Eddie has done what was needed four years ago and ripped the bandaid off. Now he's breathed life into Aussie rugby

By Christy Doran / Editor

COMMENT: Eddie Jones has done what needed to be done almost four years ago. He has ushered through the next wave of Wallabies.

Not in drips and drabs, but at once.

He has followed the lead of French coach Fabien Galthie, who together with Jaques Brunel dropped their own bombshell ahead of the Japan tournament in 2019, by backing youth.

At once, young men in the infancy of their Test careers like Gregory Alldritt, Demba Bamba, Antoine Dupont, Romain Ntamack and Damian Penaud, who had led France’s revival at under-20s level following years of disappointment, were included so that they would be primed for their home World Cup four years’ later.

They didn’t wave the white flag but took a leap of faith. It saw their imprévisibilité return.

France’s head coach Fabien Galthie backed youth ahead of the 2019 World Cup. It’s a decision that has paid off. (Photo by Anne-Christine POUJOULAT / AFP via Getty Images)

Having shocked the globe to push the All Blacks through until the final whistle at the 2011 World Cup final, they almost toppled Wales in the 2019 quarters.

Had Sebastien Vahaamahina not lost his head in the first half, Les Bleus might well have made another surprising run.

Now, having invested in the future, they are primed for their World Cup run and are one of the favourites for the Webb Ellis Cup after taking out last year’s Six Nations, snapping their Twickenham hoodoo in emphatic style earlier this year and having dominated European club rugby in recent years.

A nation that went from a 39 per cent win record pre-2019 turned the corner, lifting it to 58 per cent in 2019 to 78 per cent since 2020 – a run that included 14 Test victories in a row.

Jones, it would seem, is following the same path ahead of the World Cup.

It’s understood he has the support of the Rugby Australia board, who believed they needed to work backward from 2027 to stand a chance in their home tournament.

Indeed, for more than a year the RA board has encouraged its head coach to back the nation’s youth.

Eddie Jones has ushered through the next generation of Australian rugby. (Photo credit: Julius Dimataga/RugbyAU Media)

Jones, having curiously given most of his veterans the first crack to stake their claim, hasn’t shied away from following through. He’s been bold and ripped the bandaid off the Wallabies.

And why not? After all, this is a Wallabies side that have slipped away from the face of the Earth like a melting iceberg.

The players who have been constants in those sides are Michael Hooper and Quade Cooper.

Would they have led the Wallabies to World Cup glory?

History suggests, no.

On the field, both have struggled this year.

Despite claiming his eighth Matthew Burke Cup on Monday, Hooper had his least effective year in Super Rugby since debuting way back in 2010.

While a calf injury saw him miss the Test against Argentina, Jones could surely have carried him and backed him to have a positive influence like Ian Foster has done with Brodie Retallick or Jacques Nienaber has with Siya Kolisi.

(L-R) Michael Hooper and Quade Cooper have both been left out of Eddie Jones’ squad despite unveiling the Wallabies’ Rugby World Cup jersey at Coogee Oval on June 22, 2023. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

While Cooper has kicked with remarkable accuracy since his incredible return against the Springboks in 2021, the past month exposed his inability to stop the physical onslaught in defence.

His decision-making was also exposed in Dunedin, as he ran the ball back into the defence and was turned over in one of his first involvements.

His second, a shocking drop with an overlap out wide in the final few minutes, was perhaps the final nail in the coffin.

Neither are the future and Jones has sped up their departures. It’s a brutal decision, but Jones has done so by recognising what is on the horizon for Australian rugby with the British and Irish Lions less than two years away too.

Only five players are over 30 in Jones’ squad, while 16 of the players are under the age of 25.

Max Jorgensen is one of three uncapped players included, with the 18-year-old being included despite not playing since injuring his knee against the Crusaders.

But a brace of tries on debut against the Brumbies in Sydney on debut, where he slipped out of two tackles including Allan Alaalatoa, showed he has the composure to succeed on the big stage.

Blake Schoupp has made every post a winner since his low-key move to the Brumbies.

