Mercury (Hobart)

Rennie driven by results

New Wallabies coach won’t make excuses

- DARREN WALTON

NEW Wallabies coach Dave Rennie is demanding excellence and immediate results when he takes the reins.

Rejecting notions of a rebuild following a post-World Cup exodus of talent, Rennie has forecast a “no excuses” policy as he bids to revive the Wallabies’ flagging fortunes.

Former Wallabies coach John Connolly and two-times World Cup winner Tim Horan have called on fans to give the New Zealander time to mould what shapes as a new-look team in 2020. But Rennie is having none of it.

“I think the Australian public expect the results and probably expect them immediatel­y and I don’t want to give the guys any excuses that we’re building and all that sort of stuff,” the two-times Super Rugby-winning mentor said.

“So the expectatio­n is they’re going to work really hard and we’re going out to win footy. I feel if you use excuses you give players an out to maybe underperfo­rm.”

Wallabies stalwarts like Samu Kerevi, Bernard Foley, Will Genia, Nick Phipps, Adam Coleman, Rory Arnold and Sekope Kepu have left the country. Rennis is unconcerne­d.

“That excites me, to be honest,” he said. “When I went to the Chiefs in 2012 there was a heap of very experience­d players leaving for offshore. That actually encouraged me to apply for the job because I thought it was going to be easier to change the culture with a chance to bring in some fresh blood.”

It remains to be seen whether Foley, Genia and Kepu, who all meet the 60Test eligibilit­y criteria, are picked for the Wallabies with the new coach preferring Test aspirants playing in Australia.

“The advantage of having guys playing Super Rugby means that we’ve got access to them, we’ve got an influence,” Rennie said. “And players from overseas, maybe it works all right in a World Cup year, but it’s good to have them in the set-up.”

“For example, if we’re looking at a prop who is playing in France and we want him to be athletic and skilful because of the game we want to play, as well as scrum well, his French club doesn’t care whether he can catch and pass. They just want him to scrimmage. Maybe he’s not conditione­d well and you’ve got to get him back a week earlier, which is difficult.”

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