Lee Grant
John Eales (66)
Please use this thread for general stuff about the Wallabies this year so we don't create a thread for every little thing. Before starting a new thread think of using this one first and use your own discretion.
This from FoxSports:
Queensland Reds coach Ewen McKenzie warns Wallabies players of an unprecedented workload in 2012
Jim Morton AAP February 01, 2012 4:06PM
A prolonged 2012 Super competition, with four mid-year Tests wedged in the middle, and a heavier travel burden in the new four-team Rugby Championship will test Wallabies like never before.
For the first time, the new June international window will put a halt to the Super Rugby season for four weeks as the Wallabies immediately play a mid-week Test against Scotland before a three-match series against Wales.
Test players will then return to their Super franchises for the final three rounds of the competition before a three-week play-off series starts on July 20.
The rebadged Tri Nations, the Rugby Championship, which now also features Argentina, will kick off with the Wallabies playing the All Blacks on August 18 - a fortnight after the Super final.
With a third Bledisloe Test and the regular spring tour in Europe to follow, key Wallabies like Genia, ball scavenger David Pocock, backline star James O'Connor and captain James Horwill must be braced for a gruelling workload.
"It's not going to happen," he said.
"You have to manage the players in that space.
"They will tell you they are willing but in the end they can only front so many times."
Resting and rotation is set to become more of a norm at the Reds and the NSW Waratahs, where more than two-thirds of Robbie Deans' Test players are based.
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As one has mentioned before: Wallabies players will have to be rested in 2012 because a couple of international series are inserted into Super Rugby - just like they have to do in Europe for their Autumn Tests and 6N (and the Heineken Cup, for that matter.) EPS members of Super teams should be treated as though they are regular players and not need the excuse of injuries to others to get on the park.
Spread the work earlier.
This from FoxSports:
Queensland Reds coach Ewen McKenzie warns Wallabies players of an unprecedented workload in 2012
Jim Morton AAP February 01, 2012 4:06PM
A prolonged 2012 Super competition, with four mid-year Tests wedged in the middle, and a heavier travel burden in the new four-team Rugby Championship will test Wallabies like never before.
The jam-packed schedule could mean Australia's leading stars play a maximum 36 matches - three more than what Wallabies ironman Will Genia gallantly soldiered through a World Cup-boosted 2011.
"This is the most difficult season for a Wallaby that I've seen," said Queensland Reds coach McKenzie. "You look at the calendar and it's tough, really tough."For the first time, the new June international window will put a halt to the Super Rugby season for four weeks as the Wallabies immediately play a mid-week Test against Scotland before a three-match series against Wales.
Test players will then return to their Super franchises for the final three rounds of the competition before a three-week play-off series starts on July 20.
The rebadged Tri Nations, the Rugby Championship, which now also features Argentina, will kick off with the Wallabies playing the All Blacks on August 18 - a fortnight after the Super final.
With a third Bledisloe Test and the regular spring tour in Europe to follow, key Wallabies like Genia, ball scavenger David Pocock, backline star James O'Connor and captain James Horwill must be braced for a gruelling workload.
Former prop McKenzie, who started his 51-Test career in 1990 before the game went professional, stressed it would be impossible for the leading lights to play at top capacity throughout a 10-month playing season."It's not going to happen," he said.
"You have to manage the players in that space.
"They will tell you they are willing but in the end they can only front so many times."
Resting and rotation is set to become more of a norm at the Reds and the NSW Waratahs, where more than two-thirds of Robbie Deans' Test players are based.
****************
As one has mentioned before: Wallabies players will have to be rested in 2012 because a couple of international series are inserted into Super Rugby - just like they have to do in Europe for their Autumn Tests and 6N (and the Heineken Cup, for that matter.) EPS members of Super teams should be treated as though they are regular players and not need the excuse of injuries to others to get on the park.
Spread the work earlier.