Which rivals? England peaked for the 2015 RWC in 2016 because of poor selections, coaching and management leading up to the world cup, and the All Blacks managed a seamless transition this year because of (partially) good succession planning but moreso because they have superior depth to every other rugby nation.
Our record against the other 2 countries we have played at this stage is no different to any other year. Our lead up to the RWC was far from ideal but we were still navigated into the final, sure we had some luck too, but in the process we expended a lot of our resources. We are currently in the midst of a serious rebuilding process and I couldn't give a rats if it's not bearing fruit in year 1 as long as we are heading in the right direction.
I don't doubt that the results this year are below even what the most pessimistic would have predicted, last weekend was a classic opportunity blown, as were 2 of the England tests. What I do doubt is that playing another half a dozen rookies would have yielded a better result and more importantly made us stronger in the future.
NRL is completely different, it's a domestic competition, the clubs have salary caps to work within and they need to blend a mix of rising talent, dirt trackers and the Origin stars. Just because it's pumped in the media doesn't make it anywhere near the standard or pressure of international rugby.
So let stick to the current not live in the past.
Rivals – the ones we play regularly we struggle to beat like the Pumas who are a bigger threat each game as the improve unlike the static Wallabies and the Boks who even though they are dealing with a new coach, quotas, and injuries has already touched us up when they went basic old school with zero attack and all kicks.
The AB’s should always be the benchmark. As you highlight; they do what we don’t with the same humans as we have. Just minus the BS and in a coordinated manner not a cluster.
It’s depressing as you highlight that our record against the rivals is the same as other years. I think we have set the bar pretty low and yet we still struggle with it year in year out and the closet we come to change is the excuses.
England conveniently is a good example of what happens when you clear the decks of the BS, excuses, long-term acceptance of mediocre performances, institutionalised thinking and methods (one of the boys club coaches after another). Almost overnight with most of the same cattle – results. They even had the stones to pull in a teen unknown who is a world beater in Itoje and keep bringing in the new blood.
Actually, a lot of people saw these results coming and can see it continuing. This team, its direction and coaching regime is best equated to canned fruit – it’s the preserved poor quality twin of the fresh stuff that was past its best a long time ago.
This could apply equally to our Super Rugby teams -
it's a domestic competition, the clubs have salary caps to work within and they need to blend a mix of rising talent with the old hard-heads. Just because it's pumped in the media doesn't make it anywhere near the standard of international rugby.
As for the reference to the teens, it holds for the AFL as well. The Bulldogs were reliant on at least 2 x 19 year old this year. They didn’t make excuse for them, they let their on-field performance speak for themselves. Athleticism and talent don’t need the medias help. The only sport that seems to have evidence that you improve with age (in to the 30’s) is distance cycling.