According to Fox Sports stats, in the Rugby Championship so far the Wallabies have made only two attacking kicks, have had five charged down, kicked two out on the full and have found space with just 29 per cent of their long clearing kicks.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/spo...r/news-story/387bacc0b51963a6d3b33e356419818d
Again Wallabies don't need a game built around kicking, but they still need a respectable kicking game to complement any game plan.
The wallabies need a game plan built around winning.
We need to jettison this idea that the wallabies can and should only play "running rugby" or whatever it is currently called. How about an approach that is tailored to the opposition, the ref, the players you have available, the conditions and the amount of risk you are willing to take? And no, merely stating that Australia has never had a gameplan that was built on field position is not a good reason for us to obsessively avoid it in the future.
There are going to circumstances in which more kicking is better than less. There are going to be circumstances in which kicking is imprudent. Around these parts though, and this has at times included public statements by Michael Cheika, any kicking that exceeds the absolute bare minimum (clearing your own in goal area) is considered to be rugby blasphemy.
Instead of looking at winning at working backwards from that, we seem to start with "entertaining" and try to figure out how we can turn that into winning. I don't know about you but I am thoroughly unentertained at the moment. Id rather we won 9-6 with no ball than losing whilst chick it around all night.
Critically, none of our primary opponents - in fact probably none of the other test sides at all - appear to be worried about style for style's sake. I don't think we will ever be consistently where we can be whilst there exists beneath - but very close to - the surface an obsession with style.
It's been demonstrated that the days of us having fitter, better skilled and more dynamic players than everyone else bar NZ are well and truly over. We are entering a new era of genuinely pro rugby and we need to be professional about what we want to achieve rather than nostalgic about how we remember things being. Do people think the New England Patriots devote as much thought to "style" as we do?