Wallabies' PREDICTED World Cup squad: Jones faces defining choice as he locks in 33 for France

By Christy Doran / Editor

Eddie Jones spoke about the opportunity of Tate McDermott leading a “new era in Australian rugby” ahead of the Wallabies’ Bledisloe return fixture in Dunedin.

Now, having pushed the All Blacks to the final whistle after going down 23-20, the question is whether Jones pushes forward with the “regeneration” of the side or give his aging men one last dance at next month’s World Cup?

Jones will name his 33-man World Cup squad on Thursday evening in Darwin.

The increase from 31 to 33 has been made because of World Rugby’s stronger stance on Head Injury Assessments, with mandatory 12-day stand-down periods for those with concussions seeing the governing body allow teams an additional two players.

That will see most nations likely pick three hookers and three halfbacks, with Michael Cheika previously opting to take two No.9s in 2015 and 2019 with Will Genia and Nic White sharing the duties most recently in Japan.

Season-ending injuries to Allan Alaalatoa and Tom Robertson, who could play on either side of the scrum, might well see Jones select a sixth prop, particularly given Taniela Tupou’s injury concern and the heavy load looming for Angus Bell.

That’s a big number, but the Wallabies’ World Cup campaign could well rest on the shoulders of Bell and Tupou, who must be managed and nurtured throughout if Jones’ men are to end back in Paris in the final fortnight of October.

Tate McDermott and Angus Bell. (Photo by Joe Allison/Getty Images)

As such, it could allow youngsters Blake Schoupp and Zane Nonngorr to be called into the squad well before they’re truly ready for such a big tournament.

Should Jones push forward with ushering through the next generation of Wallabies, two players particularly are in doubt to make the trip: co-captain Michael Hooper and veteran halfback Nic White.

While there were questions about whether Hooper’s form leading into the international season, an underwhelming match against the Springboks, where the entire Wallabies pack struggled mentally and the side struggled to get on the same page in Jones’ first Test back in charge, a calf injury has ruled him out of the past three Tests.

Those three missed Tests can’t be understated while Jones has been particularly cagey about the flanker’s return.

“No, he’s a long way away, mate,” Jones said when asked about Hooper’s prognosis.

“I’m saying that he’s got a serious injury and when you’ve got a serious injury there are deadlines and we need to find the deadline.

“When you’ve got a calf injury, sometimes you don’t know how quickly you can recover.”

Asked to clarify whether he was at risk of missing the World Cup, Jones was coy.

“I’ll worry about that when we come up to World Cup selection,” he said.

During that time, Tom Hooper has emerged as someone capable of playing at both openside and blindside flanker while Fraser McReight had a stronger outing in Dunedin to complement his teammates both in the back-row and across the entire forward pack.

His clean steal in the 33rd minute, where he pounced on a falling Damian McKenzie and withstood the attempted cleanouts of Sam Cane and Anton Lienert-Brown, was a moment that reinforced McReight’s ability to get on the ball.

At halfback, White’s struggles from Melbourne somewhat continued in Dunedin where he couldn’t change the tempo and lead the Wallabies home.

His final pass to Quade Cooper, which should not have been spilt was a slow, scrappy ball, for a playmaker looking to take advantage of a four-on-two overlap.

Wallabies coach Eddie Jones has a big call whether to include co-captain Michael Hooper. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

White’s kicking game and big match nature, having won championships in Europe, could still see him board the plane to France but given Jones’ desire to play off the cuff and up-tempo in attack, the 33-year-old halfback seems to be going in a different direction to the Wallabies coach.

Nonetheless, given Ryan Lonergan, a player highly valued by the Brumbies not just as a leader but a player with a fine pass and someone who can put width on the ball as a result, wasn’t used by Jones during the four Tests to date perhaps indicates that if a change is occurring, it could be instead of the 25-year-old.

Could Tawera Kerr-Barlow still be a late addition? The former All Black, who funnily enough grew up in Darwin, won’t go away as a potential bolter.

Rookie Matt Faessler stood up to the pressures of international rugby by executing his lineout throw well against the All Blacks.

How his scrummaging held up will be something Jones will have tried to get to the bottom of though. After all, the Wallabies’ scrum struggled in the second half and with the tight-head prop concerns, Jones will want to ensure his hooker helps them out.

He was also busy across the park and has likely done enough to join Dave Porecki and Jordan Uelese, whose knee issues likely still remain a concern given his late scratching on Saturday.

Nick Frost, Richie Arnold and Will Skelton pick themselves.

Whether Jones can find space for another remains to be seen, but the inclusions of Rob Leota and Jed Holloway particularly could mean there’s no space for Matt Philip. It’s a decision that will go down to the wire.

Michael Hooper, meanwhile, is likely battling with McReight and Langi Gleeson for the final spot.

