COOPER BARRELS
MELBOURNE, July 11 (Reuters) Flyhalf Quade Cooper might be the apple of Ewen McKenzie's eye, but is still feeling the pressure to perform in front of the new Australia coach as the Queensland Reds ramp up for the Super Rugby playoffs.
The demise of former Wallabies coach Robbie Deans, who controversially overlooked Cooper for the British and Irish Lions series, has opened the door for the mercurial 25-year-old to take back the flyhalf position ahead of the opening match of the Rugby Championship against New Zealand next month.
In his third season at the Brisbane-based club, Reds coach McKenzie has made no secret of his admiration for Cooper's highstakes game, but his 38-test prodigy remains wary of slipping up under his mentor's nose.
“Now having Ewen there it's all about continuing to work hard and not dropping your bundle, because this is where the real test starts,” Cooper told Australian cable television channel Fox Sports.
“I've just got to continue to work hard and do the right thing on and off the field.
“Thinking about being part of the Wallabies again and facing the All Blacks, if I do that, then I'm losing sight of what's in front of me and I'm not doing my team mates or my club justice.”
POST-SEASON CAMPAIGN
Cooper will line up against the Sydneybased New South Wales Waratahs on Saturday in the final round of the regular season, as the Reds jostle for a home play-off to start their third successive post-season campaign next week.
Having suffered a serious knee injury at the end of the 2011 World Cup, and re-injured it last year, Cooper's return to top form for the Reds this season had most rugby pundits Down Under believing him a shoo-in to play against the Lions. His omission from the 31-man squad was largely considered a travesty and inevitably linked with the scathing public attack he launched at Deans's gameplan and coaching style last year.
Deans's preferred flyhalf James O'Connor struggled in the pivotal position against the Lions and breached team discipline during the series and appears to have fallen out of favour. That leaves Cooper competing with the highly-fancied but uncapped ACT Brumbies flyhalf Matt Toomua or wayward talent Kurtley Beale, who is still undertaking an off-field programme to deal with alcoholrelated problems. In contrast to his “Three Amigos” comrades O'Connor and
Beale, Cooper has kept his nose clean this season, which should favour him as the Australian Rugby Union review team protocols after several embarrassing incidents during the Lions series.