A broken record: Ongoing challenges for the Wallaroos after another Trans-Tasman trouncing

By Hugh_96 / Roar Pro

With the Wallabies pretty much out of the World Cup, why not a belated run down on the Wallaroos versus Black Ferns game.

The Wallaroos game as expected, was a bit of Groundhog Day. The Wallaroos were defeated by the Black Ferns 43-3. Add in what seems to be a season-ending injury to experienced fullback Lori Cramer and a red card to boot, it was not a great afternoon in Hamilton for the Wallaroos.

Midway through the first half you could see the marked difference between the teams. Similar to what Stephen Hoiles said after the Wales game, the Wallabies were boys against men; the Wallaroos, part-time players versus full-time players.

There is no getting around it. It is what it is.

The Wallaroos have talent and put in the effort but the Black Ferns did everything faster, were fitter, were just stronger and had bigger players.

In one of the early NRLW seasons, I’m pretty sure it was Andrew Johns who said when talking about the skills of Evania Pelite or Emma Tonegato that they demonstrated the benefits skills repetition provides with full-time training.

Recently in a Fox Sports interview, Emma Tonegato said she can thank the full-time rugby sevens program for her easy transition and success in the NRLW. When she started NRLW training she knew she had previously trained harder and longer with rugby sevens. So she had the strength and skills.

Putting that aside, did we learn much more from this game? In reality, not much more than from the Pacific Four Series in Canada. You can never question the effort of the Wallaroos. Throughout the game they did not shirk anything, and consistently put their bodies on the line – there would have been some very sore bodies post-match.

Bridie OGorman shown a red card against Black Ferns. (Photo by Dave Rowland/Getty Images)

Probably the biggest surprise was that the Wallaroos were able to hang in there in the second half. They went into halftime down 31 to nil and you would not have been surprised if the game really blew out in the second half. But no, the Wallaroos hung in there and did not let in another try until the 76th and 81st minute.

The stats were not a pretty picture. The first half was all the Black Ferns in terms of territory and possession. The Wallaroos only spent 15 seconds in the opposition’s 22 while the Black Ferns spent close to seven minutes. In the first half, the Kiwis made 23 tackles, the Wallaroos 125. By the end of the game, things improved noticeably but the Wallaroos still made almost twice the number of tackles of the Kiwis (and missed 48 tackles).

The set piece was a challenge where they did lose two of their six lineouts and six of their 17 scrums.

Getting over the advantage line was another challenge.

In the second half, the Wallaroos were able to get more ball but just as they would begin to get a roll on and put some pressure on, there was a dropped ball lost in contact or a turnover. To be frank with all the tackling they did in the first half it was surprising there were not more errors.

It should be recognised that the Black Ferns played very well and had three debutants coming off the bench. There will be some cracking games later this month for the Kiwis against England and France in particular.

For the Wallaroos there are many challenges. At times it sounds like a broken record but there just is not the player depth, and consequently not a lot of competition for positions. The players do not play enough Super W matches either, ditto for the Wallabies players with Super Rugby Pacific.

Over the ditch, the women have the Farah Palmer Cup and the men have the NPC. In Australia, we do not have that additional tier of competition to develop players.

So next up in a couple of weeks is the inaugural WXV Tier 1 tournament that includes England ranked No.1, France ranked No.3 and Wales No.6.

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One could mention, another challenge, that the other teams are in full-time mode while the Wallaroos after the Kiwi game headed back to work and uni but we won’t… another broken record issue.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2023-10-09T03:44:29+00:00

Hugh_96

Roar Pro


It could cover the cost of a full time coach for the Wallaroos

AUTHOR

2023-10-09T03:43:22+00:00

Hugh_96

Roar Pro


Agree, there is value in having some form of work outside of rugby or studying.

2023-10-08T23:53:44+00:00

Atlas

Roar Rookie


Agree with you there Hugh, it's an improved setup this year financially; and I like the idea of players having jobs - maybe stay in touch with the 'real world'

AUTHOR

2023-10-08T23:29:43+00:00

Hugh_96

Roar Pro


That maybe the case but the lowest NZ salary is more than the top Wallaroos pay. I assume the NZ coach is F/T. Also NZ pay a significant number of their Aupiki players as well which provides more depth. Pretty sure the NZ players train together a lot more than the Oz players.

2023-10-08T11:06:00+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


Over the barbecue steaks a friend suggested the Wallaroos go up against the Wallaby WAGs. I am not sure about inviting him back, ever.

2023-10-08T08:23:54+00:00

East Coast Aces

Roar Rookie


it would be very interesting to see Jones' and staffs bill so far plus what was paid out to Rennie and his staff. If we literally didn't change Rennie's regime every single dollar spent on Jones regime could have been used on the women's game and gone a lot further. McLennan still could have done his league raiding just on NRLW targeting former 7s and XVs players and we would have been more successful at both men's and women's games this year

2023-10-08T02:39:23+00:00

Doctordbx

Roar Rookie


So not having 3 assistant coaching appointments would fund the whole woman's program?

2023-10-08T02:17:49+00:00

Atlas

Roar Rookie


Unsure how many Black Ferns are truly fulltime professionals; the salary range is AUD$56,000 (NZ $60,000) up to AUD$120,000. That lower end wouldn't be enough to live on. Charmaine Smith was in news recently, she is taking six weeks unpaid leave from her job (police) and was back at work the week of the test; as did Iritana Hohaia (also NZ police). NZ $60,000 for first two years; (83,000 3-5 years), plus an assembly fee $2200 in test weeks. Only 'veterans and stars' are above that level - unsure how many make it to that 6yrs+ level of a playing career.

2023-10-07T17:02:00+00:00

wigster

Roar Rookie


Wasnt it set in stone to butter fans up after the rennie stabbing that eddiejones was going to make the wallaroos great again

2023-10-06T08:15:45+00:00

East Coast Aces

Roar Rookie


if they actually had the balls to stand up to Eddie and say no to some of his stupid appointments like 3 psychologist and too many unqualified assistant coaches that would free up money. Also not paying too ups to players they don't even pick.

AUTHOR

2023-10-05T21:08:30+00:00

Hugh_96

Roar Pro


RA has so many competing interests & don’t have the funds. Not sure what the answer is, we need some strategic creativity. In regards to the 7s players, am guessing at this stage they are being siloed for the Paris Olympics & maybe post that we may see some integration.

2023-10-05T19:55:24+00:00

East Coast Aces

Roar Rookie


Super W and SRP should both be full home and away competitions. For the women, outside of Super W the Wallaroos should be together as long as possible playing not just pac 4 and WXV but go on tour and play as many games as possible against countries like Japan, northern hemisphere countries and even the clubs over there. And the 7s girls where possible should be released to play 15s. I also think there's a bunch of 7s players at state level that maybe aren't plaging 15s?

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