I don't understand why you think Cooper couldn't earn that much. Even on 1.5 legs he was our best flyhalf this year.
I think Cooper is a wonderful player but that he was a goose for making the comments he did. I thought that the tough ARU stance was proper, but I'm glad that QC (Quade Cooper) couldn't find a well paying gig anywhere else and that he will stay in Oz rugby. Now that he has been through the wringer perhaps he will be a happier camper and be contrite.
A lot of the Masters' article rings true even though old Roy is a unionphobe.
If Quade can shift up a gear in big test matches - eg against the All Blacks - we will soon forget his goose behaviour. He is a unique player in Oz rugby. He has the long flat passes on the money both ways as Steve Larkham had, but his abillity to pass chest on, and thereby to add value to the threat of players inside or outside, is even better than that of the great Bernie.
The other Oz flyhalves fall short technically. Beale, like Giteau before him, is like a centre or back three player: wanting to do well for his team mates outside him, of course, but is by nature a seeker of the outside break. Like Giteau did, KB (Kurtley Beale) robs his outside runners of the space they need, though at least he recognises such an error earlier than Gits did, and passes the ball sooner. But those two or four extra steps (usually players like to pass off their inside foot) are enough to compromise a backline move.
JOC (James O'Connor) runs square; not to add value to his outside or inside men, but to be in a position to step either way. It should be his secondary role: to get defenders fixed so they don't drift onto the paths of support runners. But too often it is the step and not the pass that is his main interest. Not a bad trait at 12, but limiting at 10.
Barnes is more of an all rounder. He stands too deep to be a good facilitator of others; so the guys he passes to have too much to do before they get to the gain line. Most often they have to breach the tackle line to get there, and so Barnes tends to kick a lot. Michael Lynagh stood deep and old Naas Botha did too - but they knew how to kick and therefore were effective. Barnes has to play closer to the bulls and if he does he won't kick as much - won't be able to, and won't have to.
Above all, Aussie flyhalves, or first receivers, have to take advantage of turnover ball at which time opponents are not configured for defence. The Wallabies were better at transition play in the 1980s than they are now, 30 years later.
And did we not see Wales attack brilliantly from deep after a set piece move last weekend because they remembered that the defending fullback would most often be expecting the kick from runners in their own 22 -and be waiting back for it, and not be in the tackle line? The Wallabies would have seen the fullback back there and kicked to him more or less as a courtesy.
As for their tactical kicking generally: it is good to see a LF kicker, Tapuai, close to the action, but generally Aussie kicking, even when appropriate, is of poor quality. They were fortunate not to get any crap weather conditions on tour.
But I digress. If QC (Quade Cooper) can lift his game so that he can play his Super style in big test matches with team mates not used to him day in day out, he will make a huge difference to the Wobs. It's a big "if" and one that is maybe too early for the Lions tour, but you never know. If Tapuai can play at 12 with him every game next year in Super Rugby, Robbie Deans, not a vindictive man if I read him right, may think that combo is a goer.
This is a Tahs thread? Excuuuuse me.
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