Dave Rennie reveals Taniela Tupou's World Cup odds as Achilles rupture confirmed
Coach Dave Rennie says Wallabies enforcer Taniela Tupou should be back from a ruptured Achilles in time for next year's World Cup amid a mounting injury toll.
Dave Rennie is confident Wallabies steam-roller Taniela Tupou will be back from injury in time for next year's World Cup while promising a review into the causes of Rugby Australia's colossal casualty list.
Tupou suffered a ruptured Achilles tendon against Ireland on Sunday, with four other Wallabies also injured in the 13-10 loss in Dublin.
With former captain Michael Hooper the latest to be ruled out with concussion, nine players have now been sent home to recover from a horror European tour that's also included one-point defeats at the hands of France and Italy.
Despite Tupou's grim prognosis, Rennie allayed fears the prop enforcer would miss the World Cup in September.
"Recovery time (is) seven-plus months, so he's unlikely to get back in time for Super (Rugby) but will be back in time for international," the coach said on Friday.
The New Zealander vowed to conduct a review into the causes of the casualty glut, but dismissed claims Tupou's injury was the result of overwork.
"Obviously it's disappointing," Rennie said.
"With the amount of injuries we have, we'll have a good look into what's caused some of those.
"Some are bad luck and others if it's something we're doing within our program then we need to adjust."
One positive for Rennie has been the opportunity to blood fringe players with valuable first team minutes.
"It's no doubt that we've got a bit of time into the group that's playing and they're not unfamiliar with what we're trying to do," he said.
"Injuries have created opportunities and that gives a chance to create more depth and competition for places."
Five-eighth Ben Donaldson will earn his first international start when the Wallabies take on Wales on Sunday (AEDT) in the fifth and final game of their spring tour.
"He's training really well, he's got points of difference and we want to find out what that's like under the blowtorch," Rennie said of the 23-year-old.
Also starting in his first match will be 21-year-old Langi Gleeson, while prop Sam Talakai could win his first cap off the bench.
With only 25 fit players to choose from, lock Darcy Swain and prop Matt Gibbon were the only two overlooked for the tour-ending Cardiff Test.
"We have a Murphy's Law group where we're slotting guys in on the chance that someone falls over on a Friday or on a warm-up that others are clear in their roles and they can jump in," Rennie said.
"It's no doubt that we've got a bit of time into the group that's playing and they're not unfamiliar with what we're trying to do.
"Injuries have created opportunities and that gives a chance to create more depth and competition for places."
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Claims that Finau is a risky proposition are hyperbole. His tackles have been mostly perfectly timed and executed except for the Lynach one and that was a split-second out, certainly not 2 seconds. Social media criticism shows opposition fans are nervous about Finau’s impact. I see Jacobson and Blackadder as no.7s, they don’t have the power, size or dynamism to be 6 or 8 at Test level. Akira has shown he lacks the intuition and technique to play Tests. If he learnt to bend his back more and hit breakdowns and tackles low and hard, it would do wonders for his game. Finau is the standout option for 6 with Grace or Shields as his backup. I’d like to see Finau, Sotutu and Jacobson as an experimental back-row combo; lineout nous, dynamic ball carrying, hard defence, etc.
Go to commentsI find these articles so very interesting, giving a much more in depth series of insights than one can ever gain from “desktop” research. It is very significant that it is this English man that Joe Schmidt has turned to build the basement stability and reliability from the WB forwards that was so shredded during the Jones debacle. With his long period in Ireland, with both Leinster and Ireland, Schmidt will know Geoff Parling’s qualities as a player well, and he will have gone over, with a fine tooth comb, the mans time in Australia. This, one feels, will prove to be a shrewd decision. I’m particularly interested in Parling’s comments about the lineout, especially the differences in approach between the hemispheres. He talks about the impact of weather conditions on the type of lineout tactics employed. He is the right man to have preparing for a wet and windy game at Eden Park, the “Cake Tin”, or in Christchuch, or for that matter in Capetown. I must confess to being surprised by this comment though re Will Skelton: “ Is he a lineout jumper? No. But the lineout starts on the ground – contact work, lifting, utilising that massive body at the maul.” Geoff is spot on about the work Will does on the ground. But I would contest the view that he is not a lineout jumper. I think I have commented before on this one, so won’t go further than referring to the end of the last Cup Final in Dublin, LAR using Will on maybe 3 occasions at No 2 in the lineout. And I have seen him used by LAR in Top 14, and never seen him beaten to the catch…but in reality that would only be a total of 10 times max.
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