'Brutal and violent': The two aspects Reds workhorse wants to fix to take next step towards Wallabies

By Christy Doran / Editor

As Ryan Smith prepares for his 50th Super Rugby match, the former air conditioning contractor turned Reds stalwart wants to add a “brutal and violent” edge to his game to make the next step in his career.

Where his razzle-dazzle teammates Harry Wilson and Fraser McReight often get the headlines off the back of their dazzling highlights reels, Smith, in much the same way Scott Fardy went about his career, is the no-frills second-rower that every successful side needs.

A ruck-hitting, tackle-machine that enjoys the tough stuff in the middle, Smith has quietly gone about his work since making his debut for the Reds in 2020.

A tradesman in every sense, Smith was on the tools as the sun rose in the days around the start of the Covid pandemic and would duck to training after finishing his honest day’s work in the hope of one day pulling on the Reds jersey.

That moment came when Brad Thorn rewarded the lock for his desire to get stuck in and compete.

The Brothers lock hasn’t looked back – and neither have the Reds, with the 27-year-old becoming a mainstay at the Super Rugby franchise holding the tight-five together.

“I was lucky enough to keep getting selected,” Smith said in his usual understated, dry manner ahead of his milestone moment in New Zealand.

“It’s been the story of my career. Even at Brothers, there were a lot of fantastic players ahead of me and I just stuck at it and worked really hard and picked up what I could from those guys.

“I was really happy to get one game for the Reds and to potentially have 50 is pretty amazing and something I didn’t foresee happening.”

Ryan Smith will play his 50th Super Rugby match on Friday. (Photo by Kelly Defina/Getty Images)

Smith’s importance to the Reds has risen even more under Les Kiss given the emphasis the former winger places on the breakdown and quick ball.

Fortunately, Smith is all too willing to put his head down and play his part.

“In this team, it’s really about knowing your role,” he said. “We’re all across our detail, it’s all been set out exactly what the coaches are expecting from us.

“The other guys in the team are fantastic ball-carriers and breakdown experts, Harry Wilson, Seru [Uru], Fraser, Wrongers [Liam Wright], so I’m not trying to step up and take any carries off those guys because they’re such damaging ball-runners and fantastic with ball-in-hand.

“I’m happy to do my job and make tackles and hit attacking breakdowns and work really hard around that set-piece stuff, which allows those guys to light up at the other end.”

If there were more players in Australian rugby with Smith’s attitude around the breakdown, the Wallabies would have scored dozens of more tries and secured several more wins in recent years.

Indeed, no area on the field has given the Wallabies more headaches since the 2015 World Cup than the attacking breakdown.  

It’s also why Smith recognises it’s the area that he must continue to improve if he wants to get a crack under new Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt.

“Les, Chock [Zane Hilton] and Fish [Jonathan Fisher] have really just asked me to home those things that might already be a part of my game, but just to make sure that I keep working on the things I’m already good at and things I need to improve,” Smith said.

“A lot of that breakdown stuff is really important for me and trying to be brutal and violent at those breakdowns is probably my next step.”

Kiss, who coached alongside Schmidt for three years and the best part of 50 Tests, says the breakdown will be something the New Zealander will be after as he edges closer to naming his first Wallabies squad.

“Without a doubt,” Kiss said.  “I know that will be a focus for the Wallabies as well.

“The accuracy that you need there, hitting that sweet spot of accuracy, getting that right physicality into that moment, hitting that right to be able to clear that ball is a massive part of the game.

Former Irish coach Joe Schmidt (R) worked alongside Les Kiss (L) for many years. Picture credit: Seb Daly / SPORTSFILE (Photo by Sportsfile/Corbis/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

“The breakdown can be refereed differently from referee to referee, there isn’t quite the consistency that we’d like there to be, so just being very good at the breakdown, being very good as a carrier, getting that ball back early, they’re all key components that can make any team play better, and no doubt the Wallabies and Joe will be making sure that any player that is picked has those qualities.”

Friday’s clash against Moana Pasifika is Smith’s next test.

A side on the rise under Tana Umaga, Stephen Jones and Tom Coventry, Moana has enough physical threats, including Julian Savea in the midfield, to make the Reds’ trip to Whangarei a tricky one.

“The truth is we’re playing Moana and Moana Pasifika have some big bodies, they attack the breakdown, we just need to make sure we have that level of physicality of where it needs to be. That’s the focus,” Kiss said.

