Manawatu Standard

Tight Wallabies pose RWC threat: Moore

- Daniel Gilhooly

Forget the performanc­es and results from any Wallabies tests this year, former captain Stephen Moore says their Rugby World Cup hopes will hinge on how well the players come together.

Moore was skipper of the 2015 Australia side that exceeded all expectatio­ns by reaching the final at Twickenham, where they came up short against the All Blacks.

The veteran of 129 tests said that campaign was the perfect example of camaraderi­e eclipsing talent and he expected coach Michael Cheika to adopt the same mantra in Japan.

Moore reckoned Cheika would have made team bonding a priority during their 10-day pre-campaign camp in Noumea and it would be the same again this week in Odawara, south of Tokyo, where they’ll prepare away from the tournament limelight.

‘‘Four years ago we worked really hard at the camps and, out of that, we wanted to play for each other,’’ Moore said.

‘‘The most important component to team success is how it gels. Then once you get a few wins together you get confidence in what you’re doing and everything is reinforced.’’

The Wallabies flew out of Sydney yesterday, 14 hours later than planned.

The delay was caused by a typhoon lashing Japan that made landfall near Tokyo yesterday morning.

Moore was unconcerne­d by the erratic nature of Australia’s test performanc­es in the lead-up, saying little should be read into all matches over the past seven weeks as teams were at different points of preparatio­n and motivation.

A good example was last month’s 36-0 loss to the All Blacks at Eden Park, which Moore attended.

He said the hosts came out steaming and wondered if Australia may have been subconscio­usly distracted by all the glowing press after their big Bledisloe Cup win in Perth a week earlier.

‘‘I don’t think anyone bar New Zealand would have won that game, they were obviously very desperate,’’ Moore said.

‘‘I wouldn’t read too much into it – that’s as hard a test match as they’re going to play and probably as close as you’ll get to a World Cup final-type scenario.

‘‘So it will be a good experience for those young Wallabies players to have been under that kind of pressure and hopefully they’ll learn a fair bit from that.’’

Moore hoped critics would write the Wallabies off en masse, making it easier for Cheika’s men to harness a siege mentality that was a pillar of Australia’s campaign four years ago. – AAP

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Wallabies coach Michael Cheika, left, with former captain Stephen Moore.
GETTY IMAGES Wallabies coach Michael Cheika, left, with former captain Stephen Moore.

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