Rugby
Beale settling into No 10
2012-11-10 08:28
Sydney - It has taken three years to get here, but Kurtley Beale is
fulfilling the vision he and Wallabies coach Robbie Deans had for him
as Australia's chief playmaker.
According to
stuff.co.nz website, after an apprenticeship playing off instinct at fullback and a
shaky entree to the Wallabies No 10 jersey two months ago, Beale is
finally humming at five-eighth.
Deans, the man who moved him up the very back even as NSW were
using him in the halves, could not hide his satisfaction with Beale's
fledgling mastery of the role.
''He's been great,'' he said. ''The biggest requirement for
Kurtley, as distinct from fullback, is that he's the hub of everything,
so he's got to not only drive it in-game but essentially do
preparation.
''There's a lot involved in that, there's a lot of communication
with the whole group and he has to be around and on top of the detail
... I think he found it hard work early because it is a different
requirement, but he's in the groove now.''
Beale has kept a low profile in Wallabies camp in the lead-up to the Test against France.
There is a sense he wants to prove himself further in the role before being asked to talk about it.
It has been a long and windy road to this point. A year after his
Wallabies debut Beale was used at five-eighth in the Australian
Barbarians side that played England in 2010.
But the presence of Quade Cooper, Berrick Barnes and James O'Connor
in the squad, as well as Beale's electrifying impact at fullback, kept
him at No 15 for the rest of the year, while injuries to himself and
others last year delayed further Deans's plan to introduce him at No 10
last year.
The carnage continued after the Rugby World Cup but this time it
gave Beale his opportunity. He took over five-eighth from an injured
James O'Connor at the Rebels after coming back from injury, and
Cooper's misfortune gave Deans the chance to start the transition in the
national team.
Beale's fitness and confidence have skyrocketed since he was
dropped to the bench early in the Rugby Championship, and the France
test match, the first of four on the spring tour, is another step in
what Deans sees as a promising future.
''The expectation in many ways was probably that he would always
end up there [at No 10], but he's certainly benefited from his time at
the back at fullback,'' Deans said. ''[Beale and halfback Nick Phipps]
are hearing each other and I guess having played together at franchise
level is an advantage, but they're now getting some time under the
belts at international level and that always settles blokes.''
Beale will be pitted against veteran French playmaker Frederic
Michalak, a surprise selection at No 10 after playing at halfback for
much of his time at Toulon.
French coach Philippe Saint-Andre has stayed true to his word and
named a team based on a policy of regeneration but has also invested in
experience in key positions. Brice Dulin will start at fullback and
Wesley Fofana on the wing, while Maxime Machenaud was given the nod
over Morgan Parra at halfback.
''There's obviously some interesting selections there but, to be
frank, personally I don't dwell much on those permutations, you know
that all those decision have been made for good reasons,'' Deans said.
''Michalak coming back to No 10 is obviously an interesting decision but he's a class player and he's playing good rugby.''
Michalak, 30, has only recently returned to France after playing
Super Rugby in South Africa. He has not played for the national side
since the 2007 Rugby World Cup.
''Maybe that's part of the motivation, maybe they feel that [the
Super Rugby] background he's had gives him a point of advantage against
a southern hemisphere team,'' Deans said.