The Wrap: With Wallabies done and dusted in 15 miserable days, who do we trust to take Australian rugby forward?

By Geoff Parkes / Expert

In a World Cup that goes for seven weeks, Australia lasted two weeks, one day.

Forget about permutations that might see Australia go through if Fiji lose their last two pool matches. The 40-6 loss overnight to Wales in Lyon means that for the first time in ten iterations, the Wallabies exit before the quarter-finals, with Fiji and Wales set to advance from Pool C.

In the context of Rugby Australia chairman Hamish McLennan claiming that the appointment of Eddie Jones as coach was part of a long-term plan to win the 2027 World Cup, then this outcome can hardly be considered a surprise.

In the context of Jones reportedly seeking out the vacant Japan coaching position – a line of questioning Jones refused to engage in at his post-match press conference – the outcome cannot be considered a surprise.

Australia’s early exit also confirms its current world ranking of 10th – just outside the quarter-finalists in ranking, but considerably farther outside in reality.

That’s where Australian rugby is right now; a mass of mediocrity and confusion. A recipe for everyone invested in the game to be angry at their considerable investment of money and emotion being torched on a wasted World Cup cycle.

The post-mortem that McLennan began last week – while the Wallabies were still alive – can now begin in earnest. It will be emotional and bitter. It is unlikely to be constructive.

As always, the focus will be on Eddie Jones, one of rugby’s great personalities, who coached in two losing World Cup finals, who pulled off the event’s biggest ever upset, in 2015, but who this time leaves the Cup with his side failing to contend.

It is Jones’ modus operandi to make things about him; not because it serves a rampant ego, but because it is his preference to accept responsibility for everything and keep the spotlight off his players. He finds the headlines and the headlines find him.

(Photo by Adam Pretty – World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images)

But the failure of this World Cup runs far deeper than Jones’ ability as a coach or selector. Or his ability to deflect.

Yes, the toss will be argued long and hard about missing men, Quade Cooper, Michael Hooper, Len Ikitau and Pete Samu. About swings in game plans. About training loads and an apparent disconnect between coaches, S & C and medical staff.

Important talking points, all of them, but all overtaken by the circus surrounding Jones and his potential early exit, and how the events of the last 12 months since his appointment, have descended into a failure of management and leadership.

The central issue is the process through which Jones was appointed; the timing, the public and private expectation that was placed around that, how and why those expectations were later walked back. And now, if Jones really is about to walk away, what the point of it all really was.

Forget Jones’ mea culpa and insistence that he will face a post-World Cup review. McLennan has already told Australian rugby fans that the selection of such a young, inexperienced squad was to prepare them better for next time. If results this time don’t matter, if winning is withdrawn as a KPI, how can a coach be sacked for losing?

What’s convenient is that by making the coach unaccountable for this result, instead framing a broader 5-year objective, the chairman is effectively pronouncing himself unaccountable as well.

That’s the theory. But by hitching himself to Jones’ wagon, McLennan always left himself exposed should Jones decide to return to Japan. If that were to happen – and there are plenty of people close to the action who believe it will – then McLennan’s position will surely be untenable.

The 2023 World Cup campaign will have been cut-off at the knees, a new coach given insufficient time to reset, to install a credible coaching team, to establish a way of playing, to build any kind of cohesion, for what?

The cost of paying out Dave Rennie? An amount said to be well north of half a million dollars? The cost of throwing young players to the wolves in St Etienne and Lyon, patently unprepared for elite level, World Cup rugby?

Dejection for Australia players. (Photo by Craig Mercer/MB Media/Getty Images)

Jones argued post-match that, as tough as this outcome was, it was the best way to provide his players with the experience they need. But the question remains, if inexperience was a key contributor to this result – throw lack of leadership into that mix – isn’t that a function of Jones excising much of the experience and leadership he had at his disposal when he took the job on?

Australian rugby’s problems run deep and wide. Financial impoverishment, unwieldy governance, provincial imbalances, parochialism, cashed-up domestic codes impacting upon the value of broadcasting rights and talent acquisition, are just some of the key impediments.

For these to be properly addressed, so as to get alignment across the sport; for participants to buy into a centralized model such as Ireland has; above all else, there has to be trust. Trust in the people at the helm of the sport that they have the respect, expertise and the authenticity to bring the game together.

