Ewen McKenzie will not be compromising his standards.
Like most nights out in Dublin, it started well. A group of seven players, including the Wallabies captain, the Waratahs captain and a 90-Test veteran back, went to Dublin's oldest pub, the Brazen Head, for a drink the night before their day off.
A photograph posted on the pub's Facebook page shows the group posing happily with Gerry the bartender. ''Some of the Australian rugby team dropped in for a drink tonight. Gerry in the shirt and tie is not one of them … obviously,'' the caption reads. The time stamp puts the post at 7.45pm last Tuesday, before it all went pear-shaped.
Two of the players pictured, Israel Folau and Ben Mowen, went back to the team hotel before midnight. The others - Nick Phipps, Nic White, Bernard Foley, Dave Dennis and Adam Ashley-Cooper - stayed out. It is unclear what happened after that. It is believed another group of players dropped into the Old Stand Pub in Exchequer Street, a rugby pub named after a long-gone stand at the now-demolished Lansdowne Road stadium. At some point, members of the various groups met up and sampled more of Dublin's nightlife. It is understood the players who were reprimanded verbally were in very soon after midnight, the written warnings were in before 3am and the suspended players came home later than that. But by the following Monday, five in that innocuous photograph were under a cloud.
Ashley-Cooper was suspended; Dennis, Foley and Phipps had written warnings on their files, and White had been reprimanded in person by Ewen McKenzie. From the other groups, a further five players were stood down, two more were issued with written sanctions and three more with verbal warnings.
But for the so-called ''Dublin six'', the only thing worse than missing this weekend's Test match would have been the look in McKenzie's eyes as he made the news public. The stoic Wallabies coach, whose concession to emotion is generally limited to a grunted laugh or twisted grin, was visibly upset in Edinburgh on Monday. There was genuine disbelief, and palpable frustration, that the inroads the team was making on and off the field had been mocked by some of his most senior players with a drunken night out in Dublin. ''This is not a proud moment at all, not at all,'' McKenzie said. ''I am actually really disappointed, but I'll deal with it and get on with it.''
After turning a bitter defeat to England into a victory over Italy, the team had taken a singular focus into last week's preparation in pursuit of back-to-back wins. It trained at ''full noise'' on Tuesday before heading out for dinner in small groups. The six all knew they were playing in Saturday's Test against Ireland.
Ashley-Cooper had been the team's most consistent performer for years and one of its most meticulous athletes when it came to preparation each week. Benn Robinson was a decorated Test prop and had been working hard to reclaim his spot in the starting team after being benched in favour of James Slipper when McKenzie took over. Tatafu Polota-Nau, once considered the Wallabies' best hooker, was on the verge of playing his first Test in 12 months when he made the decision to stay out. Nick Cummins had the world at his feet after beating Joe Tomane to a starting spot for all three Tests on tour, while Liam Gill and Paddy Ryan, fringe players this year, had just been handed their first playing opportunities in months. At some point last Tuesday night, on the streets of grimy Dublin, they lost sight of the bigger picture. McKenzie vehemently denied suggestions he could have fined the players instead or, in light of the rousing 32-15 victory, let it go completely. ''If it doesn't reach the surface of the day and no one ever knows about it, nothing changes, people just go on,'' he said.
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