The Wrap: Tupou coup looks more profound by the day, Christie vitriol out of order, Argies and Scots a shambles

By Geoff Parkes / Expert

While the Rugby World Cup pool groupings are a well-documented schemozzle, nobody could accuse organisers of not making the best of a bad situation, scheduling a juicy, tournament-shaping first weekend of matches.

The 2019 event eased its way off the grid, with a nervous Japan edging Russia – a nation that failed to qualify this time – on opening night. Compare that to Friday night’s blockbuster; France locking in the support of the home nation by sitting New Zealand on its backside, courtesy of a powerful and intelligent second half performance.

There were pivotal games in all directions, with pool B’s comprehensive win by South Africa over Scotland and in pool C, Wales edging Fiji, having profound implications for the rest of the tournament.

That’s a result of obvious interest to Australian fans, with the Wallabies to face both over the next fortnight, buoyed by their 35-15 win over Georgia.

Despite fears in some quarters of an opening match disaster, this was a win for the Wallabies that was always going to happen. It was just the manner in which things played out that came as a surprise.

The much-vaunted Georgia pack was never really sighted, the Wallabies superior at set piece, carry and territorial kicking game, once everybody got past Carter Gordon having his first exit kick charged down.

So content was Georgia to play off 9, it was almost as if Nic White had been down to a Georgia training session, to school halfback Vasil Lobzhanidze in the art of box kicking.

With the Wallabies sensibly playing tournament rugby, accumulating points as they were offered, the contest was effectively over by half-time.

But here’s where things got interesting; Georgia realising that beyond their love of grinding and mashing beards at the maul, they had pace to burn out wide, against a side that is still yet to convince that they have a robust defensive plan in the outside channels.

Georgia soon found however, that a potential strength was also a weakness, with multiple opportunities spurned, a result of naivety and stage fright.

Winger Mirian Modebadze was a case in point, blessed with jet shoes but seeming not to understand the laws, forcing the ball in goal under no pressure, instead of letting it roll dead for a scrum near halfway.

He didn’t finish there, as good as begging referee Luke Pearce to give him a yellow card, after the clock had ticked over 40 minutes.

That was after his equally speedy wing partner, Akaki Tabudsadze, on a clean break, kicked ahead too soon, instead of pinning his ears back and taking on the final defender.

Worse was to follow, a loose carry instead of a low, grass-cutting dive, allowing Mark Nawaqanitiwase to knock the ball out of his hands over the line.

Taniela Tupou #3 of Australia runs with the ball during the Rugby World Cup France 2023 match between Australia and Georgia at Stade de France on September 9, 2023 in Paris, France. (Photo by Catherine Steenkeste/Getty Images)

The butchering disease spread to star fullback Divat Niniashvili, whose sweeping 45m breakout had try written all over it. Which is exactly what happened, the ball somehow being handed over to Taniela Tupou, who hit the gas in the opposite direction, before hooking a sweet ball for Ben Donaldson to run away and score.

Assuming Tupou stays injury free, his signing by the Melbourne Rebels is looking more profound by the day. In command of his core role, Georgia’s scrum was going nowhere. And what about the brilliant passage of play in the 33rd minute, when he quickly stepped into halfback and swept away a superb pass off his left hand, before at the next ruck, with a taste for his new role, bouncing out the other way and popping a sweet short ball off his right hand?

That work was made to look even better when Tate McDermott, claiming his job back at the next ruck, ran himself out of options and threw a meek intercept.

That would be McDermott’s last involvement, getting himself into a horrible position in a tackle, suffering a Cat 1 concussion that will definitely see him sidelined for the Fiji match and, more than likely, the following match against Wales.

Equally impressive was Will Skelton, whose demeanour at the post-match press conference suggests he is growing nicely into the captaincy role. Entitled as much anyone to be slowed by the stifling heat, Skelton’s 70 minutes was a fine contribution, highlighted in the 51st minute by taking on a Georgian attacking maul on his own, and winning.

Georgia’s second half recovery of sorts was down to two things; a lack of sting from the Wallabies’ bench (where four lineouts were lost) and an evening up of the penalty count.

Just as the All Blacks versus France, and England versus Argentina matches showed, this is going to be a World Cup dominated by sides who finish on the right side of the penalty ledger, and who parlay this into field position and points.

Dalton Papalii, Tupou Vaa’i and Luke Jacobson are all outstanding Super Rugby players and deserved All Blacks. But if all three are in the same match day 23 against a top-rated nation, it’s hard to imagine New Zealand lifting the trophy.

Opening night against France demanded more physical presence at the breakdown and in the close carries; something that Sam Cane and Shannon Frizell would have offered.

