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Joe Schmidt wants Wallabies' 'house in order' before exit

Declan Meredith of the Wallabies watches on during the Nations Championship match between Australia Wallabies and France at Suncorp Stadium on July 11, 2026 in Brisbane, Australia. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)
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Rookie flyhalf Declan Meredith wants another crack as Joe Schmidt attempts to avoid some unwanted Wallabies history in his final game as coach.

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The Wallabies sunk to a sixth-straight loss and ninth in ten Tests in Brisbane on Saturday, beaten 42-26 by France despite leading the back-to-back Six Nations champions 21-12 at halftime.

The wheels came off in a seven-minute stint that yielded three tries when fullback Tom Wright, who impressed in his return to the starting side, in the sin bin for a professional foul.

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Meredith, the 27-year-old debutant in the No.10, couldn’t negotiate any peace for his side as opposite number Romain Ntamack and brilliant fullback Matthieu Jalibert steamrolled the hosts.

The loss dropped Schmidt’s winning percentage to 36.66 ahead of his final game in charge, against Italy in Perth next Saturday.

Match Summary

0
Penalty Goals
2
4
Tries
6
3
Conversions
3
0
Drop Goals
0
156
Carries
135
5
Line Breaks
14
13
Turnovers Lost
11
5
Turnovers Won
1

He needs a victory to jump slightly above Dave Rennie (38.2 per cent) and avoid finishing with the worst win-loss ratio among Wallabies coaches. It currently sits at 11 wins, 19 losses.

Australia coughed up a 12-point lead in a 33-31 loss to world No.3 Ireland last weekend in Sydney.

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The side’s only victory in their last 10 Tests came against Japan.

Schmidt took over from Eddie Jones with the program in shambles after the Wallabies’ historic early exit at the 2023 World Cup.

He was convinced to stay in the role for these three Tests before Les Kiss – he observed operations without direct involvement this week – who was coaching the Queensland Reds this season, takes over next month.

“My time’s nearly finished and I just want to leave the house in good order,” he said.

“It’s hard at the moment to rationalise the positives and I know there were some.”

He insists the belief remains internally and that he can feel it externally after back-to-back sell-outs in Brisbane and Sydney.

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“But to galvanise that we have to get results and I feel that acutely,” he said.

“You don’t take jobs on like this to come second. Internally I’m incredibly competitive and just want these guys to get a little bit of reward.”

Schmidt pointed to the side’s high turnover of No.10s – they have tried seven in the last 17 Tests, mostly due to injury – as a disruption that has contributed to their poor results.

“When things don’t go our way we’ve got to get some traction and part of that is around experience,” he said.

Meredith was propelled into a debut after Carter Gordon and Ben Donaldson both suffered calf injuries against Ireland.

That double blow also forced Schmidt to use fullback Jock Campbell in the unfamiliar role of reserve playmaker.

Donaldson could prove his fitness to face Italy but Schmidt is likely to call on a specialist flyhalf as reinforcement.

Veteran No.10 Bernard Foley is in the wings as he pursues a return to the NSW Waratahs next season after a stint in Japan.

Meredith is confident the side has the cattle though and wants another shot.

“If I get another opportunity I’d want to deliver more,” he said.

“That’s everyone’s kind of feeling in the change room, after a game like that, to come back and provide a bigger exclamation mark.”

The speedy talent out of Cairns, who grafted for years in Canberra before seizing his chance at the Brumbies this year, misread a defensive play in the first half that led to a try and was unable to win back any momentum once the French got a footing.

“They put you to the wire when they have momentum; you learn that in Tests, momentum is everything in a game and it’s hard to win back,” Meredith said.

“Definitely a few lessons learnt, but keen to get back on the horse.”

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Comments

2 Comments
T
Two Cents 17 mins ago

Describing Meredith as wanting another crack as opposed to being guaranteed to start again as the only recognized flyhalf in the current squad is weird.


Of course he is going to start again. And throwing in an untried person at 10 as a replacement is literally asking for teams to exploit you through that channel.


If they decide to rush Foley in as an emergency cover as opposed to anyone else, uplifting Burey or Debra or recalling Edmed, Lolo or JOC, will be a bigger disaster than “trialing” Jock there.


I can't believe once again we are back where we were at the end of DR’s reign. Why do we never learn from our mistakes and simply repeat them over and over but expect a different outcome?

A
AM 1 hr ago

Schmidt is a great technician but woeful selector. He consistently picks under sized teams. No Amatesero, no Lukhan, Jordan Uelese had an outstanding season at Montpelier who had the best scrum in the top 14. Williams needs to go at 8 for Bobby V and Hooper starting. Lomax is a better natural 15 than Wright as well and threat under the high ball where he struggles. Plus has goal kicking. Game has moved on from the 000s

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