{"id":292987,"date":"2023-11-03T19:08:56","date_gmt":"2023-11-03T19:08:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sportsloveme.com\/?p=292987"},"modified":"2023-11-03T19:08:56","modified_gmt":"2023-11-03T19:08:56","slug":"australian-rugby-can-be-great-again-heres-seven-things-it-must-do","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sportsloveme.com\/rugby-union\/australian-rugby-can-be-great-again-heres-seven-things-it-must-do\/","title":{"rendered":"Australian rugby can be great again \u2026 here\u2019s seven things it must do"},"content":{"rendered":"
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time.<\/p>\n
Changes to Australian rugby are badly needed – and they\u2019ve already started. Here are seven ways the sport can climb back off the canvas.<\/p>\n
The Wallabies\u2019 underperformance at the Rugby World Cup is a different issue from the \u201csystem\u201d issues that exist in Australia. They\u2019ll take longer to sort out but hiring the best coach is clearly the first step to getting the Wallabies back on their feet. McKellar, who has just started the English Premiership season with Leicester, would take a bit of persuading to return.<\/p>\n
Let\u2019s be fair dinkum about this – he\u2019s coaching Handre Pollard, Jasper Wiese, Juan Montoya, Freddie Steward and others at one of the traditional powerhouses of European rugby: it\u2019s not easy to walk away from that into a dumpster fire. And, even if he does want to return, it\u2019ll cost Rugby Australia, whose \u201cno payout\u201d line about Eddie Jones rings a little hollow given that they had to pay out Dave Rennie on top of any McKellar release fee.<\/p>\n
But, McKellar is the man for the job because he understands what actually works in modern rugby. While Eddie Jones is trying to reinvent the game, McKellar pays homage to its fundamentals: set-piece and defence. If it\u2019s not McKellar, then Ian Foster becomes an option – if he can persuade his mate Joe Schmidt and possibly Tony Brown to come with him.<\/p>\n
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Rugby Australia CEO Phil Waugh.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>James Brickwood<\/cite><\/p>\n Former Wallaby Ben Darwin is highly respected in New Zealand for his work on cohesion analytics but seems to struggle to get a hearing at Rugby Australia. The Crusaders swear by Darwin, and the Herald<\/i> understands that New Zealand Rugby has also been very open-minded to his ideas around what makes a successful sports team.<\/p>\n Rugby Australia doesn\u2019t need to implement every little thing Darwin says, but they do need to listen to him – especially as he will tell them things they don\u2019t want to hear. Any credible organisation must be prepared to put their hands up and admit they don\u2019t have all the answers – and there are also analytical firms in the UK – similar to Darwin\u2019s crew – who are sitting on a trove of data that will tell Rugby Australia where the issues are.<\/p>\n Roll it up in a ball, throw it in the bin, douse the lot in petrol, set it on fire and throw it off a cliff. That\u2019s the only way to deal with the whole business of league recruits. In any case, the entire pitch has been wrong. Rugby Australia should be telling NRL players they would be safer taking the money in a domestic competition, playing against blokes of similar attributes, rather than actually challenging themselves against the big South Africans or best New Zealanders.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Rugby-bound Roosters star Joseph Suaalii.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>Getty<\/cite><\/p>\n That would light a fire in any of them brave enough to switch. Otherwise, forget about rugby league and put your time and money into the Jack Barretts and Massimo de Lutiis\u2019 of this world.<\/p>\n Whether Hamish McLennan stays as chairman or not would appear to depend on whether he is prepared to take more of a backseat role. He can\u2019t be near any high-performance decisions after the sacking of Dave Rennie and the hiring of Eddie Jones months out from a Rugby World Cup, but the board must also now decide whether sponsors, broadcasters, state government allies, prospective Wallabies coaches, the Super Rugby clubs and so on feel McLennan is part of the solution or an impediment to moving forward.<\/p>\n Waugh has been thrown into the fire in his first months in the job and is in an incredibly difficult situation, but he has shown signs that he can grow into a capable CEO and effective operator behind the scenes. He has to be the boss from now on.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Waratahs star Jed Holloway runs through a tunnel with juniors cheering on.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>Getty<\/cite><\/p>\n It\u2019s hard to find consensus in Australian rugby, but you can bet the house on the fact that no coach or player believes that they are getting enough rugby at the moment. Super Rugby Pacific is a relatively short competition, so unless you are involved with the Wallabies you aren\u2019t being challenged for the second half of the year.<\/p>\n Former Force chief executive Tony Lewis implored Rugby Australia to start up a \u201cthird tier\u201d competition, although the current financial realities make that a long shot. Yet, with plenty of already contracted Super Rugby players effectively sitting idle for six months there has to be a creative solution.<\/p>\n There are two ways of doing this: cutting the number of Super Rugby teams or expanding the competitions underneath Super Rugby in a meaningful way. It should be extremely hard to get a Super Rugby contract in Australia, and yet the brutal reality is that every year there are players in each Australian squad who are no more than NPC-standard operators.<\/p>\n Cutting teams would be painful, but there can\u2019t simply be an open-ended commitment to the five-team Super Rugby model if there are neither the players nor commercial benefits to justify it. Well after the establishment of the Force and Rebels, the Australian under-18 and under-20 sides continue to be heavily stocked by NSW and Queensland talent. Incidentally, the same logic should apply to Moana Pasifika – this isn\u2019t simply an Australian issue, it\u2019s a competition issue.<\/p>\n Heading into its third year, the \u2018L\u2019 plates have to come off – the eight-team finals format in a 12-team competition isn\u2019t working. There isn\u2019t the remotest chance that the team that finishes No.7 or No.8 is going to win the competition, so participation in the finals series is an achievement badge they don\u2019t deserve.<\/p>\n There\u2019s no way that a pitbull like Waugh, who was an absolute competitor in his playing days, would deep down back the current format, with clubs being able to dine out on \u201cmaking the finals\u201d when they didn\u2019t earn it like in the old Super Rugby formats. It\u2019s a cop-out, and if it remains then Super Rugby will breed players who take shortcuts.<\/p>\n Sports news, results and expert commentary.<\/i><\/b> Sign up for our Sport newsletter<\/i><\/b><\/p>\n2. Listen to the outside voices who aren\u2019t nodding dogs<\/h3>\n
3. Ditch the NRL \u2018hitlist\u2019<\/h3>\n
4. Empower Phil Waugh<\/h3>\n
5. Play more games of rugby<\/h3>\n
6. Widen the base<\/h3>\n
7. Make Super Rugby credible again<\/h3>\n
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