Northern Edition

Select Edition

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

The defensive system dubbed 'The Blue Wall' that's confounding Super Rugby has a northern hemisphere coach masterminding it

Michael Hooper in action for Waratahs against Brumbies. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

NSW Waratahs have labelled their much improved defence the Blue Wall and its certainly proving harder to breach than in recent Super Rugby seasons.

ADVERTISEMENT

After conceding 19 tries in their first five games in 2017 and and 17 last year, the ‘Tahs have only allowed 13 five-pointers this season

Asked what the difference was this year, backrower Ned Hanigan said new defence coach Steve Tandy had brought greater clarity in that area.

‘It’s not that different, it’s just blokes staying more connected with one another and you’re just trusting the fellows inside and outside you have got your back,” Hanigan said.

‘It sounds simple but really practising it and making sure you don’t have those rogue guys.

Video Spacer

“That Blue Wall is what we refer to it as and you just keep turning up.”

Welshman Tandy praised the players for buying in and for how they were applying the system.

“The boys are getting more trust and connection in how they go about their busi ness and around working together and making good choices around it and its just something that seems to be growing,” Tandy said.

NSW haven’t conceded more than three tries in a game this season and last Saturday kept the free-scoring Crusaders down to two, one of which was scored in the dying seconds.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Coming up against the Crusaders, we knew that was going to be a real barometer around where we were defensively,” Tandy said.

Video Spacer

“They do a lot of passes, they run a lot of variety around their shape, they’ve got good ball carriers, so it; was really nice to stand up to that sort of test.

“I thought our discipline was outstanding, and we trusted our system.

‘We only gave three penalties away in a game coming up against the Crusaders is pretty special.”

Former NRL star Karmichael Hunt has added some starch to the midfield this year and was inspirational off the bench last Saturday with a huge hit late in the game.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Karmichael comes off the bench and it’s just carnage wherever he goes, it definitely lifts the team,” Hanigan said.

The Waratahs head the Australian conference by one point ahead of Melbourne Rebels with just four points separating the four local teams.

NSW host the conference’s bottom placed side the Sunwolves in Newcastle next Friday.

Lock Jed Holloway is in doubt for the game with a rib injury.

ADVERTISEMENT

Boks Office | Episode 37 | Six Nations Round 4 Review

Cape Town | Leg 2 | Day 2 | HSBC Challenger Series 2025 | Full Day Replay

Gloucester-Hartpury vs Bristol Bears | PWR 2024/25 | Full Match Replay

Boks Office | Episode 36 | Six Nations Round 3 Review

Why did Scotland's Finn Russell take the crucial kick from the wrong place? | Whistle Watch

England A vs Ireland A | Full Match Replay

Kubota Spears vs Shizuoka BlueRevs | JRLO 2024/2025 | Full Match Replay

Watch now: Lomu - The Lost Tapes

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

J
JW 43 minutes ago
Stat chat: Clear favourite emerges as Sam Cane's All Blacks successor

Really enjoyed the Breakdown for once last weekend, it was a sensible and interesting debate amongst the shared options (probably helped by Beaver taking over from SJK).


I don’t think Ned does enough justice to the benefits of Kirifi’s low center of gravity in this article, and I’m not just saying that because he’s starting to develop the perfect game for his size. The other aspect in favour of Kirifi is that he’s the one player showing real improvement. All the others, apart from Lakai of course (even Savea despite his best efforts), are going backwards.


That can obviously be put down to ‘form’ within the very small window at the start of the season where main players typical try to build from, but it’s an important factor that we do need to see improvement in contributions from DP, Jacobsen, and Blackadder before they can seriously be considered. So with that sad, the options right now are actually very narrow (as outlined in the recommendations in this article), but of course we should expect at least 2 of those other 3 to be putting their hands up too.


There is no Billy Harmon this year, but his replacement is one other player who has good stats this year, and also a lot of extra promise to come, Veveni Lasaqa. He’s having to overtake a couple of last years other stars, Withy and Renton, in terms of the Highlanders mix, to get a starting spot and some minutes under his belt to really show what he’s got, but I think theres much more to see yet. There are of course a bunch of other names worth mentioning, Withy himself not the least amongst them for the future, but Lasaqa is one that I can see taking the comp by storm in the sort of fashion that Sititi did.


But along the lines of the topic used, I really see Sititi as being a 7 as well. With Savea and Lasaka he has that perfect mix of body strength, still a low center of gravity, but also enough muscle to foot it with sides that have 1.96/110kg flanks. While he has talent to burn, one would also not be wrong to expect a dip in performance, even without that, for the purpose of development and long term planning, I’d expected Wallace to fit the impact role more than the 80min man for the All Blacks this year, and the most likely person I can see him replacing on the regular, is Ardie Savea. So that would likely mean time at 7 or 8.


While it’s not necessarily the thing I’d do, that could work well with Savea transitioning to the impact role (both because hes likely to need less minutes as he gets older, and because theres hopefully good depth overtaking him), and Wallace to a starting position again. Of course the troublesome position, since Read started to lose form before RWC 19’, is that number 8 spot which Ardie had been asked to fill, and now which he is only really relieved from because of Sititi’s immergence. Wallace to me only answers so many of those questions by being used at 8 because of how exceptionally he played on both sides of the ball last year. So what if there is a drop, or he is just given a different plan than being overplayed by Razor (like he was last year to his detriment)? Well from what I’ve seen this year, Hoskins Sotutu is showing he’s ready to take the jersey back again and make it his. I’m really excited by his impact and intensity in his allround game he’s had a chance to show this year, and I’m confident it’s going to continue/show, even to the point the Blues win this weekend.


So what does that mean? I can see the best balanced backrow as being Ardie at 7, Sotutu at 8, and Barret at 6, with Sititi on the bench. As a 7 back up I’d currently go with Kirifi, but expect DP, as the starter and, I’d imagine, the number 1 7 before he got injured last year and never came back, to make himself the preferred next goto 7 this year after Ardie (and maybe actually the best specialist 7, but it just not being enough to give him the primary role).

12 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ Was Dublin drubbing the end of an era or a bump in the road for Ireland? Was Dublin drubbing the end of an era or a bump in the road for Ireland?
Search