Half-back hullabaloo
MICHAEL CHEIKA HAS an abundance of talent to choose from at scrum-half and fly-half, but the big question remains, who will he select at 9 and 10 for the seismic Pool A showdowns with England and Wales?
The experienced pairing of Quade Cooper and Will Genia started the Rugby Championship opener against South Africa before the Waratahs combo of Nick Phipps and Bernard Foley were given an outing against the Pumas the following weekend. Phipps and Foley were retained for the thrilling 27-19 win against the All Blacks, but it was Nic White who changed the game late on. The ACT Brumbies number nine fired over a long-range penalty before breaking the All Blacks defence in the dying minutes for the match-winning try.
Phipps, who had a disastrous outing that night against the world champions, was replaced by White for the Bledisloe Cup decider in Auckland, as he linked up with Cooper in the halves. The duo had a shocker at Eden Park with Cooper’s sin-binning, for a high tackle on Aaron Smith, proving costly while White missed out on a World Cup place on the back of that performance. Two world class options at inside centre, in the form of Matt Giteau and Matt Toomua, further complicate matters for Cheika. Striking the right balance will be crucial. It would seem that a 9-10-12 axis of Phipps, Foley and Giteau is the first-choice for the tournament, but don’t be surprised to see a Genia, Giteau and Toomua playmaking trio by the time the Wallabies take on England at Twickenham. The erratic, but brilliant, Kurtley Beale is also in the selection mix at 10 or 12.
Can they cope with the pressure?
Scrum pressure that is. The Wallabies scrum has improved exponentially this season with veteran tighthead Sekope Kepu, who will link up with Bordeaux-Begles after the tournament, and young Brumbies loosehead Scott Sio anchoring a solid unit in recent months. The emergence of Sio transformed the Wallabies scrum during the Rugby Championship. After impressing from the bench against the Springboks and Argentina, Cheika handed the 24-year-old his run-on debut against the All Blacks in Sydney.
Sio, who is the son of former Samoa Test prop David, caused Owen Franks all kinds of problems that night and will be entrusted with doing a similar demolition job on Dan Cole and Samson Lee or Tomas Francis during the tournament. The appointment of legendary Pumas hooker Mario Ledesma as scrum coach in July was also a masterstroke by Cheika. The pair having worked together in the past in the Waratahs set-up.
Australia will be reminded in the coming weeks of their poor scrummaging displays last autumn. The Wallabies pack conceding a penalty try during their 33-28 win over Wales while England’s scrum dominance laid the platform for a 26-17 victory last November.
Click Here: Leggings
Under the tutelage of Ledesma, the Wallabies scrum has made great strides, but the ultimate acid test awaits against Stuart Lancaster’s side on October 3rd at Twickenham.
Source: Photosport/Shane Wenzlick/INPHO