Bledisloe 1
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@Crucial said in Bledisloe 1:
@KiwiMurph said in Bledisloe 1:
Bernard Foleyâs international rugby career is set to be revived in remarkable fashion on Thursday night, with Wallabies coach Dave Rennie poised to name the veteran playmaker at No10 for Australiaâs opening Bledisloe Cup match in Melbourne.Wasn't Larkham available?
Nah, there has been a lot of interest in young Bernard. Heâs one for the future!
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@Derpus said in Bledisloe 1:
We should be able to borrow a few ABs given we can't field a full 23. Like in juniors when you rock up on game day and you end up playing for the opposition because they are short.
I'm happy to give you Shannon Frizell, after all his brother is Australian.
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@KiwiMurph this has got to be a windup surely?
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@KiwiMurph said in Bledisloe 1:
@Derpus Perofeta and Sotutu could use the test minutes.
You don't want to give them a player who might win the game from them. So Codie Taylor should surely be in the mix.
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After 20 years of pain, when will the Wallabies win back the Bledisloe Cup?
Ten years ago, Mark Ella correctly predicted the Wallabies wouldnât win the Bledisloe Cup for at least another decade. He canât see anything changing soon.
By Tom Decent ⢠September 13, 2022 - 09.00amMark Ella was a magician on the rugby field and once channelled his inner Nostradamus at a speaking gig in 2012.
A decade had passed since the Wallabies last won the Bledisloe Cup, which was retained in dramatic fashion on an August evening in 2002 thanks to a Matt Burke penalty goal after full-time that teammates were convinced he was going to miss from almost in front.After 10 years of torment at the hands of the All Blacks, Ella, widely regarded as one of the greatest Wallabies players, was asked how long he thought Australiaâs Bledisloe Cup drought may continue.
âI think itâs going to be another 10 years before we get there,â Ella said.A decade on from Ellaâs stunning comment, the drought has now doubled.
The 63-year-oldâs bold prediction came true, with the upcoming Australia and New Zealand series marking 20 years of Bledisloe Cup heartache for the Wallabies.
Itâs enough to leave any rugby fan over the age of 20 feeling melancholy.
âI canât see anything changing,â Ella told the Herald and The Age ahead of another two-Test series beginning in Melbourne on Thursday.
âI wouldnât have ever thought it would be 20 years. I thought we would have been smart enough to work it out by now. Obviously, we canât for some reason.
âYou canât go this long without winning. Anybody with half a brain in rugby knows weâre not going to beat them.â
How did it get to this point? How did a proud rugby nation, who sipped from the Bledisloe Cup every year from 1998 to 2002, fail to match it with their enemies across the ditch.
âItâs not pretty reading,â said 71-Test Wallaby Drew Mitchell, who was part of a generation of players who never lifted the Bledisloe Cup. âHopefully itâs this year. Weâve got to believe that. Thereâs desperation to get our hands back on it.â
Since 2003, when Australia handed the Cup back to New Zealand, the men in gold have been successful in just one-sixth of Bledisloe matches (nine of 54 Tests).
âWhen youâve got once-in-a-lifetime players, it makes a huge difference,â said two-time World Cup winner and All Blacks great Sonny Bill Williams. âThe talent pool in New Zealand is phenomenal.â
Twenty years ago, Burke did not understand the significance of a moment now etched in Australian rugby folklore when his late penalty sailed over to give the Wallabies a 16-14 win in Sydney.
It was Australiaâs fifth straight Bledisloe series win and not even the most pessimistic observer could have predicted two decades of patchy performances.
âI remind everyone at work every time Iâm there. I always say âwho kicked the goal? I canât rememberâ,â said Burke, firmly tongue-in-cheek. â20 years, wow. That is a long time.
âThe irony is that night I kicked two from five and became a hero. I should have been hung, drawn and quartered for kicking so s---.â
To set the scene, new Wallabies recruit Mat Rogers had just scored a tremendous 72nd-minute try to put Australia behind by one point with seven minutes to go.
But Burke, the teamâs sharpshooter, missed the conversion.
However, an energised Wallabies side chased the win by marching downfield before earning a penalty.
Then came a comment that has lived in the memory for two decades.
âMat Rogers walked over with the ball and said âdo this one for me, do this one for the team and think of all the endorsements youâre going to getâ,â Burke said âI started pissing myself laughing. That calmed me down.â
Can Rogers corroborate that story?
âI just said âmate, think of the country and think of the money youâll make off the memorabiliaâ,â Rogers told the Herald. âI think he purposefully missed the first one.
âAfter he kicked the second, I ran in there and said I wanted a slice of the memorabilia.
