Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

'It's going to be better': Carter Gordon's verdict on poor goal kicking

Carter Gordon of the Wallabies looks on during the The Rugby Championship & Bledisloe Cup match between the Australia Wallabies and the New Zealand All Blacks at Melbourne Cricket Ground on July 29, 2023 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Carter Gordon is confident his wobbly goal-kicking will improve in time for the Wallabies’ Rugby World Cup opener against Georgia next week.

ADVERTISEMENT

Gordon only managed one success from five attempts in their tournament warm-up loss to France, but the young playmaker said he was up to the challenge of carrying the team’s kicking duties.

The issue was problematic for the Wallabies at the last World Cup in 2019 in Japan, with the role shared between Bernard Foley, Christian Lealiifano, Reece Hodge and Matt Toomua before their quarter-final elimination.

Video Spacer

Video Spacer

This time Gordon, who was preferred at No.10 by coach Eddie Jones ahead of Quade Cooper and Foley, is the starting choice and insists he will improve.

After some niggles limited his practice through Super Rugby, the Melbourne Rebels star said he now had “no excuse”.

“Obviously, on the weekend, I didn’t have the goal-kicking performance I was after and I’m working hard at it at the moment,” Gordon said following the Wallabies’ open training session in front of 2000 locals at the Stade Roger Baudras just outside Saint-Etienne.

“It’s going to be better.”

Related

He said playing against France in front of a full house at Stade de France, where they will face Georgia on September 10 (AEST) in their first pool game, was an ideal preparation.

ADVERTISEMENT

“It’s been a pretty good week in France – playing at the Stade de France was an awesome experience. It’s an unreal stadium,” Gordon said.

“I think it’s put myself and the team in good stead for the first game of the World Cup.”

Points Flow Chart

France win +24
Time in lead
75
Mins in lead
0
93%
% Of Game In Lead
0%
40%
Possession Last 10 min
60%
10
Points Last 10 min
5

The 22-year-old, who has played five Tests, said the confidence shown by Jones had given he and the other youngsters in the team belief heading into their first World Cup with 25 from 33 in the squad at their first tournament.

“The confidence Eddie has in myself and the team is huge, and that really drives me and it drives the team … I just can’t wait to get out there and play again,” he said.

ADVERTISEMENT

Flanker Fraser McReight, who replaced long-time leader Michael Hooper in the squad, said the team felt unconditional support from the coach.

“We had George Gregan in earlier in the week and he said you don’t get experience until someone backs you,” McReight said.

“For us, we’ve got the backing through Eddie and it fills me with confidence and I know it is going through the rest of the group.

“Just the group itself, we play with confidence and we all love each other so I’m super excited to rip in with these lads.”

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

1 Comment
T
The Late News 476 days ago

Well it can't get much worse. Hey kids, just train. No more talking.

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

H
Hellhound 4 hours ago
Does South Africa have a future in European competition?

All you can do is hate on SA. Jealousy makes you nasty and it's never a good look. Those who actually knows rugby is all talking about the depth and standards of the SA players. They don't wear blinders like you. The NH had many years to build the depth and players for multiple competition the SA teams didn't. There will be growing pains. Not least travel issues. The NH teams barely have to travel to play an opponent opposed to the SA teams. That is just one issue. There is many more issues, hence the "growing pains". The CC isn't yet a priority and this is what most people have a problem with. Saying SA is disrespecting that competition which isn't true. SA don't have the funds yet to go big and get the players needed for 3 competitions. It all costs a lot of money. It's over using players and get them injured or prioritising what they can deliver with what are available. To qualify for CC, they need to perform well in the URC, so that is where the main priorities is currently. In time that will change with sponsors coming in fast. They are at a distinct disadvantage currently compared to the rest. Be happy about that, because they already are the best international team. You would have hated it if they kept winning the club competitions like the URC and CC every year too. Don't be such a sourmouth loser. See the complete picture and judge accordingly. There is many factors you aren't even aware of at play that you completely ignore just to sound relevant. Instead of being an positive influence and spread the game and help it grow, we have to read nonsense like this from haters. Just grow up and stop hating on the game. Go watch soccer or something that loves people like you.

129 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING Stuart Lancaster Racing 92 exit rumours wide of the mark Stuart Lancaster Racing 92 exit rumours wide of the mark
Search