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LONG READ Has Quade Cooper solved a Lions riddle for Australia?

Has Quade Cooper solved a Lions riddle for Australia?
1 week ago

Imagine a riddle without a solution. Imagine a Gordian Knot which cannot be unravelled. Now apply it to rugby, and the image which starts to form in your mind’s eye may be that of ex-Wallaby 10 Quade Cooper. ‘Enigma’ does not even begin to cover the unfathomable up and downs of the Queensland magician’s career.

Right now, broadcasters covering the forthcoming British and Irish Lions visit to Australia would be well advised to snap Cooper up as their primary pundit. Joe Schmidt’s Wallabies could even hire him as a mentor or assistant coach, if his preview of the tour in a recent NewsCorp column is a reliable guide to the range and depth of his insights.

Cooper has some skin in the game as far as Lions tours go. Roll the clock back to their last visit in 2013, and he was by some distance the most creative and accomplished fly-half in Australia at the time. But he could still not crack Kiwi head coach Robbie Deans’ squad for the Test series.

Quade Cooper, James O’Connor and Kurtley Beale were key players for the Wallabies during the early 2010s but each courted controversy (Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

Yes, he had called the Wallaby culture under Deans ‘toxic’ the previous season, and that hardly helped his cause. But of the two pivots preferred to him, one [Kurtley Beale] was in a treatment centre in Sydney after two alcohol-related incidents, while James O’Connor had missed all of Australia’s 14 Tests in 2012 because of injury. Together the trio comprised ‘the three amigos’, Australia’s youthful terrible trifecta. As O’Connor had also spent the bulk of his rugby life at full-back or on the wing rather than in the halves, it was well-nigh impossible to tell where dysfunction started and ended in the Australian rugby team.

Cooper was always very much his own man, and it cost him what should rightfully have been some of the highlight moments in his career, notably on that 2013 Lions tour and three World Cups in 2015, 2019 and 2023. Where his own coaches all too often wavered and had doubts about his value, prospective opponents had none whatsoever. They were relieved to see the back of him. Andy Farrell is leading the 2025 tourists to Aussie and was Warren Gatland’s defensive assistant 12 years earlier.

“If I was a [Wallaby] coach, I would want him in my side,” Farrell said back then. “He is a handful. I don’t know the ins and outs of why he hasn’t been selected but he brings lots to the party. I’m pretty pleased.”

Other luminaries such as Eddie Jones, who ironically dropped Cooper for the 2023 World Cup, derided the decision to leave out “the most assertive number 10 in the Australian Super Rugby teams” thus: “Quade is by far the best stand-off in Australia. He’s played 80 minutes of every Super Rugby game, he’s got a kicking game, he’s got a running game, he’s got the game that can really trouble the Lions so it’s very disappointing to see him not in the squad.”

On-field or off-field, Cooper’s rugby IQ is still as lively as ever, and he recently turned the high-beam on to the topic of Wallaby number 10 selection for the upcoming series. His first recommendation was to pick his old team-mate O’Connor in the squad, as a counterpoint to the younger breed of 10s around him.

James O'Connor
James O’Connor has been linked heavily with a move to Leicester Tigers next season (Photo Joe Allison/Getty Images)

“This isn’t just about picking names; it’s about building a squad with strategic depth and, more critically, forging a long-lost identity,” Cooper wrote.

“Noah Lolesio, Ben Donaldson and Tom Lynagh are all quality players. The challenge isn’t about their ability, it’s about their similarity.

“They’re all cut from a very similar cloth: smart, skilled, steady. But in a high-stakes series like this, where unpredictability and adaptability are key, you need variety. You need contrast.

“That’s where someone like [James] O’Connor becomes critical.

“His experience, creativity, and ability to see the game from a different angle adds something this group doesn’t yet have.”

Teams from the north tend to be viewed as rigid and conservative in their outlook, but on this occasion in their illustrious history, the Lions will offer more variety and creativity in the pivotal playmaking role than the home side -and that in turn creates more problems for the opposition.

