'What was with that defensive set up?': Jones-Hodgson combo must get up to speed fast with Fisher absence clear to see

By Brett McKay / Expert

The Wallabies finished with a 37 per cent share of possession in the Loftus thumping at the hands of the Springboks on Sunday morning, Australian time, and frankly I’m stunned the number was that high. It might’ve been lucky to be half that for the second half.

Their 31.6 per cent share of territory, on the other hand, feels about right. South Africa spent 48 per cent of the game in the Australian half, and 28.8 per cent in the Wallabies’ 22.

When you’re only setting 39 rucks in a game and your kick-chase is almost not existent in support of a kicking game under extreme pressure, it’s no wonder James Slipper mused post-match that the Wallabies spent most of the second half tackling.

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With Argentina in Sydney ahead of Saturday night’s suddenly crucial clash at CommBank Stadium, there are so many lessons the Wallabies need to quickly heed from Pretoria: missing nearly one in five tackles, the turnovers conceded, the 13 penalties conceded to just three, and certainly the kicking game and kick-chase.

On that last point, the Wallabies kicked more than 30 times for the match, which isn’t unusual for Test rugby, but I can still only think of maybe a couple of them being contestable – either from the length of the kick, the quality of the chase, and how rarely those two crucial elements were connected.

But if only one thing can be addressed for this weekend coming, it absolutely has to be the Wallabies’ positioning in defence.

When a new coach comes into a team, they’re always going to bring new ideas and perspectives on different parts of the game. The worry for Eddie Jones and former NRL fullback turned rugby defence coach Brett Hodgson, is that it was hard to tell what their defensive plan or method was.

Assistant coach Brett Hodgson during an Australia Wallabies training camp at Sanctuary Cove on April 18, 2023 in Gold Coast, Australia. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

When Laurie Fisher was brought into the Wallabies set-up last season, his input was immediately noticeable: the Wallabies came up faster in defence, slid well when faced with lateral attack, and were then hard on the ball when the tackle was made. You could see that. But Fisher has been working on defence methods for 20 years.

Jones and Hodgson have only been working together for around 12 months, but this match in Pretoria was actually their first attempt at putting their plans into action; they never got the chance to implement them with England before the RFU made the call that shook Rugby Australia into the drastic action they took late last year.

And the issue with taking a look at the errors made in the six South African tries, is that it will easily sound like only one player was the problem. Of course, that’s not the case. There were mistakes made across the board. But the errors made in the lead-up to tries are obviously the ones that were most costly.

The signs were there in the run up to Kurt-Lee Arendse’s first try. Canan Moodie beat Tom Hooper on the right edge, with Moodie’s opposite Marika Koroibete nowhere in sight. It was only when he stepped back inside and was brought down by Tom Wright that Koroibete appeared in-frame coming out from centre field. Where had he been, that he wasn’t on his wing?

As the ball moved infield to the forward pods, the rushed pass hadn’t even been thrown behind Manie Libbok when Quade Cooper was already turned in, and then rushing in to take Libbok and/or clean up the loose ball. He got neither, and Len Ikitau is then left facing Frans Malherbe and Marvin Orie coming at him, and with Andre Esterhuizen out the back. Ikitau missed the loose ball, too, with an attempted right-foot hack.

Orie picked up, passed to Esterhuizen, which dragged Suliasi Vunivalu – already 20 metres infield – further in again. Esterhuizen found Arendse, who walked it in untouched.

How did the defensive communication fall away so quickly? Why did outside guys feel they needed to bite in so hard and so far?

For the lineout that led to Arendse’s second try, Australia’s defensive alignment had Nic White standing inside the tramlines and Allan Alaalatoa in the standoff spot, with Michael Hooper the first player back behind the offside line. The Wallabies midfield are aligned out to his left, and Wright is back in the far pocket. Koroibete is up in the line but on his edge, and Vunivalu is strangely right back near the five-metre line on the short side.

