Planet Rugby

Australia

Australia

Rugby Championship: XV of the Week

10th September 2012 15:28

Juan Martin Fernandez Lobbe

Fernandez Lobbe: Pumas skipper reaching new heights

Now that the dust has settled in the southern hemisphere, Planet Rugby looks at the players who stole the show in the Rugby Championship.

15 Israel Dagg (New Zealand): Toughest position to fill considering there were no real standouts in the number 15 jersey. But Dagg gets the nod due to the horrendous weather in Wellington which caused the power cut that plunged the stadium into darkness. Swirling 160km/hr winds and rainy conditions are normally a full-back's nightmare, however Dagg did pretty well under the circumstances.

14 Cory Jane (New Zealand): Didn't get his hands on the pigskin too often in the first half, but came to the party in the second forty for New Zealand and wrapped up the result with a well deserved try. Mention too for Bryan Habana - execution and consistency has been a problem for South Africa, but the same can't be said of the veteran winger who showed he still has an eye for the tryline before limping off with an ankle injury.

13 Conrad Smith (New Zealand): The pick of New Zealand's backs as the Wellington local straightened the All Blacks attack and tried his best to create chances that usually ended in frustration. A classy touch from the returning Smith enabled partner in crime Ma'a Nonu to put Julian Savea over for a crucial five-pointer.

12 Berrick Barnes (Australia): His kicking was questionable in general play, but from the tee he was outstanding and potted six from six thanks to his unerring boot for a personal haul of 16 points. Barnes was no slouch on defence either, and put in the majority of hits in the Wallabies' backline (9).

11 Julian Savea (New Zealand): Try aside, his work rate was miles ahead of what he produced in his last start for New Zealand (against Ireland in Christchurch in June) and may have done enough to secure a start against South Africa on Saturday.

10 Juan Martin Hernandez (Argentina): A defensive rock for the Pumas (just ask Conrad Smith), while his tactical kicking was out of the top drawer - using clever low grubber kicks to turn around the All Blacks back three. Put opposite number Aaron Cruden under constant pressure as the All Blacks playmaker was made to look very ordinary indeed.

9 Will Genia (Australia): Put in a polished and assured performance before he was forced off the field with 11 minutes to go as Australia's captain's curse struck again. Mention too for New Zealand replacement Piri Weepu who added a bit of mongrel around the ruck and allowed the All Blacks to control the game a bit more in the final quarter.

8 Juan Martin Fernandez Lobbe (Argentina): Argentina were well led once again by their bustling, bristling number eight who is without a doubt the heartbeat of their pack. An inspirational performance, that saw the Pumas skipper lead the way on defence with 15 tackles and was also a handy option at line-out time. Mention too for Wallabies super-sub Scott Higginbotham who broke a 178 minute try-scoring drought when he burst through just two minutes after coming onto the field for Radike Samo in the second half.

7 Michael Hooper (Australia): Australia's out-and-out fetcher translated his Super Rugby form to the Test stage and proved that he belongs at this level after a busy day at the office for the Wallabies. Hooper topped Australia's tackle chart (11 hits), whilst he also put in the hard yards with ball in hand.

6 Marcell Coetzee (South Africa): Robust and resilient, Coetzee has taken to the Test arena like a duck to water. The more comfortable he gets, the more physical attributes he brings to the game as the Bok rookie dominated the collisions and tackled like a demon (also 11 hits). But his impact was sorely missed when strangely subbed by coach Heyneke Meyer. Mention for New Zealand's Liam Messam - another superb super-sub who played an impressive 40 minutes off the bench.

5 Sitaleki Timani (Australia): Awarded the official man-of-the-match gong and rightly so, as the big Tongan-born powerhouse continued his solid run of form for the Wallabies. The 25-year-old has been a revelation this season, and it's no wonder Timani's team-mates believe he is on his way to becoming a world class lock. Mention too for Pumas pair Patricio Albacete and Manuel Carizza, however a misfiring line-out didn't help their cause.

4 Luke Romano (New Zealand): Topped the line-out count (nine) and, along with Richie McCaw, was the most effective ball carrier. Although he was the best Kiwi forward statistically against Argentina, it was clear he relishes the confrontational aspect of the game at the highest level.

3 Ben Alexander (Australia): Not only did the prop score an inspirational late try to lift Australia to a crucial win, but also quelled the Springboks' power source - their scrum.