It will certainly be a whole lot different to South Africa four years ago, when the most creative solution [Scotland’s Finn Russell] was not picked until the final game of the series. Cooper did not even get around to talking about England incumbent Fin Smith and veteran George Ford in his synopsis.

“You build [a winning squad] by creating a mix – by bringing different skill sets, mindsets, and backgrounds into the same space.

“The Lions 10s offer real diversity: Marcus Smith is super agile and creative. Finn Russell is very creative and has unique kicking skills. And if they bring Owen Farrell in at some stage during the tour, he is a very physical fly-half who will put a shoulder very aggressively into you.

Finn Russell completed a treble of trophies with Bath this season (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

“These guys are very different. If everyone in the squad learns from the same book, you’re going to get the same answer when faced with complex challenges.

“[O’Connor] is in a mentoring role. He’s there to learn, to guide, support and compete. His experience in a different system, combined with his competitive drive to push those guys makes him a vital voice – one who can play devil’s advocate a little bit, and challenge conventional thinking.

“You’ll have three different minds to be able to put heads together and think, ‘okay, how can we break down their defence?’ That’s the key.”

If you’re seeing a little bit of 12-year-old history dredged and brought up to date, and a few wounds reopened in these comments, you would probably be right. Perhaps Quade really is seeing a contemporary version of himself in O’Connor, stirring the pot and playing devil’s advocate in the strategic cook-up. But he is also right to question unform thinking, not least among coaches.

Coaches are no different to players, they need to be constantly challenged to accommodate the diversity of talent at their disposal. Systems need to bend to the breaking point and beyond, to accomplish that aim. There is no excuse to stop thinking outside the box.

The rehearsal, and potential improvement of 2013 only strengthened when Quade turned the spotlight on the presence of Joseph-Aukuso Sua’ali’i. Twelve years ago, Australia were contemplating Israel Folau as their shiny new toy, similar in physique and skill levels to the ex-Sydney Rooster. The question is now as it was then, where to deploy the undoubted talent?

“I believe Sua’ali’i can be a generational talent, and the challenge for playmakers is to unlock him and his abilities. While many might eye him for full-back, I’d suggest Sua’ali’i at wing, or as a back-up at inside centre.

“His skills in the air will make it a nightmare for opposition to mark him on cross-field kicks, and he is a proven finisher. But placing that kind of power and dynamism at 12 immediately creates a defensive headache for the opposition.”

The tactical backdrop to Cooper’s main suggestion of fielding Sua’ali’i on the [right] wing is a big improvement in Wright’s kicking game. Even in defeat in the Super Rugby semi-final against the Chiefs, Wright found a way to showcase the range and power of his kicking game – especially after Lolesio departed due to injury in only the tenth minute.

 

 

Like the Chiefs, Farrell’s Lions will kick ‘long and on’ – they will tend to keep the ball infield rather than kick it out, so there is every chance some some long tactical kicking duels will develop in the course of the series. In the two clips above, Wright is controlling the play off the boot in opposition to Shaun Stevenson and Damian McKenzie, and via three very different types of kick: first a short attacking grubber off the left foot which pins the Chiefs backfield deep in its own corner, followed by a near-perfect cross-kick off the right to create a scoring opportunity for Andy Muirhead; finally, a superbly measured diagonal from inside his own half which results in a 50/22 lineout turnover for the Brumbies, who went on to score on the very next sequence of play.

When you have a full-back who can see the field and kick the ball that well, it is much easier to opt for a ‘Steady Eddie’ fly-half because you know he will enjoy excellent support from 15. That kind of tactical nous and the variety of execution is beyond Sua’ali’i at the infant stage of his professional rugby career, so he should be earmarked for either right wing or second five-eighth as Cooper suggests, where his raw running power and elusiveness could be used to achieve 2013 outcomes like this.

