Studs and duds: Carter's 'brave' step up, Cheik hails 'bloody handful' as Marky nails WC spot, Wright gets it wrong

By Tony Harper / Editor

It took Eddie Jones less than two games to go from “smash and grab” to grab and smash.

The Wallabies coach ripped off his headset and destroyed it as Saturday night’s match against Argentina lurched out of the Wallabies control and left the old-new coach with a 0-2 record in his comeback.

Two games against the All Blacks, then one against France, loom before the World Cup starts in September and Jones is left searching for a way to turn things around.

The loss a week earlier in South Africa was expected but this defeat has brought on a whole new level of dejection and frustration for Wallabies fans.

“There was probably no one more despondent than me. I probably ruined three radios in the coach’s box,” Jones said afterwards.

He also compared his team to a lemon of a car as he struggled to define why he remains hopeful that the season can be salvaged.

“Well, we kept fighting, mate, kept fighting. It was one of those games where it’s sitting on the table and one team’s going to grab it, and we thought we grabbed it and then they grabbed it back and we got beaten at the end,” Jones said.

“We’re a bit like a broken car. My first car was a Datsun 1200. You’d fix the handbrake and the next day the windscreen wipers would break, and we’re a bit like that moment.

“Last week our set-piece wasn’t good. This week our set-piece was good. Last week, we didn’t attack. This week we did attack, but our decision-making around the ball was poor. This is a bit of a process we’ve got to go through. As painful as it is and as hard as it is, and it seems like where we want to be, the team we are today is a long way from the team we want to be tomorrow, but you know we’ll keep working on it and we’ll get it right.”

The defeat saw the Wallabies go beneath Argentina to 8th on the world rankings.

Asked for his reaction on that, Jones replied: “What do you reckon, mate? Doing hand stands. No, obviously not happy. But in a lot of ways, in this period, this isn’t about rankings, it’s about getting ready for the World Cup.

“Ideally, we would have won every game we played. But that hasn’t happened and it mightn’t happen. But we’re getting the team ready for the World Cup.”

 (Photo by Jason McCawley/Getty Images)

He was also asked if the assignment was proving harder than he expected.

“I’m certainly sleeping less. So, I don’t know whether it’s any harder mate. But it was always going to be difficult,” said Jones.

“If you’re coming off [a period] where you’ve been consistently unsuccessful for a period of time, which the results show that, then you’re not going to go and everything changes.

“We’re trying to change the team, and we’re also trying to change the way we play. I’m quite happy to accept that we’re not where we should be. But, I’m also quite happy to tell you that I think we’re on the right track and we’ll get there.”

So where are the green shoots, and where is the dead wood in Eddie’s realm?

Carter Gordon and Mark Nawaqanitawase were the two most eye-catching Wallabies on Saturday night, the former having to come on in the 18th minute to play out of position at No.12 after the loss of outside centre Len Ikitau to injury.

“I just liked the toughness in defence like your classic inside centre,”said former Wallaby Morgan Turinui on Stan Sport. “Carter was busy, didn’t shirk the task physically. He adds another layer in attack.

(Photo by Scott Gardiner/Getty Images)

“Increasingly it seems for the Wallabies that the more he’s on the field, no matter what number he’s wearing, what position he plays, the better it is for the Wallabies. A bit like what we saw from Will Skelton. When he was on the field the Wallabies looked penetrative and smart and really physical in the tight stuff.”

Former All Black Sonny Bill Williams agreed with the Carter love.

“He didn’t shirk his defensive responsibilities at all. He actually went looking for contact. It’s very unfortunate and hopefully Lennie Ikitau is okay for the World Cup but if you’re thinking big picture and young Carter on the bench showed why he should be a part of the squad.”

Harry Jones, speaking on The Roar’s Instant Reaction podcast, said: “Carter was thrust into one of the most difficult situations a young player can be.

“I would say his stock rose. By this I mean, I don’t think you’re nervous now about taking Carter Gordon to a knockout match in the World Cup and having him on in the final 10 minutes.”

Harry said Gordon showed a few glimpses of inexperience but “I still think he’s brave.”