“But it also points to our set-piece, so we’re clinical there because they’re big men.”

The Crowd Says:

2024-04-14T05:44:30+00:00

Honest Max

Roar Rookie


Cockbain might be the most underrated Wallaby of all time.

2024-04-13T02:44:35+00:00

MalBreakaway

Roar Rookie


Was he dropped or chose to earn euro and family motivation to go to Europe while Fardy was still valuable? Certainly not being selected for wallabies would have been influence. Shame Henry Speight got ignored too.

2024-04-12T12:28:02+00:00

ols

Roar Pro


And after tonight's game. Brutal and violent were certainly not his output

2024-04-12T08:36:53+00:00

MO

Roar Rookie


Douglas wasn’t a lineout guy though and that didn’t help. They needed to find a few more takes from non lineout guys. Skelton is far superior to Douglas though so it’s more worth the sacrifice and Skelton can defend line out drives

2024-04-12T08:28:47+00:00

MO

Roar Rookie


Godwin and hodge both handy at the attacking ruck.

2024-04-12T08:27:20+00:00

MO

Roar Rookie


You reckon George wouldn’t be prepared to put on weight? There are some like bell and nairavuo who should have 6s or 8s not a prop and a winger

2024-04-12T08:22:06+00:00

Passit2me

Roar Rookie


You could be right Peter. Our attacking breakdown issues have been so obvious for so long, I am dumbfounded that so little has been done about it. Maybe it was the coaches focussing on the wrong areas. Cheika just had our forwards charging in helter skelter without any signs of timing or technique. We literally showed stuff all interest in getting our hands dirty under Rennie. I still remember the ball being kicked to within 5 metres of the AB try line. The AB’s had to turn, run back, regroup for a defensive ruck, with no one available to cover the blind side. All we had to do was charge through, use momentum to push over the ball and score. What happened? We gave a half hearted chase, committed 2 forwards to the ruck ( with one going in too high), with the rest lining up for a glorious carry. The AB’s ran back, regrouped perfectly in a low formation, and pushed us off the ball. I doubt I’ve ever sworn so much. It was pathetic.

2024-04-12T07:56:47+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


Memories can mislead, cs. Have shared the link above for Fardy’s matches from 2014 season onwards. He was a clear starter at the Brumbies until his move to Leinster

2024-04-12T06:32:27+00:00

K.F.T.D.

Roar Rookie


And the expect him to be Captain and do winger cover tackles, and kick winning goals- that could never happen! Wait a minute!

2024-04-12T06:31:30+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


also if you want someone to hit a lot of rucks and tackle a lot then pick the person who is best at those things and ignore if they have x-factor elsewhere, for this role that is considered a nice to have. This is if you have designated roles for each player for clarity, so they all know what they should be doing where, rather than an eyes up approach and make it up on the spot based on what you see unfolding. Note I prefer designated roles and rely on the playmaker for the heads up role and working out what is unfolding and steering the play.

2024-04-12T06:29:56+00:00

LeftRightOut

Roar Rookie


Well played CS!

2024-04-12T06:25:58+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


but too many x-factor players hold back to do flashy runs, and most x-factor players aren’t hard workers. That's on the coaches and selectors as much as anyone though

2024-04-12T06:24:35+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


but too many x-factor players hold back to do flashy runs, and most x-factor players aren't hard workers.

2024-04-12T06:23:33+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


nah, lineout, maul try, scrums push over / penalty try all game

2024-04-12T06:21:31+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


The Most fans don’t rate them either.

2024-04-12T06:06:44+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


So and yeah but nah ... actually you could be right. Sometimes you need to put a player in a grander setting to bring out their true form.

2024-04-12T05:59:36+00:00

PaddyBoy

Roar Rookie


Yeah not sure if that perspective is based on years gone by because Id reckon he’s stepped into the captains role nicely, especially given the challenging environment he’s in. Been a really consistent head down bum up season from Rob.

2024-04-12T05:56:31+00:00

Alli Anz

Roar Rookie


Unfortunately for you, the players don’t agree with you Jim. They voted for him as the JE medalist

2024-04-12T05:55:40+00:00

cs

Roar Guru


That does vaguely gel with my unreliable memory, LRO.

2024-04-12T05:44:50+00:00

Wolla Wotsa

Roar Rookie


" I admit I used to bag him a bit " Well he did wear the mighty Reds Jersey for 10 years. Your tone softened towards him when he donned the baby blue jersey for 3 years :silly: .

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