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Sean McMahon: Rennie instrumental in my Wallaby return

(Photo by Dan Mullan/Getty Images)

For four years Sean McMahon has been watching Australian rugby from afar, but the mercurial back-rower says he hasn’t lost a step.

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Three years in Japan’s top flight with Suntory Sungoliath has brought a new level of discipline to his game and the 27-year-old has been rewarded with a Wallabies recall for Saturday’s Rugby Championship clash with Argentina.

High-intensity workouts within hotel quarantine has peppered McMahon to be “the fittest in this team” as described by coach Dave Rennie last week, with the rampaging back-rower highly excited to get amongst international Test rugby again.

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“Japan has done wonders for me (and) for my body,” he told reporters on Monday.

“I’m feeling fresh and it’s been good for me up in Japan, do a lot of running over there, it’s very fast game and I am looking forward to the contact side of things back at international level to see if I’m still capable of standing up with the big dogs.”

McMahon last donned the gold jersey in November 2017 against Scotland with a different and older crop of players around him.

He says learning names, faces and competing for spots with the new wave of Wallabies talent is an exciting prospect two years out from the World Cup.

“Nearly classify myself as an old bull now that there’s so many young faces around,” he joked.

“There’s plenty of competition especially in this environment at the moment, a lot of youth and then you’ve got the experience of Hoops (Michael Hooper).

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“It pushes you to want to learn quickly and get your head around everything. Those boys have been more than willing to help me out and try to get my knowledge up to speed as quickly as possible.”

With the relaxation of the Giteau Law, which stopped players under 60 Test caps and seven years service from being picked while playing overseas, McMahon said it was his new coach that brought him back into the fold.

“Everyone misses throwing on the gold jersey when they don’t have the chance to put it on anymore,” he said.

“Dave and me were talking on and off about trying to get me back and things just kept falling out of place with things in Japan, Australia, stuff like that … COVID didn’t help, that’s for sure.

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“It’s always nice to know that there are people and coaches around that still want you to be back and … have a crack.

“It just gives you more motivation when you’re overseas. For me, to train and make sure that I was up to scratch if there was ever an opportunity for me to come back.”

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WI 19 minutes ago
How 'misunderstood' Rassie Erasmus is rolling back the clock

It isn’t just the running rugby, but everything else as well. The Boks have a sense of desperation that sets in when they are matched physically, that cannot at times be offset by their skillset. One of the reasons, as far as i understand it, for Tony Brown’s introduction to the set up was to increase the Boks strike plays along with among many things. Is this not Rassie’s assessment of the Pool loss to Ireland? If you watch that game, so many opportunities, yet an unconverted try and a lone penalty to show for all those scrum penalties, stolen lineouts and 5 m maul attempts?


Fast Forward to Durban, the Boks could not score a single try? Led 24-19 with 65 minutes to go, led 24-22 with 40 seconds to go with a scrum, of all things in Ireland’s 22, yet end up losing the game. At the end of that series they had won 3 out of the 4 halves of rugby, yet drew the series.


Who could forget the infamous quarterfinal loss to the Wallabies in the 2011 WC Quarterfinal? Desperation as the time ticked on, in came the small things and the skillset failed.


The Boks have almost got it all, this one thing, as Eddie Jones said back in 2007, if the Boks get it, they might become unplayable. I think Rassie have realized as much by the failures of previous Bok teams. Boks Vs Robbie Deans, Heyneke Meyer VS All Blacks, 4 Straight Defeat to Wales? All i am saying, is that it isn’t readily apparent to me, that the Boks have it yet, and if they do, maybe it should ascend pass other nations? However, what would the school, domestic rugby philosophies not do to hinder it?


Gone are the extreme ends of the spectrum represented by Heyneke Meyer’s Bash Ball and Alister Coetzee’s flying with the fairies, as neither work for the Boks. It is obvious, that the gold lies in the combination of Mallet and to an extend Rassie. Not sure one coach would be able to change the mindset of a Rugby Nation, and to help me not hear my Bulls Fanatic neighbor shout “ Vok hul op!”

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