The lessons from England's RWC win that Eddie must remember ahead of daunting Bledisloe opener

By Christy Doran / Editor

Twenty-five years ago Clive Woodward turned to a young man to lead England forward.

After replacing Jack Rowell in September 1997, Woodward’s side initially went backwards as they lost their first four Tests under him before smashing Wales.

During the next summer, Woodward ushered through change. One of his first significant moves was backing Jonny Wilkinson to wear the No.10 jersey against the Wallabies.

In Wilkinson’s first Test start, England was hammered 76-0 in Brisbane to start their Tour of Hell.

Nor did it get better immediately either, as the All Blacks hammered Woodward’s side 64-22 a fortnight later.

Eventually, of course, it did.

After making his starting debut in England’s 76-0 loss to the Wallabies in 1998, Jonny Wilkinson kicked the drop-goal which won the 2003 World Cup.  (David Davies / PA via AP, FILE)

Wilkinson, having been smashed on starting debut in one of England’s darkest days in June 1998, kicked Woodward’s side to World Cup glory against the Wallabies in Sydney – the only triumph at the tournament by a Northern Hemisphere side during the competition’s history.

Fast forward to the present and Eddie Jones, the man whose dreams were crushed that November evening in 2003, has too made an equally daring decision to turn to youth.

At 22, Carter Gordon is three years older than Wilkinson was when he lined up against the Wallabies, but the playmaker will make his starting debut against the All Blacks in front of an estimated crowd of 85,000.

If indeed that number walks through the Melbourne Cricket Ground, it will be the largest crowd in international rugby this year. It’s quite the cauldron to be thrust into after two Tests off the bench.

Carter Gordon will make his starting debut for the Wallabies against the All Blacks at the MCG. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

Nor is he alone in terms of inexperience.

His halves partner Tate McDermott, 24, will start for just the second time in a year and first under Jones.

Mark Nawaqanitawase and Tom Hooper are both 22, while Jordan Petaia, who returns to the No.13 jersey having first worn it against Jones’ England side in the 2019 World Cup quarter-final, is 23.

In terms of experience, Jones’ side could barely have less.

“Well, you’ve got to get out of the gates against New Zealand. So, we’ve picked a young team. I don’t think I’ve ever picked a younger Test team,” Jones told reporters on Thursday at his team announcement.

“I think we’ve got 290 [350] caps in the starting 15. It’s a very young team. The All Blacks I’d say have close to 1000.

“So, we’ve got a young team out there, ready to take them on, not much past history. Just ready to play and we want to play Australian rugby, and then we’ve got a very experienced bench.”

It comes as no surprise, therefore, that the Wallabies are massive $8 outsiders.

That figure has gone out slightly with Jones’ decision to back youth.

The question is whether Jones’ decision to turn to youth is a short-term play with September’s campaign in mind or one that could be the beginning of ushering through significant fundamental change with the 2027 World Cup in mind?

History suggests he should.

Wilkinson’s English side bombed out at the quarter-final stage of the 1999 World Cup before taking home the William Webb Ellis Cup in 2003. Their success came after Woodward turned to a new direction.

Clive Woodward with his World Cup-winning playmaker Jonny Wilkinson. (Photo by DaveRogers /Allsport)

Fabian Galthie clearly had that in mind in 2019 too, as the French great took over the Les Bleus and turned to youth for the World Cup knowing that the generational talent coming through would be better off for their home campaign in 2023 by the learned experiences in Japan.

Neither Jones nor Rugby Australia will want the Wallabies to crash out at the quarter-finals in a few months’ time. Perhaps only their dream runway to the final four could be what saves them from further blushes this year.

Whether or not Jones sticks with youth or returns to his older heads, the Wallabies’ “smash and grab” job looks more optimistic than realistic whichever way he turns.

Eddie Jones (coach) has turned to youth for the Bledisloe opener at the MCG. But is it a one-off or a longer-term play? (Photo by Sydney Seshibedi/Gallo Images/Getty Images)

For whoever Jones turned to for Saturday’s Bledisloe opener likely didn’t matter.

Afer all, the gulf between the Anzac partners simply looks much greater than the Tasman Sea.

But should Jones stick with his younger brigade, including Gordon who reminds the Wallabies boss of World Cup winners Butch James and Stephen Larkham, Australian rugby might just benefit in the same way Wilkinson and Woodward did two decades earlier.

The Crowd Says:

2023-07-29T10:47:47+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


Okay :thumbup: however only 3 tests left, we need some time for combos and Ed starts someone intended for 2027. Hmmm?

