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Grey to move into permanent Wallabies role

Stephen Larkham, Michael Cheika and Nathan Grey

Australia assistant Nathan Grey will leave the Waratahs at the end of the season to move into a permanent role with the Wallabies.

Grey signed a two-year deal with the Australian Rugby Union (ARU), making his position a permanent one until the end of the 2019 Rugby World Cup.

The former Wallaby, who played 35 Tests, will leave his role as Waratahs assistant at season’s end.

“I have really enjoyed working with this current Wallaby group, as well as the national coaching group,” Grey said in a statement on Wednesday.

“I hope we can continue to grow to be where we know we can be, and I’m looking forward to being part of that.”

Grey joined the Wallabies coaching team in November 2014 and has worked in the role along with his position at the Waratahs for three seasons.

Wallabies head coach Michael Cheika welcomed Grey’s move into a full-time position.

“Nathan has been an invaluable asset in his roles at both the Waratahs and Wallabies with me over the last few years,” he said.

“He is very passionate about his coaching and even more passionate about the Wallaby jersey and what it stands for.

“Having myself coached both [a Super Rugby team and the Wallabies] in 2015, I know how tough a task it is to be in game mode for nearly 10 months a year and I’m pleased for Nathan that will get the chance to devote his time to a national role.

“It’s another piece of the puzzle to add to the national coaching framework with Stephen [Larkham] going full-time at the end of the Super Rugby season too joining Mario [Ledesma] and Mick [Byrne], and our desire to get our Wallabies to the top while also leaving a legacy for rugby around the country.”

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Nickers 36 minutes ago
Scott Robertson responds to criticism over All Blacks' handling errors

I thought we made a lot of progress against that type of defence by the WC last year. Lots of direct running and punching holes rather than using width. Against that type of defence I think you have to be looking to kick on first phase when you have front foot ball which we did relatively successfully. We are playing a lot of rugby behind the gain line at the moment. They are looking for those little interchanges for soft shoulders and fast ball or off loads but it regularly turns into them battering away with slow ball and going backwards, then putting in a very rushed kick under huge pressure.


JB brought that dimension when he first moved into 12 a couple of years ago but he's definitely not been at his best this year. I don't know if it is because he is being asked to play a narrow role, or carrying a niggle or two, but he does not look confident to me. He had that clean break on the weekend and stood there like he was a prop who found himself in open space and didn't know what to do with the ball. He is still a good first phase ball carrier though, they use him a lot off the line out to set up fast clean ball, but I don't think anyone is particularly clear on what they are supposed to do at that point. He was used really successfully as a second playmaker last year but I don't think he's been at that role once this year. He is a triple threat player but playing a very 1 dimensional role at the moment. He and Reiko have been absolutely rock solid on defence which is why I don't think there will be too much experimentation or changes there.

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