The lessons Wallabies can take from 2013 as they search for the new missing Link

By Sinclair Whitbourne / Roar Rookie

In the grim winter of 2013 after a very disappointing, but narrow and controversial loss in a series to the British and Irish Lions, the Wallabies faced a coaching choice.

The incumbent had been fired. Who now to take the role? Then as now, it was the case that different head coaches have different strengths. Whilst a good coach is a good coach is a good coach, if you can match the particular strengths to the particular needs and qualities of the side you minimise your chances of an Eddie Jones fiasco; was he a smash and grabber or a slow, re-builder? There is a saying about history that I am trying to remember …

In 2013, if you needed a rebuild from the ground up, discipline restored and a focus on getting the basics done well, then Jake White at the ACT Brumbies had shown that he wasn’t just a South African phenomenon.

Over there he had apparently done something or other of note in 2007 with the hot mess left by Rudolf Straeuli, a man whose ears alone had conquered many, but who had proven tone deaf as national coach.

Does anyone still recall the existential joys of Kamp Staaldraad (rhymes with Stalingrad – another happy haunt), players being forced naked into fox holes together, whilst singing the national anthem and having freezing water poured over them? Bring Back Buck! Bugger that. Bring Back Straeuli! In fairness, Straeuli was a very fine player in his time, jug ears and all, but as we so often see, whatever makes a fine player does not always, or even often, make a fine coach.

If you felt that Australian rugby was basically sound and it was more of a case of rebuilding some relationships between players and coach, rather than a more-old school approach (even if not the full Straeuli) and basically a tune up rather than a rebuild, Ewen McKenzie, ‘Link’ of legend, was a clear choice.

Link had shown that as one of Australia’s greatest tighthead props, a great player actually could become at least a very good and, possibly, a great coach. He had taken sides that were fundamentally sound (New South Wales Waratahs, Stade de France) or on the improve (Queensland Reds) and really got them humming.

He had taken over the Waratahs from the hirsute and astute Bob Dwyer and led them to a brace of narrow losses in Super Rugby finals (by far the best performance at that time from a side that have been, mysteriously, perennial under achievers). He had survived five years at the Never-Wozzer-Tahs, which showed a capacity for political survival that is always a useful thing to have in the national snake pit.

Ewen McKenzie. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

At Queensland he had taken a side of promising runtlings led by the underappreciated Phil Mooney and won their first title since the back-to-back triumphs of 1994 and 1995 in the Super Tens (where Herr Straeuli, popping up from time to time like Moriarty in Sherlock Holmes, made an appearance playing for Transvaal). Link had also shown a talent for political survival in a Queensland set up that led the way for Australian prime ministers by knifing seven coaches in 11 years prior to McKenzie of the Teflon skin.

In the hot tub of the Waratahs there was also the figure of Michael Cheika, aspiring perhaps to the role of Richard, Duke of Gloucester, looking to motivate the assorted stray cats playing for that side into a more cohesive force.

He had enjoyed success in Ireland with Leinster, winning a trophy in his first season and his performance in 2013 with the Waratahs suggested he was on his way to doing more than breaking doors at Bruce Stadium with them. The grizzled veteran of New Zealand rugger reporting, Wynn Gray, had noted Cheika seemed more of a change agent than a longer-term coach (after that burst of trophy winning stuff in his first season at Leinster performance did fall away). Cheika seemed to have built very strong rapport with the Waratahs players. If you felt the side needed a touch of crazy, some grub added, and a big dose of motivation then here was your (business) man.

So, what did Australia need in 2013? Because if you worked out what they needed, you would have more chance of matching the right coach to the right job at the right time.

In 2013 the Wallabies were ranked between 2nd and 4th in the world. In the 2007 Rugby World Cup they had been knocked out in the quarter final and in 2011 they had been knocked out by a superb New Zealand in the semi-finals – disappointing but arguably a side on an upward trajectory. They had not broken New Zealand’s stranglehold on the Bledisloe Cup, but they were a side with huge potential and, New Zealand aside, they won a lot more than they lost.