Ethan Blackadder is a welcome addition, named as replacement for the unlucky Emoni Narawa, and while it’s no use anyone crying about missing players, because all sides are impacted by injury to some extent, New Zealand’s depth is plainly not what it was.

One thing that caught the eye across much of the NZ coverage of the 27-13 loss was the amount of vitriol heaped upon replacement halfback Finlay Christie. As someone who was on the Cameron Roigard bandwagon well before the masses twigged on, I don’t believe Christie is of sufficient class to influence a World Cup.

But neither is he deserving of the rubbish that was thrown at him by those media and fans who, as ever, fail to understand that when your pack is getting towelled up, it’s a pointless pursuit to go seeking a scapegoat wearing 9 or 10.

(Photo by Andrew Kearns – CameraSport via Getty Images)

Finlay’s chief asset is pace, and it was noticeable on a few occasions how he provided an extra option defending in the backfield, before using his extreme dash to be present to clear the ball.

I’ll be happy to see Roigard given more opportunity, but on a scale of who was responsible for New Zealand’s loss, Christie doesn’t even register.

In Marseille, Argentina shocked everyone, including themselves, bringing no attacking cleanout, no respect for possession and a reluctance to play within the laws. All of this with a one-man advantage for most of the game. Frankly, it wouldn’t have mattered if they were three men up, so off were they on the night.

England fans rejoiced hard and long, but apart from line speed and intensity in defence, they offered little more with the ball than George Ford having a decent crack at Jannie de Beer’s drop goal record.

Their backline play was laboured and lateral, and won’t threaten the better sides. Nevertheless, they won a game many were tipping them to lose and, the disappointment of losing Tom Curry aside, given where they were a week ago, they now look like certain pool winners. That’s significant progress.

Tom Curry of England looks dejected as he leaves the field. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

A hard watch, if this game achieved one thing, it was surely to draw enough attention to the scourge that is the horrible three or four-man caterpillar, and for World Rugby to deem enough is enough.

Enough was enough too for Scotland, rudely manhandled by South Africa. There was a moment near the end of the match where Scotland was offered the choice of a scrum or lineout, with the only possible answer being “neither thanks”. Oh and, “can you tell Rassie to turn that yellow light off?”

The physical battering was not unexpected, but with four years of preparation, surely Scotland could at least have bought a plan about how to deal with the umbrella backline defence, instead of Finn Russell giving the appearance of having stumbled upon it for the first time?

Finishing off the weekend, Bordeaux delivered a thriller with Wales, holding off a storming finish by Fiji, to win 32-26. A fumbled bounce pass to Semi Radradra, after the siren, with a certain try begging, was the pivotal play; although I doubt anyone would have backed Teti Tela to make the conversion from out wide.

What is notable is that three sides – Argentina, Scotland and Fiji – entered this tournament with high expectations of joining the top flight of nations at the business end. Two of them were a shambles, and the third, Fiji, not quite clinical enough against a limited but highly committed opponent.

If a change in rugby’s world order is coming – and remember, the tournament is just one weekend old – it’s not here yet.

And so, this World Cup is off to a ripping start, with full houses the order of the day everywhere, to say that the game is in a good place.

Despite a couple of difficult moments early in the Argentina vs England match, things have largely been controversy and TMO free so far. Let’s hope it stays that way.

The home nation is off to a flying start, and excited fans from all points of the globe are criss-crossing the nation having the time of their lives. That’s exactly as it should be.

To finish this week with a reminder that, like last time in Japan, there will be a second weekly wrap, towards the end of each week. Expect a few observations on some of the on-field talking points, and off-field points of interest, and this week, some sage career advice for young Australians intending to take up employment in France. Stay tuned.

The Crowd Says:

2023-09-14T20:59:21+00:00

frisky

Roar Rookie


What is Tupuo's injury rate? How many consecutive games was he able to play? I cannot recall many this year.

2023-09-13T23:28:36+00:00

Busted Fullback

Roar Rookie


Thanks Brendan.

2023-09-13T23:07:41+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


In soccer it only happens in certain areas. Brazil and Argentina are unlikely to miss out on a football WC due to 4 out of 10 getting through with 5th going into a playoff. European champions Italy failed to quailfy for the WC as Europe had 13 places. In Rugby unless they sort their qualification process we aren't going to see big names miss out. In 2015 Georgia and Japan finished 3rd in their group so auto qualified for 2019. This left WR with a big question. Instead of keeping the qualification process the same they took a place from Europe and Asia and gave it to the PIs for fear they might miss out. For this WC Tonga had to beat HK to quailify and HK forfeited the game, HK then finished last in the knockouts. By contrast Europe, Americas and even Africa are seeing teams rising and falling all pushing standards. Portugal are at the WC after 16 years and were even relegated in that time to Div 3 of European rugby. Unless their are regional championships also every 4 years like Soccer you won't see any change either.