 

Wright’s ability to outkick the Chiefs backfield was a besetting problem for McKenzie and co throughout the game.

 

 

When the Chiefs try to gain ground on the runback in the first clip they are turned over at the ensuing breakdown, in the second McKenzie is forced to accept the necessity of a touch kick and offer the Brumbies an attacking lineout position on the home 40m line. Now mix that kicking game with Wright’s finely tuned judgement on the counter and you have the Test-worthy full-back you need.

 

Whether Schmidt chooses to renew the blend he had last November, with Sua’ali’i’s Sonny Bill Williams-like offloading prowess paired with Len Ikitau’s defensive skill in the centres, or pick the New South Wales rookie as his attacking trump on the right wing, Australia will need to squeeze every last drop of juice out of the talent at its disposal to keep up with the Lions. There will be no place for timid or prescriptive selection meetings – the more fire and brimstone and friction between different minds, the better. It is hard indeed to cover off every base if you all think, or play along the same lines.

Australia needs an O’Connor, a Sua’ali’i or a Wright to challenge the status quo – just as it needed more, rather than less of Cooper back in the day. Boldness, the pioneering spirit and a diversity of opinion is after all, at the core of the Australian Way.

According to the man himself, the Wallabies no longer produce the quality playmakers of yesteryear and have lost their way.

“The core problem is coaches change every freaking two years,” Cooper said. “This isn’t just disruptive – it’s crippling. Australia has been unable to cultivate a distinct style of play because they’re trying to get the best coach that’s out there right now, rather than adhering to a foundational Australian identity. Australian play over the last 15 years has had no identity.”

Australian rugby was never happy letting the riddle simply be itself, so it never saw the best of Cooper. But if you cannot pick a Quade, read his thoughts. They are worth the admission price alone.


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Comments

104 Comments
D
Derek Murray 9 days ago

What a player he was. Could have played 120 test matches if we just kept picking him. Bloody Cheika even played Foley at 12 to whiteant him when he did manage to get Quade in at 10.


For all Deans’ quality as a coach, he was a lousy selector. Imagine not finding a way to get the best out of generational talent like Beale, JOC and Quade.

J
JW 8 days ago

Thankfully he wasn’t at the Crusaders during Mo’unga’s time.

N
NB 8 days ago

Yes I recall those miserable Foley-Cooper outings very well indeed DM…🤭

M
Mzilikazi 10 days ago

I read that James O’Connor has not been included in Schmidts first selection. That is a pity. But I saw Will Skelton on our TV News a couple of nights ago. He looked very relaxed….and very big ! Good to see he is in the picture.


I feel a sadness that Quade Cooper, Kurtley Beale and James O’Connor, three of the most talented rugby players produced in this country, all had flawed careers. Of the three it was Beale who had the greatest impact as a WB, one can argue. His part in the 2015 RWC was not insignificant.


O’Connor had that awful period where it was only the intervention of Sale, giving a lifeline, that saved his career. Quade Cooper I see as having two very different parts to his career. The first with Qld. where he was very maverick, often indisciplined. And then the end, where he came back a very wise and disciplined player and person. He should have been used in France in 2023.


O’Connor may not be done yet, nor I suppose even Beale. But for the latter one feels it would take a lot of injuries for him to feature against the Lions.


Thanks for the article, Nick. Not long to wait now till the Lions make landfall.

J
JW 8 days ago

Yes you’d have to think Beale is the one with real prospects of actually putting on a gold jersey again, he’s looked really good, where as O’Connor has just done a job and been the real asset off the field they’d hoped and expected a vet like him to be.

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JD Kiwi 9 days ago

Great post Miz. I have no stats to back this up, but I don't think that JOC has been particularly effective in the past few weeks.

N
NB 10 days ago

I think whether Joe picks big Will to start the Tests will tell us a lot about where Aussie is as a rugby nation Miz.


