Northern Edition

Select Edition

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

'Angry' Lynagh slams Wallabies in explosive rant

A deflated Australia side

Australia legend Michael Lynagh ripped into the current Wallabies side after they were humiliated in the opening 40 minutes of their Rugby Championship clash with New Zealand on Saturday.

ADVERTISEMENT

The All Blacks ran in six tries in the first half in Sydney as gaping holes appeared in Australia’s defence, the visitors leading 40-6 at the break before eventually winning 54-34.

Sloppy errors, poor tackling and horrendous communication left the Wallabies in disarray at ANZ Stadium, and Lynagh could not hide his anger and disappointment.

“I can’t overestimate how angry I am at seeing an Australian team have skills that are non-existent,” he said on Sky Sports.

“Passing and catching and making tackles and trusting the bloke beside you are pretty basic even at schoolboy level.

“Australia has had a month to work together to try and create stuff and do things and they come up with that in the first 40? Very, very disappointing.”

Australia skipper Michael Hooper acknowledged his side were not good enough early on, but was “proud” of their recovery.

ADVERTISEMENT

But Lynagh was not impressed with his positivity and insisted there was still plenty for Michael Cheika to be concerned about ahead of the return fixture in Dunedin next weekend.

“The thing that lingers with me is the first half, how poor that was,” Lynagh added.

“Michael Hooper there seemed pretty content with the second half and that we scored a few tries. We still lost by 20 points at the end of the day and at half-time we were 40 points down.

“That’s an international half-back Nick Phipps, passing one ball to his right and it goes above a bloke’s head. It was just so poor.

“The simple skills of passing and tackling were non-existent in the first half and that’s very worrying.”

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

T
Tom 7 hours ago
Will Bristol's daredevil 'Bears-ball' deliver the trophy they crave?

Also a Bristol fan and echo your sentiments.


I love watching Bristol but their approach will only get them so far I think. Exeter played like this when they first got promoted to the prem and had intermittent success, it wasn't until they wised up and played a more balanced game that they became a consistently top side.


I really want Bristol to continue playing this brand of rugby and I don't mind them running it from under their posts but I don't think they need to do it every single time. They need to be just a little bit more selective about when and where on the pitch they play. Every game they put themselves under so much needless pressure by turning the ball over under their posts trying to do kamikaze moves when it's not required. By all means run it from your goal line if there is a chance for a counter attack, we all want to see Bristol running in 100m tries from under their posts but I think until they learn when to do it and when to be pragmatic, they are unlikely to win the premiership.


Defense has been a real positive from Bristol, they've shown a lot of improvement there... And I will say that I think this kamikaze strategy they employ is a very good one for a struggling side and could be employed by Newcastle. It's seems to have turned around Gloucester's fortunes. The big advantage is even if you don't have the biggest and best players, what you have is cohesion. This is why Scotland keep battering England. England have better individuals but they look muddled as a team, trying to play a mixed strategy under coaches who lack charisma, the team has no identity. Scotland come out and give it full throttle from 1-15 even if they struggle against the top sides, sides like England and Wales who lack that identity drown under the relentless will and synergy of the Scots. If Newcastle did the same they could really surprise some people, I know the weather is bad up there but it hasn't bothered the Scots. Bristol can learn from Scotland too, Pat is on to something when he says the following but Scotland don't play test matches like headless chickens. They still play with the same level of clarity and ambition Bristol do but they are much better at picking their moments. They needed to go back to this mad game to get their cohesion back after a couple of seasons struggling but I hope they get a bit wiser from matches like Leinster and La Rochelle.


“If there’s clarity on what you’re trying to do as a team you can win anything.”

2 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ Does the next Wallabies coach have to be an Australian? Does the next Wallabies coach have to be an Australian?
Search