Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

All Black turned Wallabies coach downplays Eden Park factor

Australia's Angus Bell (2nd L) celebrates a game winning try with teammates during the Rugby Championship Test match between Australia and Argentina at Queensland Country Bank Stadium in Townsville on September 6, 2025. (Photo by MICHAEL CHAMBERS/AFP via Getty Images)

With Kiwis dominating their coaching contingent, the Wallabies are hoping some additional All Blacks insight can help them finally crack a historic win at Eden Park to keep alive their pursuit of the Bledisloe Cup.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Australians haven’t won at the Auckland graveyard since 1986 – some 52 matches – but likely won’t have a better chance than on Saturday with the All Blacks in faltering form.

The Wallabies camp have confirmed giant lock Will Skelton will return from French rugby for the second Test in Perth, but the Australians need a first-up victory to keep alive their dream of reclaiming the trans-Tasman trophy, which New Zealand have held since 2003.

Wallabies head coach Joe Schmidt has recruited another Kiwi in former All Blacks lock Tom Donnelly as the Wallabies’ forwards coach in their five-man team, while Australia’s current scrum guru Mike Cron held that role with New Zealand from 2004 to 2019.

Donnelly, who replaced Leicester-bound Brit Geoff Parling, said he already felt settled behind “enemy lines”.

“I suppose when you’re in professional sports, whatever team you’re involved with, you get emotionally invested in it pretty quickly,” Donnelly said from the Wallabies base in Auckland on Tuesday.

“I’m just trying to do a really good job here with the Wallabies and really enjoying it. It’s no real different to any other game for me, preparing to beat an opposition.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Nothing changed, I just go about my work and make sure that we prepare these boys as best we can so we turn up on Saturday and give a performance that we’re really proud of.”

Team Form

Last 5 Games

4
Wins
1
1
Streak
4
21
Tries Scored
15
47
Points Difference
-63
4/5
First Try
3/5
3/5
First Points
2/5
4/5
Race To 10 Points
3/5

Donnelly lined up for the last of his 15 Tests in 2010 while he played in nearly 100 Super Rugby matches between 2004 and 2014 for the Highlanders, Crusaders and Blues.

He said he would do what he could to help the Wallabies.

“…It’s a long time since I was involved with the All Blacks, so my memory’s not that great, but I can certainly add my little bit of two cents here and there where I see fit,” the 43-year-old said.

“Possibly, there’s certain areas that we can give advice on or encourage, but ultimately Eden Park’s a field with four lines and a couple of goalposts.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Related

While it could be too late for the Wallabies in terms of their Bledisloe ambitions, Donnelly said Skelton would be a welcome addition as they look to win their first Rugby Championship title since 2015.

With two rounds to play, the Wallabies lead on 11 points, ahead of South Africa and New Zealand (10 each) and Argentina (9).

“He’s a massive leader within our squad so his ability to connect and encourage and work with our guys and make sure we’re all working together is massive for the group.

“Secondly he’s a huge human so it makes it a little bit easier for him to dominate collisions which is pretty handy when you’re trying to win games of football.”

Set to play in his first Bledisloe Cup match, 21-year-old winger Max Jorgensen said Australia expected a fired-up All Blacks after their historic 43-10 loss to South Africa last round.

“Coming off the back of that pretty bad loss … they’ll come out firing,” Jorgensen said.

“It’s always been a massive rivalry. I always dreamt of playing in the Bledisloe Cup and if given the chance, it would be awesome.”

RugbyPass App Download

News, stats, live rugby and more! Download the new RugbyPass app on the App Store (iOS) and Google Play (Android) now!


Whether you’re looking for somewhere to track upcoming fixtures, a place to watch live rugby or an app that shows you all of the latest news and analysis, the RugbyPass rugby app is perfect.

ADVERTISEMENT
Play Video
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

2 Comments
Load More Comments

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Long Reads

Comments on RugbyPass

T
Tom 1 hour ago
Change at the top is only answer for England – Andy Goode

We aren't miles ahead of any other nation in terms of talent at all. I agree Borthwick is a mediocre coach but let's not get carried away. France have won the u20 world cup three out of the last five times and just beat us in both the u20 and u18 six nations… and I don't think many people would claim we've got more talent than SA or the ABs either. Ibitoye isn't someone you want in a test match, he's so unpredictable. In a tight test match there are very few scoring opportunities for wingers but there are lots of opportunities for wingers to make defensive misreads and balls things up. In a tightly contested, low scoring game, you'd much rather have someone like Feyi Wabosi who has X factor but can be relied upon to defend properly or not have a brain farts, we've got other good wingers without needing Ibitoye.

I agree in general with your sentiment but we should be realistic. We've won the u20 WC once in the last decade, won the six nations only twice. A prem club hasn't won anything in Europe since Bristol won the challenge cup when they had Piutau, Radradra. There is talent out there for sure but our clubs and u20s aren't enjoying the level of success which could support statements about us having the most talent in the world. If a new coach comes in they aren't going to wave a magic wand and make us the best team in the world. There are a lot of structural problems and engrained attitudes which need to be overcome within the RFU and Prem etc. Plus any new coach is going to have to undo the damage Borthwick and Wigglesworth have done. They're going to have their work cut out for them.



...

37 Go to comments
Close
ADVERTISEMENT