The “jackal at the tackle” has become common parlance at the World Cup, but it has never been better personified than in the shape of Australia flank David Pocock.
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The 23-year-old, who then moved to Australia from Zimbabwe as a teenager, produced a stunning display in the Wallabies’ 11-9 quarterfinal victory over South Africa on Sunday.
He put in 26 tackles, but more importantly continued to forge his trade in forcing turnovers at the breakdown.
In the absence of Springbok ‘fetcher’ Heinrich Brüssow, who went off injured after 20 minutes, Pocock totally dominated the breakdown to help set up a semifinal against trans-Tasman rivals New Zealand next weekend.
Australian coach Robbie Deans labelled Pocock’s performance as the best individual display of the 2011 tournament.
“Immense. David Pocock’s game was remarkable,” he said.
“And it was bigger than he got credit for.
“He’s clearly a huge influence in any game he plays in and we’d clearer be poorer for his absence.
“The world is blessed with some very good snafflers at the moment and no doubt people will be looking forward to next week, to that end,” he said of Pocock’s likely duel with All Blacks captain Richie McCaw.
Pocock has amassed 37 caps in the three years since making his debut, but was back on the field on Sunday for his first full game since missing the Wallabies’ shock 6-15 pool loss to Ireland.
“We were very confident and clear what we wanted to do,” Pocock said.
“But they pinned us in our half for long periods of the game.
“Because we were defending for so long there were great opportunities at the breakdown.
“Losing Brüssow was definitely a blow for them,” Pocock admitted.
“He’s a quality player and he puts a lot of pressure on the breakdown.”
Deans acknowledged that New Zealand referee Bryce Lawrence’s ‘anything goes’ approach to the breakdown had helped Pocock’s game.
“I think both sides were hard done by. It was a hotly contested area so maybe it evened out, maybe it was fair,” he said.
Deans added of his star flank, who took the No.7 shirt from the legendary George Smith: “David was one of the International Rugby Board players of the year last year [Pocock was a nominee for an award won by McCaw] and you do not get that status lightly.
“He is an influential player who makes things happen.”
Springbok flank Schalk Burger called Pocock a “fantastic player”.
“Getting him back is a massive boost for Australia,” Burger said.
“You know that if he gets the opportunity he will turn over possession.
“Any team knows that if it dominates the breakdown it will go well in the game and Pocock is one of the best openside flanks in the world.”
Look, I have to be fair… I played this position myself..
Pocock has been immense, whether you like it or not.
Some say he plays illegally, but you only play what the referee allows, and that is the true measure.
@ grootblousmile:
Quite agree. If the ref allows it, what’s stopping the other team from doing it. He is a great player and has a tremendous influence on the match. This Sunday He was what stood between SA and victory. Nuff said.
It will always be a lot easier to dominate turn overs if you are allowed to do it. Even warburton looked good against us because he was given carte blanche.
@ biltongbek:
So why couldn’t we do something about it?
@ The_Young_Turk:
Cause we think adapting is the thing you plug into a wall socket when you need a two pin plug.
4 @ The_Young_Turk:
I warned before the match that the Bokke should respect the breakdown areas more… yet they did not listen…
If only Pocock could have played for SA! He would have been our great hero!
7 @ The_Young_Turk:
Would he?
Would the ordinary coaches have seen his talents and nurtured it the same way it was done in Aussie?
I often think that the majority of coaches in SA are bloody thick as two short planks!
I think Francois Louw had a good game on Sunday as a sub… he surprised me.
@ The_Young_Turk:
I doubt that, becuase he would have been blown from a different perspective wearing green.
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