'Big nail and the big hammer': Wallabies banking on Taniela boost in tandem with Skelton's 'brilliant energy'

By Tony Harper / Editor

Walllabies scrum coach Neal Hatley looks set to deploy the team’s biggest tight five weapons in tandem for the first time since joining Eddie Jones’ World Cup campaign, with Taniela Tupou getting through his first full training with the squad since his injury layoff.

Tupou, who has returned from an Achilles injury suffered last year, played half a game in Australia A’s loss in his country of birth two weekends ago and says he’s ready to face the All Blacks this weekend.

The Tongan Thor came back to Australia lacking a little thunder but has now overcome illness to resume training.

“I’ve been really sick in the last few days but I’m good now,” Tupou told reporters on Monday.

“It was good to be back home playing in front of my family [in Tonga]. It was the first time some of them have ever watched me play before so full circle back, playing where it all started for me.

Taniela Tupou. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

“It’s been quite emotional. It was sort of good it was my first game back because of all the emotions and all the family and everything. Just being home. We hardly get these games in Tonga, it’s such a small place. To be back there was special.

“To play 40 minutes, to get it done it was good to know that I’ve done the right thing with the rehab and stuff and I’m confident that I can play at this level.”

Hatley will be relieved to have Tupou at his disposal in a Wallabies jersey, maybe as soon as this weekend in Melbourne against the All Blacks.

“He’s done whole training today and done full units and scrummaged really well this morning,” said Hatley. “We’re pleased with where he is. He’s obviously bounced back really well from from a little bit of illness last week, but he doesn’t look to have any side effects this morning.”

Hatley says the team’s set piece was improved against Argentina in game two of the Rugby Championship after being a disappointment against the Springboks.

“We’re getting there after a tough start away in Pretoria,” Hatley said.

Hatley was full of praise for the input of French based locks Will Skelton and Richie Arnold, and felt their presence would be complemented by the return of Tupou.

“Will has lost about seven kg since he’s turned up here from France. So he’s applied himself unbelievably well, he’s working so hard,” said Hatley.

“But it’s no good having just the weight. We’ve got to make sure technically we’re accurate. What we’ve seen from Taniela over the last probably four or five weeks is he’s come back obviously from a big injury, scrummaging really square, working really hard. Like he’s a really big nail and we’ve got a big hammer behind him. So we need him to stay square in order for the hammer to work.”

Hatley said he had twice coached against Skelton in European club football, with the La Rochelle giant coming out on top both times.

“What he’s brought to us is a great mentality. He’s used to winning, but he’s brought brilliant energy,” Hatley said.

“When in the group there’s little lows and troughs it’s normally him [lifting the mood]. Sometimes big men don’t act and play like big men, and he does exactly that.

“I don’t think he’s missed a session. He’s up early morning doing extra sessions. Just his application to keep getting better. I think when a group sees somebody who’s achieved what he’s achieved over the last probably five or six years in Europe, and he’s still got a real hunger to be to be better every day, it’s a great stop on for the rest of us.”

He said Arnold, despite limited experience with the Wallabies, was also having an impact.

“Both of them what they’ve done really well is they haven’t just sat in the room,” said Hatley.

“Richie only has the two caps but he’s quite prepared to stand up in meetings and talk about our maul defence and maul attack. They’re comfortable in their own skin.

“They’re not just sitting here not adding value. Both of them would be brilliant in terms of adding value to what can be at times a very young pack and a pack that’s still growing. To have two experienced guys like that has been brilliant.”

Hatley was alongside Eddie Jones for the 2019 World Cup campaign, and said Jones is the best in the business at finding a result under pressure.

Neal Hatley says Eddie Jones is the best in the business in getting a result when his side is up against the wall. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

“I’m not just saying that because he’s the boss. Having worked with him for four years and then gone away and come back I’m not amazed because I’ve seen it before. He’s very good at it,” said Hatley.

“He knows that this game is unbelievably important. It’s part of a process of building and getting to make sure that we hit the World Cup at the right time we’re in the right place.

