REACTION: 'You don't have to be a smart arse, mate' - Eddie blows up at journo after Wallabies shocker

By Tony Harper / Editor

Wallabies coach Eddie Jones confronted a South African reporter and repeatedly accused him of being a “smart arse” in a feisty reaction after a horrific start to his Wallabies comeback.

Jones accepted Australia was outplayed everywhere by the Springboks as his team was trounced 43-12 – scoring the first and last tries with eight in between from the Springboks in Pretoria.

The Boks bossed the game in all areas but particularly the collision where the Wallabies were overwhelmed. It meant the Australians had no foothold in the game. In a chilling stat – the Wallabies spent just five phases and 47 seconds in the Boks’ 22 while the hosts were camped in Australia’s for 5 minutes, 6 seconds.

“We got beaten to the punch everywhere,” Jones said. “We got beaten in the set piece, we got beaten at the gain line and beaten in the air and if you don’t win any of those contests it’s going to be a long day at the office.

“There wasn’t many positives today. We went out there to play with a bit more pace and we were able to do that for the first 20 minutes but weren’t able to convert any pressure we put on the Springboks into points. Of course the Springboks came back and every time they got an opportunity they converted it into points.

“‘It starts with the set piece and once they’re on top they’ve got their big ball runners and there’s no better team in the world than South Africa once they’ve got an edge to keep playing on top of you.”

Before the game Jones had said he wanted to face a full strength Springboks instead of this line up. The Boks sent 12 stars to New Zealand early to prepare for next weekend’s match against the All Blacks, who beat Argentina 41-12 in their opener.

A South African reporter asked Jones if he was relieved he didn’t face the full force of the Boks.

“South Africans are good at winning – so you don’t have to be a smartarse, mate.”

“We’ll bounce back, I have no doubt. We were well and truly beaten today by a Springboks side that old mate’s calling the B team. I never knew there was a Springboks side called the B team but now we have a new term.”

Jones returned his gaze and ire to the reporter and confronted him at the end of the press conference as he was leaving the room.

“You don’t have to be a smartarse, mate,” Jones repeated. “You should have more respect mate. I never said that mate. I said we always want to play the best. Show some respect.”

Jones said his coaching team had to identify “the two or three areas” to fix.

“One certainly is the consistency of our set piece. There were possibly opportunities for us to be more dominant in the lineout and we didn’t take advantage of that. Our scrum is a continual work on. We’ve got to find ways to get over the gain line. We fix those against Argentina and we’re back in the money.”

Under Dave Rennie discipline was a recurring and seemingly unfixable theme – the Wallabies were no better at all in the return of Jones.

(Photo by Sydney Seshibedi/Gallo Images/Getty Images)

Former Wallaby captain James Horwill put a positive spin on the disaster post-game.

“A week is a long time in football. It’s not like it can’t be fixed. There are easy fixes. There are small things in terms of playing at the right end of the field,” said an upbeat Horwill on Stan Sport.

“It might look like it’s all doom and gloom but I see a couple of changes to some personnel and tactics, and a shift in mindset and a different team we’re playing against.

“I’m not sitting here concerned thinking the Wallabies are out of it this season.”

Horwill did agree it was a disappointing performance.

“The failure to not really fire a shot after that last little bit was the most disappointing part. You look at possession stats and time in opposition 22 was 47 seconds in the whole game. That just tells the storyWe didn’t build enough pressure and in the end we were just absorbing and they were coming in waves after wave and it showed in the end.

There are some structural things that can be fixed but we just didn’t assert ourselves on that game.”

Former Wallaby Stephen Hoiles said it was a “terrible start” for the Australians’ World Cup campaign but a team featuring four debutants should get a boost from being exposed to the realities of top tier rugby.

“We had such high expectations. We know it’s a challenging place to play against the reigning world champions but I don’t think any of us saw that coming,” Hoiles said.

 (Photo by Sydney Seshibedi/Gallo Images/Getty Images)

“Some players got their opportunity to say why they should be at a World Cup and other players probably showed why they might not make the World Cup. You can’t accept that.

“A lot of guys have never been to South Africa They’ve been exposed to the cauldron and what it will be like at the World Cup.

“You’ve got to understand Test rugby is a different animal, the physicality, and winning collisions which will be a big part of of what this Rugby World Cup will be about.