Last week, McLennan was at pains to point out how 20 years of maladministration got us to where we are today. But Australian rugby fans are sick of hearing about what went wrong after the 2003 World Cup.

They want to know how things are going to be made better. And they want to believe, and have trust in, the people who can make things better.

It was McLennan himself who opted not to take a traditional non-executive chairman role, but instead to become the front face for Rugby Australia, in the same way Peter V’Landys is the face of rugby league.

In the three years since his appointment, what are McLennan’s list of achievements? Achieving financial stability might have been said to be one; that is until it became apparent that Rugby Australia not adopting a private equity partner was not so much a matter of choice, but potential investors changing their valuations. Downwards.

Investors love to see upside. But not because the baseline is so low, so far beneath the market, it renders the investment meaningless.

Investors also like predictability. But not the kind where the Wallabies – plagued by discipline problems – give away a penalty at the very first ruck. Two minutes later, Jac Morgan was slicing through the heart of the Wallabies’ midfield, and the foundations were being laid for the Wallabies worst ever World Cup loss.

Wales is not winning this World Cup either, but the differences in on-field leadership and structure were stark. Again, no surprises there, just reflective of the price paid for choosing youth over experience, and the length of the respective runways.

There was no better example of the lack of attention to detail than the opening kick-off to the second half, where a simple, basic play – the lift of catcher Richie Arnold – was mistimed, allowing the Welsh chasers to slip past the blocks and create a collapsed maul. Another scrum penalty later it was 19-6.

Multiple penalties, a dropped goal, and two tries later, it was 40-6.

Striving to finish with something to take away from the match, the Wallabies had one final opportunity, but replacement winger Suliasi Vunivalu was held up over the line.

Held-up; just like how Wallabies fans are feeling after this whole episode.

So as the Wallabies face an awful week ahead, dragging themselves off the canvas for a meaningless match against Portugal, there was a sense in Paris on Saturday night of the World Cup actually just beginning.

World ranked No.1 and No.2, Ireland versus South Africa, was the match where everything mattered but nothing mattered.

Ireland turned down an early penalty shot. Would they have done that in an elimination game? Would South Africa have swapped out their whole pack for the second half in an elimination game?

This was a brutally fierce and intense contest, where neither side was foxing. But at the end of it all, it still felt like the losers, South Africa, lost no skin and have a good story to tell. Kick their goals and they have things covered. Cometh the hour, cometh Handre Pollard.

Ireland will feel similar. Remedy even half of the six lineouts they lost in the first 44 minutes and the story of the match changes for them too. And for all the brutal physicality that South Africa threw at them, they not only absorbed it, they threw plenty of shots back as well.

(Photo By Matthias Hangst/Getty Images)

Ireland also had the game’s standout individuals; the supremely talented Caelan Doris, and Bundee Aki, looking and playing like Matthieu Bastareaud and Jonathan Danty’s love child.

No doubt watching intently, both France and New Zealand would be wondering exactly what they have let themselves in for.

Everything in this World Cup remains what we have always known it to be. Quarter-final weekend in Paris. Ireland versus New Zealand, South Africa versus France.

Assuming of course, that Italy and Scotland don’t do anything crazy.

The Marseilles quarter-finals will be full of interest, but as we’ve known all along, just don’t look for the winner to come from that side of the draw.

On Friday night, Argentina got their World Cup back on track in St Etienne, defeating Samoa 19-10. After a horrid opening against England, this was also far from perfect. But at least this time, the Pumas resembled a Tier 1 nation, strangling Samoa for territory and physicality.

It was dreadfully disappointing for Samoa that their skills deserted them on the big stage, when it really mattered. They get another chance against England, but will need to be more tactically astute and light years cleaner in their execution, if they are to cause problems.

On Saturday, down somewhere nearer Australia’s weight division, the lower reaches of Pool C, Georgia and Portugal served up the tournament’s first draw, 18-18 in Toulouse, in a topsy-turvy, fun match.

Fun. If only this World Cup felt like fun for the Wallabies and their fans.

The second half against felt like an eternity, as the Wales ground Australia into the ground and the realisation set in, that Eddie had no rabbits to pull from under his Akubra.

