Vunivalu seemed to have been given a rough ride by former national team coach Dave Rennie, just a 90-second cameo against England last year. That was it as far as Rennie was concerned, and word began to filter out that Vunivalu was a dreadful trainer.
“So what?” I had argued at the time. On that basis, George Smith would never have played for Australia. Surely it wasn’t training form that counted, but match form. But Rennie had seen something in Vunivalu that disturbed him, and acted upon it. For that, I owe him a sincere apology. Now it is Jones’ turn to run the Vunivalu gauntlet.
If Jones believes his “cattle prod” is sufficient to restore the involved Vunivalu of Melbourne Storm days, then fair enough. Except that while he is cutting Vunivalu a lot of slack – along with Melbourne hooker Jordan Uelese and, to a lesser degree, Waratahs playmaker Ben Donaldson – he is jettisoning players who most definitely have rolled up their sleeves. And not just Wilson and McDermott but halves Noah Lolesio and Jake Gordon. All appear to be overthinking their games, over-trying, but they are giving it their all.
Mostly, Jones has selected a reasonable side and deserves congratulations for bringing in youngsters who could serve the Wallabies well – Melbourne pair Brad Wilkin and Carter Gordon, teenage Waratahs flyer Max Jorgensen and Reds outside-centre Josh Flook, who is starting to display elements of Conrad Smith in his reading of the play.
But the selection has also affected third parties and led Thorn to the crossroads of his career: Friday’s clash with the Brumbies at Suncorp. Too much Queensland talent has been needlessly lost or left underdeveloped on his watch. Even Crusaders coach Scott Robertson, a huge fan of Wilson in 2020, was more guarded in his assessment of him on Friday.
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This match is the midpoint of the Reds’ season. If Thorn cannot harness individual brilliance to a team effort – not impossible given Queensland matched the Brumbies try for try in a 23-17 defeat in Canberra last month – then it may be time for him to stand down and hand over to his assistant, Mick Heenan. It was a handover planned for season’s end. It just might occur sooner.
However, a word of warning to all those who believe Heenan’s success with University in Brisbane’s Hospital Cup competition will instantly translate to Super Rugby Pacific. Even Darren Coleman (Waratahs) and Simon Cron (Western Force), for all their highs in Shute Shield rugby, are serving painful apprenticeships at first-class level.
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