enough for Jones to not box himself into a corner by naming him as a co-captain along with James Slipper.

For years Hooper could do it all as he ran from one tackle to the next, papering over the cracks of his teammates because of his superior work-rate and huge engine, but all that did was mask his flaws at the breakdown.

Jones, for now, believes the co-captaincy model will best serve the Wallabies and provide them with a “winning edge”.

Michael Hooper is the Wallabies’ most-capped captain. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

The proof will be in the pudding, but if the Wallabies are bundled out at the quarter-final stage with the runway they’ve been served up to make a run to the semi-finals, the captaincy decision will be one of the reasons why.

After all, this is a squad with potential written right the way through it.

Other than Donaldson’s fortune, this was a predictable squad that has been given some X-factor quality to it by Rugby Australia’s smart decision to allow twin towers Will Skelton and Richie Arnold to suit up in gold.

The selections of Quade Cooper, Marika Koroibete and Samu Kerevi, who is still in the reckoning to run out in Pretoria despite being listed in the Wallabies rehab group, give Jones’ side more than a chance.

Indeed, they now have the necessary quota of five world-class players needed to win a World Cup, with Taniela Tupou, Skelton, Cooper, Kerevi and Koroibete up there with the very best.

Whether they fulfill their potential remains to be seen, with Tupou and Skelton particularly needing to transfer their domestic deeds over the years onto the international paddock.

Nor does that list include Angus Bell, Allan Alaalatoa, Rob Valetini, Nic White and Len Ikitau, who have been five of Australia’s best performers over the past two years. They are the glue binding the Wallabies together.

Tate McDermott, Mark Nawaqanitawase and Tom Wright give the Wallabies some potency.

Burgeoning Brumbies utility forward Tom Hooper and Rebels loose-forward Josh Kemeny have both been selected on their eye-catching performances this year. It’s likely both won’t make the World Cup squad, but both are astute selections despite coming from a long way back.

The Achilles heel of the squad remains the hooker position.

Jordan Uelese is even more fortunate to make the squad than Donaldson, with the Rebels rake failing to address his throwing inadequacies.

As is often the case with Jones, the Wallabies coach is impressed by the 26-year-old’s physique, which has bought him time. Now, he must run with his reprieve or risk never being sighted again. Ditto, Suliasi Vunivalu.

Jones’ first official Wallabies squad always promised some surprises. He did not disappoint.

But going down the route of co-captains seems a gamble when a new fresh start seemed essential.

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-05T02:26:46+00:00

Zero_Cool

Roar Rookie


McReight HAD performed very well at test level last year too. AND has been the best 7 in the comp. Why go back to Hooper...

2023-06-30T04:16:25+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


Aiden, believe what you will. So far as I'm concerned this discussion is over.

2023-06-29T23:46:20+00:00

Aiden

Roar Rookie


Hooper has a contract. It does not say 'must be captain.' Take your tin foil hat off

2023-06-29T20:44:07+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


So you're denying the contract given to Hooper? If you are then there is only one person spouting nonsense in this dialogue.

2023-06-29T02:13:00+00:00

rusty

Roar Rookie


PS to the try lover if it's gone to Peter not meant to. So defence was never your forte I see.

2023-06-29T02:11:24+00:00

rusty

Roar Rookie


DUH. Tight 5. Defence. Think about it then and who fits your bill.

2023-06-29T02:10:01+00:00

rusty

Roar Rookie


Oh no I've got a few. Let me update you when time permits!!

2023-06-29T01:41:02+00:00

Aiden

Roar Rookie


Its not a 'comeback' its a statement of fact. It is the best I can muster, entirely appropriate and accurate. Nothing more needed.

2023-06-28T06:36:15+00:00

Jimbo81

Roar Rookie


I wonder if EJ can make this all work. Imagine the Wallabies pack an attacking scrum 25m out. Tupou being shoved by Skelton splits the opposition scrum in half for a penalty advantage - McDermott has a dart from the scrum base beating two defenders to offload to Wilson on the angle who is pulled up 3 meters out. McReight with the cleanout. Tupou pick n drive = try. Add in Kerevi, QC, Korobeite, Faessler. Definitely have the cattle now. No excuses.

