You still here, cyclo?
Yeah. Why? Did you think I had, or should have gone somewhere?
You still here, cyclo?
Having had 36 hours to consider this further, I have come to the view that the thing the Wallabies are lacking the most is mental hardness. By mental toughness I am referring to the additional hunger, urgency, consistency, desperation and self belief that differentiate the great players/teams from the rest of the pack.
I'm of the view our next coach should have international experience. not just someone who is good at super15 level. maybe jack white or someone..
if link wants to coach the wobs make him an ass coach first then move him up.
Yeah. Why? Did you think I had, or should have gone somewhere?
Some Info. This is our cattle. What robbie has to work with.
Hookers
Stephen Moore
Tatafu Polota-Nau
Saia Fainga'a
Huia Edmonds
Damien Fitzpatrick
Adam Freier
Ben Whittaker
Ryan Tyrrell
Sean Hardman
James Hanson
John Ulugia
Props
Pekahou Cowan
Kieran Longbottom
Tim Fairbrother
Matt Dunning, Nic Henderson
Greg Holmes
Ben Daley
Dayna Edwards
Jack Kennedy
Laurie Weeks
Al Baxter
Sekope Kepu
Benn Robinson
Jeremy Tilse
Dan Palmer
Guy Shepherdson
Ben Alexander
Salesi Ma'afu
Jerry Yanuyanutawa
Locks
Nathan Sharpe
Tom Hockings
Sam Wykes
Luke Jones
Will Caldwell
Dean Mumm
Chris Thomson
Cam Jowitt
Hendrik Roodt
James Horwill
Van Humphries
Rob Simmons
Justin Harrison,
Mark Chisholm
Peter Kimlin
Ben Hand
Loose
Richard Brown
David Pocock
Matt Hodgson
Richard Stanford
Ben McCalman
Leroy Houston
Daniel Braid ??????????? KIWI, NO?
Adam Byrnes
Scott Higginbotham
Poutasi Luafutu
Ezra Taylor
Lei Tomiki
Phil Waugh
Wycliff Palu
Beau Robinson
Ben Mowen
David Dennis
Chris Alcock
Ben Coridas
George Smith
Stephen Hoiles
Rocky Elsom
Mitchell Chapman
Sitaleki Timani
Henry Vanderglas
Halfbacks
Will Genia, Ben Lucas
Richard Kingi
Chris O'Young
Brett Sheehan
Mark Swanepoel
Luke Burgess
Josh Holmes
Josh Valentine
Patrick Phibbs
Tens
Stefano Hunt
Kurtley Beale
Daniel Halangahu
Quade Cooper,
Matt Giteau
Christian Lealiifano
Matt To'omua
Centres
Ryan Cross
Sam Harris
Josh Tatupu
Mitch Inman
Morgan Turinui
Anthony Fainga'a
Will Chambers
Berrick Barnes
Tom Carter
Rob Horne
Rory Sidey
Stirling Mortlock
Tyrone Smith
Back Three
Digby Ioane
Peter Hynes
Brandon Va'aulu
Blair Connor
Luke Morahan
Haig Sare
Nick Cummins
Dane Haylett-Petty
Mark Bartholomeusz
Lachlan Turner
Nemani Nadolo FIJIAN NOW, I BELIEVE
Francis Fainifo
Alfi Mafi
Afusipa Taumoepeau
Soseni Anesi
Drew Mitchell
Cameron Shepherd
Adam Ashley-Cooper
Pat McCabe
James O'Connor
these are the squads as of the start of super14 this year.
Just this thread, I mean. It's like meeting people you know in a brothel.
I don't know it might have been posted in this thread but if you were to dump Deans and bring in any coach you want, who else would he pick?
I think the tight 5 is where a lot of problems start. They got man handled by the blacks, same as the Boks. The back row was always going to struggle.
To beat the ABs the first thing you need to do is dominate up front. Else just forget it. Does Australia have the people who can? Not against this AB tight 5 I don't think. Sorry boys, hard thing to say but I think that's a BIG part of the problem.
