Pressure Points: Now or never for Coleman at Waratahs after 'forgetting about the rugby', key signings give hope

By Nick Wasiliev / Editor

It is a strange time to be a Waratahs fan as Darren Coleman enters his third year at the helm.

Two quarter final appearances that have shown promise, a merger with Rugby Australia on the cards to take effect from January 1st, and arguably one of the greatest players to ever don the jersey, Michael Hooper, departing. 

2023 was a year the Tahs came crashing back to earth, and it was no further encapsulated than their humiliating home loss to Moana Pasifika, followed by a 40 point drubbing by the Blues the following week. It was a side limping to the finish line, managing to equal the efforts of the year before, albeit far from convincingly. 

It seemed totally at odds with when Coleman’s appointment was announced. The bloke is a stalwart of local rugby, a legend of the Shute Shield that coached Gordon and Warringah to drought breaking premierships. He’d taken NSW Country to the 2016 NRC Grand Final, he’d gone overseas and won a premiership in Major League Rugby.

Michael Hooper of the Waratahs looks on after losing the Super Rugby Pacific Quarter Final match between Blues and Waratahs at Eden Park, on June 09, 2023, in Auckland, New Zealand. (Photo by Hannah Peters/Getty Images)

Surely, if there was any man to bring the Waratahs back and give them not just a competitive edge they clearly needed, but deliver an identity as authentically NSW, it was Coleman. How had it gone wrong with this coach?

In truth, like for his team, 2023 was a serious wake up call for Coleman, as he discovered how treacherous a competition Super Rugby is, and that his own priorities proved his own undoing.

Coleman’s strength isn’t just in the belief he instills in players, it is who he can bring on board to guide that belief. Many players would come to Shute Shield clubs simply because he was there, even his 2021 LA Giltinis Grand Final winners had eleven of the starting fifteen originate from Australia: including the likes of current Waratah incumbent Mahe Vailanu and former Tah, now Brumbies scrum-half Harrison Goddard. 

Darren Coleman. (Photo by Jason McCawley/Getty Images)

These strengths were on full display throughout his debut season. It felt like the Tahs were moving again, playing with a calm confidence and grounded approach reflected in their coach.

One win on the road in New Zealand, dramatically improved performances against heavyweights the Hurricanes, Blues and Brumbies, and a strong win against the Crusaders in front of a packed Leichhardt Oval: it felt like the Tahs had finally returned to their roots. They finished the regular season with an 8-6 record, the first time they’d won more than they’d lost since 2018. 

It gave fans good reason to see improvement the following season, and to give a side a restored sense of local pride in one short year was no mean feat. 

Hoping to ride that success, Coleman aimed to build on that structure but with a heightened sense of physicality. Players bulked up in pre-season. However, this focus came with one clear flaw: moving your tactics with the times. With the second year comes a chance for teams to develop counteractive plans, having had the chance to play against you. 

However, this focus of physicality could paper over tactical predictability, as long as it could be maintained for the full game. This put pressure on the Tah’s depth, which had been exposed and stretched to breaking point for the last few years. It wasn’t just the starting side that had to match up physically, but the reserves, and the extended squad. 

A team like the Crusaders may pick up as many injuries as any other team, yet their squad is still able to win and blitz finals because their depth is that good. Despite their improvements, depth issues exposed in Penney’s era have not departed. Depth like this, the Tahs did not have. 

In short, Coleman became so focused on getting the boys up for the rugby that he forgot about the rugby itself. It was an approach that quickly unraveled twenty minutes into the opening game of the season, as Angus Bell limped off. 

With Tom Lambert exposed against a Wallaby front three at the Brumbies, momentum at set-piece was stifled. While the Waratahs were able to keep up physicality in general play, the Brumbies shift to tactics, chipping away with field dominance and penalty goals, saw them sneak home. It proved to be a blueprint to defeat Coleman.

The Waratahs went on to lose five of their first six matches, desperately trying to correct their game plan and an effectively botched pre-season. Up until their round five 14-24 loss to the Chiefs, performances seemed so uninspired fans began to draw comparison to the seemingly rudderless rugby that plagued Rob Penney’s leadership. 

While they would eventually recover to scrape into finals, they finished second last for the whole competition in clean breaks (67), carries (1,579), metres gained (5,637), and last overall in total defenders beaten (259). Simply put, they were any easy team to read and defend, and they struggled to get past most sides. 

