Wallabies are where the All Blacks were in 2007 - it's time to look in the mirror or risk more embarrassment

By Christy Doran / Editor

PARIS – Eddie Jones, more than likely, will depart the Wallabies over the next six weeks.

Most will say au revoir and be happy for him never to return. Not just to the Wallabies, but Australia. Cancel his passport and charge him with treason.

What will it achieve?

Not a lot, other than satisfying the many baying for blood and accountability.

But haven’t the Wallabies been going down this road for too long?

Indeed, back in early June, on the eve of the Super Rugby finals, Jones walked into the Captain Cook Hotel in Sydney and delivered some harsh, though, fair truths.

Within moments, he said Australia’s performances, both on the international stage and in Super Rugby, was tier-two worthy.

He wasn’t wrong, with no Australian participant in the Super Rugby final since 2014 and the Wallabies hovering at just over 40 per cent on the international stage in the seven years leading up to his grand return.

He asked a group of no more than a dozen for the reasons for Australia’s decline over the past two decades.

Wallabies head coach Eddie Jones speaks to the media during a Rugby Australia press conference at Coogee Oval on October 17, 2023 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

On the spot, many reasons were spat out. Some better than others.

Then he turned on the group, saying they were all excuses.

Again, he wasn’t wrong. Mediocrity had crept in like mould and become accepted.

Australian rugby has for too long papered over the cracks in the game, shuffling the deck chairs of the Titanic rather than attempting to usher through meaningful change.

Anyone who has attempted to do so has been booted out.

The too-hard basket has become a common feature of the game, with bureaucracy, politics, ego and power standing in the way of progress.

Agendas are everywhere in Australian rugby, with few willing to budge.

The Queensland Reds stand on the summit and profess to be the leaders yet have very little to show for it despite being one of the biggest rugby nurseries in the country.

The ACT Brumbies can hardly attract a crowd and haven’t won anything meaningful in almost two decades.

The Western Force can barely develop a player while the Melbourne Rebels have been a laughing stock for most of its existence. At least there are some green shoots developing at the Rebels.

The NSW Waratahs – one of the great underachievers in Australian rugby – have at last woken up to the fact that the status quo isn’t working.

Rugby Australia Chairman Hamish McLennan and CEO Phil Waugh have a huge task ahead of them. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images for Rugby Australia)

Boards too often look to blame one another for the game’s shortcomings rather than engage in the difficult and necessary conversions to find solutions.

The Rugby Australia board has members on it that have promised to inject expertise and sponsorship dollars into the game yet despite Sales Force executives sitting there, even they have found reasons to not put their money where their mouth is.

If you can’t even buy what you’re selling, what hope is there?

In the end, private equity suitors walked away from RA after months of conversations.

Perhaps the penny dropped for Jones.

After all, Jones had been promised the dollars would flow back into the game. Reform measures, too.

Neither occurred.

Small wonder Jones, in the twilight of his coaching career, has been considering his options, especially given the exit clauses in his contract.

The reality is Australian rugby still can’t come to terms with the uncomfortable nature of its current state of crisis.

With all six of Australia’s men’s XVs teams winning at less than 50 per cent, Jones tried something. It backfired spectacularly. That much is true.

He will naturally be remembered for further destabilising the game should he wave the white flag and walk away from the job he returned to at the start of the year.

Is Eddie Jones about to leave Australian rugby? (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

In light of the strong links to wanting to return to Japanese rugby, it’s a stain that will be impossible to rid should he pack up his bags and leave.

But the finger pointing and anger is somewhat misdirected.

The game and the results were at a low point long before he returned. It’s easy to forget that.

For five years the Wallabies had finished the year in sixth spot on the World Rugby rankings.

They will finish 2023 in ninth spot following their historic and embarrassing World Cup pool exit.

Yet, this crisis has been a long-time in the making.

RA must take a breath, conduct its review (the 12th since the noughties) and convince its stakeholders to embrace change before pulling the trigger on its leadership.

Judgement by social media won’t help RA through its hour of need.

But if Jones is no longer involved with the Wallabies by year’s end, RA must look hard in the mirror and be prepared to put the building blocks in place to ensure they climb their way out of the mess they currently find themselves in.

If that means RA chairman Hamish McLennan following Jones out, so be it.

But it must also be said that before Jones’ selection gambles backfired so spectacularly, the returning head coach was applauded everywhere he went.

Those cheers have since been replaced by boos. But the decision to bring back Jones wasn’t without reason.

Ensuring the right people are in the right positions to oversee Australian rugby’s recovery is essential.

It’s not just the head coaching role that is crucial to get right, but the chairman and the still vacant head of high-performance manager.

Everyone can play their part.

But looking in the mirror and being prepared to ask the hard questions without side stepping anything and anyone will be a starting point.

