The Wallabies have named a twenty-seven strong training squad for the upcoming Four Nations Rugby Championship including previously injured Test wingers Drew Mitchell and Lachie Turner.

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Also included in the squad are Western Force winger Nick Cummins, Melbourne Rebels midfield back Mitch Inman and the NSW Waratahs prop Paddy Ryan.

Twenty-seven players have been named in a provisional group which will assemble in Sydney for a three-day camp between July 24-26. The training group will be supplemented by three players – an outside backs and two loose forwards – from within the ranks of the national Rugby Academy programme.

Their presence allows for fully opposed training sessions, while also introducing the younger players to the standards of preparation required within the senior national team framework. No Queensland Reds players have been considered due to their on-going Super Rugby playoffs commitments and the uncertainty that places over their availability.

Western Force lock Nathan Sharpe has also been rested from the camp.

The return of Mitchell and Turner, neither of whom were considered fit enough for selection in June as they continued their respective returns from injury, was flagged when the pair trained with the Wallabies in the lead-up to last month’s 20-19 win in the final Test of The Wales Tour in Sydney.

Kurtley Beale, who made his Test return for the year in that match, has been included today, but his Melbourne Rebels team-mate James O’Connor remains on the sideline as he continues rehabilitation from a hamstring strain.

The upcoming training camp is the first of two that will be held before the Wallabies squad for the inaugural Rugby Championship assembles in Sydney on August 7 to prepare for the opening Bledisloe Cup Test in the city.

The second camp is in Sydney on August 1-3, with the 30-man squad for The Championship to be finalised following that gathering.

Consistent with the approach in previous seasons, the involvement of a wider group of players in preparation allows a greater number to be exposed to Wallaby methods and trainings, so the base knowledge is there when injuries or form loss requires personnel changes.

This takes on an even greater importance this year looking ahead to the Spring Tour which, unlike in previous seasons, follows hard on the heels of the domestic Test programme, with the touring party departing just 10 days after the third Bledisloe Cup Test against New Zealand in Brisbane on October 20.

“The camps provide us with an important opportunity for training background,” Wallabies coach Robbie Deans says.

“It gives us the chance to bring the whole group together and familiarise them with the method: ‘tune’ them in to Wallaby content if you like, coming as they are, out of the conclusion of their different state programmes from Super Rugby.”

Deans is not fazed by the unavailability of Queensland Reds players for the opening camp. “It’s a win-win,” he says.

“If they advance to the semi-final and beyond, we have players gaining exposure to the highest level and, more importantly, the highest intensity of provincial rugby you can get. That’s great background for what’s coming in The Rugby Championship.”

 

The first Wallabies training squad ahead of the inaugural Rugby Championship is:

Kurtley Beale (Melbourne Rebels), Adam Ashley-Cooper (NSW Waratahs), Drew Mitchell (NSW Waratahs), Lachie Turner (NSW Waratahs), Nick Cummins (Western Force), Cooper Vuna (Melbourne Rebels), Rob Horne (NSW Waratahs), Mitch Inman (Melbourne Rebels), Pat McCabe (Brumbies), Bernard Foley (NSW Waratahs), Berrick Barnes (NSW Waratahs), Nick Phipps (Melbourne Rebels), Nic White (Brumbies), Ben Mowen (Brumbies), David Pocock (Western Force), Michael Hooper (Brumbies), Dave Dennis (NSW Waratahs), Kane Douglas (NSW Waratahs), Cadeyrn Neville (Melbourne Rebels), Hugh Pyle (Melbourne Rebels), Sitaleki Timani (NSW Waratahs), Sekope Kepu (NSW Waratahs), Benn Robinson (NSW Waratahs), Ben Alexander (Brumbies), Paddy Ryan (NSW Waratahs), Stephen Moore (Brumbies), Tatafu Polota-Nau (NSW Waratahs).

One Response to Wallabies name The Rugby Championship training squad

  • 1

    Why do I see so many Waratah names? Glad Horne was included. His defence is shit.

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