All positions up for grabs with a well rounded RaboDirect Rebels squad
By Rebels Media Unit
Imagine sitting at a table, with Rod Macqueen, Damien Hill and Mark Bakewell, musing as to a particular starting XV for any given match.
Pre-season matches against Tonga, Fiji and seven time champions the Crusaders will likely be typical in the fact that all members of the 32 man RaboDirect Rebels squad will receive opportunities.
Furthermore the rules governing the replacement’s bench both in numbers and substitution parameters are relaxed during ‘trial’ matches, meaning that the coaches will be able to tinker with selections and combinations during the matches.
Of course, the willingness to alter a team too dramatically will be tempered with the desire to form combinations and rehearse patterns – as well as ideally getting all important wins on the board leading into the first regular season match against the NSW Waratahs.
Who will earn starting berths and establish themselves will be fascinating, with battles for incumbency taking place between players who will also be pushing for the dual holy grail’s of rugby selection – to represent the Wallabies and play in the prestigious quadrennial tournament known as the Rugby World Cup.
The final regular season matches of the 2011 Super Rugby calendar will be 17 and 18 of June (with the Rabodirect Rebels hosting the Force), and the final on the 9 of July. The 2011 Rugby World Cup commences on 9 September, two months after the Super Rugby squads conclude the longest Southern Hemisphere domestic season since the game went professional.
There will be no certainties in the RaboDirect Rebels selections, something that veteran Stirling Mortlock acknowledged.
"The squad (that) has assembled is extremely strong," Mortlock said.
"Usually in the team you have eight to 10 guys, maybe even 12, who you'd say they're in those positions and there's a few up for grabs.
"That's certainly not the case in this team, everywhere you look from the front-row, back-row, centres, there are a lot of guys who are putting up their hand and it's a great environment to be part of."
Quoting the overused rugby cliché that it all begins up front, the RaboDirect Rebels will be able to call on the services of four outstanding props, three of whom have been test capped, representing a mammoth 251 games of Super Rugby experience.
The props available consists of one ex-All Black in Greg Somerville, two ex-Wallabies in Rodney Blake and Nic Henderson, and arguably Australia’s most noted up and comer Laurie Weeks.
Somerville has experience in playing in both sides of the scrum, although he was considered a front line tighthead inNew Zealand, while both Weeks and Blake are typical anchors at number three.Henderson played his three tests at loosehead.
At hooker veteran Adam Freier – with 99 Super Rugby caps and 25 test appearances – leads two talented rakes in former Wellington based Ged Robinson, and Queensland Academy number two Heath Tessmann.
This gives the Rabodirect Rebels seven players in the front row that give a balance of experience, raw power and size, mobility and rising talent.
In the second row, four locks will give the Melbourne based team plenty of options, especially considering that three of the tall timber are precisely 201cm (Hugh Pyle, Kevin O’Neill and Adam Byrnes), while Luke Jones is a measly 197cm!
They are led by two senior locks.O’Neill is a one test All Black, and former Crusader and Chief, while Byrnes has played for former Heineken Cup champions Leinster as well as the Waratahs and Reds.
One of the youngest RaboDirect Rebels, Jones holds the honour of being the first forward to sign a professional contract while still in school, while Pyle has cut his teeth with Warringah and the Brumbies academy.
Rounding out the lineout options is former Highlanders captain Hoani Macdonald, who can play at lock or at blindside. The experienced lock has represented both the Junior All Blacks and New Zealand Maori, and spent time overseas with the Newport Gwent Dragons.
In the flanks, Tom Chamberlin, Michael Lipman, Jarrod Saffy, Gareth Delve and Tim Davidson compile an impressive list of option for the RaboDirect Rebels back row.
Saffy comes into the team as an NRL premiership winner, and has also represented Australia at all major rugby levels in union with the exception of the Wallabies.
Davidson and Lipman are known to Assistant Coaches, Hill and Bakewell respectively. Davidson is a former SydneyUniversity captain, while Lipman played in Bath for six seasons, earning ten test caps for England.
Another international in Welshman, Delve adds experience, while Chamberlin is a product of the New Zealand ‘school of flankers’, having played for North Harbour and the Blues.
Scrumhalf promises to be one of the most closely contested positions in the team, with one of the most experienced number nines in Australia, Sam Cordingley partnering young guns in Wallabies tourist and Sevens representative Nick Phipps and former Queenslander Richard Kingi.
In keeping with the time honoured tradition of being the feistiest position on the rugby field, all three have said that they are pushing for a starting spot.
While respect for each other is high, veteran Cordingley has said he is not in the team just to act as a mentor for the young scrumhalves. Phipps and Kingi have said they are chomping at the bit to push for incumbency, with both having played second fiddle to the Wallabies first choice number nine Will Genia in the last year in the test side and Reds respectively.
In the vital flyhalf position, two differing conductors will present interesting options for running the RaboDirect Rebels backline.
Former London Wasp and England number ten Danny Cipriani will look forward to showcasing his wares in the Southern Hemisphere for the first time, while former Kobe Steel, Western Force, Taranaki, Viadana and Eastwood star James Hilgendorf brings valuable utility value to the team – but he will likely feature as a first five.
In the centres, a mix of experience, versatility, speed and raw power will present a litany of options for the RaboDirect Rebels.
Stirling Mortlock, Cooper Vuna and Afusipa Taumoepeau present three deadlock class playing options, with all three tipping the scales at over 100kg.
Mortlock is an 80 test veteran and former Wallabies captain, Vuna brings league experience from the Newcastle Knights and NZ Warriors, while Taumoepeau has played at Sevens level and is like Mortlock, a former Brumby.
Lachlan Mitchell, a speedster who played for SydneyUniversity, will give explosiveness in the field.
While Mortlock is regarded as a specialist centre, he has played at 10 and 12 during his career, while the other three midfielders have had stints in the three quarters as well.
The back three for the RaboDirect Rebels are as diverse as they are potent, with a verifiable arsenal of options to select from.
Luke Rooney, JP Du Plessis, Julian Huxley, Mark Gerrard, Peter Betham will fight it out for positions – and like the bulk of the Victorian Super rugby team’s backs, provide versatility in being able to play most positions in line.
Huxley and Gerrard, both former Wallabies and Brumbies, bring the necessary experience to the team, being regarded as cool headed players that will bring polish to the RaboDirect Rebels game.
Du Plessis, a former South African age group representative, has experience in league, as does Rooney, who has won a Premiership and played internationally for the Kangaroos. The former Penrith Panther has been fast tracking his education for the fifteen a side version of the game, playing for Toulon and recently Hawke’s Bay.
Betham has been a product of the Australian system, playing with Wallaby Kurtley Beale in his schoolboy years, while playing for the Brumbies and SydneyUniversity. Many believe the 21-year-old to be a future test star.