Skelton may make the grade as a Wob one day but as others have indicated: he has to prove himself.
Although he played for 80 minutes against the Lions (IIRR) he has to prove that he can play a block of games of at least 60 minutes in Super Rugby when he gets a chance, as he most likely will at some point next year.
He's not bad for a bloke who I described as a gentle giant in Schools rugby in 2010 though: not bad at all.
Another who has surprised me is Matt To'omua who didn't live up to his promise after leaving school, even factoring in how young he was and the high level he was playing at. He didn't impress a lot in club rugby either.
It is a pity that he missed the last games of the Spring Tour because for the first time in my eyes he looked like an assured starting test player. As a 12 who can play the position in the old NZ "second-five" way he made a better fist of it than Lilo, when he got his chance.
And what can you say about Izzy that hasn't been said before? The surprise for me in 2013 is how he dealt with non-league matters such as presenting the ball at rucks and dealing with two extra defenders on the drift.
For all his manic style of play Cummins never convinced me that he was a reliable winger at the top level until this tour. And he (and AAC (Adam Ashley-Cooper) and Hooper) should be commended for how they chased down kicks, including restarts. You can see a coaching focus there now.
Tomane improved, as he had to, but he is still raw—and coming too far inside to allow one break from Wales was not a good look.
We will all have been pleased watching Cooper getting his confidence back and the type of rugby that it generated. We missed it.
One of the big plusses for me from the tour was the early realignment on defence, and despite some flat moments when opponents were let back in the game, how they held out opponents when when it mattered (except at Twickenham).
The things I will be looking forward to next year are more frequent dominant tackles in traffic areas from a bigger spread of players—and more dominant and early counter rucks, and the stopping the same from opponents.
That and the appearance of left-footed kicker who can keep his place in the side.
But as others would have mentioned: playing the likes of Ireland or Wales is not the same as playing NZ and the Boks, because they don't give you time to do some of the things the Wallabies did well on tour—even England, who I thought were not that flash in beating us.
Those two SANZAR teams deny time, which is the same as space.
Einstein was right.
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