Khaleej Times

Michael Cheika’s rebuilding Wallabies may struggle to get it back when they start the Rugby Championsh­ip with back-to-back tests against the All Blacks

- Reuters

melbourne — Michael Cheika’s rebuilding Wallabies suffered a blow to their confidence during the June internatio­nals and may struggle to get it back when they start the Rugby Championsh­ip with back-to-back tests against the All Blacks.

Facing the world champions from across ‘the ditch’ has never been an ideal way to ease into the southern hemisphere tournament and the Wallabies are under the added pressure of having to ‘save’ Australian rugby.

Less than two years have passed since Australia’s dashing run to the World Cup final in England, but by almost any measure, the local game is at an alarmingly low ebb.

Players and pundits are furious at the national federation’s hamfisted efforts to cut a team from Super Rugby, and fans deserted their provincial sides in droves as they stumbled through a season without a single win over New Zealand opponents.

The June internatio­nals offered a chance for the Wallabies to restore some faith in the Australian game but paltry crowds turned out to witness a scratchy win over Fiji, a shock loss to Scotland and a huge scare against lowly Italy.

Against that backdrop, Australia’s opener against the All Blacks in Sydney on Saturday has been invested with a grim solemnity, as if the very foundation­s of the sport might crumble if Cheika’s men fail to at least trouble Steve Hansen’s side.

“Why is it so important? Because the Wallabies need to regain the support of the Australian rugby public in a sport that, it saddens me to say, is lagging desperatel­y in the popularity stakes,” former Wallabies fullback Matt Burke wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald.

Saturday’s match at Sydney’s Olympic stadium and the return clash against the All Blacks in Dunedin also double as the first two fixtures in the teams’ annual Bledisloe Cup series, which will be decided with a third test outside the Rugby Championsh­ip in October.

Australia could lose every match against South Africa and Argentina in the Rugby Championsh­ip and it would scarcely matter to local fans so long as their team can claim the Bledisloe Cup for the first time since 2002.

Bookmakers give the Wallabies very little chance of beating the New Zealanders, who will be fuelled by the frustratio­n of their drawn series against the British and Irish Lions.

“I have never been less confident that we will beat the All Blacks,” former Wallabies captain Andrew Slack told Reuters in a recent interview.

For all the doubt, Cheika remains convinced his team can make the nation proud and has put his players through harrowing bootcamps in regional New South Wales to build the physical and mental fitness required to match the All Blacks for 80 minutes.

Hard-nosed flanker Michael Hooper has been confirmed as captain, ending an awkward leadership dynamic that dogged the team in June when former skipper Stephen Moore was benched for two of the matches. —

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 ?? AFP file ?? Australian coach Michael Cheika speaking to his players during a training session. —
AFP file Australian coach Michael Cheika speaking to his players during a training session. —

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