The Chronicle

Scandal bringing Waratahs together

- JULIAN LINDEN

RUGBY UNION: The

sense of unity that Israel Folau unintentio­nally gave to the Waratahs with his divisive social media posts has been used to full effect but now they’ve got to find another way to win.

With their backs to the wall after a week of off-field distractio­ns, the Waratahs dug themselves out of a 13-point halftime deficit to beat the Rebels on Saturday night by sticking together and adopting a simple game plan.

“He’s a special player, no doubt about it, he’s talented, he’s a freak and he’s been a big part of this team so when you lose any player like that there’s a hole,” NSW five-eighth Bernard Foley said.

“But what the side did this week, they filled it pretty quickly in terms of how we went about business, we didn’t try and replicate or find another Israel, we went about our business.

“For the guys to really come together and get a performanc­e like that, especially after what had happened and that start, guys can easily fall away and throw their hands up but they didn’t, they stuck at it and that’s the most satisfying result.”

But what keeps driving their supporters mad is that every time they look like they’ve turned the corner, they follow it up with a horror show, most glaringly with their defeat to the bottom-placed Sunwolves.

“Hopefully this is a little light bulb moment that we go, ‘that’s what we need to take in terms of direction,” Waratahs skipper Michael Hooper said.

“We need to turn that into some momentum.”

Perhaps they’ve finally worked it out, and again they can probably thank Folau.

Without the competitio­n’s all-time leading tryscorer, the Waratahs have realised they need to play a more structured game, kicking for territory and building points through penalties rather than the previous bravado approach of always searching for tries.

It worked against the Rebels and while it’s not pretty, Foley admitted it is effective.

“We want to be doing the flashy stuff but we’ll take ugly wins as well,” he said. “They’re not really ugly because they’re so satisfying especially when we sit in the change room and be so content, just have that quiet moment with each other.

“That’s the stuff you play for, the stuff you can’t replicate outside the team environmen­t and that’s the stuff we’ve got to chase.”

The Waratahs’ 23-20 comeback win over the Rebels and stirring victories in South Africa for the Brumbies and Queensland Reds have left all four teams within six points of the conference lead.

After collecting a bonus point, the Rebels (24) are still four points clear of the Waratahs (20). The Brumbies (19) are back in the mix after their 19-17 win over the Stormers in Cape Town and the resurgent Reds (18) are also well in conference contention after they beat the Sharks 21-14 in Durban.

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