Winners take chances, and that is just what the Wallabies need right now: Is it time to start listening to David Campese?

By Peter Darrow / Roar Guru

After the Eddie Jones debacle, Australian rugby will probably be gun-shy in using someone like legendary former Wallaby player David Campese in a major role moving forward.

However, it is fascinating to think how Campese would have gone coaching the Wallabies in the Rugby World Cup 2023. Could he have done any worse than Jones?

At least the players would have had a license to play with the freedom and expression Campese did in his playing days and what he is advocating for in his outspoken manner today.

To lift Australian rugby out of the mire it finds itself in, it needs to find a role for ex-players like Campese who were part of the golden era of Australian rugby and possess a desire to return to those days.

In what capacity, I am unsure, but a direct relationship with the players to mentor, motivate and inspire them would in my opinion be advantageous.

In the 1988 Bledisloe Cup series after Campese was outplayed by his opposite John Kirwan, his mother gave him a poem, “Winners take Chances”, which he then read before each match following the All Blacks win.

Campese was a risk taker as a player, so, would Campo’s influence not be a breath of fresh air to overcome the overcoached and robotic style of play we see today?

It appears that David Campese, like the late Jonah Lomu, is more revered overseas than he is at home, with a reluctance by bureaucracy to take advantage of his experienced and instinctive rugby brain.

As mentioned, even on this very site, not too long ago, the former Wallaby admitted to a rift with Hamish McLennan that he believes has seen him overlooked for many roles by the code’s governing body.

Or are independent thinkers and outspoken ex-players deemed to be too much thinking outside the square? Maybe a risk-taking individual from a small country town, like Campese, who reached stardom is deemed to be an outsider whose opinions are too confrontational.

Yes, he does have opinions, take his latest controversial statement about current players crying over games lost.

“I know I talk about the good old days, but it’s hard not to,” he was quoted in various media outlets. “I’m an old fart, I admit that, but I’ve always been outspoken, and I can’t say things are good if they are not.”

We have seen sportspeople like Kim Hughes, Steve Smith and Roger Federer cry at emotional times so I may not agree with Campo on that one, but for every disagreed statement there will be many others I do agree with him on. Take his provocative question: “Are the Springboks killing Test rugby?” which many commented on without realising Campo disagreed with the statement.

David Campese in 1991. Credit: Russell Cheyne/Allsport

He said: “They play the game we all want to play; they have the support and culture many teams kill for and their mental strength and self-belief define their brands. They are a magnificent team, iconic in stature and their status as World Champions is nothing more than their brilliance and fortitude deserves”.

Until you visit South Africa and realise the passion they have for rugby and what it means to them, it is hard to degrade their style of play. Maybe that question is best presented to the English who Campese has labelled as boring since their Rugby World Cup semi-final win in 1991.

As with me, David Campese is a fierce critic of the modern game, but this comes from a passionate viewpoint rather than a negative one. He harks back to the days of sparkling players like Shane Williams and Phil Bennett who lit up the rugby stage and entertained the fans.

What will come of a brilliant talent such as Englishman Henry Arundell on the international stage – and will he have the instinctive style coached out of him?

Television Match Officials, referees and coaches have had their fair share of criticism from Campo with him noting that referees are aspiring to be the stars of the game and TMOs are ruining the spectacle. I agree with him that the game must be about scoring tries not kicking penalty goals and box kicking is far too common.

Campese the rugby player and Campese the media commentator are similar in that they express themselves in a maverick style, consistently good, but prone to the odd catastrophe.

The player is acknowledged as being one of the great Wallabies, mercurial and a match winner as proven by his performance at the 1991 Rugby World Cup, where his famous no-look pass to Tim Horan will go down in rugby folklore.

It was all calculated with Campese totally aware of where Horan was positioned, but what if it had not come off and the pass floated into touch? That is the risk taker and maverick making decisions.

A pass that did not come off in the 1989 series against the British and Irish Lions will also go down in rugby folklore but for the wrong reasons. A ball in the in-goal area that should have been forced, was instead offered to a fellow player in a mental lapse that cost Australia a try and the lead.

Is it strange that a no-look pass was more effective than a pass where he did look?

As with David Beckham and his sending off for the England football team for an error, Campese was vilified by fans and painted as erratic by unforgiving supporters.

A reputation he has not shaken off by those who forget his magnificent achievements over fourteen years of international rugby. A record setter in the number of Tests played and tries scored – and he received huge accolades from rugby identities like Bill McLaren, the noted rugby commentator.

McLaren, in 2001, nominated Campese as his favourite player, best rugby entertainer and the greatest rugby union player of all time. Journalist Spiro Zavos in the Sydney Morning Herald called Campese, “the Mozart of rugby.” Former coach Alan Jones even equated Campo to the great Don Bradman.

Today’s Wallabies can only dream of having a career like Campese’s with regular victories over the All Blacks, a Rugby World Cup victory, audacious tries and a style of play from another planet.

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Before the youth of today dismiss rugby totally as a professional sports option, why not at least pay attention to what David Campese says and give him the opportunity to work with Australian players?

