‘Hang on…’: Ex-Wallaby questions why Tom Wright was dropped by Eddie Jones

Former Wallaby Stephen Hoiles has questioned why Tom Wright was left out of Australia’s squad for the Rugby World Cup after the Brumbies fullback’s strong start to the new Super Rugby Pacific season.
Wright, 26, started last year’s Test campaign as Eddie Jones’ first-choice fullback, with the former NRL playmaker starting in the No. 15 jersey against South Africa and Argentina.
But after being dropped from the national squad ahead of two Bledisloe Cup Tests, and then missing the sport’s showpiece event over in France, Wright has bounced back with a series of statement performances with the Brumbies.
Linking up with speedster Corey Toole, the fullback finished off an early try-of-the-season contender against Moana Pasifika at Canberra’s GIO Stadium on Friday night.
Wright finished with a double, had run for a game-high 130 metres from nine carries, beaten four defenders and made two line breaks during the clinical 60-21 victory. That performance led Stephen Hoiles to reflect on what happened with Wright and the Wallabies in 2023.
“He’d had a couple of big mistakes in Test matches last year which cost him dearly, when you think about it,” Hoiles said on Stan Sports’ Between Two Posts.
“I remember during the World Cup, we had so much going on during the World Cup last year, and there was that Barbarians squad, I remember seeing a photo of the Barbarians and just going, ‘Hang on, why’s Tom Wright not in the Wallabies squad?’
“He’s only ever been good for every team he’s played in. Again, two moments in the Test series leading up to the World Cup selection. That’s a huge quality player that we left out of that World Cup squad.
“That can go one of two ways, players can spit the dummy and not work hard in the off-season. He’s a Sydney boy, he was back up and down the highway doing speed training all summer, working his backside off.”
Wright was clearly the standout for the Brumbies as they ran up a confidence-building win over a valiant Moana Pasifika outfit in round five.
The Brumbies opened the scoring against Moana Pasifika in the sixth minute and while it was a close game for a while, Wright helped the hosts pull away with a comfortable win in the end.
Hudson Creighton and Wright both scored doubles, while Rob Valetini, Tamati Tua, Charlie Cale, Corey Toole and Lachlan Lonergan all contributed with five-pointers of their own.
The Brumbies are now third on the Super Rugby Pacific ladder with four wins from five starts, and the combination of Wright and Corey Toole is a big reason why.
“It looks as though (coach Stephen) Larkham has given them a bit more of a license to counter from deep,” Hoiles continued.
“What they did really well on the weekend though was three tries from penalty advantage. They had the arm and then they went bang. They didn’t play low percentage play, they were set up to play off an advantage whereas other teams don’t do that.”
Latest Comments
What absolute rubbish. European rugby mimics test rugby because of their ‘cultural’ focus on the set piece which is the antithesis of multi-phase, ‘play whats in front of you’ attack from anywhere rugby - which dominated world rugby under the most successful win/loss AB’s era of the early 2000’s through to the 2019 WC. Both styles ’breeds’ certain players to excel in those ‘cultural’ game styles and its that which exposed SA teams in Super so much so organisers had to break the comp into ‘conferences’ to ensure SA teams made the finals series each year and even then, no SA team won it. Rarely if ever did a SA team make the semi’s (Stormers maybe once)
No SA URC team would last in Super right now. The ‘pace’ of the game and referees clamping down on purposeful ‘slowing’ of the game which SA is famous for will expose them just like they were last time they featured. None of your teams feature in the Champions Cup and a Leinster academy team just tipped a Springbok team wearing Sharks jerseys last week.
Go to commentsThe yellow card was a bit harsh. SR isn’t known for soft yellows.
Go to comments