In Super Rugby, the ACT Brumbies were on the way back after some lean years and lost narrowly to a very fine Chiefs side in the 2013 Final. That was their second year under Jake White.

Queensland had won the Super Rugby title in 2011 under McKenzie, after some horrible wilderness years between about 2003-2009 (including a debacle in 2007 under … Eddie Jones). Queensland had a record of success against New Zealand Super Rugby sides. NSW were on the rebuild under Cheika and would go on to win the Super Rugby final in 2014. Both the Force and the Rebels were much as now, although the Force were building and in 2014 would just miss out on the finals of Super Rugby, something too many of their detractors ignore.

In 2013 some of the players available to the national coach included Will Genia, Quade Cooper, Michael ‘Squeak’ Moore, David Pocock, Michael Hooper, James Horwill, Rob Simmons, James Slipper, Scott Sio, Adam Ashley-Cooper, James O’Connor, Berrick Barnes, Digby Ioane and Israel Folau. This was a side with significant flaws but whatever one thinks of any one of them, as a collective it is an impressive set of names.

Below that impressive roster there were some genuine issues and some of them should resonate today. The side had fitness and conditioning issues and always looked in danger of running out of puff against New Zealand and even some of the increasingly fit northern hemisphere sides. There is a school of thought that the flood of injuries in 2022 and 2023 were contributed to by the national coach having to work the squad hard because of varying levels of fitness. Some injuries are unavoidable of course.

Perhaps connected to the above, was what I call a ‘mentality’ issue. This shows as a tendency to give away streams of penalties and to be unable or unwilling to react to and read the referee in game. This might seem familiar. Also familiar was a tendency in tight games to give away points soon after scoring, something that is now an epidemic. Conceding points in the ‘championship minutes’ of each half against New Zealand was also a horror show stuck on repeat play – expand that to any close match now and ‘plus ca change’ as Rudolf Straeuli might mutter from the bottom of the nearest fox hole.

Another bugbear was a scrum that had serious perception issues with referees and that arguably was surprisingly naïve – it seemed to have few answers to such standard scrummaging noughties as rolling the shoulder on contact, using the outside bind to pull down and boring in. This proved destructive on many occasions, not least the deciding Lions’ Test of 2013. Yet the same scrum had helped win the second test under a different referee. The scrum now, to me, is more consistent but it still has a frightening tendency to go missing, as it did for example once James Slipper, as makeshift tighthead prop, went off against Wales in the 2023 Rugby World Cup.

(Photo by Jason McCawley/Getty Images)

Kicking from hand was another area that seemed short of best practice. Too often the decision making, and execution seemed witless. The sight of kicks without an effective chase and just being banged down the middle of the pitch – it is sporting to open the field up, after all- was too commonplace.

If kicking from hand was variable the same applied to kicking for points. It was not a debacle (James O’Connor and Kurtley Beale calmly potting penalties to win tests with the last kick of the game, if anyone recalls) but it was not reliably top tier either – the horror of the attempted penalty kick in the first Test of the Lions’ series in 2013 still has me imitating Marlon Brando in Apocalypse Now. Carter Gordon today (a fine player with a lot of promise I will add)?

Although Adam Ashley-Cooper had a long boot, like Reece Hodge, the ability to turn to him to reliably apply pressure through long penalty shots at goal was never really developed. Is there an Australian mentality that the penalty kick is a shameful way to score points? Is it seen as the equivalent of the under-arm ball, or the keeper breaking stumps when the dozy wander out of their ground the moment the ball has passed them? Is this a genetic disorder passed down the line, like a rugby version of Alport Syndrome, from rugby league?

Finally, there was a sense that promising young players didn’t really seem to improve over time in the national set up. If they came into the Wallabies with a weak left-right pass, it seemed to stay that way. If they stood up at the ruck, had a look about and waited until the break-away was bearing down on the fly-half before looping a pass to him, then they kept doing that. Problems not being ironed out at province or even before was also a big part of the picture. Sound familiar?