“What the coaching group is trying to do is build belief here. But it’s not false belief. If you look around the room, there’s probably several guys coming back from some big injuries, you know, Quade [Cooper], Samu [Kerevi], Taniela.

“I don’t think there’s anyone better in terms of how he generates belief based on the back of what you do in training and performance. It’s not just sort of pumping hot air into a tyre. There’s genuine belief built on the back of what we’re doing.”

On Saturday Jones admitted his coaching team was enduring some “teething problems.”

“But in a build up to a World Cup these sorts of teething problems are sometimes the best problems to have,” Jones said. “Sometimes you find out more about your team in these situations than you do when you think things are going along swimmingly. And they’re not getting along swimmingly.”

Hatley said the coaches understand that there is “an urgency to coach better every day.

“I think as a coaching group, we understand where we are. He sets the tone, sets the direction. There’s never an acceptance. Some of the things I’ve talked about they’re not excuses.

“We should have won that [Argentina] game. You score 31 points at home, you should win every time, so there’s there’s no acceptance of that result. We’re massively disappointed. It’s not just the tone that Eddie sets, it’s the rest of the coaching group as well.”

The Wallabies job gets tougher this week against the All Blacks.

“The All Blacks for years now have been unbelievably efficient and then in the right moments, they could turn the screw.

”[Assistant coaches] Greg Feek and Jason Ryan are doing a brilliant job there. And they’ve obviously picked up on the work that Mike Cron did,” said Hatley, who was prepared to list three areas of chellenge to expect from the Kiwis.

“Outstanding set piece and they’re a deadly side in transition,” he said. “I think the start of the game, this season in particular, they’ve started like a house on fire. So the start will be massively important. Against Argentina, they were 24 nil up within 17 minutes and something pretty similar against South Africa.

“Our works gonna be cut out for us. We’ve had a good comeback from a disappointing start on opposition ball. I thought we were good on our ball and then obviously against Argentina we scrummaged well, won penalties our ball, got one on theirs – but this will be another step up again.”

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-29T08:31:32+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


How many 5 are last in the chase? What if he's the one who should be around? Good at least Jones picked frost and but still he's been very infective

2023-07-26T23:15:30+00:00

Bluffboy

Roar Rookie


Both. Not so much falling apart. I think they sound have about 75% parity. No way are they going to be dominant. May jag the odd penalty but that will be more the 16th man. ABs have a dismal record with Mr Barnes. In no way is that an excuse they will definitely play to the ref or at least have red hot crack.

2023-07-26T11:09:56+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


you can use what you have. I would much rather have someone the locks the scrum and can lift well in lineouts than one who is like a backrower in open play but weakens the set-piece and you are worried about the lineout or scrum falling apart.

2023-07-26T11:06:30+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


How many #5s are chasing kicks. You see Itoje and EE chasing kicks but both are the #4s who are leaner and faster. You don't send your pack after a kick you send three people who can get to the player around the same time as the other team catches it, these 3 then close off the open space on one side to shepherd the player towards the other players so they can isolate the ball carrier which is where you want Skelton to slow the ball or counter ruck. If all the pack are only focused on chasing the kick it might be why they are so bad at it.

2023-07-26T07:53:11+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Lol that's not true. He was ineffective at breakdown. Was just hanging around the rucks most of the time. Exposing d line. Wallabies aren't la Rochelle. However good he is there he's unacceptably slow for test rugby

2023-07-26T07:49:23+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


You don’t want forwards be fast especially when your plan is to kick away? Interesting That happened one time. Other times he’s usually the last in the chase. I’m not expecting him to be fast as koroibete but he’s slow even for tight 5

2023-07-26T02:12:09+00:00

Bluffboy

Roar Rookie


There in lies the problem. Props that just prop. Locks that are not genuine jumpers. Coming up against teams that have players that fill their roll and so so much more. Agree there really is no alternative at present.

