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Australian Rugby / RA

PhilClinton

Mark Loane (55)
Fox Sports headline today twisting the JAS debut into an article about how it clearly shows the NRL have the best athletes in Australia.

Now, it quite possibly is true. But still it’s funny these guys couldn’t wait more than 24hrs to start throwing knives.

I should also point out how Crawley tries to downplay JAS significance to the NRL, whilst he’s clearly going to be elite in rugby. Funny that, this is the same player multiple NRL clubs were signing at 16 and seeking dispensation to debut early.


 

KOB1987

John Eales (66)
Well that's no surprise. Mark Geyer on MMM this morning said something like 'you have to be concerned about the state of Australian rugby when a player from who has never played a minute of pro rugby gets named MOTM'. Never mind the result of the game, or that he is equally a rugby product.

It's actually the extra 5-10m of space that JAS gets in rugby that allows him to capitilise on his talent, he is much more suited to rugby than loig.
 

The Ghost of Raelene

Simon Poidevin (60)
Fox Sports headline today twisting the JAS debut into an article about how it clearly shows the NRL have the best athletes in Australia.

Now, it quite possibly is true. But still it’s funny these guys couldn’t wait more than 24hrs to start throwing knives.

I should also point out how Crawley tries to downplay JAS significance to the NRL, whilst he’s clearly going to be elite in rugby. Funny that, this is the same player multiple NRL clubs were signing at 16 and seeking dispensation to debut early.


I don't care now. Good luck to them. They have a huge league and should just enjoy it.

Part of me hopes there might be a few guys think "not such a bad option over there look how JS is going"
 

Heavyd

Arch Winning (36)
Nothing triggers the mungoes like displays of the global dominance of rugby. Whilst they had their mickey mouse Pacific Championship, which thankfully 12-15k Tongans showed up to give them a crowd, 82K watched a cracking test at the home of rugby. Sualli was the NRL golden boy until he signed with rugby last year. Now they pretend he was a average NRL player. Imagine their meltdowns when the Lions show up and steal all their headlines next year.
 

Tomthumb

Chilla Wilson (44)
Fox Sports headline today twisting the JAS debut into an article about how it clearly shows the NRL have the best athletes in Australia.

Now, it quite possibly is true. But still it’s funny these guys couldn’t wait more than 24hrs to start throwing knives.

I should also point out how Crawley tries to downplay JAS significance to the NRL, whilst he’s clearly going to be elite in rugby. Funny that, this is the same player multiple NRL clubs were signing at 16 and seeking dispensation to debut early.


The irony is hilarious considering how easy Marky Mark (Nawaqanitawase) made league look on his debut
 

Dctarget

Tim Horan (67)
I saw Carter Gordon liked a lot of the Wallabies' winning posts. Hope he misses it and comes back, got a sinking feeling that he's going to carve it up. We're missing a class winger and flyhalf at the moment. Marky and Carter are sorely missed.
 

PhilClinton

Mark Loane (55)
I saw Carter Gordon liked a lot of the Wallabies' winning posts. Hope he misses it and comes back, got a sinking feeling that he's going to carve it up. We're missing a class winger and flyhalf at the moment. Marky and Carter are sorely missed.

Marky Mark (Nawaqanitawase) had one foot out the door all 2024 - that kind of mindset is weak and I don't think he needs to be rushed back to rugby.

Jorgs showed enough that he can be our strike winger going forward I reckon.
 

Derpus

Nathan Sharpe (72)
I saw Carter Gordon liked a lot of the Wallabies' winning posts. Hope he misses it and comes back, got a sinking feeling that he's going to carve it up. We're missing a class winger and flyhalf at the moment. Marky and Carter are sorely missed.
Ironically, now that we have JAS we could field Carter more comfortably.
 

The Ghost of Raelene

Simon Poidevin (60)
I saw Carter Gordon liked a lot of the Wallabies' winning posts. Hope he misses it and comes back, got a sinking feeling that he's going to carve it up. We're missing a class winger and flyhalf at the moment. Marky and Carter are sorely missed.
Lets hope he has to watch a Lions Test next year on TV the same weekend he has a Q Cup game v in Mackay.
 

dru

David Wilson (68)
Yeah Nawaqanitawase was thrust straight into the cauldron too and we weren’t saying how weak league is.

I dont at all follow mungo, though I do respect their athletes. All the same, did Marky-Mark make his professional NRL debut for the Kangaroos against, I dont know, what is the equivalent of England at Twickers?
 

Dctarget

Tim Horan (67)
I dont at all follow mungo, though I do respect their athletes. All the same, did Marky-Mark make his professional NRL debut for the Kangaroos against, I dont know, what is the equivalent of England at Twickers?
the equivalent would be straight into SOO. My point is he made the transition seamlessly as well because he's a freak. Anyway league are just jealous they'll never get to recreate the past weekend, the Kangaroos actually won their little toy championship and no one noticed or cared.
 

