Run and gun: Drew warns rivals
Josh Rakic
January 30, 2011
Running game ... Waratahs skipper Phil Waugh will be hoping his backline stars can form a lethal combination in this year's Super Rugby tournament.
Running game ... Waratahs skipper Phil Waugh will be hoping his backline stars can form a lethal combination in this year's Super Rugby tournament. Photo: Anthony Johnson
WARATAHS star Drew Mitchell has sent an ominous warning to Super Rugby rivals as the NSW franchise prepares for its first trial match on Friday, declaring the Tahs' attack will be even deadlier than during their red-hot run of late 2010.
With their first full season and a successful Wallabies campaign behind them, Mitchell, Berrick Barnes, Kurtley Beale and Lachie Turner are better positioned than ever to light up the field for the Tahs. Mitchell declared their confidence was sky high.
''We all took a lot of confidence from that tour and on top of the Waratahs last year, I think as a back line we're more in tune than ever before,'' said Mitchell, who bounced back from being cut from the Wallabies to become one of their best on the spring tour after his first season in NSW's sky blue.
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''Hopefully the Waratahs' attack can build off the back of the Wallabies last year, and I think it can. Berrick got his chance against the French, and Kurtley, I mean, he was nominated in the IRB awards. Lachie Turner - when he got his start he went really well - and then Rob Horne is coming back from injury. We've got some options, too, with Ryan Cross and the like, then there's Hangers [Daniel Halangahu] and Tom Carter.''
The try-sneak said he was determined to continue on from last year, during which he was Super 14's top try-scorer.
''I'm feeling a lot more confident in my own ability and I feel there is a little more certainty as to where I fit in the team now,'' Mitchell said.
''Whenever you go to a new team there's always that uncertainty as to where you sit in terms of the dynamics of the team.
''I feel as though I'm a lot more comfortable in the environment this year than I was at this stage last year. And that then brings confidence.
''I'm feeling pretty good and the season has almost crept up on us and we're playing in a few weeks, which is a bit of a relief.''
He and his fellow Waratahs backs are enjoying a special leg-up: they are training with sprinter and Olympian Matt Shirvington in an effort to perfect their techniques and enhance their speed off the mark.
''Sprint training with Shirvo has been a good way to catch up to the boys who've had a bigger pre-season than us,'' Mitchell said. ''He's helping out with our technique and activating all the right muscles.
''For me, the one thing I get in trouble with is straining my hamstrings when I'm not activating glutes. My hammies take the whole load. We're are refining our technique [so that] under fatigue and duress our automatic body position goes to the correct one rather than getting sloppy.''
With a World Cup berth beckoning, Mitchell said there was no room for short cuts or laziness. Wallabies coach Robbie Deans has insisted that performances and not surnames win gold jerseys.
''Everyone just seems to have a bit of a bounce in their step - there's that extra motivation for everyone to better themselves and try and win a spot,'' Mitchell said.
''You can see at training that guys are going at each other and it's going to come down to whoever performs in the trials and matches.
''It's time to dig deep for the Waratahs and the Wallabies, but most importantly we can't focus too much on the World Cup yet because you can get caught in the position of putting so much pressure on yourself to perform for the Waratahs that you overplay your hand.
''And one thing I've come to learn from experience is you can't have too far of a look down the track because you start overlooking things in the short term that will in turn hurt you in the future.
''The key is to perform for the Waratahs first and foremost and the rest will take care of itself.''
The forwards are not doing things by half measures, either.
''I don't think I've ever seen a scrap in the backs, I think there's just an unwritten rule about that. But we often quite like looking up at the mauling sessions and seeing tempers flare. You see a few scraps at training.''