'They're good men who made poor decisions and we know that'
All is seemingly forgiven with the Wallabies set to welcome back sinning superstar Marika Koroibete for Saturday's do-or-die Bledisloe Cup clash with the All Blacks in Auckland.
Dropped alongside forwards Isi Naisarani and Pone Fa'amausili for a late-night drinking session, Koroibete is likely to be rushed straight back into Australia's starting line-up with trans-Tasman bragging rights for another year on the line.
Andrew Kellaway impressed on his Wallabies run-on debut in last Saturday's 33-25 defeat.
But with the Wallabies down 1-0 in the series and needing to win the remaining two Tests to avoid the Bledisloe Cup remaining in New Zealand for an 18th consecutive year, coach Dave Rennie is tipped to recall his strike winger at Kellaway's expense.
And that's fine by Lukhan Salakaia-Loto, who said after angering teammates in the squad by breaking curfew the trio had been dealt with and served sufficient punishment.
"Guys like Marika and those other boys, they've worked hard over the past week and a bit. As a playing group, (we feel) they're good men who made poor decisions and we know that," the lock said on Tuesday.
"We've been building this culture for the best part of two years now under Dave and his guidance and we have no problem with telling each other off or poking each other in the chest.
"Marika works extremely hard and everyone knows that. I'm sure the fans know that at home, how hard he works, so you could only imagine how gutted he was.
"So for us as a playing group, we accept their apology."
Salakaia-Loto didn't believe Koroibete, who is bound for Japan at year's end, would use his ban as any sort of spur for a big game.
"Marika, you see every game that he plays, he treats it like his last," he said.
"So if he gets the opportunity this week, he'll be exactly the same as what he's been in the past.
"He's been one of our best players that we'v e had."
But the Wallabies know it will take mor e than Koroibete to break the their 35-year losing streak at Eden Park.
The Wallabies conceded their first four lineouts at the burial ground last week to gift the All Blacks precious possession and improving the set piece is imperative.
"You can't win games if you don't have the ball," Salakaia-Loto said.
"We were in good parts of the field and those are the opportunities that we've got to take. We put ourselves in those parts of the field and, as a forward pack, we let our backs down.
"As locks and as a forward pack, we pride ourselves on our lineout and our scrum and especially on the maul.
"For us, we took that on the chin, we reviewed it and we'll make some fixes and make sure we're better for it this week."
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What's notable is that this time they were pushing the point a minute barrier for the first halve. In Tokyo it was in the 70th+ minute they broke 50, it was 20 just before halftime.
Japan has at least a couple of good try's in them, against England previously, NZ and France. NZ and France really did pump them for 40+ minutes though, England is quite at that level.
Go to commentsAngus Bell looks like the best carrying prop in the world but popping out like that against Wales is a huge issue. I'm not a fan of international props who aren't top tier scrummagers. Their carrying is a nice asset but their scrummaging will cost you matches against the best sides. Scrum has to be the primary consideration when picking props but I don't know what depth Australia have, they're not a renowned nation of scrummagers.
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