âThe funny thing is that I dropped the ball about five minutes before my try. I was shattered. I thought Iâd cost us the Bledisloe Cup, so I was determined to make amends.â
Burke added: âWhen we got that [last] penalty, Brendan Cannon and Chris Whittaker were sitting on the sideline and looked at each other and said âoh, weâre f---ed. Heâs not going to get thisâ.
âThe day before at the captainâs run, I missed 10 from there. I went left, I went right. I couldnât hit it for the life of me. I threw away the kicking tee in disgust.
âThereâs not many times in sport you get a second bite of the cherry.â
If only they knew how long it would be between celebratory Bledisloe beers.
As for why the Wallabies havenât broken their Bledisloe hoodoo, one of the most talked about losing streaks in Australian sport, there are myriad theories.
Ella feels there is a lack of depth.
âWeâre consistently bad,â Ella said. âThe solution is we need better coaching and better players, simple as that. Thatâs the predicament for Rugby Australia to work out.
âYouâve actually got to deliver the goods rather than moaning or groaning that we didnât play well and [saying] weâre learning and weâll get better next game. Thatâs bulls---.â
Sonny Bill Williams assures New Zealanders never get sick of beating the Wallabies.
âIt was George Gregan in the World Cup semi-final in 2003 who said âfour more yearsâ and baited the All Blacks,â Williams said. âThat stuff sticks in the memory of players. Itâs a great rivalry.â
It doesnât bring joy to anyone who donned a gold jersey.
âYou want this hoodoo to go,â Burke said. âWhen we were commentating a game in 2013 in Wellington, I thought it was the insult of all insults from the Kiwis when only the two new blokes walked the Bledisloe Cup around. Everyone walked off thinking âoh well, Iâve been there and done that beforeâ.
âI was like, âoh man, this is killing meâ.â
As the years go on, Rogers is surprised the tide hasnât turned.
âItâs something you shake your head at a little bit,â Rogers said. âHow have they been so dominant for so long? Itâs not like we lack talent. Is it a mindset? Talent? Are they that good? Are we that bad?
âThe longer it goes, the closer we get to a win, right? Weâre not that bad. I donât think we are. We have proven that over the years. Youâve just got to back it up.â
Analysing the form guide before a Wallabies and All Blacks match can be fraught with danger, but this year has been unique.
Despite thumping Argentina 53-3 just over a week ago, the All Blacks lost six of their previous eight Tests. Coach Ian Foster was mighty fortunate to avoid the sack.
So, are the All Blacks vulnerable? While it will be a monumental effort to reverse a trend of deflating performances, Mitchell says Australia may be able to exploit some Kiwi insecurities.
âTheyâre probably not as confident as they have been,â Mitchell said. âIf the Wallabies start like they did in Adelaide [in a 25-17 victory], then perhaps some of those doubts start to creep into the forefront of the mind ... some of the pressures and cracks start to get a little bit wider. Itâs going to be a difficult task.â
Last week, Kurtley Beale assured there was belief in the group, while coaches are working hard to ensure Wallabies fans can party like itâs 2002 again.
â[Itâs about] genuinely crossing the chalk and thinking youâre going out there to change the course of history,â said Wallabies assistant Dan McKellar. âItâs been the best part of 20 years since we held the Bledisloe. If we donât have confidence and belief, weâre kidding ourselves.â
Weâll give the final word to Sonny Bill.
âItâs going to be very difficult for Australia to win because theyâve got to win two games,â he said.
âThere is definitely talent in Australia. They can jag a game here and there but winning all your games in a year against the All Blacks is very rare.â
Bit of a long one, but not a bad trip down memory lane.
Just on the ânine out of 54 testsâ, every one of those nine have been famous victoriesâŚ.
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Team gets named in 40mins apparently.
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@Machpants said in Bledisloe 1:
@antipodean said in Bledisloe 1:
Team gets named in 40mins apparently.
1330?
NZST, yes.
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Text version:
1.Ethan de Groot (8)
2.Samisoni Taukeiâaho (15)
3.Tyrel Lomax (18)
4.Brodie Retallick (96)
5.Samuel Whitelock (138)
6.Scott Barrett (54)
7.Sam Cane
(84)8.Hoskins Sotutu (10)
9.Aaron Smith (109)
10.Richie Moâunga (39)
11.Caleb Clarke (9)
12.David Havili (20)
13.Rieko Ioane (54)
14.Will Jordan (19)
15.Jordie Barrett (43)
Reserves:
16.Dane Coles (83)
17.George Bower (18)
18.Fletcher Newell (3)
19.Akira Ioane (17)
20.Dalton Papaliâi (16)
21.Finlay Christie (10)
22.Beauden Barrett (107)
23.Quinn Tupaea (13)