Good Article in the Australian today about Kurtley at 10
Kurtley Beale on way to being perfect 10
IF there was one bright spot in an otherwise dismal display by the Wallabies in Pretoria, it was the impressive performance of born-again five-eighth Kurtley Beale.
With a short haircut, a trimmer physique and a different number on the back of his gold jersey, Beale looked like a new man.
He was certainly a far cry from the out-of-sorts man who bumbled his way through the Wallabies' loss to the All Blacks in the opening round of the Rugby Championship in Sydney.
In the absence of the injured and disenchanted Quade Cooper, Beale assumed the chief playmaking role for the first time in his 30 Tests. There was never any doubt about Beale possessing the skills to play the position - he was a schoolboy superstar at five-eighth and has played about half of his Super Rugby games for the Waratahs and Rebels at No 10. It was more about whether he was mentally ready for the responsibility of directing the team.
Well, he was ready for that and more. While so much of Australia's game was falling apart around him, Beale maintained his composure.
Cooper had criticised Wallabies coach Robbie Deans for selecting an attacking five-eighth like himself and asking him to direct a defensive game plan.
There were no such shackles on Beale. If anything, he was guilty of trying to do too much attacking, possibly because his opportunities were few and far between.
He demonstrated his attacking intent by standing very flat.
Unfortunately, the Wallabies forwards were beaten at the breakdown and failed to provide him with a platform.
Still, Beale never stopped trying to make something happen.
It was Beale who made the try-assist for the only five-pointer to replacement back Mike Harris.
Receiving a pass from Anthony Fainga'a in the midfield, Beale used his footwork to get around winger Francois Hougaard before flicking the ball on to Harris. The combination between Beale and the Wallabies will get better the more he plays in the playmaker role.
Early in the second half, Beale made a break down the right side of the field, but lacked support.
He also executed a beautifully weighted cross-kick, but winger Digby Ioane hesitated for a fraction of a second and missed it.
On another occasion, Beale threatened the defence when he touched the ball a second time in a movement, but it broke down when the ball went to ground.
This is something Beale has to do more of. As they used to say about Mark Ella, if Beale touches the ball once, something is likely to happen. If he touches it twice, the team will make a break. If he touches it three times, they will score.
To be sure, Beale's effort was not flawless. It was his long, floating pass into touch that allowed Springbok winger Bryan Habana to take a quick throw and end up scoring his second try.
There was also an errant chip-kick that saw Springboks captain and inside centre Jean de Villiers launch a counter-attack.
But Deans is a coach who is tolerant of positive mistakes and the only errors Beale made were from good intent.
He has shown that the Wallabies do not need Cooper, who is at loggerheads with the ARU over his contract renegotiation.
When James O'Connor returns from injury, Deans will have two playmaker/strike players with the ability to interchange seamlessly from five-eighth to fullback.
In the meantime, Beale is re-establishing himself in the role that he first established himself. And he looks comfortable.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/new...being-perfect-10/story-e6frg6n6-1226486167097