The sight of him locking down the Brumbies’ scrum against the Hurricanes and revving up the crowd to help get the home side across the line showed a young man who embraced the challenge and took enjoyment squaring up under the big lights.

Wallabies coach Eddie Jones talks with Max Jorgensen during a Wallabies training camp at Sanctuary Cove on April 17, 2023 in Gold Coast. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

Issak Fines-Leleiwasa is the final uncapped player in the squad.

At 27, he is no kid. But he’s only recently been given an opportunity to play regular minutes at halfback after returning to the Force from the Brumbies.

In the nation’s capital, Dan McKellar used him at halfback and on the wing. Might Jones do the same?

It could allow Jones to be crafty with reserves, allowing him to experiment with a forwards heavy bench if necessary.

But there’s no doubt the pace Fines-Leleiwasa provides is something that would have caught Jones’ eye.

When the Wallabies needed pace and tempo off the bench in the Bledisloe Tests, they got the reverse with Nic White.

That doesn’t mean White won’t be used as a starter, but Fines-Leleiwasa shapes as a “finisher” to inject life into the Wallabies in the same way he did for Australia A against Tonga and the Force over the past two years.

Pete Samu can consider himself unfortunate to not make the squad, but once again he’s not the future.

The back-rower is heading to France to continue his career.

As such, Jones has turned to Tom Hooper, Fraser McReight and Langi Gleeson. All three are young men with bright futures.

Will Skelton is an inspired choice as captain.

He’s not only one of the few players who command a starting spot, but he’s a winner. He’s also brought back with him from France some “edge” that helped Saracens and La Rochelle to multiple European Champions Cup titles.

Some might disagree that a foreign-based player is captaining the Wallabies, but let’s not forget that he was a big kid from Sydney’s west who can inspire a generation of players to pick up a rugby ball.

Will Skelton will lead the Wallabies at the World Cup in France. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

While goal-kicking could prove an issue throughout the tournament, the only genuine head-scratcher remains Jones’ love affair with Suliasi Vunivalu.

But the Wallabies coach isn’t the only person who saw something in him (whatever it is).

Indeed, three years ago Scott Johnson lured him across on the best part of $750,000.

It was a perplexing decision and one that has yet to bear fruit.

Yet, overall, this is a squad that has life in it and, as the French would say, imprévisibilité.

Life and unpredictability are things Australian rugby need going forward. Jones has just breathed more into the game ahead of schedule.

The Crowd Says:

2023-08-14T13:44:08+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Really? Again whom didn't he back who deserved it?

2023-08-11T22:41:55+00:00

Cannonball

Roar Rookie


Acclimatising? :laughing:

2023-08-11T22:38:13+00:00

Cannonball

Roar Rookie


I reckon his $1mill a year salary is something. Being dropped doesn’t mean he stops making money playing rugby. Plenty of incentive to recover I’d suggest.

2023-08-11T22:22:16+00:00

Cannonball

Roar Rookie


Wasn’t Noah at 10? Adelaide?

2023-08-11T12:37:27+00:00

Go you good thing

Roar Rookie


I think you’ll be shaving those eyebrows off in no time ballybrook

2023-08-11T12:26:27+00:00

Go you good thing

Roar Rookie


The kiwis played 12 ring-ins for most if the game mate. Not even close to full strength. Must Remember that. Absolutely slim chance of a semi final I’m afraid.

2023-08-11T12:21:08+00:00

Go you good thing

Roar Rookie


— COMMENT DELETED —

2023-08-11T12:15:20+00:00

Go you good thing

Roar Rookie


Some great points and well written your spot on here ! Reeks of board room politics. I’m just appalled

2023-08-11T11:58:42+00:00

Qualify

Roar Rookie


100% But it's better to have one than not, I'd say.