Alaalatoa is drawn to or just voluntarily joins the maul as it forms, allowing Marco van Staden to clear out down that short side, immediately drawing White into a two-on-one with Bongi Mbonambi, who is invited into the space left by Vunivalu.

Vunivalu does come forward, and Hooper quickly slides out, but Mbonambi creates another two-on-one against the winger caught in no man’s land, and again Arendse runs in untouched.

What was with that defensive set-up? And why wasn’t Vunivalu up in the line with Wright covering the short side, instead across the other side of the field? Who or what was Wright covering in that far pocket?

I’m still not convinced about the pass for Arendse’s third, but regardless, why was Vunivalu defending in the 13 channel, and why then did he bite in further again, leaving Michael Hooper and Wright to defend the three-on-two down the Boks’ left edge?

And for the final try in the 69th minute, why – from a Springboks scrum 20 metres infield – did the Wallabies leave Vunivalu as the only defender covering that short side?

Libbok switched to that short side as Grant Williams peeled away from the scrum with Tate McDermott in tow, and actually straightened back inside, but so far had McDermott let Williams run that Vunivalu was already in huge trouble.

In the end, his desperate and out of position lunge at the ball left Ben O’Keeffe with no choice but to award the second penalty try for the match, with the yellow card the final chapter in what had been a truly awful night for the Queensland winger.

But did no one see Libbok switch to the short side to exploit Vunivalu on his own? Did no Australian defender think the Springboks might fancy another crack at the guy found wanting already throughout the game?

Defensive issues are always concerning, but when they result in gift-wrapped tries, all you’re really left with is why?

Why were so many players caught out of position so often? Why did communication seemingly cease to exist?

And with the next match already less than a week away, how on earth will these glaring defensive errors be now turned around before the Wallabies host Argentina in western Sydney?

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-13T10:33:01+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


I agree Ken, Rennie was making head way for sure and I’ll point to the Spring Tour. We beat Wales and Scotland when we had no right to, particularly Wales being down by 21pts with 26min to go and a decimated line up with injuries for the last game of the season. We lose to #2 France by 1pt and #1 Ireland by 3pts, again both games we’re injury riddled from an unlucky test season. It’s the loses to the top 2 sides by such close margins that convinced me of Rennie’s progress. I have little doubt that with a full squad, QC, Kerevi & Thor would have been enough, and no Giteau rule to manage like we see now, the WBs come away 4-1 or possibly 5-0 that tour. We’ll never know what could have been but what I’m sure of now is Rennie’s last team played for each other and their coach compared to this current team. Is Eddie creating a toxic environment with his cattle prod approach & coaching through fear? Perhaps! For the first time I can recall the WB rolled over and they weren’t playing for their coach.

2023-07-12T22:16:36+00:00

Stu

Roar Rookie


We arrived at altitude a day early. That’s mostly why we got flogged in every facet. Eddie must’ve known we’d all be walking by the 15 minute mark. Bizarre coaching. This weekend we’ll at least be back at sea level.

2023-07-12T21:59:24+00:00

Stu

Roar Rookie


Paying Lord Laurie (seemingly the only big rugby intellect we have left here) a huge bag of Suaalii-money to come out of retirement and tell Eddie and his merry band of pretenders what to actually do and where they’re going wrong would be a substantial start. Short of Laurie being heavily involved, what else is there?!

2023-07-12T21:34:19+00:00

Stu

Roar Rookie


Plus, do our guys actually know how to chase, and challenge once they get there? I’ve never seen anyone do anything other than arrive and mingle in the general area, like they’re late to a party! Maybe Jordy Petaia knows how to do it? Just another skill our boys seem to be scratching their heads with.