I actually like the career trajectory of all three amigos. Sure hellraisers early on, but their journeys from that point on have been more interesting than the norm, esp JOC and Quade. Real poacher turned gamekeeper stories and I feel both still have a huge amount to contribute - one way or another.


That blotchiness on the canvas is what makes it real.

J
JW 10 days ago

His first recommendation was to pick his old team-mate O’Connor in the squad, as a counterpoint to the younger breed of 10s around him.

Haha I was so into this article until this. Wow, that is a bit of a downer. I was going to say that his side kick Sonny-Bill Williams also has some great insights. He wouldn’t be able to write a column but when he picks up on something ingame and shares what he’s seeing, you pay attention. I bet the two share a lot of thoughts, but hopefully selecting James is not one of them, you normally want your players to improve, but he would be a step back from that young version.


I don’t really agree with any other conclusions/insights shared in this article either. Should be a great series and rewarding to watch players like Wright and Jordan expand their craft to enhance their running game this year. Unfortunate for the Brumbies that Wrights play wasn’t enough to balance the loss of Noah’s.

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NB 10 days ago

Yes they lost a lot when Jack D came on, and they lost control of the kicking game esp. Brums aren’t deep enough to cover those losses in their squad.

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Rugby 101 - Ed Pye 10 days ago

The most exciting Australian 10 of the past 10 years was Carter Gordan and Eddie Jones absolutely wrecked him…Cooper is not wrong about the coaching issues in Australia

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NB 9 days ago

👍Ed

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ja 10 days ago

I was in Brisbane in 2011 and watched most reds matches live that year (sadly not the finals). Everytime QC touched the ball the entire stadium would sit forward and hold its breath, i’ve never seen anticipation like it at a rugby match. You wondered how he could one up his stunts from the week before, but without fail, he would do it. He kept up an amazing level of sustained excellence that year. He had his weaknesses, but most haters overplay them. They sound like they never saw him play live, or are perhaps ignorant. The McKenzie -Quade wallabies is a huge ‘what could have been’ imo. Anyway, I'm glad QC had a great moment on the big stage in 2021. Aus rugby owes him more credit - simply for the sheer entertainment he provided!

N
NB 10 days ago

Everytime QC touched the ball the entire stadium would sit forward and hold its breath, i’ve never seen anticipation like it at a rugby match.

And that is exactly what you need when rugby’s audience is by all accounts dwindling. Sometimes coaches take themselves too seriously and lose that essential ‘fun’ element - it is just sport after all.


Anyway, I'm glad QC had a great moment on the big stage in 2021. Aus rugby owes him more credit - simply for the sheer entertainment he provided!

Fully agree!

j
ja 10 days ago

Great article Nick. Australia clearly mismanaged generational talents in Quade and JOC. Regardless of how they behaved it is the coaches job to find a way to get the best out of them as players. Seems a missed opportunity not to have one of them involved in some capacity now.


Thanks for highlighting how well TW has developed. The fact he outkicked a Chiefs side should bode well for Aus.


The lions team for Argentina looks stacked. Less leinster and more power based me thinks?

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JW 10 days ago

I wouldn’t say he out kicked them, the Chiefs dished up plenty for him to deal with too and won that aspect of the contest. That was likely due to the unfortunate injury of Noah though.

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NB 10 days ago

I reckon both should be involved, JOC as a player/mentor and Quade as an assistant backs/skills coach. Won’t happen ofc but who wouldn’t want to tap into those top rugby intellects?

S
SG 10 days ago

When QC was playing, I always supported the team he was playing for…even when he was playing against the Canes or the Abs which usually I support… Not in 2011, not when he came back with the Wallabies with Rennie… He was like King Carlos Spencer and even better

N
NB 10 days ago

He was tip=top in 2021, and nobody will forget that last 50m GK to beat the Boks!

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Mitch 10 days ago

JOC has been left out of the squad for the Fiji match, which pretty much means he won't play in the Lions series, which is a mistake.


