Coopers latest interview on the Bloke at the Bar podcast this week, he talks a bit about this. Saying he was in a bad head space and probably wouldn't have picked himself in the team either.
So looks like he has changed his tune a bit to the words Rodha has posted. Doesn't mean those aren't untrue either though.
I imagine it was a bit of both to why he was dropped. Coopers attitude and Cheika's perception/bias.
No, the frustration stems from the misperception issue which resulted in people not measuring/assessing Quade's abilities in a fair manner.
There seemed to be a common misconception among rugby circles that Quade was purely a skillful 'maverick', he plays too much as an individual, he can't play in unison for the team, i.e play to a structured gameplan. I think the fact Quade is Maori contributed to the fallacy that he was just a individual brilliance merchant - who lacked in the wider game understanding, tactics, strategy, bigger picture detail, etc..
This kind of creeping perception of Quade's game was an irrational pig-headed fallacy - and unfortunately even his Wallabies coaches (Cheika, Deans) succumbed to this delusion. But it really couldn't have been further from the truth. If you ask anyone who knows Quade they will inform of just how outstanding his level of game understanding is. His in-game rugby intelligence has always been an exception & a unique point of difference for him amongst his peers in Australian rugby. There's a reason Ewen McKenzie once said that Quade had the potential to become an excellent coach.
McKenzie always stressed how gifted Quade was in regards to his ability to execute a gameplan and also read the situation in a game. The key to the 2011 Red's success was that McKenzie & McKay entrusted Quade with the responsibility of leading the gameplan himself. Quade ran the attack sessions in the lead up to the Red's games during the week. McKenzie acknowledged a critical component which Cheika & Deans failed to understand, that the only way to properly facilitate Cooper's abilities was to give him full ownership & authority over the gameplan and let him control proceedings as he sees.
The simply reality is that Deans & Cheikas ego's would never accommodate for this.
They wanted to reign him in and play it 'their way' or nothing.
It was their way or the highway, that's why Cooper was discarded, because he had an uncomfortable level of game understanding & rugby IQ that resulted in conflict/tension with Deans and Cheika because he was forthright & outspoken in how they could be doing things differently.
And as we know, Cheika & Deans certainly weren't the type to be challenged.