Hugh Jarse
Rocky Elsom (76)
More questions than answers.
What use is Australia A and can we use it better?
When was the last Australia A game?
Is a tour by Australia A commercially viable?
I'd like to see Aust A play inbound tours against nations with IRB ranks 15-30, but hiring venues, travel, meals and accommodation expenses mount up very quickly.
Maybe it is an expense that ARU just have to take as a way to keep the production of Test capable players going.
Could we make money out of them playing overseas in Japan and USA?
Is this a way to take some games to non-traditional areas like Darwin, Adelaide, Tassie, regional NSW and Qld cities?
Is Australia A developmentally viable?
The benefit for individual players seems to be obvious, as is the depth it can help to develop for the Men in Gold.
It is a low risk option to try players out, or different combinations and tactics.
It can give Soup players something to do instead of returning to their clubs during the finals series of Club competitions in ACT, Brissie and Sydney.
As long we don't do a Robbie and have the national coaching team cover both Aust A and the Wobs, then there are opportunities for the ARU to use Aust A as a vehicle to develop the next generation of Soup and fringe International Coaches, managers, physios, assistant coaches etc.
It seems rather sensible to have more of Australia A rather than less.
What use is Australia A and can we use it better?
When was the last Australia A game?
Is a tour by Australia A commercially viable?
I'd like to see Aust A play inbound tours against nations with IRB ranks 15-30, but hiring venues, travel, meals and accommodation expenses mount up very quickly.
Maybe it is an expense that ARU just have to take as a way to keep the production of Test capable players going.
Could we make money out of them playing overseas in Japan and USA?
Is this a way to take some games to non-traditional areas like Darwin, Adelaide, Tassie, regional NSW and Qld cities?
Is Australia A developmentally viable?
The benefit for individual players seems to be obvious, as is the depth it can help to develop for the Men in Gold.
It is a low risk option to try players out, or different combinations and tactics.
It can give Soup players something to do instead of returning to their clubs during the finals series of Club competitions in ACT, Brissie and Sydney.
As long we don't do a Robbie and have the national coaching team cover both Aust A and the Wobs, then there are opportunities for the ARU to use Aust A as a vehicle to develop the next generation of Soup and fringe International Coaches, managers, physios, assistant coaches etc.
It seems rather sensible to have more of Australia A rather than less.