2011 – Third 2015 – Runner-up
1987: Fourth Place
1991: Winners
1995: Quarter Finals
1999: Winners
2003: Runner-Up
2007: Quarter Finals
2011: Third
2015: Runner-Up
WALLABIES LOOKING TO CONTINUE
WORLD CUP ROMANCE
ustralian rugby has been in the
news for the wrong reasons for
the best part of two years now.
From the persistent questioning of
whether Head Coach Michael Cheika
is the right man to lead the team into
rugby’s biggest competition to the Israel
Folau debacle that has dominated rugby
headlines recently, the past 24 months
have undeniably been some of Rugby
Australia’s most turbulent ever.
While one might argue that these
are purely off-field issues, and that a
professional outfit could, and should, rise
above such things, things haven’t been
the rosiest on the pitch either.
Indeed, Cheika’s squad has looked far
from settled for a while now, and, more
often than not, the team have lacked
that Australian flair and creativity that
has seen them rack up hefty scorelines
against even the best in the world - see
the side’s 2015 defeat of New Zealand in
the Rugby Championship.
What’s more, following a dismal Rugby
Championship campaign in 2018, the
Wallabies dropped to a record low
seventh place in the world rankings, and
things have not looked up since, with
the side losing to Wales for the first time
since 2008 in the Autumn Internationals,
before suffering a sixth consecutive
defeat to England on the same tour.
At the time of writing, this all combined to
make for Australia’s worst run of games
since 1958, the team winning just four
of their last 13 games under Cheika’s
stewardship. A significant fall from
grace for the four-time Rugby World Cup
finalists.
Combine this with the loss of a talismanic
player like Folau, and Australia approach
this year’s Rugby World Cup on rocky
ground.
But, while a lot of how Australia will
fare at this year’s World Cup depends
on how they perform during The Rugby
Championship, they do have the makings
of a strong squad.
Centurions like Sekope Kepu, Will Genia,
and Adam Ashley Cooper provide a
wealth of experience that can prove
crucial over the course of a World Cup
campaign, while players like Kurtley
Beale, Samu Kerevi and Dane
Haylett-Petty have the ability to turn any
game on its head. And if David Pocock
can work his way back from injury to pair
with Michael Hooper in the back-row, the
Wallabies may be a team to be feared
once more.
A
AUSTRALIA
WALLABIES
COACH:
MICHAEL CHEIKA
40 • WWW.SCRUMMAGAZINE.COM • ISSUE 116 2019
RUGBY WORLD CUP - TOP 10