The men are much of muchness. Can't see much improvement there. Perhaps Pama Fou should be more of a focus than Luke Morahan given his excellence previously and his work at the restart (which was horrendous).
Our work at the breakdown lets us down, for both teams, as we are basically dominated by most main teams we play. Sharni Williams is the best we have across both squads. SHe was exceptional this weekend.
The women are a real worry. Not sure where the improvement comes from, with only Vani Pelite to come back. I thought Shannon Parry was fairly anonymous and Ellia Green had, I thought, her poorest tournament for a long time. We also seem to be using Tonegato differently, and shes doing a hell of a lot of heavy work. I really like the young ones coming through like Ashby and Paki, but that band of youngies who have been around a few years now (Du Toit and Hayes etc) really need to step up. They are not having the impact they need.
Emma Sykes is one I want more of too. She is super talented and showed those glimpses last week. But she also looked a little loose at times. If she can be sorted out by the coaching team, shes above Ashby in the pecking order for mine.
And hopefully Chloe Dalton is good to go immediately because by Christ we need her kicking. Our restarts are terrible.
I remember so well RR when you were one of the first here to justifiably back in, what, 2014, highlight how brilliantly the Aust 7s women's team was playing and the dazzlingly skilful style of 7s rugby there were then producing. And you were totally correct; your comments presaged the Olympic win in 2016.
There can be little doubt that Walsh and that team peaked in 2016 and attained a level of competitive excellence now long dissipated and, sadly, nearly forgotten.
What went wrong?
IMO, three things:
One, typically Aust back-slapping hubris when we win big via our national teams. We so often start to consider we have invented the hold grail of some comp or another and we swap a hidden and implicit complacency for immediate humility, self-analysis and hard-bitten renewal of game styles, players and skills.
Two, Walsh was fantastic in his pre-2016 player selections, training and player development methods. His period to 2016 was a superb example of sustained rugby coaching competence and leadership across all the essential spans of what needed to be built.
But his big, big longer-term mistake with far-reaching consequences was (a) not fully grasping the next major evolution in 7s women's rugby shifting inexorably toward a greater balance between raw physical prowess in defence and ruck work and speed and agility, and (b) consequently in late 2016 and into 2017 not recruiting a 'bigger, tougher, stronger, more hardened' type of new recruit into his 7s stable.
Instead he choose to promote young women in the past moulds of light running backs vs the newly required 7s conquistadors - that are really forward-backs hybrids in physical skills terms - and now found in far greater quantity in NZ, Canada, France and well emerging in USA and, slowly but surely, Fiji. Worse still of these newly chosen light running backs none if any have truly blazing speed a la Green and that is why the team is increasingly over-reliant on Green and we lack a balanced wing structure unlike eg NZ's which is in itself proving costly vs the better teams.
Three, by any observable and objective standards of coaching calibre at work, Menenti has been an absolute disaster as this team's HC for the last two years. The womens' individual skills have clearly and quite seriously degraded since early 2018, the game plans are increasingly hard to discern if any really exist ('just get it wide' seems to the sole team MO when against good competition), team cohesion as soon as real pressure arrives falls apart, our restarts are often laughable and inexcusably poor for pro players, and our defence is regularly early-QC (Quade Cooper)-like-awful with lots of failed light, high jersey tugs and poor overall tackle execution more typical than not.
When a coach starts to make hapless statements like 'we're so much better at training than we're showing on the field' you know that bad will only become worse and the HC has lost his ability to properly grow and lead a team.
Add 1, 2, and 3 up = incremental and assured decline into weakened competitiveness and ever more 'disappointing' outcomes. Until and unless 2 and 3 change fundamentally, our women's team is headed for, at best, sustained mediocrity whilst other teams with better player selection and coaching move the whole game forward and watch delighted as the Aussie women fade in the rear view mirror.