“You come into the latter stages of the competition – the quarterfinals and probably for us it will be England or Argentina. It will be physical, you’ve got to win collisions and if you get through it will be New Zealand or France so it’s going to be a big part of the competition for the guys to understand now that’s what it’s like to play Test rugby and the difference compared to Super Rugby.”

Hoiles name checked Pete Samu, who replaced injured Tom Hooper early on, as having a positive game and called out Jordan Uelese for three poor lineout throws in succession in the second half.

“There’s a few guys there who said ‘I’m ready for this level’ – Carter Gordon being one of them.”

Wallabies co-captain James Slipper acknowledged that an issue prevalent under Rennie – a lack of discipline – was still there under Jones.

The Wallabies were on the end of a 13-3 penalty count from Ben O’Keeffe while their handling and decision making was likewise poor. Two yellow cards while defending their line – both which resulted in penalty tries, told the story of the pressure they were under.

“There was an opportunity to come here and put it in a game that we were proud of,” said Slipper.

“And to be fair, we just defended the whole second half. So you’ve got to give credit to the Springboks that put us under pressure and we will learn a lot from that.”

Asked what the Wallabies will learn, Slipper responded: “Once again, discipline, playing at the right end of the field. It’s a tough start, but we’ve got a long year ahead of us. There’s plenty to come. So we’ll keep working hard.

“We wanted to play a Wallaby game tonight and I’d probably say we didn’t deal with the pressure. The discipline put us on the backfoot a bit.

“We lost two players to the sin bin. In Test matches you need to be playing well in those areas, set piece needs to be functioning you need to be playing at the right end and we didn’t do that tonight, but we’ll learn from that. We’ve got Argentina next week so we’ll go again.”

The Boks were understandably happy with how things transpired.

“I’m really proud of the boys, it was a fantastic performance,” Bok captain Duane Vermeulen said at the post-match presentation. “We played to our strengths. We can still improve, it was not 100 percent our best performance, but I’m very happy with the result.”

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-12T03:03:28+00:00

Hertryk

Roar Rookie


Tell Justin Harrison to leave the histrionics in his commentary - he doesn't have to sound like a thug... As for the narrative after the game - same ol' same ol' I don't think Jones is going to be the Messiah.. In my very humble opinion

2023-07-11T01:34:40+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


All fair, RTL. I’m wondering if achilles cop extra stress from kicking? Which might explain Quade’s ‘aerial support’ from Nick and Reece.. Eddie wanted an experienced 10 because it was too big a risk for Carter’s development and our hopes for him to run on. Quade I think was underdone. But not ‘poor’ as others have opined on these boards. In an attempt to be fair to Eddie and his selections and game plan, perhaps this pain was unavoidable given the time he has. Too early for Bell and Nella. Too early for Carter to run on while we build Quade back to test strength. Analogous to Keating’s ‘recession we had to have’, the mess we saw was the risk we had to take. We will see.

2023-07-10T20:34:41+00:00

Rugbytrylover

Roar Rookie


Good points Ken. I was really looking forward to this game to see what tactics Eddie was going to have the boys play. I was extremely disappointed. Kicking the ball away with no decent chasers for pressure is rubbish. In defence of Quade, he plays best with ball in hand. He hardly touched it. Didn’t take any kick offs, or goal kicking… strange. Carter came on as you say with the game gone but he looked very keen . His try from a nice kick was because Tate didn’t kick it away but passed to him. Great backing up saw him get an inside ball from Koroibete. Looked a forward pass actually but ref must have felt sorry for us! Both Quade and Carter need to get more ball direct from the half otherwise I fear Eddie’s plan of kicking ball away will be a disaster. We don’t have the players to play that way imho. Forwards have no real mongrel. I’m sure though every squad member is playing the best they can and proud to represent their country. Eddie will earn his money to mould them into a winning team. A rebound against the Argies will be necessary but I’m keen to see if we still adopt this kicking off 9 rubbish.

2023-07-10T13:39:22+00:00

W Evans

Roar Rookie


It’s a sweeping comment that leaguies never had any idea about rugby… Wally Lewis, Michael O’Connor, Ella brothers, Matt Rodgers, Lote Tuquiri, Israel Folau… Cameron Murray is a straight upgrade at 10/12 and knows the game. Su’ali’i is 5 x better than Wright, Petaia or Kellaway at 15. Both would solve major problem spots. Ball carrying 8… Payne Haas is double the player Valetini is. I grew up playing Union on Wednesday and League on Saturdays. Plenty of players did the same and to say leaguies have no idea is ridiculous.

