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Wounded Wallabies: Four more players set to miss decider

Jordan Petaia of Australia goes off for a HIA during game two of the International Test Match series between the Australia Wallabies and England at Suncorp Stadium on July 09, 2022 in Brisbane, Australia. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

The Wallabies might need outside reinforcement for Sydney’s decisive third Test against England after a likely serious knee injury for Izaia Perese headlined the carnage in Brisbane.

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Scans will confirm if the utility back tore his ACL in Saturday night’s 25-17 loss at Suncorp Stadium.

Lock Cadeyrn Neville also suffered a knee injury, fullback Jordan Petaia was concussed in the third minute and Scott Sio (arm, shoulder) lasted no longer when he came on in the second half.

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Ian Foster fronts the media after the loss to Ireland in the second test | All Blacks press conference

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      Ian Foster fronts the media after the loss to Ireland in the second test | All Blacks press conference

      Allan Alaalatoa (concussion) and centre Len Ikitau (calf) should both be fit to play at the SCG on Saturday at least.

      But with Jed Holloway, Quade Cooper, Tom Banks and Andrew Kellaway already in the casualty ward and Darcy Swain suspended for another Test the cupboard is almost bare.

      The Wallabies remain particularly thin in the second row and at fullback, with Reece Hodge flown into the squad as cover and now a potential fix in the No.15 and Nick Frost a chance to start after debuting off the bench.

      Rennie said he’d consider added a second-rower to the squad once a clearer picture of their injury toll was possible on Sunday.

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      It paves the way for code-hopper Suliasi Vunivalu’s much-hyped debut on a wing or off the bench, the former NRL premiership winner training strongly with the squad after a series of hamstring injuries since returning to rugby.

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      Petaia’s early exit was a headache for a side searching for a fullback ahead of next year’s World Cup, Kellaway strong when moved there in Perth but now facing up to eight weeks on the sideline.

      Petaia stumbled to his feet after a tackle gone wrong and would appear long odds to feature in Sydney in another setback for the talented 22-year-old.

      Rennie won’t use the injuries as an excuse though, given his team came from 19-0 down to threaten an upset in Brisbane.

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      “We lost the collisions early, they choked us down our end but the first time we got down we scored seven ,” he said.

      “When we played territory we put th em under heat and at 22-17 we had all the momentum and a lineout (was lost because of a bad throw) and they were able to swing the length of the field and get three points.”

      Australia scored two tries to one but Owen Farrell’s six penalties and a conversion from eight attempts was the difference.

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      J
      JW 16 minutes ago
      Razor has an about turn on All Blacks eligibility rules

      Yep, another problem!


      I think he would have, in the instance I mentioned, which wasn’t changing anything other than correctly applying todays eligibility quidelines. Which is an arbitrary construct, as the deal likely would have played out completely differently, but I just ‘allowed’ him to have 1 year sabbatically for his ‘loyalty’, rather than having some arbitrary number like 70 caps required.


      So if Richie had a 3 year deal, and the first year he was allowed to use him still, I don’t think he’d really not transition to Dmac being his main 10, as he’s obviously the only one he can use for the following two years, therefore likely his only real option for the WC (very hard for Richie to overtake him in such a short time). Richie would purely be a security net in a situation like I proposition where there are only small changes to the eligibility.


      The system is not working well enough though, as we don’t have the Rugby Championship or World Cup trophies, do we? Well on that last question, that’s all I’m really saying but I would not believe a word this author says, so it’s entirely a ‘what if’ discussion, but if the author is right and now they are actually going to be more flexible, I think that’s great yeah. Ultimately thought I think those two players were an anomaly signing their contracts and futures up so far ahead, especially of when they were performing. Both jumped at the opportunity of good contracts when their All Black prospects weren’t looking that bright.

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