It was good enough for New Zealand Rugby in 2007 after yet another World Cup failure, as they looked inwards rather than out despite coming under huge internal pressure from a rugby-obsessed country demanding accountability.

In the end, they didn’t throw the baby out with the bathwater. The All Blacks have since made three of the past four World Cup finals, including this weekend’s in Paris just 15 months after the country called for Ian Foster’s head.

Whether RA can dig their way out like the NZR did will come down the decision-making of its leaders.

The Crowd Says:

2023-10-29T09:31:53+00:00

Rugbytrylover

Roar Rookie


Maybe apply as the new Wallaby attack coach? At least they would have a plan to attack !

2023-10-29T09:08:22+00:00

Kens lovechild

Roar Rookie


No one will touch me now as I've been a freelancer for too long and every team I've been I've disrupted . Ra and Queensland have alot to awnser for. I should of been an allblack.

2023-10-29T09:06:16+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


News here in NZ is Eddie has stepped down.

2023-10-29T09:06:09+00:00

Dean

Roar Rookie


YES!! He is gone! Now for McClownan as well.

2023-10-29T08:44:19+00:00

Rugbytrylover

Roar Rookie


Brett. They need to play more games…. Super rugby players ‘train until what March’? I suspect Ireland and other Northern hemisphere players are back playing club footy and then have 6 Nations soon too..

2023-10-29T08:41:11+00:00

Rugbytrylover

Roar Rookie


How’s your archilles? Will you be back in gold with a new coach or are you happy playing 2nd division touch football in Japan?

2023-10-29T08:40:26+00:00

Reds Harry

Roar Rookie


Just got an SMH alert to say Eddie has resigned. From coaching the Wallabies.

2023-10-29T08:38:38+00:00

Rugbytrylover

Roar Rookie


Bill Pulver took a bonus on the way out when rugby clearly was bleeding… a wealthy man in his own right… pathetic!

2023-10-29T08:05:09+00:00

KTinHK

Roar Pro


Ask your father

2023-10-29T05:59:15+00:00

Ballymore Brumby

Roar Pro


I actually think out of all this mess, most people are blaming RA, EJ and the corporate leadership, not players who, from what I’ve read and watched are stuck between a rock and a hard place.

2023-10-29T02:56:45+00:00

Ruckin' Oaf

Roar Rookie


Way only a couple of years ago that the Wallabies were beating the Springboks

2023-10-29T02:51:32+00:00

Objective Observer

Roar Rookie


Christy, you have not been reading the comments. If DR had stayed we would now be celebrating a RWC win.

2023-10-29T02:48:22+00:00

Ruckin' Oaf

Roar Rookie


Sad but true that

2023-10-29T02:10:48+00:00

Kens lovechild

Roar Rookie


Please explain

2023-10-29T01:31:20+00:00

Noodles

Roar Rookie


People seem to ignore the selections and complete jumble of WBs coaches ahead of the RWC. WBs left out players who had been involved in wins over Boks, France and within a point or two of Ireland. Supposedly too old. Yet the ABs and Boks played a massive final with lots of blokes well into their 30s. WBs possibly come home with their confidence crushed and no idea of game plan. Then the coach decides to pursue the Hamster spin strategy, evidently to set up a contract exit. None of this needed to happen. All of it rests on the Hamster who should now go, and quickly.

2023-10-28T23:31:47+00:00

MM

Roar Rookie


That’s rather wishful thinking. All Blacks had the core of a great team together in 2007, and were unlucky to be knocked out in the quarter finals. Wallabies aren’t nearly at that level.

2023-10-28T23:14:30+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


I don't see the comparison really. In 2007, didn't NZ go into the RWC as #1 in the world and lose to France in the QF having won all their pool games? I don't see any real comparison except for some decision to be made about coaching which was already made 7 months ago.

2023-10-28T23:12:24+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Neither was Deans

2023-10-28T18:24:40+00:00

Rajah

Roar Rookie


The comparison is extremely poor and this article is having a another dig at Dave Rennie, getting hard to take anything this author writes seriously. All Blacks were favourites for the tournament in 2007 if I remember and number 1 in the world. Eddie Jones wallabies had won zero leading into the tournament. All Blacks thrashed Scotland 40-0 in the pool stage. Wallabies were thrashed 40-6 by Wales in this pool stage. We will never know but Dave Rennie’s wallabies would have at least made the QFs and possibly the SF. Everything went wrong for the All Blacks when France beat them in 2007. The had to wear the infamous grey jerseys, the haka got turned back on them when France confronted them in their faces, Carter and Kelleher got injured early in 2nd half and a french forward pass was missed in the lead up to the winning try.

2023-10-28T16:17:13+00:00

Passit2me

Roar Rookie


Thanks for that. I read that the reds paid for Ballymore. They managed their money, went through hard times paying it off, but was now paid off

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