‘In Eddie we trust’ was the message lapped up by the masses nine months ago. Australia’s World Cup campaign is over. I wonder, who trusts Eddie and Hamish now?

The Crowd Says:

2023-09-29T07:17:36+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


A few injuries is not the same as choosing to rest a lot of your front line. You’re just engaging in a deliberately dishonest argument now

2023-09-29T05:18:23+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


That’s a cop out because unfortunately that argument can be made for every game we lose and it works both ways. The evidence is clear that we didn’t play against either Fiji or Wales with our best team. The absence of Tupou and Skelton means we didn’t even put the best team on the paddock out of the squad let alone Australia. Neither did Italy put their best team on the field last year nor did Wales this year. And the Australia A team last year certainly wasn’t playing a full strength Fiji team when they won. Having said that, the Wales result was an absolute flogging and let’s not ignore that. The reality is that the Australian performance under Dave Rennie didn’t go forward when measured against the yardstick of world ranking, which themselves are calculated by “beating teams we used to beat before”. It’s worth noting that those ratings were also helped by winning games against a seriously understrength French side if you recall. In fact it was full of newbies just like the Australian team that lost to them in the RWC warmup. And it certainly hasn’t gone forward under the new coach. But pretending that there has been a “rapid decline” under EJ totally ignores all the facts. So I stand by my view that I’m not seeing the “rapid decline” since last year you are talking about – mainly because I couldn’t see any real and sustainable improvement under DR in 2022 , just a couple of one off performances that papered over the cracks again. But don’t take that to mean I am happy where the Wallabies are at or what they produced at the RWC – the game against Wales was diabolical.

2023-09-28T17:56:38+00:00

Dida

Roar Rookie


It’s a good point. But at the same time we aren’t going to be able to stop players going to Japan, France, UK, Ireland to play rugby. It’s an opportunity to get rugby experience, earn coin (often more than in Aus) and have the experience of living in another country. Hard to pass up. The same challenges occur in other sports in Australia as well so it’s not unique. I think the number one focus of RA has to be the quality of our Super Rugby sides. As has been said, when we get better quality across our super sides, the wallabies will improve. Keeping young talent in rugby is obviously a big issue as well. Professional rugby in Aus is super rugby. So that’s where RA have to put all their efforts. Centralisation will help that. Tough calls have to made or the game will struggle to remain fully professional.

2023-09-28T08:58:25+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Yep , although I don't think Hamish is the only one addicted to sugar. A few Roarers seem to have the same affliction.

2023-09-28T06:31:24+00:00

jdubs

Roar Rookie


Is this actually Tah-man on the keyboard? You're in no position to be lecturing anyone Tah-Biscuit

2023-09-28T06:11:27+00:00

Biscuit man

Roar Rookie


Most of those you mention were actually involved in bringing the Wallabies to rock bottom in the last 4 years. Brumbies should play in National Rugby Comp moving forward with other country towns in Aus like Newcastle and Wollongong . They are stone broke and the 5k crowd will be welcome at National level. They also have a stadium appropriate for that level of rugby.

2023-09-28T06:09:21+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Your whole comment is flawed because it was an under strength team put out vs Italy. It wasn’t the best team we could put out. We’ve narrowly beaten them multiple times with last minute tries. A loss where we couldn’t manage one isn’t hugely different. Last year Aus A beat Fiji.

2023-09-28T05:41:27+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Yep it has to be a longterm plan and cannot be dropped 2 or 3 years later. Patience is the main thing or nothing gets achieved. Sadly sugar hits seem to be Hamish's choice and I see another league bloke offered 1.6 mil today. They have so much money to waste on league players but no money to sign their U20s.

2023-09-28T05:15:21+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


It was a mistake to change from Rennie to Eddie when they did—but not because Rennie was so superior—but because the problem with the Wallabies is NOT the coach! Also spot on mate, however let’s not ignore that bewildering selections and selection bias does seem to be an ongoing issue for most Roarers and that is generally the province of the coach. Rennie had as many head scratchers as Cheika and Jones have.

2023-09-28T05:12:04+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


and me!!!!

2023-09-28T05:11:40+00:00

jdubs

Roar Rookie


Dan McKellar and Larkham plus Laurie Fisher and Dan Palmer would be the highest quality coaching set up Australia has seen in 2 decades. And a fitting farewell for the Biscuit to boot.