2 Adriaan Strauss (South Africa): Another position that left us scratching our heads. In the end, we felt South Africa's stand-in first-choice hooker performed his core duties effectively enough without being spectacular.

1 Rodrigo Roncero (Argentina): Showed there's still plenty of rugby left in his 35-year-old legs after the veteran front-rower powered over for the game's opening try in his 51st Test. Roncero received the hugs and kisses of a champion when he took a seat with half an hour to go.

Compiled by Dave Morris

Comments

ArmchairGeneral says...

Think Ozzies will beat Argies as comfortably as ABs did. Hard game comfortable score line.

Posted 10:14 11th September 2012

porridge_time says...

Julian Savea? Didn't do anything. Think you should watch the match again, it was only quality defence by the Pumas that kept him from helping his side rack up a big score.

Posted 08:36 11th September 2012

Ferdie says...

Rude_80: Savea, 10 runs 79m gained - highest equal on the field(with Nonu) plus one try. Camacho 4 runs for 36m. Ten NZ players made more run metres than him, despite him being #1 for Argentina. Where is the comparison?

Posted 07:35 11th September 2012

cuw3100 says...

Although Jane scored, me thought Shipperly played well on his wing :)

In fact the other young boy of the OZ side Hooper too was good.

however it is a difficult week to compare performance as the first half in NZ was a mud-bath. The Argie flanker who came on was also as good as Messam :)

if not for the power outage, the match would have been a real farce; (maybe a higher power intervened) officials should have waited for better weather or having seen the forecast should have timed the start later.

Posted 04:27 11th September 2012

rugbyphile says...

Cruden looked far from ordinary --kicked points in difficult conditions, passed well--set up a try-- if you had your house and life savings on the line next week you would pick him well before Hernandez.

Posted 04:07 11th September 2012

Rude_80 says...

Julian Savea? Didn't do anything. Camacho is three times smaller and showed much more guts. Savea's try was a present from his mate.

Posted 01:15 11th September 2012

sandal says...

"" the All Blacks playmaker (Aaron Cruden) was made [to] look very ordinary indeed.""

That pinpoint-accurate skip pass for Cory Jane's try? Ten metres-plus, off the left hand while attacking the line at pace? Very ordinary.

That sideline conversion from his "wrong" side and into a whirling gale? Very ordinary.

I, however, think few people on the planet could have achieved either feat.

As for ""the All Blacks pack came in a poor second in the battle up front"" ...

So much for the stolen lineouts, for the tighthead, for the stable scrum -- one of which provided the perfect base for a single-phase backline try -- and so much for the second-half performance in the loose and dominance at the breakdown that provided the platform for the waves of attacks. Oh, I shouldn't have started.

I don't expect PR to love the All Blacks, but so much of the commentary isn't just ill-informed and jaundiced, it's puerile.

Posted 01:06 11th September 2012

missionary says...

Dear me. PR is on drugs - can I have some. Berrick Barnes? Ugh. Thought the Argentine 12 was pretty solid myself. Otherwise Nonu. Cory Jane didn't do enough to warrant his position in here and I'd suggest Zane Kirchener (I know you Saffers love to bag him) was probably more adept overall. As for 7, McCaw as a beast on the weekend. Hooper? Like Pocock, fetching is all he does!!

OK - so apart from that, not too bad. I think the Argies are going to give the Australians a severe hurry up this weekend.

Posted 00:26 11th September 2012

Ferdie says...

barnes for sure - until his first successful kick australia had gone 105 minutes without scoring a single point, that in itself quite an achievement in modern rugby

Posted 00:19 11th September 2012

kiwilad says...

The All Blacks pack came a poor 2nd??

What were the posession stats???

Come on PR, thats a little hard to swallow.

What was the score??

Posted 23:35 10th September 2012

Page 2 of 2

Character Count : 0/1900

  • Australia Fixtures
Forthcoming Fixtures
FixtureDetails
All times are local
Rugby Championship
Saturday , August 17
Australia vs New ZealandTBC
Saturday , August 24
New Zealand vs AustraliaTBC
More Rugby Championship fixtures
British & Irish Lions
Saturday , June 22
Australia vs British & Irish Lions11:00
Saturday , June 29
Australia vs British & Irish Lions11:00
Saturday , July 6
Australia vs British & Irish Lions11:00
More British & Irish Lions fixtures
  • Table
League
Rugby Championship Table
PosTeamPPts
1New Zealand626
2Australia612
3South Africa612
4Argentina64