Israel Folau says Wallabies have nothing to lose in second Bledisloe Cup Test with All Blacks
ISRAEL Folau learned a painful lesson to trust his instincts after a half-hearted intercept attempt led to him being shown up by All Blacks flyer Rieko Ioane.
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ISRAEL Folau learned a painful lesson to trust his instincts after a half-hearted intercept attempt led to him being skinned for a try by young All Blacks flyer Rieko Ioane.
Folau opened up on his embarrassing defensive miss and also said the unfancied Wallabies “have nothing to lose” in the second Test in Dunedin.
Of all the Wallabies’ missed tackles at ANZ Stadium last Saturday, two summed up the defensive meltdown — Samu Kerevi’s cold miss on Ryan Crotty and Folau’s error in letting Ioane get around him in the 17th minute.
Kerevi’s was an individual error and Folau’s was a result of a system gone haywire — Australia had five defenders covering two attackers.
Folau said he’d been caught out because he was indecisive.
“I was in two minds at the time,” Folau said. “I was thinking about the intercept and I came up.
“The pass obviously beat me and he finished really well. I got beaten fair and square. He’s a great young talent.
“It was a good lesson for me to just back my instinct and go with what I was thinking in the first place, as opposed to being in two minds.
“I was thinking about the intercept but then I thought (Beauden Barrett) was shaping up for a little grubber behind, which kind of changed my stance. It was a learning curve for me.”
Folau felt terrible after the try but he quickly put it out of his mind, and later managed to score scored a try and set up another.
“Straight after he scored I knew it was my bad but I guess with all the years of playing at this level experience has taught me if I make a mistake to move on as quick as I can,” he said.
“It comes down to maturity. It’s always a learning experience. I have never had a perfect game.”
Folau believes firmly in the power of positivity and using the tough times as valuable lessons.
He admits the long-running dominance of New Zealand has the potential to wear him and his teammates down, but Folau believes times of difficulty are where the most progress is made.
“It can get quite frustrating and draining you know after years and years of not getting a result,” he said.
“But I try to look on the positive side in that if you are not going through challenges, there is no growth. The guys know what we are about. We train hard and work hard. It’s about delivering on the day.”
With virtually nobody giving them any hope of a win in Dunedin, Folau said they were not lacking for motivation.
“There is nothing to lose, you know?” he said. “We have been in this position for a long time.
“After the game the boys were disappointed for a day or so. But we know what we are working on inside our camp, and we’re trying to build something. It’s always a journey.
“It was disappointing from our point of view as a team to let in that many points. But it was funny, going into halftime I didn’t feel like we were as far apart as that.
“The scoreboard said differently but I felt like we could be right in it and throw things at them, and the second half was better.”