My take in 2013, when Australia was still winning more than it lost, was that the Wallabies needed a rebuild. The areas of weakness were not superficial – they went to the basics of how you win the game. That was a side that still had a world class lineout and a generally dominant ruck presence. It had a roster of world class players, albeit many with surprising frailties. It was not just a case of the side needing some tactical tweaks or a few hugs to make everyone happy again. The alternative argument, that things were basically sound could be made by pointing to the side’s general success and parts of the game that were strong. In the end I think we know where that rather optimistic view ended.

However, if I thought things needed more than a tune up in 2013, you can imagine that I am looking at the CVs of coaching prospects now with a very firm eye on people who have rebuilt sides, who can work with and develop younger players, who can instil a grip on the basics and who can communicate a clear plan so that we can see whether progress is being made.

What worries me is that there are good coaches available, but I don’t see anyone with the required skills to match. Darren Coleman at the Waratahs comes closest, but I don’t believe he has the experience or record yet to step up to the vast demands of the national job. There is still a bloke in South Africa whose name doesn’t rhyme with ‘Growlie’… And now I remember that saying about history – ‘It doesn’t repeat but sometimes it rhymes’.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2023-12-04T11:32:46+00:00

Sinclair Whitbourne

Roar Rookie


Understood. I read Slipper more as supporting Hooper as captain and his right to speak if he wasn't happy, than support for what he was saying but... It was a horrible time. Issues with behaviour ran deep. There had been a physical altercation between (from memory) Nathan Sharpe and one of the three amigoes over attitude some years before and James Horwill was also beside himself. The behaviour stuff crossed state lines. Unfortunately, starting in Dublin in 2013 it did take on a state-based aspect and that got worse over the next 6 months. It wasn't helped by some aspects of the Di Patson situation - the truth of it we will probably never know. The two people on the scene I had the fortune to speak with had diametrically opposed views on this - so where does that leave us? The organisational set up of the Wallabies does seem to have been pretty poor (nothing to do with coach or players) and it was a distraction. Whilst I think a Jake White type coach would have cleaned behaviour up and out, as he had at the Brumbies, it isn't a given because he'd have needed support from the board if he wanted to toss a big name and he may not have got that. If there is a reason for hope, other than the relatively good performances of our Under 20's in recent years, it would be that the current squad doesn't seem to have a lot of behaviour issues, for all the other problems besetting it.

2023-12-04T06:32:42+00:00

savant

Roar Rookie


I think we do have the cattle to play the old Qld style. The beauty of it is it’s not that difficult. And all of the players can be confident of understanding it. Yes we need a better place kicker because the style involves taking the points at every opportunity. So you might look at starting Lonergan for example. And the style never involves dominating set piece just doing enough to win your own put ins. We can do that. We’ve got to pick defensive centers over X factor or crash ballers. So no Petaia or Paisami. Stewart and Ikitau would make the midfield ‘no pasaran’. The only risk you’d take would be on the wings. Marky and Toole give you strike power but suspect defence. Fly half just needs to kick out of their own half and pass through the hands to the wings in the opposite half. Players wouldn’t be in any doubt with this style of game. Ruck security is our big problem but then it’s a problem no matter what style we play. We averaged less than 40 percent wins in the last 7 years playing all kinds of complicated plays and picking athletes first. None of that worked very well. How could Knuckles rugby be any worse? The upside is the losing margins to top sides would be smaller and this in turn will allow the players to play with more confidence. One of the most obvious things to me when watching us play the kiwis is how they play with absolute certainty and we don’t. That’s the difference confidence makes. That’s where we need to get back to.

2023-12-04T06:19:30+00:00

AgainAgain

Roar Rookie


No, not that. I am speaking of his support for Hooper in and around the time. In addition, if someone didn't speak out, many here seem to suggest they didn't have an opinion or more they were all in support of EM and consequently dump the blame on others. Put it another way. If this had blown up on Robbie Deans watch it wouldn't have been seen as a coup, as was the case when QC carried on like a porkchop and EM was passing comment on the situation. It just all seems highly partisan to me.

