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Wallabies boss Dave Rennie open to picking players based in New Zealand and Japan

By AAP
(Photo by Matt Roberts/Getty Images)

Disappointed by the nature of Izack Rodda's Australian rugby exit, incoming Wallabies coach Dave Rennie plans to stop the player drain, show some love and tinker with the Giteau Law to best harness the talent at his disposal.

Former Glasgow and Chiefs coach Rennie is quarantining in his native New Zealand and isn't likely to arrive in Australia until after Super Rugby AU's July 3 restart.

Rugby's shutdown has given him ample thinking time and he described the Giteau Law as "under discussion".

Chiefs fan reaction vs Blues

The law allows those playing overseas with 60 or more test caps and seven years of service to Australian rugby to play for the Wallabies, a loosening of the policy that allowed Matt Giteau to play in the 2015 World Cup.

Rennie is advocating for a fresh tweak - rather than a complete tear down that he believes would damage the domestic product by enabling the country's best players to "chase the big money knowing they can still play for their country".

Instead, Rennie entertained the prospect of including Japanese teams alongside Australian and New Zealand outfits in a revamped Super Rugby competition next year, from which any Australian could play and still be picked for the Wallabies.

That could allow the likes of rampaging centre Samu Kerevi, who left the Queensland Reds for Japan's Suntory last year, to return to the national fold.

"We've certainly got players playing in that (Japanese Top League) competition and whether that would make them eligible for selections (is worth considering) because you can compare apples with apples," Rennie said.

"If we had a Wallaby playing for the Blues, for example, we get to see him playing against the best Aussies.

"From a selection point of view that makes sense ... I'm not a big fan of trying to pluck guys out of France."



"The full picture probably hasn't been painted ... he's gone and whole situation was really messy and I think could've been handled a lot better," he said.

"There's so many good Australian players playing overseas, young men in their prime but not in our country.

"We've made a lot of phone calls ... shown a bit of love and can hopefully lure them back over time."

Rennie, who hopes to meet former national coach Michael Cheika, wants that communication to extend to the boardroom after witnessing chief executive Raelene Castle's demise during the rugby's COVID-19 enforced hiatus.

"My assumption is that (negative) comments made in media ... hopefully it's because those people care," he said.

"So (we need) more conversations face to face, less individuals leaking stuff to media ... if we work harder together, pull in the same direction, it'll improve the brand and continue to develop the game."