'He's been awesome': Wallabies coach predicts who will start at No. 10 for All Blacks as Australian selection headaches loom
Just 10 days out from the opening Bledisloe Cup test against the All Blacks, the big debate among the Wallabies coaches is who will start in the backline.
With a squad of 44 in Christchurch preparing for the first test in Wellington on October 11, Wallabies attack coach Scott Wisemantel says competition is fierce for starting spots.
"I've got a backline in my head but whether it's the same backline as Dave (Rennie) and Tatsie (Matt Taylor) and Geoff (Parling), that's for debate, and that's a nightly debate that we're having at the moment, so it brings an edge to training, which is good so that's what we want," Wisemantel said.
"It's always changing - someone will have a terrific training session and someone lets themselves down a wee bit - it's one of those ones where they've got to perform."
Wisemantel said three weeks preparation in camp meant there was time to establish new combinations, so they wouldn't necessarily rely on both halves coming from the Brumbies or Reds.
"At the moment it's a really good opportunity to see who matches and gels with who and we want to see a level of consistency and continuity through the bench."
While joining England in the middle of 2018 under former Wallabies coach Eddie Jones had an immediate impact, Wisemantel warned the Australians were a little raw given the debutants and new coaching staff.
"They're different teams in so far as that English team had been together for a fair while and fairly well established, we're probably at a different (stage)," Wisemantel said.
"New coaching staff, new systems, new players so our ambition is to do the same thing - that's the ambition but whether we can do it in the short-term I don't know."
While the Wallabies playmakers are far from set Wisemantel was firm about whom he saw in the All Blacks No.10 jersey - Richie Mo'unga.
Wisemantel was asked why he preferred Mo'unga, who mostly started there last year, over Beauden Barrett.
"Have you watched the Super Rugby Aotearoa? He's been awesome."
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Think it was a great defensive performance by Northampton. They didn't have stage fright in the first half, the Nienaber defense smothered them. They limited Leinster to 15-3 in the first half. It could have been over by then. A great try from Leinster in the start of the second half looked to have sealed it. But Byrne missed another conversion. Northampton started trying little kicks behind the Leinster wingers. Leinster messed one and Smith brilliantly made the conversion. Leinster decided to tighten the game after Byrne missed a straight forward penalty. A few errors got NH into the 22 and they scored and converted with a few minutes left. Another brilliant steal from Lawes saw NH have a final attack which was turned over by Conan. A classic semi final. World record attendance of 82,300. Leinsters 3 week preparation warranted for this one.
Go to commentsJust came back from the game and the atmosphere was amazing. Players stayed afterwards for more than a hour to sign stuff and take photos with fans. Great day out.
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