Dwyer's overly flat alignment was a big part of the 1995 downfall. There has to be a balance. It was even flatter than what Cooper does (and I am one of those who talked about barnes standing too deep).
Dwyer took an experienced team with fantastic talent and came away with a terrible result. Deans took an inexperienced team with fantastic talent and came away with an average result.
Dwyer is therefore the coaching messiah?
Not to mention that in almost every article he infers the referees are biased against the wallabies!
The truth about the 1995 RWC isn't as supportive for Deans situationas you would point out. It is bad for Dwyer in selection mode though.
On the injury front and these players should not have toured most probably:-
1. Kearns - chronic ankle and foot problem.
2. Willie O. - Knee held together with strapping tape
3. Horan - less than 12 months and no Rugby after destroying his knee in Super 10 against Natal I think it was. At the time there were questions about him running again let alone playing.
4. Little - knee injury like Horan, just not as bad.
5. Campo - Chronic knee and ankle injuries
6. Gregan - grossly out of form, to the extent in 1996 he would be dropped for the amateur Country Cockatoo player Steve Merrick.
There were other niggly injuries throughout the side but these injured players couldn't train properly let alone play to a high level. Dwyer did have an "out" though, in 1994 they defeated all comers and played very very well to boot. It was the last harrah of the 1991 squad and playbook.
There was another insidous factor at play at the 95 RWC which Dwyer found himself, perhaps unknowingly, compromised by. That of the rebel World Rugby Corporation. It says a lot about the mind set of the team when the Captain (Kearns) has signed with the rebels along with a quite a few others of the senior players. Evidence suggests that Kearns signed or was in serious negotiations with the WRC during the 1994 test series and he makes comment which could be viewed as confirming that when accepting the Bledisloe Cup after beating the AB in Sydney. This is a factor because on top of being injured key players were distracted from their performance by a looming split from the ARU.
Contrast with Deans, he made the same errors with regard to injured and out of form players, and I alluded to this before and when the squad was announced. Dwyer has freely admitted his errors with the side since 1995 in a number of articles and interviews.
Dwyer's sides, where ever he coached were always meticulously prepared and were at the cutting edge of tactics and fitness (excepting his failure to drop injured and out of form individuals in '95 as previously mentioned). This contrasts with Deans whose Wallaby sides have for the most part looked uncoached and bereft of structures. There is no doubt the Wallabies are as physically fit as any Tier 1 side, so that is no area of failure. As I said in the years leading up to the 95 RWC Dwyer's sides performance and played very well. The Deans coached Wallabies have played well in maybe half a dozen games at best in 4 years,
regardless of results.
One last point I have to agree with a lot of the criticism of the Refs. It isn't that they are biased, that is an allegation of corruption and significantly better evidence would be required for that. It is simply that too many referees are not competent. Again for me that is a Coaching and Selection issue for which Obrien is responsible, as people are continually put in situations beyond their ability to perform.
BTW I think Barnes just had a poor game last night with the forward passes, his handling of most other aspects of the game was pretty good.