It was a disappointing sight, after a year of promise, to see the Tahs (like most Australian sides) return to a situation where they could only beat someone on their day, once in a sky-blue moon.

Jake Gordan and Darren Coleman. (Photo by Jenny Evans/Getty Images)

If there is one thing Coleman is good that though based on his career up until now, it is bouncing back from failure. It proved the case when he was undone tactically in the 2016 NRC Grand Final, a result he admitted proved invaluable when he won Warringah their first Shute Shield the following year. 

He also accepts accountability candidly, and in many interviews heading into the latter half of the 2023 season openly admitted he got many parts of 2023 wrong.

With failures comes opportunity for growth, and sometimes you need a serious wake up call so you can be better for it down the road. 

The challenge though is ensuring that the errors made in 2023 are not repeated. Coleman cannot afford to tactically rest on his laurels again, the Tahs need to play rugby that asks questions of the opposition, combined with that level headedness his teams are known for.  

Coleman has sought to fix his depth issues in the tight-five, signing Hayden Thompson-Stringer from La Rochelle and Tom Ross from the Brumbies.

He has also finally landed a second-rower of real potential, with local talent Miles Amatosero returning from Clermont to add some much needed size in the second-row. He has been joined by Fergus Lee-Warner and Ned Slack-Smith, as well as former Fijian forward Mesu Kunavula, to fill the Michael Hooper-sized hole. 

Tane Edmed (Photo by Brett Hemmings/Getty Images)

After not knowing who his first-choice shotcaller was in 2023, Coleman will be trusting on the maturity of Tane Edmed at fly-half, supported by Jack Bowen and hopefully Will Harrison, after Ben Donaldson moved on to the Western Force. 

If one positive did come out of 2023, it was how efficient and versatile the Waratahs backline showed itself to be, with Jake Gordon now set to be supported by exciting young scrum-half Teddy Wilson and the returning Jack Grant.

Test centres Lalakai Foketi and Izaia Perese alongside strong replacements in Joey Walton and Mosese Tuipulotu, and a very exciting back three with Max Jorgenson firmly ensconced at fullback, mean Coleman has plenty of talented options up his sleeve. Not bad considering last year he was expected to barely get any game time behind Kurtley Beale! 

NSW Waratahs CEO Paul Doorn and Rugby Australia CEO Phil Waugh. (Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

RA have a vested interest in the Tahs now, using them as an opportunity to put their plans of centralisation into practise. Rome wasn’t built in a day, but progress needs to happen in some form or another, either on the field and/or off it, as other franchises will be looking at the Waratahs and what management under the RA roof looks like. 

To not address the depth issues, tactical missteps and not see progression in 2024 could be fatal for Coleman’s time at the Tahs.  

The Crowd Says:

2023-12-23T02:39:23+00:00

MO

Roar Rookie


There was a game where para beat the broncos. And Peter Stirling orchestrated about23 points and Kenny ran the D. Amazing intelligence on show

2023-12-20T05:59:53+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


By NSW winning SR in 20244 Given another 18+ centuries, the Tahs should be pretty well organised, but don't bank on it ...

AUTHOR

2023-12-19T23:56:10+00:00

Nick Wasiliev

Editor


I think who are the best players are to have played in any squad always comes down to a matter of personal opinion. But, I don't think it is a controversial claim to say that he is ONE of the best to play for NSW. Michael Hooper has earned 138 caps for the Waratahs (only 13 caps behind the all time record holder, Benn Robinson). He's won the Matthew Burke Cup for best Waratah of the season on eight occasions, far more than anyone else (the next best is Wycliff Palu, who won it twice). You can make the argument if you wish that the likes of Phil Waugh, Matthew Burke, Tony Daly, David Campese, Phil Kearns etc. might have been better players in their time, and they achieved more success with the Wallabies. However, at SR level, Michael Hooper has something most of those players don't have: a Waratah Super Rugby title. Oh, and he was the captain of that 2014 Grand Final winning side. Darren Coleman has had experience at Super Rugby level before, as a Skills Coach for the Tahs during their 2000 Super 12 season, where he also led their academy. Obviously a long time ago, but we can't write a coach off simply because it's their first head coach Super Rugby experience and they're picking things up. If we did that, we'd never have had Ewen McKenzie, Robbie Deans, Scott Robertson or god forbid, Eddie Jones. It's only season three for DC, and there is enough in there for him to grown himself as a coach and take the Tahs further. If you want me to talk specific tactics on Coleman, I'd be more than happy to. However, in the case of this article, it would probably be triple the length, especially when getting into the knitty-gritty around his contradictory tactical plans towards using his forward pack. You want me to write an article on that? She'll be a dense one.