I think this AB team will go undefeated this year. Nobody can live with them.
I am just trying to work out how to take that little gem, Scarfy!!
Anyway, I was just here with a mate!!
http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-union/u...a-legacy-he-helped-create-20100802-113eu.html
Deans is up against a legacy he helped create
SPIRO ZAVOS
August 3, 2010
Hoist by his own petard. Wallabies coach Robbie Deans endured the acute pain on Saturday night during the Bledisloe Cup Test at Melbourne of seeing several players he developed into stars when he coached the Crusaders destroy his team. But would the Franks brothers, Brad Thorn, Richie McCaw, Kieran Read or Daniel Carter have been the great players they have become if they had been developed by Australian Super rugby coaches? They might not have.
Deans cleverly played Thorn as a second-rower, rather than as a loose forward. And in doing so he maintained the Crusaders' tactic (now standard practice around the world, except in some Australian sides) of having a scrummaging, hard-yards second-rower (Todd Blackadder before Thorn) to complement a taller, jumping partner. Deans, though, spent hours getting Thorn's jumping right by practising with him, having Thorn catch an old boot. On Saturday night Thorn won his one lineout throw and made important passes in both of Cory Jane's tries.
When Carter first came into the Crusaders squad, Deans asked him what his goals were for the season. "To take Mehrts' [Andrew Mehrtens's] place," he replied. "Good answer," Deans told him. A common sight at the end of the Crusaders' practices was Deans teaching Carter all the tricks of how to kick a rugby ball.
On Saturday night, the sorcerer's apprentice displayed an almost uncanny knack (but we know where it came from) of placing his kicks exactly where they had to be. The All Blacks scored three tries from Carter's kicks. Two of them, Mils Muliaina's second and Joe Rokocoko's, came from pinpoint kick-offs. McCaw's try came from Carter's diagonal kick across to Adam Ashley-Cooper seconds after the Wallabies fullback had been injured.
The point of all of this is that Australian rugby has had players with tremendous talent. But that talent has generally not been fully developed by our Super rugby coaches. David Lyons, for instance, had size, power and speed as a youngster. But he never became an all-skills player. He remained a non-passing barger all his career. Phil Waugh has never been coached to have the running game that McCaw has developed. The case of Kurtley Beale is illustrative. He was far more talented than Carter as a youngster. But his prodigious talents have not been properly developed by the Waratahs coaching staff.
Will Genia and Quade Cooper are players who have fulfilled their tremendous talents through specific coaching by Deans. Cooper's passing genius and the way he takes pressure off other players was missed on Saturday night. Without him, Genia seemed to be Stan Laurel without Oliver Hardy to play off. The Melbourne Test massacre revealed that too many players are coming to Deans with flaws and a lack of nous in their games that should have been picked up by their Super rugby coaches. Matt Giteau, for instance, failed to find touch after Ben Franks was given a yellow card. Drew Mitchell did not seem to know that two yellow cards equals a red card. Richard Brown's tackling technique is wrong. Berrick Barnes is predictably careless in his kicking. This brings us to the Test at Christchurch on Saturday. The Wallabies won five of their first six Tests there up to 1958. Then the All Blacks won six Tests there in a row. The Wallabies won their Christchurch Test in 1998 and regained the Bledisloe Cup. This was a period of Wallabies strength when the team was dominated by ACT Brumbies stars developed by Rod Macqueen, Australia's equivalent to Deans.
In 2002, the Wallabies were on a three-Test winning streak. The streak ended in the rain and bitter cold of Christchurch. Twelve of the All Blacks squad were from Deans's Crusaders team, a side that has won more than 80 per cent of its home matches. This victory confirmed Christchurch a New Zealand stronghold.
So the final twist of the petard for Deans is that on Saturday his Wallabies have to smash a citadel he has helped build.
sums up a lot of the problems with Australian Rugby. Our plaers are not coached well enough at S15 level.