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2023-11-25T20:39:37+00:00

Peter Darrow

Roar Guru


Do you think a coaching book as mentioned by sheek would work today Busted? Different players offering advice on their specialist areas i.e Rodriguez on scrummaging, Campese on running rugby...?

AUTHOR

2023-11-25T08:16:28+00:00

Peter Darrow

Roar Guru


Hi sheek Do you think your book idea would work today? I would be keen to give it a go if you are also keen to help? Mainly contacting players would be the first issue, maybe Rodriguez first? Any thoughts?

2023-11-23T10:49:46+00:00

Busted Fullback

Roar Rookie


The manual is the Dick Marks one that people talk about, sponsored by Rothmans. Yes, that’s how long ago it was. It’s great when we get to hear and see other coach’s ideas and suggestions through print or on devices. But, as a retired teacher, I know it’s best when the advice is given in person and you get to ask questions. I’ve been to two scrum seminars, one with the late Jake Howard and later with Cameron Lillycrap. Never learnt as much as I did with them. This is what RA can do to help the education of Aus coaches. There is so much knowledge out there that we just don’t get to learn from.

2023-11-23T10:26:58+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


Coaches manual, nice one! I’d like to read that. I’ve been using the subscription on The Rugby Site Coaching Vids and my fav series is with Mike Cron, he’s a good teacher in general but his series on scrum, line outs and rucks is something else. Get that guy to coach the coaches

2023-11-23T07:57:46+00:00

JC

Roar Rookie


Campo thrived as a maverick in the amateur age, and I get the sense he thinks he should be able to bring the same freewheeling style to a professional coaching position. But it’s not that easy, as he’s probably found. If he’s serious about coaching, he needs to start at club level and work his way up to a role in Super Rugby.

2023-11-22T23:53:11+00:00

Richie

Roar Rookie


Well there’s no question about it AtW, we will keep reading.

2023-11-22T22:12:32+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Street signs? What are they?

2023-11-22T22:05:31+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


Quick! Go out and change the street signs while you have the chance!

2023-11-22T21:55:47+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Yeah that memo must be still on the slow camel train to my place. :happy:

2023-11-22T21:55:14+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Sorry Peter, I’m not suggesting they have to present honest comments all the time. They can make serious comments to those who matter, behind closed doors but to the public, they can provide vanilla answers, eg “I’m sure the game’s in good hands, Rugby’s an evolving feast, the talent in the game now is as good as it’s ever been, etc”. I also think publicly they should focus on player development and the positives around the available talent, ie talk up the players and their skills, etc.

2023-11-22T21:50:47+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


This is the point. Just like the headlines which inspire the adage. "Are readers over it already with headlines which ask questions?"

2023-11-22T21:48:27+00:00

Ankle-tapped Waterboy

Roar Rookie


BG, you haven't had the memo. "Dinkum rugby" is what it's all about. As per 2023 year just gone, and Chieka's "give the punters running rugby at all times and in all situations, it's what they want".

2023-11-22T20:15:05+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


Problem is that they are doing terribly well today by themselves are they? Aren't they? Really? Don't attribute the issues in Aus Rugby today to the "younger generation." The disastrous state of RA, some of the State Unions and SR sides hasn't been because they are run by people born in the last 30 or even 40 years. If you are between 45 and 75 then it is people of our generation that have stuffed up Rugby in Aus. I watched Campo as a kid. Great player. I've heard him speak many times and spoken with him briefly once at a function. Lovely guy. But nothing he has done in the past 20 years leads me to believe he would add value to a 2024 Wallabies team.

2023-11-22T13:44:42+00:00

Busted Fullback

Roar Rookie


G’day Cec. Ah, parity. There was once a time when 30% possession was about all we could get. But our ability to play what was in front of us was so good, intelligent, inventive and creative that we were able to go out and win. Those are the qualities we need for genuine running rugby. But that was back, some might say way back, in the amateur era. Actually, we also had everything else you mention. And during the 80s through the early 2000s we had a national manual for coaches, (I’ve still got mine), that stressed the basics but allowed for coaches to have some flair so that, as the players moved from school and club through state and into national sides, they brought that variety with them. So, too, did the coaches. Don’t see that happening so much these days. Thanks for taking me down memory lane.

2023-11-22T11:50:00+00:00

Just call me Campo

Roar Rookie


Just call me Campo, Peter. Nice article, too. Thank you

AUTHOR

2023-11-22T11:39:38+00:00

Peter Darrow

Roar Guru


Hello David

2023-11-22T11:06:51+00:00

Cec

Roar Rookie


We don’t have the cattle or mentality to go down the Boks track in attack. But there are some non-negotiable skills around possession & defence based on current laws – scrum dominance or at the very least parity, kicking skills to exit and take points when needed, line speed all day long and win or have parity in the tackle and ruck. By all means have variety in attack & when countering.

2023-11-22T10:05:06+00:00

Just call me Campo

Roar Rookie


It's a yes from me

AUTHOR

2023-11-22T08:56:47+00:00

Peter Darrow

Roar Guru


Exactly gamechanger

2023-11-22T07:16:27+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


Campo is needed to restore classic running rugby back to our national game. RA should employ him as a consultant. Mavericks often have “ left field “ ideas which bring change and challenge the status quo.

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