2023-08-11T11:22:39+00:00

Filstrup

Roar Rookie


Good article, excellent headings describing the AR revolution that “we had to have’. And Jones is mastering it, despite the naysayers, aussie haters and Rennie’s nostalgics. Most important, this is the reckoning time of a sad and depressing era since Cheika took the reins. A change in mindset, if it ever existed one -listen to Jones, Angus Bell and Tate McDermott, bringing pride and hinting a new generic strategy is to do things differently. No more sad eyes, depressing press conferences, cross eyed captains. It won’t matter if they don’t make the quarters. This is the future, rugby culture building to get the AR on the mainstream media -currently hijacked by NZ press journos, -Greg Growden and Wayne Smith are deeply missed- . Next, trust McLennan and Vaugh will ditch the farcical SR, to stop aussie utilised as NZR punching bag and the double standards clowning officiating of the man and his whistle.

2023-08-11T10:04:35+00:00

Rodkafer

Roar Rookie


EXACTLY Torgs

2023-08-11T09:51:32+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


Fair enough mate.

2023-08-11T09:37:13+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


On the other hand, from what I have heard here, there was a systemic attitude problem among the senior players in the until-2019 team, though i've also heard the coaching team weren't innocent in enabling it. Along with an emerging generation France needed to clean house. Talking stories and rumours here, rather than facts, but the people I heard it from aren't gossipy types. I doubt very much that Hooper, Cooper, Samu would have been attitude and culture problems. I get trying to plug into Eddie's rationale and logic and buying it (though i don't myself) but I don't see the situaion is comparable. I also do think Hooper, Cooper are still in the Wallabies best 23 and Samu might well be. Were France ommiting their best players at given positions to include Dupont etc?

2023-08-11T09:11:40+00:00

Big Mig

Roar Rookie


Christy I like that about Eddie " He’s a contrarian. He trusts few. Nor does he listen to outside noise. " Eddie knows, and maybe we all kind of expected that we'd be impressed if the Wallabies 0-4 team made it to passed the quarterfinals. Stale. Losses to 0-4 means something had to give, and lets face it Quade and Co didnt really impress. He had to do something "left field", and if it pays off he'll be lauded as a genius (rightly so), if not, what has he lost ? An expected (dismal) quarterfinals berth with Quade and Hoops having their last game?

2023-08-11T08:59:32+00:00

Dida

Roar Rookie


You name a better option. There's a lot to being a captain. Yes he's untested as a captain but that doesn't mean he doesn't deserve the job. Wallabies need a change and I don't think McDermot etc offer the same leadership. I love McDermot, especially as a reds supporter, but he does err on the negative side. As I said there's so much to being a captain, not just someone who can call the lineout or run the plays. There are loads of captains who are leaders by example and I'd say every man in that side would follow Skelton's lead into those big matches.

2023-08-11T08:53:55+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


Actually, my comment was about the ranking of Lonergan but could equally have been in defence of White who, with the absence of Quade and Len, is now our most critical backline player.

2023-08-11T08:53:07+00:00

East Coast Aces

Roar Rookie


Media talk about old players being scarred by loses. But if you bring a huge group in at once and they still lose guess what? You've just scarred another whole generation. Only way it works if you bring them into a winning team either way. And best chance of that is by always picking your best team.

2023-08-11T08:43:50+00:00

East Coast Aces

Roar Rookie


Sports journalism is the same as politics. We heard in the recent royal Commission drops are given to favourable media. Every exclusive is just someone on the inside feeding hacks that will give favourable media. You criticise them they ice you out. I get the fear for your job if that happens. But rugby in Australia doesn't have many places to go for any media. So you should just suck it up take the cold shoulder for two weeks and point blank ask Eddie why Samu isn't picked and hold him to a real answer.

2023-08-11T08:39:18+00:00

Rhys

Roar Rookie


Yeah his hyperbole can be pretty hyper, but I can’t help but feel after seeing these selections that Jones has been looking for an excuse to swing the axe on a few players. Christy, with his apparent inside knowledge, noting the knock on in this article who knows how that played into EJs mind re Quade. I suppose it is conjecture but it wouldn’t surprise me. Nonetheless, Eddies gameplans were never going to maximise Quade’s ability

2023-08-11T08:31:29+00:00

Loosey

Roar Rookie


Clearly Eddie wasn't watching in 2011.

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