I feel like Robbie Deans lost trust in Quade Cooper after the 2011 World Cup, which was somewhat understandable after his performances against South Africa and New Zealand. By the time 2013 rolled around, he was the right choice to play flyhalf.

N
NB 10 days ago

Yes I agree it is a mistake, because it was such a win-win from the outside. Literally nothing to lose with JOC as the #3 at outside-half!


Maybe it’s a Kiwi coaching thing?😉

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dw 11 days ago

Thanks Nick. I note that JOC has been left out of the squad vs Fiji. I wonder if he is being considered for the Lions and just discarded because the final is this weekend??


Given our lack of 12s I would guess it will be Joseph and Len in the centres. Tom, Kellaway and Harry Potter the back 3?

N
NB 11 days ago

I don’t know, did Joe say anything at the presser? I suspect he would have been picked ahead of Donno if he had a shot.

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NH 11 days ago

Nice piece Nick. These kicking duals went the exact opposite direction between Mckenzie and the reds (H Muraay and Ryan) when they played (see about 50min mark), so its insightful to see wright doing the fundamentals well, not just the highlight reel stuff. I think it would be crazy to drop/move Tom to accommodate suaalii. Whoever the 10 is, they are gonna need help with kicking and game management. Australia are very weak at kicking/game management and Noah (and JOC) are better at this than the others 10s whereas we can get x factor, line breaking ability etc from other players on the field. No JOC in the squad but maybe he will come in after the SR final, seems a shame to leave him out - he would be an ideal 23. With no Kerevi in the backs, Suaalii’s size increases in value also. My question is, where do you put Suaalii to minimise the lions ability to manipulate his inexperience? At 13 where he can defend in the line but potentially get done by set plays. Or on the wing where he has to defend less but maybe is manipulated by their kicking game…? Joe could get creative with where suaalii, daugunu and ikitau can interchange. He could be like Marika and defend in the line with the 10 out the back but then you don’t use his high ball catching ability in D.

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JW 10 days ago

Murray is not a fullback, so not surprising, but yeah Ryan still very much developing huh. Noticeable when the Reds are firing and he’s not scoring hattricks lol

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NB 10 days ago

Yes I originally suggested JAS at 15 but it would be a shame indeed to uproot TW when he is looking so good. So I guess it will be 12 or 14 for the young man. as long as they can get him on the ball 10-15 times per game.


Tom W and Lonergan take a lot of pressure off Noah in the kicking game and the WBs need to do the same. He’s not a top navigator like a Faz or a Sexton.


It’s a straight choice between Paisami and JAS at 12 as there is really nobody else. So it could be either Paisami-Ikitau with JAS-TW-Jorgo back three; or JAS-Ikitau with Kellaway in for JAS at 14.

J
Janice Turton 11 days ago

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H
Hammer Head 11 days ago

yes, good idea. Let’s all email someone who goes by the moniker of Bruno quick hack.


Where does RP find these sports fans?

A
AD 11 days ago

I think the “steady eddie” style of 5/8 you mentioned is the biggest problem we have v Lions. I think it’s a slightly bigger problem than lack of depth at prop.


In my team I have HMP as one of 4 #10s, but more through hope than anything I’ve seen. Pasitoa didn't get any time with Force, and others just aren't there.


Let's hope that Wright and Co coming up from behind can carry a lot of that load.


The only thing they wouldn't be able to do is of course put themselves through a gap!

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JW 10 days ago

I can’t think of any 10 in Australia that’s a “steady eddie” outside of Noah and James, you should be fine for versatility.

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NB 10 days ago

Noah has developed well but he doesn’t have the passing or running range of an Ella or Larkham, or senior Lynagh’s kicking game.


I’d like to see more of HMP for mine, but he didn’t get enough time at the Reds this year.


This Aussie side just has so many questionmarks atm, hard to see how it may be able to take two matches off the Lions.

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