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'Happy to be nervous': Wallabies coach admits he's a tad daunted in new job

Head coach Joe Schmidt during a Wallabies training session at Ballymore Stadium on June 25, 2024 in Brisbane, Australia. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

Wallabies fans should not expect overnight success after Joe Schmidt confessed to never being less prepared for a first Test in charge as a new coach.

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The Wallabies face Wales in their first match of the year in Sydney on July 6, hoping to reverse a record 40-6 loss to the Red Dragon at last year’s Rugby World Cup in France.

Schmidt, though, is making no bold promises, just repeating he hopes his side is competitive as he builds a side capable of challenging the touring British and Irish Lions in Australia next year.

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After taking Ireland to the top of the rankings and then helping the All Blacks make last year’s World Cup final, the meticulous Kiwi is enduring somewhat of a baptism of fire at the Wallabies.

After being appointed in January, he is living a gypsy lifestyle in hotels between travelling from his New Zealand base and doing the rounds with Australia’s Super Rugby clubs.

Schmidt candidly concedes he is still getting to know most of the players during a two-week camp in Brisbane before taking on Wales at Allianz Stadium.

“I’ve never been so unprepared to be here,” he said on Thursday.

“This is the one time I’ve got to meet all these players and, in those previous roles, I’d had three years with Leinster and I knew a greater proportion of that squad before the All Blacks.

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“I had the Blues and so, yeah, it’s a little bit daunting, to be honest.

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“But if I wasn’t nervous, I don’t think I’d be on the edge doing my job right.

“So I’m happy to be nervous because it just encourages me to work a bit harder and engage a bit quicker and a bit more often with the players so that we can try to be on the same page.”

Given the hectic lead-up, Schmidt is not only playing his selection cards close to his chest but also keeping fans guessing about how the Wallabies will play.

But he did indicate his new-look squad, which features only 14 survivors from Eddie Jones’s disastrous 2023 World Cup outfit, will present a more territorial game.

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It seems the Wallabies will strike balance somewhere between Robbie Deans’ “play what’s in front of us” mantra, Michael Cheika’s attacking ball-in-hand style and Dave Rennie’s more pragmatic approach.

“There’s a few different ways you can play,” Schmidt said.

“We’ve got some different-size blokes who are able to play the way that they best play. We’d obviously like to be able to play with some tempo, and I don’t think that that will surprise anyone.

“It’s a way that the players like to play the game, and you want players to enjoy playing and that would obviously be part of it. Everything’s a hybrid (style), it tends to be.

“The last two years with the All Blacks, it was different again because you just want to try to get the best out of your individual players, and some sort of collective game model that they’re all invigorated by but also places these strengths as best they can.

“And I’m still learning what those strengths are, so I’m not going to say that we’ve arrived at a way to play that’s going to be successful because that’s going to take one more week, hopefully, and then we can put something together next Saturday.”

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J
JW 16 minutes ago
Lions tour Aussie takes: The Suaalii decision and the Finn Russell factor

Good reads again John. I feel some moments at still within the team to improve, and hopefully some individuals to shine through. After Super Rugby where we were shown you can’t drop your guard at kick off several times in this series have the Lions caught their opposition out with quick throws and restarts, letting the ball go out in this game was a shocker (though the kick was honesty good enough to find the touch had they been ready). Tate tried to strip the try scored just before the half, where he could easily have just dove over the line with him and that pretty much would have been them going into the half with a 10 point lead or so. And in the last play they just didn’t work hard enough, especially one player, I forget who, when back into the ruck area given the Lions too much space wide.


I feel they also didn’t seem to show the same killer instinct once they were in front, playing it safe on a couple of breaks/momentum carries.


I also don’t really understand why Donaldson on the bench. I would much rather have someone you want on the pitch like Pietsch available in a 6/2 split with Gordon or Wright more than able to cover 10 imo. Tate was wonderful on the wing though. And of course lots more positives also present.


I really enjoyed how they were running onto the ball in close in around the ruck. Wilson was playing a different role I thought, he was more the one out man design for quick ball and he presented it as good as you can get all night. That said, he’s not first choice 8 is he, who is that again? Is Wright still injured? I worry that Joe is keeping him their and its dictating too much of the plan just because he has been given the captaincy role.


Will be interesting to see who he thinks might be work a shot in the first team this week, plenty of options. I watched the first quarter of last weeks midweek game and Tupou certainly wouldn’t be one on that list, might be worth a punt though. Think they have to try and work some plays for Bell too, hes got too much class just to be down on form, give him something to work with and I’m sure he’d be a standout as well.


Also seen enough to know Hunter isn’t suddenly going to turn into a class center, I would definitely stick with Joseph but maybe theres a window to put him onto the wing, despite what I said above, now? I think you also do him a disservice in his defending (like many are), he made the player go outside him. It’s the hardest backline spot, I’d be inclined to use him like a league back row and carry it from 12 more often, if that suits Len better.

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