BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) – The clock is ticking on Joe Schmidt’s hopes of engineering a rapid turnaround for the Wallabies as they head into their first clash against Argentina on Saturday with their Rugby Championship campaign on a knife edge.
After sweeping July tests against Wales and Georgia, Australia came crashing back to earth with successive home defeats by South Africa as the world champions showed themselves to be a class above.
Argentina once offered Australia a chance to chalk up face-saving wins in the annual southern hemisphere championship usually dominated by New Zealand.
But those days are over.
The Pumas stunned Australia 34-31 in Sydney a year ago, doubling down on the 48-17 drubbing in San Juan in 2022.
Schmidt was impressed by Argentina’s tour of New Zealand, even if the 42-10 hiding by the All Blacks at Eden Park took the gloss off the Pumas’ 38-30 win in Wellington.
“(Argentina) got further into the World Cup obviously than Australia did,” Schmidt told reporters on Thursday.
“In their second game (at Eden Park), it was 7-7 in the second half.
“To spend a half at 7-7 against what was a pretty rampant All Black team was an indication of just how formidable the Pumas are currently.”
Like Eddie Jones, Dave Rennie and a string of coaches before him, Schmidt has struggled to get the best out of a Wallabies team that lacks world class talent in its tight five forwards and a standout playmaker to marshal the backline.
Facing a beefy Argentina pack, Schmidt has rolled the dice with the injury-prone Taniela Tupou starting at tighthead prop after missing both the Springboks tests while mourning the death of his father.
Noah Lolesio has been given another opportunity in the number 10 shirt but it may be last chance saloon for the ACT Brumbies flyhalf after his struggles against the Springboks.
Number eight Harry Wilson will be the fourth Wallabies captain in six tests, while Hamish Stewart becomes Australia’s 15th test debutant this season as he replaces the injured Hunter Paisami at inside centre.
Injuries have forced some of the personnel changes on Schmidt but he was frank about the Wallabies’ depth.
“We are trying to increase the breadth and depth of our player pool because we know that no matter how hard you try, if you lose a couple of players, particularly in one position, you become vulnerable,” he said.
While the Wallabies search for lost confidence at La Plata, Argentina will hope to send hooker and four-times World Cup hero Agustin Creevy off with a win in front of home fans.
Coach Felipe Contepomi named the 39-year-old former captain on a bench featuring the experienced muscle of locks Tomas Lavanini and Guido Petty.
Enforcer Marcos Kremer has been switched from lock to openside flanker in a powerful back row that could prove a handful for the Wallabies’ loose forwards.
(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Peter Rutherford)