Townsville Bulletin

Buckley’s hope will do Cheika

- JIM TUCKER

WALLABIES boss Michael Cheika has likened his coaching predicamen­t to that of Collingwoo­d’s Nathan Buckley last year when critics howled for his head before the march unfolded to Saturday’s AFL grand final.

Holding his nerve as a coach under siege was the attitude that Cheika yesterday distilled as vital because he never wants to make a soft call just to please detractors and buy time.

Another of the big decisions in his Wallabies’ “plan” is in his lap right now, because he must decide whether to persevere with his Kurtley Beale- Matt Toomua midfield for Saturday’s crunch Test against South Africa in Port Elizabeth.

Cheika openly said Bernard Foley was still his top fiveeighth, even in the act of dropping him, so it will be fascinatin­g to judge whether Beale- Toomua is truly just an experiment or a longer- term change of direction for the backline.

Either way, this rocky run of just two wins from nine Tests must be ended by something special to stem the public perception that the Wallabies are on the nose.

Beating the Springboks in South Africa for the first time since 2011 would be an accomplish­ment but beating the laststart conquerors of the All Blacks has a far more powerful ring to it if it can be pulled off.

“They wanted to cut Nathan Buckley’s head off last year didn’t they, and he’s in a grand final this week,” Cheika said of Buckley mastermind­ing the rise from 13th in the AFL last year.

“I think the year I won the European Cup with ( Irish club) Leinster six months before everyone was saying you’ve got to give that guy the boot. It’s about who holds their nerve.”

It’s not just on the Foley call but on issues like the groundswel­l urging the promotion of 135kg Taniela Tupou to starting prop when Cheika has a “no hurry” stamp on him to learn his trade as a super- sub for a seventh Test in PE.

“To not be too stubborn ( is part of it too because) you’ve got to move the dial sometimes when things get to a certain situation,” Cheika said. “( But) there’s a difference between moving just to appease others and moving to actually get the outcome that you want.”

The expected return of Michael Hooper from a hamstring twinge is a big positive because the skipper is back running at full pace.

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Michael Cheika.

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