2023-09-12T15:34:43+00:00

therugbyfanshaz

Roar Rookie


Russia didn't fail to qualify, they, and Belarus were suspended from all rugby competitions.

AUTHOR

2023-09-12T10:54:53+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


That one's more around timing, Brendan. TJ Perenara was clearly the dominant half-back behind Smith, but with both those guys coming to the end at the same time time, and Brad Weber also fairly experienced, the focus needed to go on someone younger. Folau Fakatava was identified, but he suffered a year-long injury. Christie was next off the rank, and then Roigard fully emerged this season. Moving forward, Roigard and Fakatava as the main halfbacks, is not too bad a position to be in.

AUTHOR

2023-09-12T10:50:04+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


Yeah, the notion that referees should be "asserting themselves on the game" is seriously flawed.

2023-09-12T09:52:00+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


Georgia reminded me alot of Italy when they played Wales in the 6Ns where they believed they had a chance and so took risks and minded the ball less than they normally would of. Its a learning curve for the team but like Italy in their games v Scotland its one thing to almost beat teams its another to actually do it. On scrumhalfs in NZ I never understood why Bryn Hall never got a chance considering his SR success in which he was a key cog and having Christie with RM makes less sense than Hall with him. I know age was probably against him with Smith also being older.

2023-09-12T09:27:37+00:00

Busted Fullback

Roar Rookie


In 2003 a mate and I were walking to a meeting, both of us suggesting that we’d have given a leg to be playing for Namibia. Some Leaguies in front of us couldn’t understand why we would want to be part of a 104 point beating. They just didn’t get it. But it’s not always been about the top tier. Speaking to Anthony Herbert on one occasion when he said how wary the WBs were of playing Samoa in Wales in ‘91, let alone his personal challenge against Brian “The Chiropractor” Lima. I’m hopeful that, in my lifetime, we’ll see promotion and relegation between the tiers. And, like soccer, presence in the top tier does not guarantee entry to the RWC.

2023-09-12T09:13:59+00:00

Busted Fullback

Roar Rookie


Geoff, at the Brisbane Grand Finals, referee coaches were heard to say that one of the refs did not assert himself on the game. Yet, everyone I spoke to said that it was an enjoyable game to play and watch with no controversies. I hope these types of referee mentors have their days numbered.

2023-09-12T07:30:49+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


China and the ethnic cleansing of the Uyghurs? Where does it end..Us and the indigenous history? I don't like Russians full stop because they have flooded where I live in Thailand and they are rude arrogant and cheap...Things I dislike not predominantly because they invaded there neighbour.

AUTHOR

2023-09-12T07:12:50+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


I'm sure Roigard will get his opportunity in the next fortnight Peter, and then hopefully, the selection for the quarter-final will be, as you say, less complicated.

AUTHOR

2023-09-12T07:10:12+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


I don't mind them picking up the blatant attacking cleanout penalties, Peter. There's too much from the side and cleaning out guys well off the ball. But the consistency in how it's applied is definitely an issue.

AUTHOR

2023-09-12T07:08:13+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


No, you're right, this time they really loaded up the first round games. And to be fair, because the gap between nations has narrowed, eg Aus ranked 9th, it's far easier to do that now. Compared to 1987 and the first RWC, the game is so much more competitive now. And that's a great thing.

2023-09-12T03:56:02+00:00

Colin Fenwick

Roar Rookie


Mainly...

2023-09-12T03:46:18+00:00

Jokerman

Roar Guru


It’s a lame bench and that is what really is bringing out the vitriol. Foster gets alway with it but then it catches up. Roigard, BBBB, Fainga’anuku should be the back bench. Jorden starting at fullback. :thumbup: :happy:

2023-09-12T00:22:02+00:00

CW Moss

Roar Rookie


Yes Mr Fox but easy games seem to create selection errors. Players get over rated and then go into their shell under white hot pressure. It’s for all teams to watch for :stoked: eg it’s taken a while for Will Skelton to stand up in Tests.

2023-09-11T23:58:48+00:00

Leachy

Roar Rookie


We`ve all seen Cheika has a used by date of one year as a test coach. He pumps his teams up with BS then it all goes to cactus after that. He has no plan B C D. He is not a cerebral coach. Times up Cheika.

2023-09-11T22:33:44+00:00

Noodles

Roar Rookie


If we persist with Petaia, which I’d imagine will be the case, you’d expect to see Kellaway at 15. Having both Petaia and Donaldson at their current approach to broken play defences would be a big risk from what we see so far. Kellaway would be a big assist for Petaia in getting his positioning right.

2023-09-11T22:11:32+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


No SA did.

2023-09-11T22:05:33+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


They are playing far more restrictively atm.

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