USARugger
John Thornett (49)
Just the forwards? No, all the backs as well—and mixed in too.
Makes sense. It usually only takes ~2 phases for the backs/forwards to start mixing and true back-on-back or forward-on-forward isolation is a thing of the past largely relegated to the set pieces. It was apparent last year, and this seems to be buoyed by the evidence that you've provided, that Cheika is actively seeking a way to leverage this fact to their advantage and make it more of a strength than an inconvenience (as many teams with poor ball skills in the forwards do). Their attack pattern also seems to cause the defense to end up "mixing" even fast then they normally would because of the rapid and lateral nature of it all.