Taranaki Daily News

Cheika: We know no one rates us

- ROBERT VAN ROYEN

As if Michael Cheika didn’t have enough on his platter.

When Wallabies coach Cheika revealed he had received abusive messages in the wake of the 54-34 loss to the All Blacks in Sydney last weekend, he shone a light on the uglier side of the coaching life.

‘‘I have certainly had some of my own hate mail to deal with,’’ Cheika said this week. ‘‘I am not sure how they get my email address ... or (my) phone number. But you have to roll with that stuff mate, you have to deal with it. And there’s only one way that can change.’’

Victory over the All Blacks in Dunedin tonight, to keep the Bledisloe Cup series alive ahead of the decider in Brisbane on October 21, would be the best way for Cheika to jab a trident back at the trolls.

Good luck against it.

Even when All Blacks coach Steve Hansen scratched tighthead prop Owen Franks because of his Achilles tendon injury, it created only a small ripple of consternat­ion among supporters.

Replacing a 95-test veteran with Nepo Laulala, who has just four internatio­nal caps, might activate some heated conversati­ons if the opposition were England, South Africa, Ireland or France.

But the Aussies? Nah, really.

It would be arrogant to believe this result was a foregone conclusion because the Wallabies are unlikely to be as terrible in the opening 50 minutes when they trailed 54-6 in Sydney, and it would only take a red card from referee Nigel Owens to swing the momentum in the visitors’ favour at Forsyth Barr Stadium.

Yet it pays to be realistic. The TAB have posted ridiculous­ly short odds on the All Blacks, offering just $1.02 for a win while the Wallabies are at $12.

Were the Wallabies really that bad in Sydney?

Not for the final 30 minutes, when they replied with four tries to him. He’s up not The All Blacks fell apart when the 28-year-old centre was subbed off early in the second half in Sydney last week, and has been called the glue which holds the backs together. Don’t be surprised if coach Steve Hansen asks him to play the full 80 this week, particular­ly if the match is tight.

and exploited the All Blacks’ sloppy execution and lack of focus, they weren’t. Getting inside players’ heads is one of the most difficult jobs for any coach and Hansen would have pounced on footage of that second-half comeback at ANZ Stadium.

During their preparatio­n last week the All Blacks would have adopted a siege mentality, a consequenc­e of the ‘‘bug-gate’’ court case being scheduled during their buildup and tabloid stories about the personal lives of Aaron Smith and Jerome Kaino being aired in the local papers.

Hansen has had to punch some different buttons this week.

Prolonging the Wallabies’ mis- 7.35pm tonight Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin erable run on New Zealand soil is an obvious angle and, so too, is the desire to retain the Bledisloe for a 15th consecutiv­e season.

For those old enough to remem- ber the halcyon days of Australian rugby, when men like Eales, Gregan and Larkham, to name a few, held the All Blacks accountabl­e, it seems inconceiva­ble a generation of their supporters have not celebrated a Bledisloe victory.

Recording the 21st consecutiv­e win over the Aussies on this side of the Tasman will form just one plank of the All Blacks’ mission statement.

One day this golden run will end and Hansen, contracted to NZ Rugby through to the 2019 World Was a mixed bag in Bledisloe I, but still carved the All Blacks’ defensive screen open a few times. Surprising­ly, the former league star wasn’t utilised with cross-field kicks and bombs. Chances are that will change under the roof.

Cup, will be desperate to ensure it doesn’t happen on his watch.

And demanding his players don’t allow their minds to wander, as it did during the second spell in Sydney, should ensure he keeps the heat on Cheika.

‘‘You have got to keep working, keep your attention on what you are trying to do rather than taking a big sigh and a breath,’’ Hansen said.

‘‘Our attention went to the scoreboard rather than the things we had to right there, and then.’’ Wallabies coach Michael Cheika isn’t surprised almost everyone has written his side off.

Rank outsiders with the bookies to beat the All Blacks in Dunedin tonight, slagged off by their own fans and practicall­y biffed in the scrap heap by many Kiwis - tell him something he doesn’t know.

‘‘I think no one does [give us a chance], to be honest,’’ Cheika told media at his team’s captain’s run yester.

‘‘It’s up to us to write our own chapters if we want to change that attitude around. People would be justified to think that.’’

A miserable year for Australian Super Rugby teams - they went 0-26 against Kiwi franchises - started the 2017 rot, before the All Blacks twisted the knife with a 54-34 flogging in Sydney last weekend.

Given what happened at ANZ Stadium, chances are even the most passionate Wallabies fan would laugh in your face if you asked whether or not they felt their team could win in Dunedin and deny the All Blacks from locking up the Bledisloe Cup for a 15th consecutiv­e year.

‘‘We’ve got to let our game do the talking [tonight],’’ Cheika said. ‘‘We do lots of good stuff away from the field, but what counts is on the field for everybody.’’

The Wallabies have been dealt a blow on the eve of Bledisloe II, with rugged lock Adam Coleman ruled out of the match with a shoulder injury. He’s been replaced by Rory Arnold in the starting side.

Wallabies skipper Michael Hooper labelled the scratching of Coleman a ‘‘huge blow’’, but maintained the team’s preparatio­n was on point.

‘‘I was happy to see the guys really disappoint­ed. I was really disappoint­ed and that trickled through the whole team from last week’s game,’’ he said.

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