'Don't need to prove anything to anyone': Wallabies bruiser opens up on French move - and why he's found peace in role

By Christy Doran / Editor

Lachie Swinton has opened up on his decision to leave Australian rugby, saying it was a “hard decision” based on a desire to get into a new environment and join one of the premier sides in the thriving French Top 14 competition.

As revealed by The Roar, the hard-hitting back-rower signed with Bordeaux late last year on a two-year deal.

The deal came to pass when the Waratahs hardman was quietly making a statement on tour with Australia A and the Barbarians in France and the United Kingdom.

It was up north, where ruggedness and physicality are craved especially on rain-soaked fields during the cold winter months, that Swinton caught the eyes of his Bordeaux suitors.

“It poked its head up at the backend of the Barbarians tour,” Swinton said.

“I was on holiday and I was thinking about what I wanted to do, and the decision was purely based on getting into a new environment.

“French rugby is the pinnacle right now. You see a lot of great players over there and then to get approached by one of the best clubs in the best comp was a cool thing.

“It was a very hard decision to make. I’m a very proud Tahs person, and it did hurt me to make the call. But it might not be a permanent thing. I’ve got two years with them I’m very keen to go as hard as I possibly can and then the rest will look after itself.”

Wallabies bruiser Lachlan Swinton has opened up on why he’s leaving the Waratahs. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images for Rugby Australia)

The seven-Test Wallaby, who was red carded on debut against the All Blacks, told his teammates of his decision to leave during a team bonding trip down south.

“For rugby players, the best thing about rugby is it’s a global game, so I think you’re shooting yourself in the foot sort by putting yourself in this box if you’re not going to go anywhere,” he said.

“The biggest thing for me is I’m really holding onto little moments [this year].

“We went away for pre-season down to Jed’s place and I was sitting around the fire having a few beers with the lads, and I was thinking this could be one of the last times I get to do one of these trips, which is a bit exciting. But change is good sometimes.”

Swinton’s decision to leave the Waratahs at season’s end divided opinion.

Some see him as a walking red card, a relic of the pre-TMO years where you could get away with staying upright in tackles.

Others, like his teammates and coaches, recognise the value of his bruising physicality. It’s why Dave Rennie first picked him for the Wallabies in 2020 and loved his opening half-hour of Test rugby before his high shot on Sam Whitelock saw him become the first Wallaby to be sent off on debut.

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Swinton, well, over time he’s come to accept himself for what he is and what he can offer on the field.

“I don’t need to prove anything to anyone else anymore, and it’s quite refreshing that I’m at that point now,” he said.

“I wouldn’t say I don’t care anymore, but I’ve got my Tahs boys and the coaches that I care about and that’s me.

“Everyone knows what I can do, they know what I bring. You either like me or you don’t and so be it.”

Did it take him sometime to get to that point?

“It’s like anyone’s career,” he said. “You’re sort of trying to find your feet, find who you are and I’ve sort of got to a point now where I know the person I am more importantly than the player.”

Lachie Swinton stands over Duane Vermeulen during the Wallabies’ win over the Springboks in 2021. (Photo by Matt Roberts/Getty Images)

After recovering from a nerve issue in his shoulder that threatened to end his career in 2022, it took time for Swinton to find his feet upon his return last year.

When he eventually did start to find his inner confidence, the bruising back-rower copped a seven-week ban for a late, high and reckless shot on Force back Jake Strachan.

Even so, recognising his unique physical characteristics, Swinton was asked to attend Eddie Jones’ Wallabies camp on the Gold Coast.

While he ultimately wasn’t selected for the World Cup, it’s believed he was on standby during the Barbarians tour to join the Wallabies after a strong second half of the season where the balance in his game had returned.

“Yeah, it was pretty challenging,” said Swinton about his return to the field after his injury-devastated 2022 campaign.

“I was just trying to focus on my DNA, which was trying to pull off some big hits. But I concentrated on that so much that the rest of my game didn’t really grow at the start. I was talking to the coaches about trying to become more rounded as a footy player and, come this year, I really want to continue that.”

Time to deliver on some unfinished business?

“It’ll be the last season with the Tahs for the next few years, but I’d like to come back at some point,” he said.

“I’m very focused on myself and the Tahs. What else happens with representative stuff is what it is. It’s been a bit scattered in the past. I’ve been in and out for a while now. They know what I can do and offer and if they want that they want that.

“I’m really focused on doing some great at this club, so I can look back really proud of our team and what we’ve done this year.”

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-15T01:07:12+00:00

John Ferguson

Expert


Haha the information will be useful throughout the season and within my pieces moving forward, nothing is wasted.

