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'I think if we named 30 Wallabies in our squad we'd still be bottom of the betting market'

Matt Hodgson in 2013 /Getty Images

They’ve been written off as wooden spoon contenders in the betting markets but former Wallabies flanker Matt Hodgson says people will be pleasantly surprised by how many wins the Western Force rack up this year.

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The Force were winless in last year’s Super Rugby AU campaign but have since embarked on an audacious recruiting spree that has netted them a host of internationals.

Irish fullback Rob Kearney headlined the recruitments, with Argentinian quartet Tomas Cubelli, Tomas Lezana, Santiago Medrano and Domingo Miotti adding further international experience.

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Brumbies flyhalf Noah Lolesio:

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Brumbies flyhalf Noah Lolesio:

Former All Blacks duo Richard Kahui and Jeremy Thrush have re-signed from last season, while Wallabies duo Tevita Kuridrani and Tom Robertson have come on board.

Star inside centre Kyle Godwin knocked back the opportunity to play with the NSW Waratahs in order to sign a new two-year deal with the Force.

Despite the impressive recruiting spree, the Force are rated alongside the Melbourne Rebels in some betting markets as favourites to take out the wooden spoon in Super Rugby AU.

The Brumbies are warm favourites to defend their title with the Queensland Reds rated as their biggest challengers.

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Hodgson, a Force legend who is now their head of rugby, believes the team will prove the doubters wrong.

“I think if we named 30 Wallabies in our squad we’d still be bottom of the betting market,” Hodgson said.

“So no I’m not surprised.

“But I think we use it as a benefit to us. We focus on what we can do here in WA.

“No one really from the outside looks in until game one. We’re happy with the way we’re tracking. We’re going into round one confident.

“I think people will be pleasantly surprised by how many games we win and also the style of rugby we play moving forward.”

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The Force looked doomed when they were cut from Super Rugby ranks in 2017.

But the Perth-based franchise is now seen as the financial shining light of Australian rugby after being saved by billionaire mining magnate Andrew Forrest and invited back into the fold.

The Force are determined to build the foundations for long-term success, and that plan gained momentum this week with the unveiling of the Fortescue Western Force Academy.

The aim is for home-grown talent to progress through the academy to become an integral part of the Force and eventually push for Wallabies honours.

“Before we got removed from Super Rugby we would have had 10 or 12 (local) players in the main squad, and we want to grow that again to have 50 per cent, 60 per cent of local talent playing for the Western Force,” Hodgson said.

“I want a six-year-old to go down there and say, ‘I want to play for WA, I want to play for the Force’.”

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M
MA 1 hour ago
How the four-team format will help the Wallabies defeat the Lions

In regards to Mack Hansen, Tuipoloto and others who talent wasnt 'seen'..

If we look at acting, soccer and cricket as examples, Hugh Jackman, the Heminsworths in acting; Keith Urban in Nashville, Mike Hussey and various cricketers who played in UK and made the Australian team; and many soccer players playing overseas.


My opinion is that perhaps the ' 'potential' or latent talent is there, but it's just below the surface.


ANd that decision, as made by Tane Edmed, Noah, Will Skelton to go overseas is the catalyst to activate the latent and bring it to the surface.


Based on my personal experience of leaving Oz and spending 14 months o/s, I was fully away from home and all usual support systems and past memories that reminded me of the past.


Ooverseas, they weren't there. I had t o survive, I could invent myself as who I wanted, and there was no one to blame but me.


It bought me alive, focused my efforts towards what I wanted and people largely accepted me for who I was and how I turned up.


So my suggestion is to make overseas scholarships for younger players and older too so they can benefit from the value offered by overseas coaching acumen, established systems, higher intensity competition which like the pressure that turns coal into diamonds, can produce more Skeltons, Arnold's, Kellaways and the like.


After the Lion's tour say, create 20 x $10,000 scholarships for players to travel and play overseas.


Set up a HECS style arrangement if necessary to recycle these funds ongoingly.


Ooverseas travel, like parenthood or difficult life situations brings out people's physical and emotional strengths in my own experiences, let's use it in rugby.

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