2023-07-25T14:04:49+00:00

ojp44

Roar Rookie


Too many ex half backs as refs; not enough ex props... :rugby:

2023-07-25T10:02:13+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


The point was in relation to him being good in the scrum but not around the park. Being able to win or even just not give away penalties is worth more than making 20 extra meters of running in a game as just one penalty gains or loses you 30+m. He has to play or he will not be ready for the WC and so he might as well start and play 40 minutes and be swapped at half time than sit on the bench and the game be lost.

2023-07-25T10:01:41+00:00

Jimbo81

Roar Rookie


Hooper is the master of attaining that ducks hit stat. Combat ineffective!

2023-07-25T04:09:12+00:00

TJ-Go Force!

Roar Rookie


I think you will see a bit of this

2023-07-25T02:10:53+00:00

Reds Harry

Roar Rookie


What a truly depressing read. Gawd I'm tired of reading these pieces with wishful projection by under pressure coaches. Tupou is massively underdone and as per usual with Australian rugby, because of our non-existent depth, we are trying to rush back a player too early. Same as Bell. When we get rinsed on Saturday no doubt we'll have the usual blabble ... "disappointing", "easily fixed", "feel we are improving" and "fans need to be patient". The coaches and players have massive improvement needed in all phases but particularly the scrum, kickoffs and in defence ... that may get us competitive. We were assured Skelton was perfectly fit playing in Europe and would reproduce his club form for the Wallabies straightforwardly enough. Yet we needed him to lose 7 kilos? Genuinely do not understand that.

2023-07-25T01:50:38+00:00

Bluffboy

Roar Rookie


It is a head scratchier for me Dave. The talk and expectation around Skelton and Tupou for that matter. What you lose having Skelton on the park doesn't get anywhere near positive side of the ledger. Cracks me up the stat re rucks hit. With the large percentage of play in the mid field he is bound to be accidentally near one to lean on. Given his size and the go go gadget arms he is bound to disrupt or snatch. Personally as a AB supporter I happy to see him on the team sheet. Tupou can hold his own at least I guess when he is not gassed and is better than most others. But also as a AB supporter my sleep pattern remains the same.

2023-07-25T01:36:22+00:00

Jimbo81

Roar Rookie


Why not make an example of their playmaker early (even if it's late) and snuff out the connection between forwards and backs? We're probably going to lose anyway - why not at least hammer the smug arrogance from their 5/8 and send a message?

2023-07-25T01:30:44+00:00

Bluffboy

Roar Rookie


Who says he is going to win any. He has been out for a considerable time and I wouldn't think that is an advantage for him.

2023-07-25T01:24:32+00:00

Jimbo81

Roar Rookie


Vs Hooper whose Super season was terrible - how the hell does Hooper get VC and another test???

2023-07-25T01:24:02+00:00

Wig

Roar Rookie


He really scared the tongans

2023-07-25T00:37:27+00:00

Tooly

Roar Rookie


Harley can certainly BS and like Weismantle flex up in a muscle shirt at training for the photos . Tupou is a big bloke who has been running at and over little boys and little blokes at club level . He was able the establish a reputation as a scrummager with the protection on Berry and Murphy in Super Rugby . At test level without them he is out scrummaged by world class props . He is a good runner and can pass , his defence is limited to tackle bagging motionless players . Skelton’s asset is the grunt he provides at scrum time . His defence is as above . Coincidentally Suvaalii made his reputation as a big boy against small boys . No so good against blokes his own size . With Tupou and Skelton we need big mobile players around them . Valentini , Samu , Wilson .

2023-07-25T00:33:42+00:00

Big Dave

Roar Rookie


I'm sick of people who have a clue saying positive things about Skelton when we at the roar know so much better.

2023-07-25T00:15:57+00:00

Olly

Roar Rookie


I hear you but I am not sure we can say he really shined in that game. Tackled alot as they ran at our 7 is basically the job of a 7 and I think he was 2nd highest tackles in the game for the Wallabies. Did a bit of work at slowing the ball down but nothing to force a penalty as the Argies ball was coming out quick still. He was poor at securing our own ball which is my usual criticism of him and a strength of Pete Samu and Hooper is now more focused on securing our own ball over stealing it. He had a good SR season so we will see if he can step up.

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