I knew that the Visionaries would be using the win as PROOF positive that all is great with the Wallabies. ie Gagger "case closed". This was the easiest of the 3N games the Wallabies are going to get. The win was good and showed a marked improvement in the play of certain players which had been seriously criticised by me and others. Those criticisms stand and will be resurrected next week if last nights efforts are not replicated. If this is the one game where the Wallabies play with application, passion and desire then I will be indeed re-stating my issues with Deans et al. This is the key, they need to replicate this commitment, the result IMO is not as important to me as the method of play.
(I still prefer Radicals, Fanboys and Gonads for these purposes...I will keep trying...I was hoping Scarf, ever the good wit, would intrude and issue the definitive nomenclature to offset Gagger's desire to besmirch the poor Radicals with late night text editing, 'fixes', flattering language for his faction, and so on. But we Radicals all quietly took that as a compliment. Oh, and I also cannot help noting that there's some new Gonads emerging).
There have been some good posts on last night's game, so I'll just try and add my own pieces:
Commentators of understandably patriotic bent often celebrate the victor's win in a manner that under-analyses the loser's contribution to it, or facilitation of it. Then positive predictions are made for the next triumph, without sufficient crediting of what might or will occur when the loser's contribution is either reversed, or heavily modified by the same team, or another one. The infusions of optimism post Perth v England, and then the shock of Sydney, is a good example, as England rapidly learnt and awoke.
SA were appalling last night, truly appalling. Scarf is quite right on this. Australia only matched SA on try count, the difference in score line were the penalties and constant ill-discipline gifted endlessly by SA. Two yellow cards same team (quite rare in Tests), terrible back line attack and cohesion from SA, Habana and Smit in truly shocking from, forwards lacking characteristic intensity and fight-back, this SA looks like a team in self-deconstruct mode, losing even basic basic motivation for long periods. Something has gone badly wrong inside this team and its management. The majority of us I think voted only weeks back that SA would surely win the Tris. The decline since has been staggering, but we're certainly benefitting, let's not kid ourselves as to the degree to which SA's troubles contributed to this win.
Yes, great to have the win, the Wallabies were up on Sydney and Brisbane-Ireland, no doubt. I agree that the intensity of the forwards in general, much improved breakdown work, Elsom's 'revival',, Pocock's now world-class talent and consistency, a seemingly revitalised Giteau (but we have seen this before), Genia way up on Sydney, were all positive factors. Critically, as others have commented, the aspect I liked most was that the team itself generally seemed to be far more committed and psychologically 'up' for longer. But this this shouldn't be over-praised, it's what you rightly want a top team to be (and one whose cost is $30m pa), it should be expected as just a baseline for 80+% of all games; we are all so pleased as its absence has been far more the norm than its presence.
But there were serious deficiencies that an SA (or a Bulls or Stormers) in a better head space would have made costly. Our back line - after 5 Tests this season - has only ever been really 'electric' for good periods in Perth. Last night, there were lots of poor passes, non cohesive combinations, as fp says so well, 'one out' plays reaching ahead of support, handling errors, and attacking patterns that seemed more 'on the spot, let's try this' than really deeply rehearsed and consistent. After 5 2010 Tests our back line play should be far better than this, it really is not improving much. And, just as worrying, we started to leak tries to the opposition in the latter part of the game, the old black Wallabies dog was back on the park.
My achievement marker for RD to (just) be given the benefit of the doubt was at least 3 good wins this Tris. But a proper expectation should be a Tri-Nations won. If we win next week, enthusiasm will be more rationally based, a positive trend line might be starting. (I hate to recall it, but let's remember Brisbane last year after the victory - 'these new Wallabies under Deans are going somewhere special'...well, on we went to Wellington, Tokyo....)