Bold decisions needed to save Australian rugby, says Lynagh

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World Cup-winning Wallabies legend Michael Lynagh says bold decisions are required from Rugby Australia to restore success, stop rivals codes mocking rugby and save the 15-man game from ā€œdisappearing down a big sinkholeā€.

Lynagh laid out his concerns for the health of rugby in Australia ā€“ and advocated for a reduction in Super Rugby teams ā€“ as the Wallabiesā€™ first World Cup exit from the pool stages was confirmed by a Fiji losing bonus point on Monday.

Lynagh is rugby royalty in Australia after captaining the Wallabies and playing 72 Tests in a 12-year career ā€“ including the 1984 Grand Slam tour and the 1991 Rugby World Cup win.

Speaking to former England halfback Matt Dawson on a BBC rugby podcast, the London-based Lynagh said heā€™d been saddened by the Wallabiesā€™ poor campaign in the 2023 Rugby World Cup but hoped it would be an overdue wake-up call for Australian rugby.

ā€œAustralia really havenā€™t fired a shot at this World Cup, and itā€™s really disappointing. I feel for the players. Theyā€™re not bad players and theyā€™ve worked really hard but when they get out on the field it just doesnā€™t seem to click for them,ā€ Lynagh said.

ā€œI feel the way this has gone thereā€™s going to be a few of them that might struggle to get over this experience. I hope not.ā€

Michael Lynagh lines up a kick.Credit: Fairfax

Lynagh said the ā€œdecline of rugbyā€ had been underway for 10-15 years in Australia and the game requires a sharp U-turn to lifts its downward trajectory at home, where talented young footballers are choosing other codes, with NRL and AFL able to outspend the 15-man game with far bigger broadcast deals.

ā€œWe all hope that a successful Australian rugby team can carry us through and plaster over these problems, but Iā€™m afraid this time it hasnā€™t. Itā€™s time for a full stop and see what we can do going forward,ā€ Lynagh said. ā€œThe youngsters coming through are choosing different sports which are better funded than rugby.ā€

Rugby Australia is using the Wallabiesā€™ World Cup woes as a catalyst to push hard for reform in the gameā€™s high-performance structures, aiming for a centralised model.

ā€œWe want them to be competitive, we want to have the local support behind us, the whole country behind us, as opposed to AFL and rugby league supporters laughing at us and putting us down – which is what is happening at the moment,ā€ Lynagh said.

Tom Hooper after the Wallabiesā€™ loss to Wales.Credit: AP

Some argue Australia needs to consider reducing its number of professional teams from five, and Lynagh said that the success of the Wallabies in his career was partly due to the team being drawn from just two states – NSW and Queensland. Lynagh has two son playing professionally – Tom plays for Queensland and Louis plays for Harlequins in England.

ā€œLike Leinster, they play together a lot, they know each other really well, they gel together and we seem to have lost that a little bit now with having five teams in Super Rugby and competing against New Zealand and South Africa when they were in the competition,ā€ he said.

ā€œItā€™s tough and weā€™re not winning a lot against those teams. Having five teams has really disappeared the playing togetherness, we just donā€™t have the playing population to fill these teams.

ā€œMaybe thereā€™s going to be some tough decisions having to come up as to how we structure the whole situation in Australia and Iā€™m afraid the results at this World Cup have shown the current system hasnā€™t been working for a while and itā€™s going to take some time for any changes to come to fruition, but something has to happen, we canā€™t continue this downward spiral.

ā€œIn Australia we have a federated system and states are their own little fiefdoms and they donā€™t like each other and donā€™t trust Rugby Australia.

ā€œThereā€™s got to be a change in how weā€™re doing those things. They are big, bold decisions that will not be popular but if we donā€™t there will be real problem in going the same way weā€™re going … thereā€™s a real possibility of Australian rugby disappearing down a big sinkhole.ā€

Watch all the action from Rugby World Cup 2023 on the Home of Rugby, Stan Sport. Every match streaming ad-free, live and in 4K UHD with replays, mini matches and highlights available on demand.

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