2023-07-29T08:29:37+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


I think Christy's suggesting start CG now in prep for 2027, similar to the 4 year run in by Woodward and Galthie. My issue with CG is who kicks?

2023-07-29T05:31:02+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


Christy, the difference between Jonny and Carter is the former had a five year lead in at test level before before becoming the starting 10 at a RWC.

2023-07-29T04:56:50+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


So croissants are back on the menu?

2023-07-29T04:53:42+00:00

K.F.T.D.

Roar Rookie


Wine can’t turn into water, but it can change into vinegar.

2023-07-29T03:42:46+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


My apologies, wrong circle of hell. Cigarette manufacturers and RoboDebt designers and approvers.

2023-07-29T03:04:34+00:00

Tooly

Roar Rookie


We must turn to youth and aim at the 2027 WC . Anything we achieve along the way will be a bonus . This side won’t beat the ABs but they will learn and gradually get better . Our approach to 2023 must be based on youth with the likes of Slipper , Aalotau , Quadie , Kerevie and Koreibeti used as back up .

2023-07-29T03:02:57+00:00

ShortBlind

Roar Rookie


CG

2023-07-29T02:54:23+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


With eddie's record he's more likely to turn wine into water.

2023-07-29T02:29:11+00:00

savant

Roar Rookie


Ah the face saving begins! Did Eddie run this spin to Hamish who in turn met Christy in a car park to reveal the secret strategy? Now the bad losses can be put down to a deliberate strategy to expose generation next to build for the 2027 RWC. But you know for the first time under Eddie this strategy makes sense….

2023-07-29T02:25:23+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


A friend can't make it and Ticketek's web site is friendly to buy tickets and hostile to anyone wanting to make a return, even when the event is sold out. They don't give a rat's. Not the first time I've tried and failed. I loathe them with a deep and abiding loathing. A company that is worse than second-hand car sales and comparable to arms dealers.

2023-07-29T02:14:38+00:00

Noodles

Roar Rookie


Focus on Carter is a bit overdone. He’s had time to get to this and looks ready. Of course he has yet to face ABs. But to me the bigger issue is whether the tight five deliver and whether the back row match it with a form opposition. There’s plenty of experience in the squad, but not enough team stability and settled cohesion because of injury etc. I hope Carter has a good day. But it’s not his job alone to make that happen.

2023-07-29T01:54:22+00:00

Just call me Campo

Roar Rookie


whi is CD?

2023-07-29T01:15:34+00:00

numpty

Roar Rookie


Next article will have Jones Jones turning water into wine. Jones said he wanted to win the Bledisloe and the rwc this year so we have to think these selections are in mind to do that and that's also what he should be judged on. This team is also no more youthful then what Rennie had at his disposal in 2020 with Tate, lolesio, hunter etc at the helm.

2023-07-29T00:53:40+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Jones should be selecting the team/tactics that can get our best performance tonight and for the WC. _ He can turn to youth from November.. _ What I want to see right now is him aligning his words/tactics with selection. In the mean time I am already sick to death of his contradictory comments and the way everything seems to be about him. _ Now the advertising campaign is about Jones, people aren’t turning up to watch him, we go to watch the players. _ I want be excited about Tupou, Bell and Skelton, the opportunity that Kerevi/Petaia gives us in midfield, just how good Koroibete is. Not seeing EJ smirking about proving doubters wrong and skipping croissants.

2023-07-29T00:28:47+00:00

K.F.T.D.

Roar Rookie


The only thing I saw at Betoota that might have been close was a merde de chien lying to the south.

2023-07-29T00:17:41+00:00

Daggett

Roar Rookie


The one in the French quarters of Betoota?

2023-07-29T00:09:59+00:00

Wig

Roar Rookie


Yes same id often say look at the baby blacks and how well they went . Have a major clean out get all new crop in. Leave tate and carter there come what may now with the fwd pack from Dave's eoyt ,include ikitowel when fit and the new wing mark, kellaway was good before. And a better coach wich was allready there ummm sorry Dave. 47 - 17. Working til kick off at murrin Murrin

2023-07-28T23:36:43+00:00

Colvin Brown

Roar Guru


Yes, I'm not so sure how Carter Gordon reminds Eddie Jones of Butch James either. From memory Butch was famous for his high tackles and was often referred to as "the thug"

2023-07-28T23:29:36+00:00

Mactruck

Roar Rookie


I’ve got $200 on them winning the cup at varying odds over the last 2 years. 13/1 best odds

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