2023-12-04T06:11:33+00:00

AgainAgain

Roar Rookie


Genia and Cooper do not represent the Wallabies and while they may be disappointed, does not change the underlying factsand conjecture around what actually happened and who supported EM's demise. And to suggest it was a NSW coup with very limited evidence, may suit some, but it doesn't all add up for me as an outsider. Were there agendas at play, likely, but whose. The way many like to portray it as Hooper's fault as pushed by many here based on conjecture and what you call circumstantial evidence is poor. But each to their own.

2023-12-04T02:22:54+00:00

HKRed

Roar Rookie


Nice article. Michael "Squeak" Moore?

AUTHOR

2023-12-03T20:40:41+00:00

Sinclair Whitbourne

Roar Rookie


Are you referring to Slipper's drug issues or saying that he was part of the push to dump McKenzie? In terms of behaviour issues there were issues across the board, but the internal push for a change of coach was much tighter in terms of which players from which state. I don't recall Slipper being noted as one of those driving for a change ...

2023-12-03T11:27:35+00:00

W Evans

Roar Rookie


It’s pretty compelling circumstantial evidence. McKenzie seemed to only have issues with a certain demographic from a certain franchise… I think Genia and Cooper as well as Moore were all pretty disappointed by what looked like a coup. Maybe a book will be written one day.

2023-12-03T10:57:13+00:00

AgainAgain

Roar Rookie


So you buy the Tahs, Chieka comspiracy...a plot to insert Chieka.

2023-12-03T10:53:59+00:00

AgainAgain

Roar Rookie


Was Slipper a NSW's player. I think that is the current partisan rhetoric trotted out here, but not sure about it's accuracy.

AUTHOR

2023-12-03T08:35:23+00:00

Sinclair Whitbourne

Roar Rookie


I was very unhappy about the way Link's tenure ended and still am. The push came from some NSW players and power brokers. I had the good fortune to speak with someone who was in the support part of Link's set up, about 18 months after it all ended and he was very angry, very traumatized really and made it very clear who he saw as behind it all. However, he also said some things that suggested Link himself was starting to have some reservations because of the absolute shambles on the organisational/admin side. In 2019 I spoke to someone very highly placed in the admin at the time who was absolutely convinced that they had to do what they did. He was also quite emotional about it. Although it left the issue of justification unanswered, it did make pretty clear who was behind the putsch. 2015 was a good year but the rest has been, in my view, a train wreck. I'd have kept the coach and punted the malcontents. Bad ju-ju.

2023-12-03T04:13:18+00:00

W Evans

Roar Rookie


Yes, that’s my understanding. Jeff Miller was the common denominator over those 2001-2007 horror story years. QLD rugby never recovered as it coincided with the Lions winning 3 premierships as well as the Roar and Titans entering the market.

2023-12-02T22:53:29+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


Link COULD have been the coach we needed then… He was smart enough to have game plans suiting different teams… it was never going to work immediately, however one of the biggest shames since we went pro was that he never got a proper crack. Whose fault? We might never know, but… I know who I was upset with at the time, and still have not gotten past it… Having said that, White would have possibly been the right coach to address the huge issues we had with terrible execution of basic skills.

2023-12-02T22:48:47+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


You are right... Story goes that powerbrokes in QLD desperately wanted favourite son Slack to coach... so they pushed Knuckles, but Slack said "no". Thats where Miller came in, as a stand in... then we rotated through several coaches, until Mooney was hired based on under 20s results, and then... boy, QLD had a good 5 years then... until they came up with the hair brained idea to hire a bloke with a 30% win rate to continue our most successful period... and then didn't learn from that horrendous mistake.

