Cooper has already radically boosted his play as a defender in Super Rugby. He will be fine. Competition is good and he has some.
And going back to an earlier poster saying no one here supports Deans, I do. That might be because I grew up in NZ and see rugby slightly differently to many here, I don't know, but I can honestly say i relate to Deans selections and what he tries to do.
People here seem to think he doesn't want us to win, that he lacks passion. It is just not true. The kiwi culture is less brash than the aussie one. Don't make the mistake of confusing reservedness for a lack of commitment. Deans wants to win alright. He hates losing with a passion. All he is asking is that the playing group bring the same burning commitment.
I'm not a "told you so" kind of poster, but I had massive reservations about this move by Deans. You can look up some of my posts on here or on the Fern and see that the biggest hurdle I saw in this appointment is the cultural obstacles Deans would be faced with. Deans grew up in the NZ rugby environment, became an AB in the amateur era when the ABs were no nonsense but revered by the NZ public. He became a successful coach in the provincial ranks understanding intricately all levels of NZ rugby. He knew what it took and how players got to the top in NZ. He saw it. He lived and breathed it. He knew what the players went through and knew how to connect with them on a real personal level which is a huge factor in getting people to buy in and also get the best out of them.
Ironically Henry mentioned this "psyche" stuff in his interview this morning with Fran Kelly on ABC - ie coaching your own nation and how that was so very different to when he was at Wales.
Anyway, Deans had little knowledge of OZ and really only had his NZ and AB experience to draw on. He couldn't talk about any glory days at Eastwood or playing/coaching for Queensland ripping it up. All of that intangible stuff is very important IMO when dealing with a bunch of early-mid 20 year olds carving out a career that not only demands professionalism but demands that inner stuff of passion, playing for the mate next to you, and pushing beyond physical boundaries when its just mental.
Maybe I'm getting a bit carried away with this stuff, but Deans was pushing it up hill big time coming to his geographical neighbours but in rugby terms couldn't be more far apart IMHO.
This not to say there have some poor results and some very good ones (to me at least Australia's WC was pretty good - it took one hell of a performance to beat the Boks and then a huge effort by the ABs to beat the Wallabies in the semi) which Deans should be critiqued - no issue there. But even 4 years on I still think that buy in is not there so it always seems like things are right, disjointed, not on the same page, weird, prickly, confusing - all rolled into one......