IMHO the biggest issue with Australian Super teams is the skill deficit in basic skill execution in game. We have players, superstars who cannot execute the basic skills for their positions. The NRC does F^%$^% all to address that, it is not a development competition, it simply does not have a long enough season and the squads are not assembled long enough to develop any real combination. The only thing it is good at is burning the money supporting it (even if it is cost neutral for RA) and being part of the idea that more product is a good outcome with no regard to the quality.
Until the development pathways are fixed the performance issues of the Australian Professional sides will not be addressed. And by development I do not mean "identifying" potential talent at 16 years old and paying them shit loads or contracting them to EPS or somesuch, that is not the way.
Interesting yesterday I watched the U16 elimination finals for a regional NSW competition and saw a 16 year old kicking goals from outside 40M. making clearing kicks from his goal line to the 40m line and over half way from the 22. Interesting that the current Wallaby 10 cannot execute that skill.
It's true.
As an aside - there is also the odd aspect that, strangely, at club and junior levels it seems more orthodox - i.e. clear the ball into touch (as most of us were trained to do when young). It seems to have become a tactic in some teams (Tahs for sure, Wallabies a bit too, a few other teams this year as well) to not actually go for touch ( I don't really know why) and even put up high-balls from the 22 or thereabouts (again, why??). Strange. I mean, how is it better to put the ball near the touch line 40m out rather than over it? Somebody with a spreadsheet would probably know the answer. I'm not that clever.