2023-12-02T10:47:09+00:00

Sofa Coach

Roar Rookie


Your point on Nance is very interesting Dusty. I too have been one of Nance's torture victims and I doubt there have been too many more brutal a task master in any Aussie sports at any level. And maybe that is the key? Not the style or the tactics of the coach, or the talent or the mentality of the players: maybe the players simply aren't in the right condition to implement what the coaches are requiring (a point that many have commented on on these pages previously)? The average wallaby is about 20kg heavier than those Nance trained. But with the exception of the likes of Hoops (who is of course a mortal sized player) I bet there are few current Wallabies who would keep up if they were dropped into one of Nance's training programmes. Yes rugby has changed. Our players size has evolved to adjust but their fitness seems to have devolved.

2023-12-02T08:37:23+00:00

W Evans

Roar Rookie


Agree with you Savant- Back to basics. Personally I think Nucifora and O’Gara but I’m just not sure it is realistic. And if that’s the case Nuci and McKellar or Schmidt and McKellar are possible alternatives. The one thing I would say, I’m really not sure Australian rugby has the cattle right now to play that style. Where are the uncompromising Loanes and McCalls, the grinders like Dave Wilson or Peter Slattery, blokes like Topo Rodriquez, McKenzie etc. Whoever takes over is going to have to evaluate what’s available from u16s to u23s and find players talented enough to plug gaps.

2023-12-02T08:27:45+00:00

W Evans

Roar Rookie


I’m not suggesting he should come back! I think he had a very bad fall anyway and must be close to 80. I am saying that the rot set in around the time he was pushed out of Australian Rugby and the ‘resignation’ of McKenzie was awful- he was pushed and white anted.

2023-12-02T05:16:58+00:00

savant

Roar Rookie


Agree with your assertion that we need to return to basic principles right now. I wrote a long post on these lines in reply to Harry’s article about OGara. We need to restore confidence and self esteem in the young side whose minds were scrambled and scarred by the Jones debacle. It’s very telling that we were beaten comprehensively by a Wales side playing basic principle rugby with a side that had no more talent than ours (if we had selected the right players). We need to play Knuckles Connolly style rugby now. The kind of rugby instilled in Qld sides by the Irish Christian brothers in the 20th century. It was this rugby played by Qld in the late 70s that led to the renaissance of rugby in Australia. Play it down the other end, prioritize defence, kicking, set piece, and ruck security. No X factor, no fancy game plans etc. I would love it if Gatland could give us 2 years to rebuild self esteem. However he appears to have committed to Welsh rugby. I wouldn’t mind the right South African. Of the Australians McKellar is the clear leader for me. He can assemble a team and will prioritize set piece. But the field of ‘rebuilders’ is thin as you say.

2023-12-02T04:57:24+00:00

savant

Roar Rookie


And that’s exactly what we need right now.

AUTHOR

2023-12-02T02:57:04+00:00

Sinclair Whitbourne

Roar Rookie


Agree. There will need to be some very clear communication about expectations and the kind of things that people for should be looking for that may not just be win/loss but represent progress. It might be identifying things like improving lineout wins on opposition ball, or percentage quick ruck ball etc. If people just go for 'did we win?' then there is a good chance that the next coach will also be ushered out without any real progress. I recall that when Dan McKellar took over at the Brumbies, one of the things advised was to look for a less restrictive style of play (not a big ask, admittedly). In his first few months the side looked shocking. But you could see logic in team selections and you could see in the way the team was setting up that there was a clear plan and a clear direction. So, when the results were not coming, you could still identify progress. Towards the end of that season things started coming together and the side went on a run of wins. Without that communication McKellar might have been in dire trouble.

2023-12-01T22:32:18+00:00

Interestedoz

Roar Rookie


What I really like about this article is it highlights the differences between the Wallabies 2013 and 2023. They haven’t been winning more than losing for a long time now. In 2013 top 4, 2023 9th etc. When you see it presented like this for me at least, it really illustrates the scale of the challenge ahead. I hope the next coach is supported with a rrealistic winning expectation. While we continue to play top 8 teams, a team ranked 9th shouldn’t be expected to win a majority of games in my view.

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