2023-07-12T08:03:40+00:00

Fox

Roar Guru


I don’t know if you remember last year Harry but Reiko blew him off the park for that first 30 metres and Koroibeti tried to chase him down with everything he had but the acceleration Reiko has at times is just insane. Even if players can match his top end gas – and that is very few – almost none can accelerate like he can in the first 40 metres – and that first 10-15 he is just past the player by 4 metres if he has space. Hansen said no one is as quick as him off the mark in the 1st 40 – not even Will Jordan. They have clocked him twice recently and the 1st 40 his time speed was the equivilant of 9.9 second 100 metres. I mean if there is player Harry quicker than that in the world game over the 1st 40 metres I haven’t seen him in Europe or here except that American player a few years back that was on the US Olympic relay team. So Koroibete is very quick but the express acceleration of Reiko’s is just mind boggling at times. You can bet the Boks will try to give him no space and shut him down as early as they can this weekend – surely they must know how blinding he is off the mark. Will be interesting to see what they do IMO. Get as offside as they can in ‘the never very closely watched outside D’, I reckon Harry because he can really hurt you even from inside his own 22m. On the flip side the AB’s will need to watch the silky feet of Colby

2023-07-12T05:51:44+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Perthstayer, not good percentage but look above. The Boks missed more than one in Four!

2023-07-12T03:13:47+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


Hope springs. Eddie's direction just seems incoherent, which is where the comparison lies. Like Ed, Smith also built public expectations that the team could create history by inflicting the first defeat on the Boks at altitude. Funnily, after Smith's team was famously flogged in Pretoria, the Wallabies also next faced Argentina, narrowly winning the test under the new coach, Rod the Great. Also famously, the sole bright spot in the 1997 slaughter in Pretoria was the form of young player, one Stephen Larkham. Hope springs!

2023-07-12T02:51:40+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Thanks Peter. Understood

2023-07-12T01:44:07+00:00

Virgil

Roar Rookie


We need a body of work before we can judge Eddie Jones and his assistants. Can I suggest a good point would be after the Bledisloe cup series?

2023-07-12T01:27:02+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


haha I hear you mate - same here

2023-07-12T01:02:49+00:00

Die hard

Roar Rookie


Not always sure what my point is sometimes also Piru. Grateful if you can find a point in it sometimes and make sense of it to me

2023-07-12T00:59:57+00:00

Die hard

Roar Rookie


Definitely our own 10 team competition of our own Doc. I'm thinking we go an original all out Oztrlalian Fair go comp to make a big splash. The girls have got a good bare bones game up recently so we join that and make a combined gender plus all the rainbow 12 team round robin starting on the same day as the super finals. 12 teams is bigger than the kiwis. Our girls are prettier and everyone's available for the start because we're never in the finals anyway And the refs have to wear heels and body cams for the audience

2023-07-12T00:50:28+00:00

No Arms

Roar Rookie


Poor technique IMO

2023-07-12T00:41:07+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Thanks Brett. Appreciate you clarifying. I was reading it above as 58 missed. :silly: 26% Missed is high still, eh?

2023-07-11T23:59:44+00:00

tuohyred

Roar Rookie


Shades of Poms finally trusting Ben Stokes??

2023-07-11T23:58:08+00:00

tuohyred

Roar Rookie


And Cheika had limited time with squad to work his mongrel (Killigrew, shinboners for us old Vics) magic

2023-07-11T23:53:42+00:00

tuohyred

Roar Rookie


Greg Smith. Already that bad, or can EJ have a bit of rope??

2023-07-11T23:48:02+00:00

LuckyPhil

Roar Rookie


Good to see you ahve stepped back from saying QC is a ferocious defender. The fact is that up until the emergence of Carter this year, QC was far and away the best 10 we had, faults and all. Nard not so much. Donno not really. Noah not at all. Luckily we now have Carter coming on, but not sure we should be too quick ditching quade and going all in on Carter without another backup.

2023-07-11T23:45:51+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Just get your own NRC Doc. Why is it so difficult? Why is it always about entering some Aus teams in a NZ comp or having NZ players to bolster your Aus teams. Why doesnt RA solve RAs issues?

2023-07-11T23:40:02+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Same thing really.

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