2023-07-10T09:57:46+00:00

Freddo

Roar Rookie


CG couldn't get the Rebels into top8: that was a team effort. I wouldn't rule out Lolesio (reliable as kicker) but Gordon had a better year. He is in form.

2023-07-10T09:34:01+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


RTL, there’s a lot of knee-jerking this week. With respect and I am open to Carter getting a run on, before we select a 10 we should decide how many playmakers we will have, and who they are making play for. PID rugby morphed into 3 playmaker rugby two nights ago. What a friggin mess. Was Quade short of a run? Too short of match fitness? Possibly, but he ran on, because a rookie 10 might be scarred forever if he copped the shackles in-game, and the dullard jibes post-game that have come to pass for Quade. Does that mess suggest that we should run on a rookie who went extremely well after a victor had racked its cue in junk time? It’s a fair question to ask about our run on 10, but is it the most important one? What is our playmaking system? A 9/10/12 one? I hope not. But to be clear I’m happy for Carter to get a start. But for reasons that serve our intended attack system, not to knee jerk about the Achilles survivor who went once more into the breech on Sunday for an unappreciative and myopic fan base.

2023-07-10T08:46:59+00:00

Full Credit to the Boys

Roar Rookie


Hi CPM. I admit to only noticing the speed of the Williams. I might have been like most of the Australian team and a bit shell-shocked to notice anything before that.

2023-07-10T04:39:56+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


He had them getting back ten by the look of it, another masterstroke by NRL Eddie

2023-07-10T04:26:39+00:00

Qualify

Roar Rookie


Even Rennie drew the AB's close at times, so I expect much more from Eddie.

2023-07-10T03:59:45+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Hard to say until they try it I suppose, but in my opinion it might be more fruitful than trying to convert leaguies who've already got a heap of habits that are counter productive - at least they start with a blank slate

2023-07-10T03:55:27+00:00

Full Credit to the Boys

Roar Rookie


Hi Piru. My Dad always used to say that Australian rugby lost an enormous resource without access to huge full forwards. I'd include the entire back five. Just wonder how transferrable the skills are against the need to ruck, scrummage and tackle?

2023-07-10T03:44:53+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


Great truism, the Boks had 73% of the ball, but Australia still managed to kick the ball more often (30 times to 26).

2023-07-10T03:37:51+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


If we’re looking inter sport, we’d be better off looking at AFL for wingers and fullbacks imo Seriously, hear me out. How handy would a couple of guys with huge lungs and used to getting kicks away (and catching them) under pressure have been on Saturday night?

2023-07-10T03:31:14+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Forwards can't move in the right direction if the backs won't hold onto the ball, or at least chase their kicks

2023-07-10T02:18:39+00:00

Tom G

Roar Rookie


And you can’t see that coming? Where have you been?

2023-07-10T01:31:35+00:00

Full Credit to the Boys

Roar Rookie


Yes I am joking Ken as I said to Piru. I think the signing of Suallii is emblematic of a totally dysfunctional culture. Making it look even sillier is that this young winger came unheralded into the NRL and looks far quicker with better football smarts than Suallii. But I still dont want rugby to buy him.

2023-07-10T00:56:17+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


You keep it JN. It was well earnt. If you cant enjoy the wins why follow a sport. :thumbup: :thumbup:

2023-07-10T00:44:36+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Eddie deflected from his teams thrashing. I question who learnt it from who between Eddie and Cheika.

2023-07-09T22:37:41+00:00

jonnyacidseed

Roar Rookie


The reporter never actually called them a "B" side either. Eddie chose that term in his retort to the journo

2023-07-09T20:12:38+00:00

Danny McGowan

Roar Rookie


I actually thought Eddie's blow up at Journo was just to deflect the shit from team. Cheika was good at that too, after a bad preformance divert the attention from team, I remember when he changed a aftermatch press conference to about a cartoon in papaer. It stops the captain copping questions on why team didn't play well. I somehow suspect Eddie always knows what he is doing in press!

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