We're starting to get a feel for what the 2019 Wallabies coaching team will look like, but the big question is how will it function in a high-stakes World Cup year?
Michael Cheika survives at the helm, Scott Johnson installed over the top as director of rugby, with Mick Byrne (skills) and Nathan Grey (defence) likely, but not certain, to survive a cull of the assistants.
Something had to give, but there are plenty of people bemused that it was attack coach Stephen Larkham – the man once anointed by Cheika as his successor – who was offered up as the fall guy.
An objective look at the Wallabies' season – 13 Tests, nine losses, half the tries scored this year compared to last – will tell you they were all fair game. The attack was poor, yes. But the defence ran hot and ice cold, the skills were not evident and the set pieces – the lineout in particular – a mess.
But depending on what side of the fence you sat, internally, it was someone else's fault. The defensive system exhausted players, leaving little in the tank on attack. The attack was too structured. There was too much kicking for a team short on strong tactical kickers. And so on. One source told The Sun-Herald that Larkham had barely touched the attack this season.