The performance of Nawaqanitawase caught everybody’s eye. His quick tap and go in the fifth minute led to the opening try and he looked to have won Australia the game with five to play with a stunning intercept. It was a performance in stark contrast to the damp squib of a wing performance from Suliasi Vunivalu a week earlier in Pretoria.

“Fantastic.  Every time we got the ball, he lit the stadium up,” said Eddie Jones. “Kids are jumping off the edge of the seat. He’s that sort of player. Fantastic.”

Argentina coach Michael Cheika was also impressed.

“The two wingers out there for Australia, they’re a bloody handful. You needed two hands to handle them both they were giving us so much grief.”

Jim Tucker, on The Roar podcast, summed it up this way: “That was in Australian Wallaby folklore in a victory. Now it’s small print.

“Nawaqanitawase just nailed that wing spot for good and for the season. That’s the sort of resonant performance that Eddie Jones wants to see across the park. He initiates plays and Suliasi Vunivalu waits for  play to be directed his way and it’s just a no contest to be honest. Vunivalu will struggle to see much time at all really.”

Podcast host Brett McKay agreed and said of Vunivalu – who was poor against the Boks a week ago – “I don’t see how he goes to France.”

McKay also talked up Will Skelton – “I thought the first half was his best game in a gold jersey. He was absolutely phenomenal. Samu Kerevi had an impact even when he had to shuffle to 13 when Ikitau went off.

“Carter Gordon, we’ve been saying it all Super Rugby year but he just seems to be able to handle this.”

McKay also predicts a change in the No.15 jersey for the Bledisloe Cup, as long as Andrew Kellaway is passed fit, with Tom Wright having two poor matches to start the Rugby Championship.

He did produce one brilliant try saving tackle but ill-disciplined moments deep in the game left the Wallabies exposed.

T(Photo by Scott Gardiner/Getty Images)

Meanwhile, Argentina coach Michael Cheika was praised for his rare victory over Eddie Jones.

“Michael’s game plan was superb, the way he put the Wallabies under enormous pressure,” said Tim Horan on Stan Sport.. “The Wallabies  just couldn’t put Argentina under pressure. They couldn’t get past 5,6,7 plus phases and, and the penalty count really went against the Wallabies and stopped any momentum that they could try and get in the match.”

Jones, however, remains steadfast on the way ahead and hinted at solutions withut actually spelling them out.

“In the first two games we’ve scored two super tries early in the game and we move the ball with fluency and quickly, which is how we want to play. We want to play with fluency, and we want to move the ball quickly,”” said Jones.

“But we’re not able to sustain that at the moment. I can give you a fantastic, plausible reason, but you’re not going to believe it, so I’m not going to give it to you.”

Harry Jones said Eddie must quickly find a way to teach his Wallabies exactly what he wants from them, and pointed to a telling comment from the team’s star winger.

“There’s something interesting about Marky Mark being interviewed at the end of the match and they said ‘what do you take from that’ and he said ‘we need to use the ball more’. Your own star player is deviating from the doctrine.”

Eddie Jones will be used to external noise – and it’s coming in loud and fast.

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-19T14:02:05+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


You picked 2 reds players one of which basically hasn't played at 13 like at all and you rate him higher than genuine 13? Ofc you're biased. I don't even care that you're but your denial is ridiculous

2023-07-19T02:29:21+00:00

Dean

Roar Rookie


The ole “ if you don’t agree with me you are bias etc” Nice tunnel to live in I guess. Perhaps you forget that Perese is a Qld lad? You rate him as a 13, I don’t. That’s ok. We have a difference of opinion, that’s ok too. But label it, good on you for successfully labeling a stranger.

2023-07-18T21:35:37+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


No way anyone who’s not biased would even think to compare true 13 with someone who played just one game there or would give them a spot in a national team after one game. That’s just not true that perese is bad defensive reader or worse than your winger lol. I told you he’s been great and not for one game. Flook is fairer comparison but surprisingly both of your choices are from reds. So not biased of you yeah right

2023-07-18T20:27:58+00:00

Dean

Roar Rookie


Actually I’m not kidding. Perese is one tough nugget however, his hands let him down in the 13 slot. I was, very, very impressed by Daugunu at 13, against quality opposition as well. He too has his issues with hands but was a better defensive reader and communicator than Perese. For consistency though, I’d pick Flook over them both. An accusation of bias because I have a different opinion is perhaps somewhat bias?

