How the Brumbies have evolved to become unlikely contenders for Super Rugby title
The Brumbies are poised to again dominate the Australian conference of Super Rugby and have the potential go at least one step further and make the tournament's final in 2020.
Despite the loss of veterans Sam Carter, Rory Arnold and Christian Lealiifano, the Brumbies squad remains one of the most potent in Super Rugby as it has a forward pack that can deliver points, but also possession to a dangerous backline that has the firepower to do the same.
Boasting a forwards contingent that comprises of Wallabies Scott Sio, Folau, Fainga’a, Alan Alaalatoa, James Slipper, Blake Enever, Pete Samu and Rob Valetini, the Brumbies will yet again be clinical and damaging at set-piece under the eye of veteran forwards coach Laurie Fisher.
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Such experience will be joined by exciting emerging talent such as the 205cm Nick Frost, who demonstrated his potential whilst appearing for the Junior Wallabies in the World U20 Championship and impressed with his try against Ireland last year.
Both Frost and fellow emerging second rower Darcy Swain will likely appear alongside Enever in the locking role during the season, and will thus provide credible lineout options, allowing the Brumbies to maintain their preference for commencing their attack with a driving maul.
Yet there will be more attacking options on offer for the Brumbies of 2020.
Club legend Christian Lealiifano has left for Japan and some may consider the Brumbies are in a similar position to the New South Wales Waratahs, who could struggle to fill the void left by Bernard Foley.
The Brumbies, however, do not need a flyhalf that will make the crunch decisions, lead the younger players around and win them the game as the Waratahs might.
All the Brumbies need is a flyhalf who can underplay his own game and put the larger forward runners, such as Lachlan McCaffrey and Rob Valetini, into the right areas of the park to breach the gain line.
That should unleash potent outside backs like Tom Banks, Toni Pulu and former rugby league player Solomone Kata, who is a proven try-scorer in that code after scoring 46 tries in 93 appearances for the New Zealand Warriors.
The Brumbies are blessed with youthful talent in the flyhalf role in particular thanks to the addition of Reesjan Pasitoa, who is a product of Nudgee College in Brisbane, which is a known Wallaby factory.
At only 18 years of age, the evidently talented Pasitoa is now a genuine contender to start for the Brumbies in 2020 as Lealiifano's understudy Wharenui Hawera has moved to Japanese club, the Kubota Spears, and the frustrated Jordan Jackson-Hope has defected to the Sunwolves.
Another young talent vying for the playmaking role is 21-year-old Bayley Kuenzle who represented the Junior Wallabies in 2018.
A product of Newington College in Sydney, Kuenzle is a versatile player who can also play in the inside centre position and is known as a direct ball-runner. Having such a player could open up opportunities out wide as the Brumbies will not run themselves out of attacking space with Kuenzle on the park.
A name some suggest may be a fringe Wallaby this year is Auckland-born Noah Lolesio.
A member of the 2019 Junior Wallabies who narrowly lost to France in the World Rugby U20 Championship final, Lolesio has been training with the Brumbies for at least 12 months, and appears set to have first opportunity to take the reigns when the season opens against the Queensland Reds in a matter of weeks.
Whoever gets the flyhalf spot, much responsibility will rest on their shoulders, although that player will not carry that burden alone as the attack will be orchestrated by Wallabies scrumhalf Joe Powell, who will know how to balance out the No. 10's workload and bring him into the game as required.
The backs will be coached by former Waratahs fullback Peter Hewat, who appears to be a coach on the rise after a successful 2019 with the Australian Schools and U18 side that defeated New Zealand across the ditch.
Hewat will get the Brumbies to play a more attacking and counter-attacking brand of rugby as seen in recent years.
His inherent attacking assertiveness ensures the Canberra side have the balance to score from both set piece and broken play, which will make them an exceptionally difficult team to defend against.
The Brumbies have points in them through the set piece, middle of the park and flanks which make them credible contenders for the 2020 Super Rugby crown.
Under the guidance of head coach Dan McKellar, they are in exceptionally good hands to achieve such an outcome.
Mentioned in dispatches as a potential Wallabies coach of the future, McKellar learned his rugby at the famous Souths Magpies in Brisbane, and the North Queenslander brings all the teak a former front rower should.
However, the 43-year-old is not limited by his attraction to only being physically dominate to achieve success.
He is an articulate communicator who appears to have the ability to get the most out of what he has at his disposal and is more pragmatic than dogmatic in his approach to the game plan.
Despite their prowess in the forwards, McKellar is a shrewd enough operator to know the Brumbies must be more than one-trick ponies if they are to progress deep into the finals.
Considering what the entire organisation appears to be able to deliver, 2020 may yet be the year of the Brumby.
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I think the best 15 we have is DMac. Jordan at 14.
Go to commentsIt certainly needs to be cherished. Despite Nick (and you) highlighting their usefulness for teams like Australia (and obviously those in France they find form with) I (mention it general in those articles) say that I fear the game is just not setup in Aus and NZ to appreciate nor maximise their strengths. The French game should continue to be the destination of the biggest and most gifted athletes but it might improve elsewhere too.
I just have an idea it needs a whole team focus to make work. I also have an idea what the opposite applies with players in general. I feel like French backs and halves can be very small and quick, were as here everyone is made to fit in a model physique. Louis was some 10 and 20 kg smaller that his opposition and we just do not have that time of player in our game anymore. I'm dying out for a fast wing to appear on the All Blacks radar.
But I, and my thoughts on body size in particular, could be part of the same indoctrination that goes on with player physiques by the establishment in my parts (country).
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