RedsHappy
Tony Shaw (54)
This is all speculation, but it does seem worth discussing given we were the only S15 country to conduct late 2011 EOYTs.
Northern tour has Super consequences
April 3, 2012 AAP
IT WAS scheduled to raise Australian Rugby Union revenue in a World Cup season but Australia's Super Rugby teams appear to be paying the price for the Wallabies' northern tour late last year.
After six rounds of Super Rugby, the sixth-placed Brumbies are the only Australian (3-2) team with a positive record as the South African and New Zealand teams have started better.
Injuries and a lack of depth have also contributed to below-par performances.
But the concerning form of some of Australia's best players - leading Wallabies who played both in the World Cup and then backed up a month later to travel to Britain - hasn't helped their provincial sides.
Whereas the All Blacks and Springboks went on holiday after their World Cup campaigns ended in October, the Wallabies had to stay up for the two-match tour and couldn't sign off until after an impressive 24-18 win over Wales in Cardiff.
Few who backed up to play the Barbarians in London and Wales - matches designed to boost Australian Rugby Union coffers left low by a reduction in 2011 Tests - are playing near their best and some look jaded.
Dual World Cup winner and former Wallabies selector Tim Horan said only Waratahs utility back Adam Ashley-Cooper and Western Force skipper David Pocock were displaying good form.
'You shouldn't have an end-of-season tour after a World Cup but due to the ARU's financial constraints the Wallabies had to tour and play for an extra 1½ months,'' Horan said yesterday.
''If it was more about the welfare of players that wouldn't have happened. They should have been given 10-12 weeks off. There's a fatigue factor.''