Waratahs set to field incredibly inexperienced backline due to departures, injuries
NSW Waratahs are set to field one of their least experienced backlines in memory for their opening round Super Rugby AU clash with old rivals Queensland on Friday.
Halfback Jake Gordon, centres Lalakai Foketi and Karmichael Hunt are all expected to miss the game at Suncorp Stadium with hamstring issues.
Wallabies prop Tom Robertson (back) will be unavailable.
Test utility back Kurtley Beale was recently released, meaning the Tahs backline will be short on experience come Friday, though there should be one Test player in off-season recruit Jack Maddocks.
The Tahs' backline stocks of proven performers has vastly diminished since the start of the 2019 season.
Israel Folau was sacked mid-season and fellow Test players Bernard Foley, Nick Phipps, Curtis Rona and Adam Ashley-Cooper all left at the end of the campaign.
NSW backs coach Chris Whitaker was excited rather than concerned at taking on the Reds with a depleted and youthful backline.
"One thing we've learnt out of this break is a lot of those young guys have really put their hand up." Whitaker said
"There's going to be some interesting selection dilemmas for (head coach) Rob (Penney) when it's time to choose a team.
"You've got the guys who played (in Super Rugby earlier this season) making their debut (five-eighth) Will Harrison, (outside back) Mark Nawaqanitawase.
"Now you've got (five-eighth) Ben Donaldson (centre) Joey Walton, so there's plenty of opportunities there and we've got a couple of sevens guys Nick Malouf and the other Angus Bell who have both trained really well."
Wallabies forward Ned Hanigan is in line to play his first game of the season on Friday, after missing all six of the Tahs' matches in the earlier Super Rugby tournament through concussion.
The tournament will showcase seven law variations.
There will be goal line drop-outs to reward attacking kicks, replacements for red-carded players after 20 minutes, rewards for 50/22 and 22/50 kicks, and 'Super Time' for matches that end in a draw after 80 minutes.
Match officials will also be briefed to police the breakdown, limit the number of scrum resets, and get tough on cynical and repeated infringements to speed up play.
"We've come to acknowledge there's probably going to be a lot less scrums throughout the game,'" Waratahs' prop Harry Johnson-Holmes said.
- Adrian Warren
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Keep? Do you have any idea what league is like? That is what rugby has turned into, not where it's trying to go. The universal body type of mass, the game needs to stop heading towards the physically gifted and go back to its roots of how it's played. Much like how SA are trying to add to their game by taking advantage of new laws.
That's what's happening, but as Nick suggests the slow tempo team can still too easyily dictate how the fast tempo team can play.
You mean how rugby used to be before teams started trying to manipulate everything to take advantage for their own gain to the discredit of the game.
Go to commentsIs that "paid" or compensated?
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