KOB1987

John Eales (66)
I don't care now. Good luck to them. They have a huge league and should just enjoy it.

Part of me hopes there might be a few guys think "not such a bad option over there look how JS is going"
that kind of gets covered in this article:

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/sp...y/news-story/89a1183e4496b0ad975a48fe89804393

“The birth of a star”.
Former NRL gun Joseph-Aukuso Sua'ali'i had the UK’s rugby media fawning and their supporters suddenly worried after his man-of-the-match performance on debut for the Wallabies at Twickenham.

The hype lived up to the billing as 21-year-old Sua'ali'i made a statement at the home of rugby, and now has millions of British & Irish Lions fans wondering if their tour to Australia next year might not be the walkover many were predicting.

With all eyes on the $5 million man playing his first professional rugby game, Sua'ali'i set up Australia’s first try, made several offloads, won three kick-offs and completed a sensational catch-and-pass off a chip kick to announce himself as the real deal.

The Times columnist Stuart Barnes wrote: “Earlier this week, very few England watchers would have known the name of the Wallabies’ No 13, Joseph-Aukuso Sua'ali'i, but here we were, a little short of 40 minutes on the clock and thousands at Twickenham were producing a collective gasp of relief as England finally managed to bring down the 21-year-old debutant. The home crowd had recognised the birth of a star.”

Fellow Times analyst Stephen Jones wrote: “But what they did have was Joseph-Aukuso Sua'ali'i, playing his first game of senior rugby union after being poached from rugby league in Australia. He should have been a panicky old sight, he should have been hounded to destruction. Instead the young man played gloriously, made a try out of a breathtaking pop pass out of a tackle and all in all played magnificently. Almost all the converts to union from rugby league in Australia has been useless, but here is a man that may well be worth the monster fee that has been paid for him.”

Former England playmaker Andy Goode said on X: “This guy Joseph Sua'ali'i is a rock star! Skills from another planet!”

Dylan Coetzee wrote for Planet Rugby: “There were question marks when Schmidt picked the million-dollar man but he produced the goods. Joseph-Aukuso Sua'ali'i, remember that name because today a special Wallaby was born.”

The Times’ rugby correspondent Alex Lowe said the result was a bonus for the Lions series. “Nobody wants to build up a Lions tour that everyone expects the Lions to win 3-0, you want there to be jeopardy and a challenge,” Lowe said.

“And if Australia have uncovered in Sua'ali'i a new global superstar then that’s just brilliant for the game. He’ll bring rugby league fans into union, he’ll attract other league players to come back, he’ll attract the schoolboys who like him play union and league to choose union, that’s why they’ve spent $5 million on a three-year deal for this guy.”

Veteran rugby writer Alex Spink wrote for Planet Rugby: “In Sua'ali'i they saw a superstar to lure eyeballs from the NRL, the AFL, the baggy greens and Matildas and back to a sport which, according to a recent report, ranks only ninth in popularity in Australia.”

The Daily Mail’s rugby correspondent Chris Foy said: “Sua'ali'i is going to light up this code”.

Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt, who had received criticism for playing Sua'ali'i just four weeks after he’d joined camp, said the risk paid off.


“Joseph obviously got a few kick-offs back for us, he’s a bit of an aerial freak but at the same time it was a good learning experience for Joseph as well,” Schmidt said.

“I know there were some doubts expressed about him being selected and the risk. I think people would now see the opportunity of involving a young man like that. Particularly the way he prepared during the week, I thought he was really professional.

“He certainly has a rugby pedigree, albeit having played a few years of professional rugby league, which has made him a really professional young man.

“He is incredibly diligent around his preparation. That diligence pays off in the way that he performs. He’s still probably finding his feet in the game. There are subtleties that are very different, but with that diligent work ethic, that professionalism and the athleticism that he possesses, I thought it was a really confidence-boosting debut.”

Adam Kyriacou wrote for Planet Rugby: “The former rugby league man was outstanding with and without the ball as he demonstrated his skill-set all afternoon, showing no signs of nerves on the big occasion. Joe Schmidt and Rugby Australia have got themselves a gem and if this is his first game we can’t wait for more.”

And Mike Henson on BBC Sport said: “Schmidt’s big gamble of thrusting new rugby league recruit Joseph-Aukuso Sua'ali'i into midfield for his first union game since his schooldays paid off handsomely.

“The 21-year-old jigged across Twickenham’s turf barefooted before the warm-ups, getting the size of the stage, and looked completely at home as he set up Tom Wright’s try with the most delicious finger roll this side of a sushi platter.”

 
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