2023-06-28T01:25:32+00:00

Rugbytrylover

Roar Rookie


Yes PK. So easy to criticise on these forums from the comfort of your lounge. As you say, no solutions offered.

2023-06-28T00:44:08+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


So you can't actually provide the additional brave selections he should have made then, just saying he should dump more players but not actually say who should be selected.

2023-06-27T23:22:53+00:00

rusty

Roar Rookie


Difficult question. I do like the dumps you mention and agree with Arnold and Hooper. Uelese is a liability unless EJ can get into his head. His throw is appalling and his body language screams loser. As to bravery EJ needed to get rid of more of the old losers. I don't think even EJ can transform that habit in most of them. The tight 5 is critical and then defence, as per the Crusaders. Hence I agree with Faessler, Arnold, Skelton, T Hooper. Very short on quality props and too many poor defenders in the backs. Don't know if EJ has the nouse or staff to fix the prop woes. Defence is attitude, you either have it or you don't. If a player gets this far and doesn't it's a hard fix. I guess we'll all know in the next few games.

2023-06-27T20:51:50+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


Eloquent Aiden.... Is that the best comeback you can muster?

2023-06-27T12:39:34+00:00

BeginAgain

Roar Rookie


Actually if Tupou, Faessler and Slipper make it.. that is a reds front row :happy: ok Slipper is not anymore, but his membership card hasn’t been revoked has it? But in truth it wasn’t the players I was speaking to, but rather the tenacity and work rate the reds showed as a team even being hugely outgunned on paper. The first time the reds won, people could put down to being a fluke, a bad day by Chiefs, missing players etc.. but then it almost happened again in close succession.. that is not luck. So if they can do it against a team they were supposed to be convincingly beaten by (8 ranked against 1) you would have to feel that the Wallabies can if they take a bit of whatever the reds take when they choose to stump up and give it there all. It wouldn’t be the first time an Australian team punched well above its weight.. the Wallabies epitomised that through the 90’s.

2023-06-27T03:12:51+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


not true at all, if the incumbent is not performing at a high enough level at test level then you look to replace him. The point is Hooper HAD performed very well at test level last year so super rugby form cannot be used as the reason to replace him.

2023-06-27T02:46:18+00:00

Wolla Wotsa

Roar Rookie


" the Wallabies have a team that can compete with anyone. I mean we don’t have to look much further than the games between the Reds and the Chiefs this season to see that." There won`t be any Reds in the Wallaby Tight 5, or backrow. :laughing: :shocked:

2023-06-27T01:46:20+00:00

Zero_Cool

Roar Rookie


I would have almost gone Liam Wright, Wilson & Valintini with Gleeson off the bench.

2023-06-27T01:44:27+00:00

Zero_Cool

Roar Rookie


That hasn't considered anything this year. And frankly his form at Super Rugby this year suggests otherwise.

2023-06-27T01:42:12+00:00

Zero_Cool

Roar Rookie


I guess the problem is, on current form, he's not performing. We have an up-and-coming player. But they name the non-performing player Captain… Can't really captain the team if you aren't in the XV, makes looks … regrettable for the coach if their captain isn't even in the 23. And Hooper (nor McReight) can really be coming off the bench. So they name Hooper as Co-Captain, they may as well just send McReight to go play in Japan, because clearly being the best 7 in Super Rugby doesn't matter.

2023-06-27T01:36:31+00:00

Zero_Cool

Roar Rookie


But that's the thing, if you apply that logic, you NEVER pick anyone who isn't in the team. I'd ask you this, when last year was McReight clearly worse than Hooper? Yes, Game 2 against South Africa was not great from McReight, but you have to balance that against game 1 where he was one of the best on ground. Not to mention, he actually wasn't bad, just made tackles instead of getting on the ball… because SA targeted him after he dicked all over them the previous game.

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