2024-02-15T00:08:21+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


I didn’t deserve that effort but it’s appreciated, thanks John

2024-02-14T21:39:23+00:00

John Ferguson

Expert


McReight played 1,109 minutes while Reimer played less than half at 439. So the sense was on the money, 7 less turnovers in less than half the time. In scalable numbers thats Reimer 1 steal every 39 minutes. So one steal every half. For McReight it equates to 1 steal every 61 minutes. Basically, Reimer's steal rate is double per game. Strong numbers against the same oppositions.

2024-02-14T14:22:39+00:00

MO

Roar Rookie


The idea that rugby is a game for all shapes and sizes doesn’t apply to pros. It’s hard to wrestle 130 kgs or even 120kgs of fit strong person. I played low level with a former nz school boy at 10. He was 120 of muscle. Karate judo boxing etc. he said he wasn’t the biggest guy in his rep team! That was about 25 years ago. Easily handled a 16 year old soa the hulk palelei who even at 16 wasn’t used to guys who could handle him. Intra club game and i always found soa to be a good kid and nothing bad to say about him as a man except that watching him walk down stairs in a handstand wasn’t good for me appreciating the diff between how dangerous I was and the reality

2024-02-14T14:01:58+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


Test rugby isn’t the real world, I’m fully aware

2024-02-14T11:18:09+00:00

MO

Roar Rookie


In the real world 100kgs is a big guy. Look how small most of the good heavy weight boxers are

2024-02-14T09:47:28+00:00

Derek Murray

Roar Rookie


Reimer probably played <50% of the minutes McReight did, I'd guess significantly less

2024-02-14T03:45:03+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


I hadn't considered that, Skippy.

2024-02-14T03:43:21+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Is that a problem with Australian rugby or a problem with the wrong players being selected for the Wallabies?

2024-02-14T03:41:06+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Yes, the nuance of it being at a RWC wasn’t lost on me. I was definitely being a bit flippant and I won’t argue against your comment on that front.

2024-02-14T03:40:05+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


I like Luke as a player. He is quality.

2024-02-14T02:35:18+00:00

ForceFan

Roar Rookie


‘Don’t need to prove anything to anyone’ – delusional. Hopefully the change will be good for him.

2024-02-14T01:19:37+00:00

Rugbytrylover

Roar Rookie


Definitely better expressed, I’ll give you that.

2024-02-14T00:59:01+00:00

Randy Ruga

Roar Rookie


They may never come back. However if they're available for Wallabies selection they'll at least still be on the radar of RA and local SRP clubs, as it is now they go OS and they're somewhat off the radar.

2024-02-14T00:15:11+00:00

John Ferguson

Expert


I am eager to see how Luke Reimer goes this year. He is indeed smaller but he is an on-baller and I think this is still a role which needs to be cherrished. Reimer won 11 in the season, McReight won 18, but for some reason I never think of McReight as being a on-baller? Despite this he was the highest in 2023 of anyone, the closest was his captin Wright on 16 with the closest non-Aussie was Billy Harmon on 13. McReight yet to do it at international which is the test, Reimer was succesful at Australia A level.

2024-02-13T23:03:31+00:00

East Coast Aces

Roar Rookie


Sorry guys thought this was a fan forum where we could passionately express ourselves. If you want me to be completely literal I will try again. Swinton has massive wraps on him where is performances have not lived up to. He goes into contact high which often results in him not winning the contact and on many occasions results in Red and Yellow cards. This then has massive flow on effects for the team. Which is less than useful to a team trying to beat their opponents.

2024-02-13T22:58:07+00:00

East Coast Aces

Roar Rookie


"Worst wallaby world cup performance in history" As in a performance by the wallabies in a world cup. Does that make sense yet? Can you name on match they played worse in? You certainly can't name a world cup game where they have lost by more points.

2024-02-13T22:44:30+00:00

Don

Roar Rookie


I think Nick Bishop might have done that review on Skelton's impact. He was also influential in one or 2 of the games he played on the Spring tour in 2022. Cleared rucks, trucked the ball strongly and was dominant. Until he went to Europe and became a better player he was not a test level footballer.

2024-02-13T21:35:25+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


All depends how he is used. I think Geoff did an article in 21 or 22 showing how against Wales he did one man rucks freeing up defenders and attackers for Oz. Maybe it was part of his deals in Europe but he says himself that he was told to lose weight by the coaches.

2024-02-13T21:30:45+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


Knowing how he is in a maul having him jumping is the worse thing you can do in attack or defence.

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