2023-07-18T13:51:27+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


You’re kidding right? Perese had great season at tahs and you prefer daugunu who played like 1 game at 13? Maybe you try to hide your bias a bit ????

2023-07-17T23:43:50+00:00

Muzwell

Roar Rookie


"I preferred the earlier game... Just a better, faster game and high skills" I agree but think you are downplaying the gap in quality between the 2 games - I thought it was night-and-day. ABs v Boks was another level. In fact Los Pumas had a poor game really - their attack stuttered even with a mountain of possession and lots of mistakes and dropped ball. A scrum that wilted against a 7 man scrum. Many things not good about that performance. And yet we couldn't beat them.

2023-07-17T10:19:44+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


Yet in a sense I feel the problem is that he's too strong a link. To my mind, his passing default should be to the 10, so the playmaker can decide whether to feed the forwards or make some space for Kerevs or whatever.

2023-07-17T09:02:11+00:00

Dean

Roar Rookie


That's right, I had forgotten. Thank you. Normally the standard 3 months for a broken bone to heal.

2023-07-17T05:07:34+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Never said any such thing Doc. Just pointed out that Rennie as HC of the Wallabies lost 1 match v Arg. Eddie is now equal with that. Difference is Rennie played them 6 times I think.

2023-07-17T04:25:28+00:00

Joey

Roar Rookie


he broke his arm in the final against the chiefs so probably still injured

2023-07-17T04:23:47+00:00

Joey

Roar Rookie


Carter has always been fast and made some good break away tries in super rugby but I also think that Kerevi was quite slow. Might have been because he is still getting back to 100% off the injury and him playing out of position probably made him run more than he should have.

2023-07-17T00:06:15+00:00

Doctordbx

Roar Rookie


So you're saying he would have started Foley?

2023-07-16T21:44:29+00:00

Mirt

Roar Rookie


What was it he said in the presser, “if I was the Allblacks I’d better watch out” or something like that. Yes Eddie, shut it. But I preferred the earlier game, where I had no skin. Just a better, faster game and high skills, and one of the only times each year I get to go for the Boks.

2023-07-16T21:38:16+00:00

Mactruck

Roar Rookie


The best form 7 in Australia currently is Wilkin. Not sure he can cut against the AB’s but should be given a shot.

2023-07-16T18:53:43+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


As a neutral here I gotta say that so far at least the most entertaining match this RC . Also thought plenty to like about some aspects of Wallabies play ..Couldnt help but notice tho pre match just how tense Aussies looked in their dressing room as opposed to The Pumas .I really , really believe and have said it here before but mean it now more than ever that Jones needs to shut his mouth ...Already talking big prior to NZ match ..Maybe like in South Africa Rassies bosses reigned him in , just possibly time has come for Eddies to do the same .

2023-07-16T14:02:20+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


I totally see your point. Next thing we find he can play pretty well anywhere, next thing you know he's a dogs body who never gets back home to where he belongs.

2023-07-16T12:58:55+00:00

Mungbean74

Roar Rookie


Well at least we are finding out a bit more about who should be there. Mark Nawaqanitawase and Carter Gordon just have to be there’s in the match day 23. Unfortunately Suli needs to work hard for the Reds next year. Surely Kellaway or Hodge have to get a crack at 15. I’m a Reds fan, but trying Petaia at 15 now is just not the right time. 13 or bench yes! He could be handy!

2023-07-16T12:39:49+00:00

Ozrugbynut

Roar Rookie


I get it, but am of the view Eddie doesnt have a settled team as yet. Take Uelese for example or T Hooper last week (both unknowns), plus he hasn't really seen too much of Skelton and Arnold (individually or together) to know who his preferred locking pair is. Just my two cents.

2023-07-16T12:37:09+00:00

Ozrugbynut

Roar Rookie


I do agree. I just thought he looked accomplished enough that he could offer more as a bench utility (10, 12, 15) if for example Hodge/JOC etc were needed but unavailable. Impressed with his presence in defence.

2023-07-16T12:28:37+00:00

Guzzle

Roar Rookie


Eddie dropped Frost and Samu.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar