Slim 293
Stirling Mortlock (74)
None of our other potential 6s have shown to be better than a fully fit Elsom...
The Oz chimes in...
The Oz chimes in...
Australia cannot win the World Cup without Rocky Elsom
Bret Harris From: The Australian August 13
ROCKY Elsom has received heavy criticism following the Wallabies' loss to the All Blacks in Auckland last Saturday.
Some argued Elsom should not only be stripped of the captaincy but be dropped from the team.
As one of the greatest Wallabies of his generation, Elsom is held to high standards.
But there is a perception he did not work hard enough in Auckland, which is demonstrably wrong. Elsom, who is his own worst critic, would be the first to admit that he was not at his best against the All Blacks, but how on earth could anyone have expected him to be.
After recovering from hamstring and ankle syndesmosis injuries, Elsom is effectively in pre-season mode. If you forget about his sole game for the Brumbies against Western Force in the Super Rugby season, Elsom has played just three matches, which all happened to be Tests, against Samoa, South Africa and New Zealand.
And yet his performance against the All Blacks was actually quite solid.
If you use match statistics as a guide _ and yes, stats can be misleading _ Elsom had a very high work-rate in the Auckland Test.
To be sure, Elsom uncharacteristically missed a few tackles, which is probably the main reason he has copped so much flak.
But Elsom (12) was second only to secondrower James Horwill (16) in ball carries; second only (30) to openside flanker David Pocock (41) in breakdown involvements and was one of five forwards to reach double figures in tackles.
Pocock topped the tackle count with 16, while hooker Stephen Moore made 11 and number eight Ben McCalman, Horwill and Elsom effected 10 each.
Significantly, Elsom led the way in dominant tackles with four. His total involvements measured at 52, were second only to Pocock with 63.
Given that Elsom also scored one of the Wallabies' two tries, it was not a bad effort from someone who supposedly did not play well.
Another reason Elsom attracts heat is because of his "seagulling" on the wings.
Seagulling is an old-fashioned expression which describes a lazy forward bludging out wide.
It has virtually no relevance to the way Elsom plays the game.
In rugby league parlance, Elsom is an "edge/middle" player, which means he has the athleticism and speed to play out wide and the size and strength to play in tight. One of Elsom's strengths is his ability to read the play and to anticipate where he needs to be on the field in attack and defence.
To describe this as "seagulling" is idiocy. Elsom went close to scoring early in the first half against the All Blacks when he received a pass on the left wing and then scored towards the end of the game after taking a pass on the right wing. Yet he still recorded the second-highest involvement rate (0.65) behind Poccok (0.79) among players in the starting line-up.
Coach Robbie Deans has taken a calculated risk Elsom will be at his best _ or at least near it _ when it matters most, in the knockout stages of the World Cup in October. But Deans has little choice. He would be acutely aware the Wallabies cannot win the World Cup without Elsom at his best.