2023-09-28T05:07:24+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Tell them they're dreaming..... Yep, the issue isn't just opening up the selection criteria for the Wallabies. At the most it might provide a little sugar hit for 2 years. The real solution is to quietly and calmly put in place a 10-20 year plan that starts with a rugby model in Australia that promotes the game in all states and removes barriers for players wanting to follow a career. This can't happen while individual states stonewall change and put their state ahead of the game.

2023-09-28T04:57:26+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


I agree Dida, I think a centralised model where fringe talent is given the opportunity to play SR rather than being warehoused under a single SR team would provide part of the solution. There is no reason why Australian SR teams shouldn't have a draft system similar to AFL or for RA to take a more active role in ensuring that players see an opportunity to progress and therefore decide not to travel overseas at the age of 21. As an aside, a few years ago I was talking to one of the Panasonic Knights players who was telling me that he tried to get noticed by one of the Aussie SR teams (I can't remember if it was QLD or NSW, it doesn't really matter). He couldn't get a foot in the door so he went to Japan as a 21 year old (he was 24 when I spoke to him and was a starting player for Panasonic). As far as I know he never came back. When I saw him play he looked very serviceable. I am not saying that all players that leave the country (or him) are super stars in the making or even would be good SR players, but we can and should at least make sure that the system in Australia does provide a good opportunity for talent to be spotted and provided an opportunity to develop in Australia. I don't think that is yet the case and there are some easy things we can do to fix that if we get the states to actually work together for the good of the sport.

2023-09-28T04:48:22+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Sure, that is the immediate response to the debacle of the RWC and I get it. However when I look at where Australia is at today against where it was at under Dave Rennie, I think about the following points; 1. What I see is that in 2022 we lost to Italy. So to be clear, Australia was ranked 6 in the world and we lost to the 12th ranked team for the first time ever. That isn't a very good result and the game wasn't close despite the late rally from Australia at the end. 2. Prior to DR, Australia was ranked 6th in the world. When EJ started his coaching stint we were ranked 7th in the world, today we are ranked 10th. Australia's ranking declined under both coaches. 3. This year, outside losses to SA, NZ and France (which have consistently ranked above Australia and ignoring the close result against NZ which is an outlier) including the 2023 RWC, Australia has lost "winnable" games to Argentina, Fiji and Wales. These teams were ranked (11/09/23) at 10th, 9th and 8th in the world respectively. 4. Apart from slipping from 7th to 10th, I don't actually think there's a lot of difference between losing to 12th placed Italy (DR) and 8th, 9th, 10th placed teams (EJ). I get the emotion, and I do think that the results in 2022 were closer than 2023, but the actual win/loss that you refer to is simply the wrong metric. 5. Yes, Rennie coached teams were able to occasionally rise to the occasion, but all of the 3 coaches before Rennie were able to do that and the consensus on the Roar has been that occasionally having a good game isn't where we need to be. All that does is provide justification for not making hard changes. That is why I stand by my comment that I didn't see anything with Rennie that was particularly exciting. I thought he was going nowhere. That's not to say I can see where EJ is going but looking backwards longingly at DR isn't the solution.

2023-09-28T02:44:40+00:00

Merlin

Roar Rookie


No-one had heard of Bundee Aki when he played in NZ - he was very average when here; same as Gibson-Park. NZ has many many top wingers so Lowe was very unlikely to break into the All Blacks..

2023-09-27T07:10:08+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


TBH Scott I get frustrated with the many suggestions that just arnt reality. Lets just select from everywhere! The talent isnt there. Lets get Drua and go it alone...... Maybe Drua is happy with SR and sticking with NZ. Lets just open SR up to a draft and have NZ change its selection policy..... Maybe NZ dont want any of that. Just bring in Japan.... Japan may not be interested. Lets just go it alone and get rid of SR... With what money? Anyway I just hope something is done and done soon.

2023-09-27T06:45:22+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Hooper wasn't fit and couldn't say when he would be and admitted as much. Cooper wasn't really in form was he?

2023-09-27T06:38:12+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


That's because there are none.

2023-09-27T06:37:08+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Ignorance is bliss fella. How much has the Force cost RA?

2023-09-27T06:36:42+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Losing heavily to teams we beat isn’t a decline?

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