2023-12-19T22:31:57+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Penney was not able to spend money. DC came in and was instantly able to spend money. And quite a bit of it. The restrictions on Penney were immence and were removed when he was sacked. I just hope he got a great payout. Its something Aus rugby specailises in. DC should have made far better progress in 2023 but failed. Lets see what he does this year coming.

2023-12-19T14:00:48+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


Hope you're right, with respect to the Tahs at least, finding form between his propensity for getting and inflicting injuries.

2023-12-19T13:37:52+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


I believe it. I think he can be a top level test player. Watching him carrying, catching, passing for Oz A confirmed what I’d thought was his potential. His defence and lineout work was always top drawer. He has a high workrate - hits lots of rucks. Add some subtlety with the ball and there’s your 6

2023-12-19T13:22:42+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


The backline I'd like to see: 9. Gordon/Wilson 10. Edmed/Harrison 11. Nawaqanitawase 12. Perese 13. Walton 14. Pietch 15. Jorgensen

2023-12-19T10:31:31+00:00

Phil

Roar Rookie


Just pick Joey at 13 DC.

2023-12-19T07:50:24+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


He doesn’t manage that. That’s the job of the S&C coach.

2023-12-19T06:14:45+00:00

Barry Smyth

Roar Rookie


Thompson-Stringer Is a loose head prop when we really need a Tight Head :(

2023-12-19T06:02:58+00:00

Barry Smyth

Roar Rookie


Hence the previous & correctly derogatory comment that adding bulk for the sake of it & he didnt add functional strength to help with speed and power!

2023-12-19T03:23:36+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


Taking it or drinking it!

2023-12-19T01:13:21+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


:thumbup:

2023-12-19T01:10:48+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


Another puzzle savant. Presumably it had something to do with the forwards but for mine Perese and Marky just don't click. Given the latter's form with the Wallabies (which is where he broke out big time), I blame the former, who I'd like to see given a good go at 12 -- hoping to make use of his incredible leg strength while reducing his radius for thinking (or not - he seems a bit strange). This would require a good cut-out capacity from 10 when we really want to get the ball to our flyers.

2023-12-19T01:01:35+00:00

Wolla Wotsa

Roar Rookie


cs Thunk he us taking the puss as our kiwi brothers would say. :laughing:

AUTHOR

2023-12-19T00:40:58+00:00

Nick Wasiliev

Editor


The majority of the squad was from Penney's time when DC came on. I believe DC brought in 17 new heads into the squad of 40+, mostly as coverage and a lot of those new heads had already been in the NSW system. You're not wrong about the issues Penney faced when it came to spending, the Tahs were in very bad shape. But, as mentioned in the title, this isn't an article about Penney, it's an article about DC and the challenges he faces currently. It's well documented that Penney was dealing with issues beyond his control: financial issues alongside the inexperienced cattle he had (itself a failing of the NSW pathways and fractured system), but what he tried to get those inexperienced players to do on the field also played a part as to their significant underperformance. He's a brilliant coach, no further evidenced by the Crusaders picking him up, but the issues from his time at the Tahs were very complicated. DC's challenges are inherited from that time, but also were some of his own making as a result of tactical decisions made for 2023.

2023-12-19T00:39:40+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


Since when exactly did the Tahs ever have good ball retention? *sigh*

AUTHOR

2023-12-19T00:26:33+00:00

Nick Wasiliev

Editor


Fair, maybe it's more from what I've seen with Harrison being a very effective distributor. Either way, it's the right problem to have, and it gives DC variety as to who to go with.

2023-12-19T00:22:18+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


on Edmed’s level on his day. Hard to compare them. Edmed is an explosive type whereas Harrison's of the silky variety.

2023-12-19T00:17:28+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


Unusually big call oz?

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