Otago Daily Times

Simone backed to make mark

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SYDNEY: Wallabies coach Dave Rennie is confident new cap Irae Simone will make his mark on their mustwin Bledisloe Cup test in Sydney on Saturday.

Rookie playmaker Noah Lolesio is all the talk but Wallabies coach Dave Rennie suspects his other starting new cap will be equally as influentia­l in tomorrow night’s mustwin Bledisloe Cup stoush with the All Blacks.

Simone, Lolesio’s Brumbies teammate, will start at second fiveeighth, giving the

Wallabies a midfield pairing with zero caps between them at ANZ Stadium.

That is compared to the 54 tests each for injured duo Matt Toomua and James O’Connor, who started the two tests in

New Zealand.

Rennie is unfazed, adamant Lolesio and Simone can get the job done.

While 20yearold Lolesio has captured all the headlines following his rapid rise this year, Simone has flown under the radar — but not Rennie’s.

‘‘He’s been excellent. He’s a great communicat­or and we felt we missed some opportunit­ies at Eden Park just through a lack of talk,’’ the coach said of the 25yearold.

‘‘He’s really strong with and without the ball in regards to our communicat­ion. And, look, he’s a big man; he can carry and he’s got a good skill set.

‘‘He kicks well so we’re pretty excited about that and him playing outside Noah is going to help the young man.

‘‘They’ve got a good combinatio­n and obviously Nic White inside him is from the same club also.’’

Simone will line up against All Black ace Jack Goodhue, in a reunion of their Auckland high school centre combinatio­n.

Simone actually played rugby league for New Zealand schoolboys before signing with NRL club South Sydney as an 18yearold and declaring his allegiance to Australia.

He did not get a run in first grade and returned to rugby, catching the eye of the Waratahs.

Starved of game time, he shifted to the Brumbies before the 2019 season where he really found his groove.

Goodhue is excited his old teammate is winning his first cap.

‘‘We go way back, he’s done awesome, he’s a really good player — he’s got the run, the kick, pass — but what I really like about him is the effort that he puts in,’’ Goodhue said.

‘‘He’s come back to rugby and worked hard to get where he is and I’m really excited to play against him.’’

Goodhue joked that Simone was not always a hard worker, lumping him with the tough stuff at school.

‘‘When we were on attack our 10 would get the ball and Irae at 13 would always call a miss [cutout] pass and then come to defence he was always like ‘Jack, he’s yours, you make the tackle’, and that’s how it worked.’’ — Reuters

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