Sunday Star-Times

Wallabies woes deepen with Genia injury blow

- GEORGINA ROBINSON

A month ago the upcoming Ireland tour was going to be the shot in the arm Australian rugby needed.

Now, with Will Genia all but ruled out and Tatafu Polota-Nau much the same, the June test series has the disturbing feel of England 2016.

Remember that one? The Wallabies bossed by England in three test matches on home soil, less than a year after playing in a World Cup final. Coached by one of our own, Eddie Jones, to boot. It was all so traumatic.

But in a little over a month, the No2-ranked Irish will be here preparing to do the same and there is every reason to feel bearish about the Wallabies.

Halfback Genia is looking at up to eight weeks on the sidelines after picking up a medial ligament tear in his left leg during the Rebels’ Friday night loss to the Crusaders. Australia’s dependence on the little man’s leadership and game management may not be as acute as the Rebels’ – the scoreline blew out to 55-10 from 13-10 after Genia was taken off the field – but it is not far off. The injury will cast a pall over Michael Cheika’s weekend as the Wallabies coach runs the rule over his playing stocks in the final few rounds of Super Rugby before the break.

Compoundin­g the disquiet is that Cheika is now planning to take on Ireland without his most experience­d hooker, Tatafu Polota-Nau. It appear Polota-Nau will return to Australia this year, as planned, but be given a break between wrapping up his duties with Leicester and joining the Wallabies for the Rugby Championsh­ip.

Add that to a conspicuou­sly short preparatio­n for the first test in Brisbane and Cheika has some big challenges on his plate.

The Wallabies have known about the time limitation­s for a long time and have deployed assistants Nathan Grey, Stephen Larkham and Mick Byrne to the provinces throughout the season to try to make up for it. Certainly the systematic familiaris­ation will help but it is no match for time together as a squad when you are about to take on the Six Nations champions and second best team in the world.

Polota-Nau is a player for whom it is worth playing the long game. The Leicester-based hooker craves a break after a gruelling couple of years and looks certain to sit out the June series with one eye on next year’s World Cup. For so long the Wallabies enjoyed the twin virtues of quality and quantity at hooker, with the NSW No 2 swapping in and out of top billing with his Canberra rival Stephen Moore. Since Moore retired at the end of last year and Polota-Nau flew the coop to the UK Premiershi­p, Cheika has been looking for the next best thing. He found it in Jordan Uelese but the Rebels young gun is now in a race against time to be declared fit after a run of injuries that will take him to the wire for June. That leaves the field wide open. The Brumbies’ Folau Faingaa, the Reds’ Brandon PaengaAmos­a and the Waratahs’ Damien Fitzpatric­k have plenty to play for over the next few weeks.

The halfback question is equally vexing, not least because Genia turned up in Melbourne and immediatel­y showed his powers had deepened with age rather than weakened. Joe Powell has been on Cheika’s radar at the Brumbies and Jake Gordon looks in no rush to hand back the Waratahs No 9 jersey to Nick Phipps, but there is a gap to bridge between any of them and Genia.

Australia’s attack coach, Larkham, made it clear last week there would be new faces in the first Wallabies squad of the year, but it’s hard to believe he was planning for so many of them to start. The only mercy could lie in persistent rumours Ireland will bring a B side down under for their summer tour. Where once the suggestion would have been met with outrage, it will be judged less harshly if any more top-line Wallabies drop out of contention over the final few rounds.

The

Sun-Herald

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Will Genia is set for eight weeks on the sideline.
GETTY IMAGES Will Genia is set for eight weeks on the sideline.

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