The Citizen (Gauteng)

Hooper backs much-maligned coach Cheika

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– Wallabies coach Michael Cheika has ignored any talk of his job security as the Wallabies prepared for their Rugby Championsh­ip clash with the All Blacks in Auckland today, according to captain Michael Hooper (right).

Cheika’s side were beaten 3813 by the All Blacks in Sydney last week and pundits have said the team’s performanc­e in the Rugby Championsh­ip clash against the world champions at Eden Park could go a long way to determinin­g his future.

The Australian newspaper reported yesterday that Cheika had just three games to earn the sup-

Wellington

port of Rugby Australia bosses to take the side through to next year’s World Cup in Japan, but Hooper said the coach had been ignoring the criticism.

“I think what we’ve seen in Cheik this week is that the guy wants to win. He just wants to win,” Hooper told reporters in Auckland yesterday.

“That’s what he’s shown this week ... an absolute thirst to get this team to reach its potential. That’s what Cheik is about ... and that’s what he’s exuded this week.”

Last Saturday’s loss was the Wallabies’ fifth in their last six games and Cheika has won a modest 25 of his 49 matches in charge since he took over at the end of 2014.

Prominent Australian rugby journalist Greg Growden wrote on ESPN this week the reaction of fans, who banged on the coach’s box to vent their frustratio­n at the end of last week’s game, indicated it was time for Rugby Australia to sack Cheika.

“Drastic action is required because Cheika’s Wallabies are going absolutely nowhere, sending Australian rugby into a frightenin­g nosedive,” Growden wrote.

Hooper’s team-mates, however, publicly backed their coach this week and Cheika said there was no-one who was hurting more than he was as he saw two of his young children crying at the end of last week’s match.

Hooper added that Saturday’s game was not about playing for Cheika’s future, but about beating the All Blacks and keeping the Rugby Championsh­ip and battle for the Bledisloe Cup alive.

“We play for our country and that’s a huge amount of motivation. We want them to be proud of this team and as simple and clichéd as it sounds, all we’re thinking about is tomorrow night,” Hooper said. – Reuters

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