But given Rob Valetini has been the only specialist No.8 used this year, Jones could well want cover for him.

Gleeson, who missed the start of the TRC as he recovered from injury, is someone who can break the line. But whether he’s got the fitness remains to be seen.

Where that leaves Pete Samu remains to be seen, but given he was dropped from the Bledisloe Cup squad doesn’t bode well.

As for the rest of the backline, Carter Gordon and Quade Cooper shape as the two specialist playmakers. Another will likely be on standby.

It will leave Ben Donaldson and Reece Hodge battling it out as the utility back capable of playing fly-half and fullback. Donaldson seemingly has his nose in front and was preferred for the Bledisloe Cup series.

Force-bound back Ben Donaldson (C) remains in the hunt to go to the World Cup given his ability to play fly-half and fullback. (Photo by Filippo MONTEFORTE / AFP) (Photo by FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP via Getty Images)

Jones must consider whether to take three specialist centres or four, not including Jordan Petaia who of course wore the No.13 jersey. That will leave Lalakai Foketi on shaky ground while Hunter Paisami’s injuries (and poor form in matches after briefly returning), likely won’t have helped his cause.

Helping Foketi could be that Samu Kerevi is due to have an operation on his broken hand on Monday, while Len Ikitau is racing the clock to be fit for their World Cup opener in Paris on September 9. Both are expected to be named.

In a way similar to Jordie Barrett at the All Blacks, Petaia could be – and has been spoken about – used at inside centre at a stretch.

Fullback Andrew Kellaway and wings Marika Koroibete and Mark Nawaqanitawase are amongst the first picked.

Will Jones opt for specialist wing cover in the form of Suliasi Vunivalu and Dylan Pietsch? Pietsch, the Waratahs winger who has looked comfortable for Australia A, offers versatility in the sense that he was an openside flanker at schoolboy level.

While Pietsch wasn’t called upon during the Rugby Championship, it’s a factor that could prove handy in the World Cup. Remember Nick Phipps and Radike Samo playing on the wing?

Richie Mo’unga led the All Blacks to a nail-biting win over the Wallabies at Forsyth Barr Stadium on August 05, 2023 in Dunedin. (Photo by Peter Meecham/Getty Images)

As for Tom Wright, the Brumbies outside back could well have blown his chance after being axed for the Bledisloe series after errors at critical times late in the Wallabies’ loss to Argentina exposed his unfortunate propensity to make the wrong decision at the wrong time.

Jones will also select a Australia A team to take on Portugal at the Stade de France the day before the Wallabies meet France at the same venue on August 26.

That could pave the way for players like Max Jorgensen, Wright and Issak Fines-Leleiwasa, as well as Lukhan Salakaia-Loto and Folau Fainga’a, to be in the north and on standby if injury strikes.

Jorgensen, 18, recently started running again following his knee-injury suffered against the Crusaders in May.

He is someone that Jones will watch closely.

PREDICTED WALLABIES SQUAD

Forwards: 18

Hookers: Dave Porecki, Jordan Uelese, Matt Faessler

Props: Angus Bell, James Slipper, Blake Schoupp, Taniela Tupou, Pone Fa’amausili, Zane Nonggorr

Locks: Richie Arnold, Nick Frost, Will Skelton, Jed Holloway

Back-row: Tom Hooper, Rob Leota, Fraser McReight, Rob Valetini, Langi Gleeson

Backs:  15

Halfbacks: Tate McDermott, Nic White, Ryan Lonergan

Fly-halves: Carter Gordon, Quade Cooper

Midfield: Samu Kerevi, Len Ikitau, Izaia Perese

Outside backs: Mark Nawaqanitawase, Suliasi Vunivalu, Marika Koroibete, Andrew Kellaway

Utility: Ben Donaldson, Jordan Petaia, DyLan Pietsch.

The Crowd Says:

2023-08-11T00:55:23+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


I was trying to be nice, there was a lot of division over the selection, which also dictated the game plan. Suited us :laughing:

2023-08-09T02:01:43+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


23 year old me thought the All Blacks had too much Spencer and not enough Mehrtens

2023-08-09T01:27:28+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


But he hasn't picked him in the 23 from the 2 games he was in the squad...

2023-08-09T01:06:28+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


I won't discount anything piru, the easy side of the draw makes a huge difference. Look at France's run in 2011. However 2003 is a bit of an outlier, I think it was an extremely weak RWC. England had been outstanding for two years and also in the winter tour to Australia and NZ in 2003. Nowhere near that standard at the RWC. The AB really struggled with their lineout and game plan, with Carlos not quite dominating as he might have. By then Australia was well into its slow decline and it still seems extraordinary how close that final was. If Larkham had been on the field the whole game we might well have won in ordinary time. Still grates how his trademark petulance probably cost us the game. I would also have liked to see Giteau get a lot more time at halfback, we were limited by playing the captain with such a short slow pass. There is a lesson in that too.

2023-08-09T00:58:52+00:00

Muglair

Roar Rookie


That is good to hear Christy I have been of the same view as BS (sorry Broken Shoulder, that is a poor abbreviation). On the team Christy. A reasonable selection on form, but I have a few caveats. Some of our big names have injuries or are still recovering. We cannot afford to carry more than one, and even then NZ can probably cover for Retallick and can be confident they will get a return on that investment. I am positive so far on Eddie. He is showing some adaptability in his game plan whereas Dave Rennie was not. I do not think DR was going to eliminate the Achilles heel of breakdowns occurring too far from support, resulting in turnovers, penalties for not releasing, and cards for trying to remove opponents set over the ball. I do not read too much into the narrow loss over an AB team full of good players but a long way short of the AB team of the previous weeks. However it seems plain to me that we are consolidating good foundations in our game. Too me, Eddie's selections have been more about giving highly popular incumbents opportunities and then moving them out. There are four tightly grouped teams in the world rankings in our pool. Unless we continue to improve significantly it will be hard work getting out of the pool, and will be underdogs in the QF. There are quite a few players who will not be in Eddie's first team next year, even if available. Nor do I think those players will take us to a SF, let alone a smash and grab final. I am looking forward to see if Eddie surprises us all tomorrow.

2023-08-08T12:43:40+00:00

Rugby_AU

Roar Rookie


Donaldson is an average 10 at super rugby not ready for the WC

2023-08-08T05:59:21+00:00

JamieInBrisbane

Roar Rookie


As Bonaparte once said, "Men are more easily governed through their vices than through their virtues," so it makes sense to have as many vices as possible IMHO. :laughing:

2023-08-08T04:56:30+00:00

John Ferguson

Expert


He's not there because he is not as versatile as he once was considered and I believe if impact is something you want you can get that from Gleeson.

2023-08-08T02:27:49+00:00

Rugbytrylover

Roar Rookie


Biscuit…. Exactly…. No wait, it’s all a ‘Tahs’ conspiracy! Yeah right!

2023-08-08T01:50:28+00:00

Biscuit man

Roar Rookie


Irrelevant . It’s one country one team and best of each squad gets picked.

2023-08-08T01:04:55+00:00

Wolla Wotsa

Roar Rookie


You`ve dropped too many tahs. That will never happen. Although Eddies squad is an improvement on the Tah centric Chieks era :happy:

2023-08-08T01:04:13+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


So if a player plays poorly off the bench they should be given more opportunities and greater minutes?

2023-08-08T00:56:50+00:00

Wolla Wotsa

Roar Rookie


So we have a 33 man squad consisting of. 5 Overseas picks 5 Rebels 7 Reds 8 Brumbies 8 Tahs, could be 10 if Hooper and Foketi are fit. It`s incredible what you can achieve when you play for NSWRA :laughing: :silly:

2023-08-08T00:53:53+00:00

Randy Ruga

Roar Rookie


I reckon you're right, & can't wait to see them in action.

2023-08-08T00:39:13+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


If we are being literal. "The Roar can reveal that the former World Cup-winner..... remains in consideration for a remarkable call-up by Eddie Jones" https://www.theroar.com.au/2023/07/22/ex-all-blacks-world-cup-winner-could-still-earn-wallabies-call-up-by-eddie-australia-a-to-play-portugal-in-paris/

2023-08-08T00:25:14+00:00

Gasher

Roar Rookie


Those 3 were all starting obviously ? With big minutes to showcase his wares?

2023-08-07T22:45:23+00:00

Dusty10

Roar Rookie


Gleeson also seems to suit Eddie's style; he wants big damaging runners and he wants to be able to score quickly, off minimal phases. He'll pick Gleeson because of the promise of what he CAN be, rather than what he is (realistically, he's young, inexperienced, and inconsistent).

2023-08-07T21:50:09+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


If anybody gets a hurt during the captains run we’ve probably got bigger issues.

2023-08-07T21:41:21+00:00

Adam

Roar Guru


Oh I'm not suggesting Wright be used extensively other than for say that Portugal game or as a replacement in some of the other pool matches. While he might be up to a brain snap here or there he's guaranteed to put in the effort, is quicker than Suli, can kick out of hand and positions himself on the field better. I'm hoping Eddie has always just had Samu pencilled in and knew he didn't need to see him play to know he needs to be on the plane. But seems like he's scratched his name off for some unknown reason

2023-08-07T21:17:48+00:00

Rugbytrylover

Roar Rookie


Lonergan has been with the squad for a month? Training but not playing I know. Probably deserved a shot at game time but he’ll be ready if there is an injury. Suspect he’ll be in against Portugal.

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