Australia vs Yanks centres and further general musings - redefining midfield roles
I was looking at Robbie Deans team for this week, where he opted to play Horne at 12 and Ant at 13. My instinctive response was dismay, after all, how could a man as obviously capable and rugby savvy as Dingo not fathom he was playing the two options (notice I didn't say best options necessarily) not in their natural positions? Ant is a workhorse with decent defensive skills, a moderate running game and aggression over the ball, and Horne is bone-rattling hitter and tackle shredder (at his best). Surely they are the wrong way around?
Being an ex-backrower, I have no clue as to why this interests me as much as it does, but I believe that sometime since 2008-2009, the roles of international (and arguably Super Rugby) midfielders have been swapped to some degree. I lived for a long time on a diet of Horan bobbing and weaving and slipping tackles at 12, with Herbert, Mortlock et al. and even Digby Ioane (for a season) savagely and brutally winning the battle at the gainline, their immense power, acceleration and running lines putting the fear of god into the opposition.
Then in 2008 I sat down and watched as Ma'a Nonu really exploded onto the scene, his physique making him somewhat of an oddity in the ranks of Test 12's of the time, with maybe Jauzion excepted (I actually thought at the time that He and Conrad smith should swap, and that Uncle Ted was blind for not seeing it). But what really did it for me was watching how effective, individually and in combination, Jamie Roberts and Brian O'Driscoll were on the 2009 Lions tour. Suddenly here was some hulk throwing his weight around, crashing over the gainline, defending like a man possessed, offloading, getting his legs pumping and setting up his silky-stepping, razor sharp partner for breaks. Classic I thought, bloody brilliant. Except the Neanderthal had 12 on and the cheeky little bugger had 13.
Thus in my head began percolating ideas about how the roles of centres would evolve over say the next 8-10 years. Now I'm not the first to say this (In fact the highly impressive Scott Allen has been driving home the point fairly often around here) but I firmly believe that the role of the 12 and 13 are subtly different now than they used to be.
Nowadays In a 12, I believe coaches look for (in priority order)
- Physical presence and contact skill at the gainline (in attack and defense)
- short passing skills or offloading
- understanding with 10 and running lines
- low error rate
- tactical kicking game
- flair
- skills on the ground, for the pilfer or counter ruck --> less important with new interpretations.
In a 13 I think they look for
- Ability to set up back 3 (distribution)
- low error rate
- Defensive ability (mostly communication and tackle accuracy, dominant tackling a real bonus)
- usually speed and footwork
- Support play, particularly on inside breaks
- Individual flair.
- tactical kicking option
As I said above, this is not necessarily new thinking, however I believe this excellent forum to be the #1 place where I can quantify my thoughts and get them on paper.
Hopefully this will bring discussion of what this means in terms of Australian midfield play. What cattle would combine the best if I am indeed correct? I personally am relatively excited by the prospect of Horne at 12, I have always wanted to see him play there. I am equally excited at the possibility of seeing an AAC (Adam Ashley-Cooper)/Horne pairing at some point in the match. I have long thought this would be a good combination regardless of which numbers they wear (though I am leaning towards AAC (Adam Ashley-Cooper) 12 Horne 13 currently, but that tends to change at the drop of a hat).
It is turbulent times to be a Wallaby supporter, so perhaps theorising and throwing some near meaningless hypotheticals will do us good