As I (and others) expressed way back in June, the young guys would benefit greatly from having a few old heads in the squad (and on the field) in this type of situation. Obviously Robbie Deans doesn't agree with that theory (as he didn't select that type of player when he had the opportunity), but despite my lack of international rugby coaching experience, I'm going to stick with it.
The trouble was that when we gave these opinions deploring the lack of hard heads in the first squad of the year, we struggled to identify which hard heads should have been included. Trawling through the names of the S14 players the only name we could come up with as missing belonged to Van Humphries.
When the tour party was named I wrote that our dirt tracker team would have trouble against the hard heads of Leicester and Munster even knowing that the best of their players would be quarantined by national teams. It would be a good experience to play against such folk said I.
But then Munster had a horrid run of injuries. In the last game they played before they met Oz, whilst the Wallabies were in Hong Kong, they were down to 16 contracted players, taking into account 9 others protected by Ireland.
Even considering the execrable weather and the home crowd, it was galling to see how our forwards played against a provincial pack so stricken by absences and which had uncontracted players or those with not much pro experience.
That was the worst thing about the defeat to Munster, and contrariwise, the best part for them.