wamberal
Phil Kearns (64)
Cheika brings something to the Tahs that has never been there before, at least to my knowledge. The team appears to be grounded and totally prepared for whatever comes their way.
Cheika is at once tough-minded and a visionary. He grew up playing rugby for a club where running was the preferred (the only) option, but where a dominant forward pack was always a given as well. A club with probably the proudest rugby tradition in Sydney, at least post-war, where performance and loyalty to the cause were paramount. No room for tall poppies.
He is the ultimate team player, and I get the feeling that, at a pinch, he could get kitted up and play the last ten minutes. Not too many coaches around that could do that, but I reckon he could.
Finally, he knows, and the players would know too, that a loss is not the end of the world, and a win is not career-defining. This is another game of rugby, play it as well as you can and walk off the field knowing that you have given of your best for your team-mates, your state, and yourself.
Tahs by 10.
Cheika is at once tough-minded and a visionary. He grew up playing rugby for a club where running was the preferred (the only) option, but where a dominant forward pack was always a given as well. A club with probably the proudest rugby tradition in Sydney, at least post-war, where performance and loyalty to the cause were paramount. No room for tall poppies.
He is the ultimate team player, and I get the feeling that, at a pinch, he could get kitted up and play the last ten minutes. Not too many coaches around that could do that, but I reckon he could.
Finally, he knows, and the players would know too, that a loss is not the end of the world, and a win is not career-defining. This is another game of rugby, play it as well as you can and walk off the field knowing that you have given of your best for your team-mates, your state, and yourself.
Tahs by 10.