The New Zealand Herald

It’s foolish to write off Wallabies this early

- Gregor Paul in Dunedin

There's a touch of over-confidence creeping into the buildup for this second Bledisloe Cup encounter.

Not from the All Blacks, but from everyone else it seems. There isn't a pundit to be found who is giving Australia a chance and that included former Wallabies who have been harsh, if not brutal, in their condemnati­on of the current side.

The TAB have plunged the odds on the All Blacks to their lowest level for a Bledisloe Cup test and there is this overwhelmi­ng sense that fans on both side of the Tasman are in agreement the clash in Dunedin will deliver another heavy victory for the All Blacks.

Why everyone feels like that is fairly easy to understand. The Wallabies were 54-6 down at one stage last week and they were powerless for more than half an hour to do anything to stop the All Blacks. There was also the continued bursts of inaccurate skill execution from the Wallabies and this sense during some periods of the game, that they didn't know what they were trying to do.

For much of the test they didn't look confident. They were hesitant, lacking in commitment to each other and their strategy and given they were like that for 50 minutes, it's no surprise they have been written off as hopeless. But that sort of thinking is not so much crazy as unfair and not reflective of the true ability of this Wallabies side.

They can play effectivel­y with the ball. Even when they were leaking badly in the first half, their attacking thrusts were convincing. They stretched the All Blacks in that first

Even when they were leaking badly in the first half, their attacking thrusts were convincing.

half. In the second, they broke them four times and while some of that was the result of poor decisions the visitors made, there was still ample evidence that Kurtley Beale has added plenty, Tevita Kuridrani is hungry to make his mark and that Israel Folau is deadly if not tackled on the gainline.

On the fast, dry track in Dunedin, the Wallabies should be able to do a bit of damage with the ball.

The big question is how much improvemen­t can they make on their defence after what was a bit of a horror show in Sydney?

The All Blacks exposed the structure of the Wallabies defence by moving the ball quickly and effectivel­y but the bigger problem for the Wallabies wasn't their system, it was more their poor one-on-one tackling. That was unusually bad.

Michael Hooper is a world-class openside who normally hits hard and yet he missed four tackles he would expect to make in his sleep. He wasn't the only one and while that was hardly excusable, it is something the Wallabies can confidentl­y expect not to see again this week.

And if they can make better tackles they can do more to slow the speed of the All Blacks' possession at the recycle point and that in turn will give them a better chance of making more tackles when New Zealand look to push wide.

The Wallabies, however it may have looked last Saturday, are not as far behind the All Blacks as the 54-34 game would attest. They will be better in Dunedin and those who have written them off should be a little wary of regretting that.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand