Yes, you can believe the hype: the Wallabies are officially back
3 Was that the moment that launched Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii?
The Wallabies midfielder had his hands full with the giant Springboks No.12 Andre Esterhuizen in the first half, and it looked like another quiet Test was on the cards. But Suaalii's intercept try in the second half could be the moment that launches him because he has only scratched the surface of what he's capable of. It seemed to give him an immediate burst of confidence, and he showed his aerial prowess by grabbing an important Springboks restart shortly afterwards.
It was a big 'little' moment in a Test full of them, and a great example of what he can contribute in moments that don't make the highlights reel. It is difficult for midfielders against South Africa – the space isn't in their channels – but Suaalii came through the Test positively. As an aside, this was the sort of win that will bring Mark Nawaqanitawase back to rugby before the World Cup in 2027.
Who wouldn't want to be part of what this squad is building?
4 The Wallabies can play better
The inquest in South Africa was in full swing immediately after the final whistle, with Springboks coach Rassie Erasmus scathing of his own team. There will be endless talk about how they went away from their DNA and played far too much side-to-side rugby, and there is an element of truth in that.
But the Wallabies won't be too happy with parts of their game. They knew the early box-kick barrage was coming, and they failed to deal with it. Tom Wright knocked on and Jorgensen was beaten in the air. Later in the first half, Eben Etzebeth won the high-ball chase uncontested. It will be the major focus this week in anticipation of the Springboks restoring Handre Pollard to the No.10 jersey and kicking the ball 1000 times.
But the rewards of getting that right are enormous – the Wallabies looked like they could cut the Springboks to shreds on the counterattack.
5 JOC's strong return
It may have been a blessing in disguise that the Wallabies felt obliged to keep James O'Connor on for the full 80 minutes, with late bench addition Tane Edmed pencilled in for the return Test in Cape Town next week. O'Connor got better with every passing minute, and his experience shone through as the Wallabies started to unpick the Springboks' suffocating rush defence.
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There was a lot of communication passing between the Wallabies' players in that difficult first half, and O'Connor's offload to Ikitau to set up Pietsch's try in the 28th was the first sign that they had worked out the solution.
In fact, so quickly did the Wallabies adapt to the rush that they turned it against the Springboks in the second half. Bell's short ball for Wilson's first try exposed the Springboks' line speed, and by the 65th minute the Wallabies were picking it apart almost at will.
On the back of some front-foot ball – that man Bell again – O'Connor went over the of Springboks winger Kurt-Lee Arendse with a beautiful left-to-right pass and Jorgensen did the rest. That was smart, composed footy from an older No.10 who saw the first-half pictures and responded accordingly.
Cully's team of the week
Rugby Championship team of the week, round one
1 Angus Bell (Australia)
2 Codie Taylor (New Zealand)
3 Fletcher Newell (New Zealand)
4 Fabian Holland (New Zealand)
5 Nick Frost (Australia)
6 Tom Hooper (Australia)
7 Fraser McReight (Australia) - Player of the round
8 Harry Wilson (Australia)
9 Nic White (Australia)
10 Tomas Albornoz (Argentina)
11 Kurt-Lee Arendse (South Africa)
12 Len Ikitau (Australia)
13 Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii (Australia)
14 Max Jorgensen (Australia)
15 Will Jordan (New Zealand)

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"There were a couple of uncharacteristic errors from the Springboks where, I think next week, if they pick and go there, he (du Toit) is such a powerful, athletic man, he will be a handful," he said. "It was probably a mix of us and a little bit of inaccuracy from the Springboks because when they were accurate, you saw that first 20 minutes. "I saw wave after wave and even that very first drive was impressive. "We probably got a little bit lucky, even when Andre (Esterhuizen) went down the left-hand touch a couple of times. "One of the times, (Wallaby) Tom Wright went 70 metres and scored at the other end." Schmidt says the Wallabies can't expect a repeat of the Springboks' second-half lapse when the two teams meet again next Sunday morning (AEST) at DHL Stadium. "We know that pressure is coming," he said. "I've coached against the Boks with a few other international teams and come out second. "I know whether they're favourites or not, they're a heck of a team." Lock Will Skelton and veteran flyhalf James O'Connor revealed the Wallabies quietly celebrated while also reviewing the epic 38-22 triumph on laptops, knowing full well the Boks will likely respond in ruthless fashion. "A lot of the boys are already onto next week. The boys are reviewing, everyone's clipping stuff," Skelton said. "We know what's going to come. They're going to try and punch you in the face this week. "So we're going to have to have a good week of preparation again, and really fight until the end." After playing a lead role in his first Test since 2022, 35-year-old O'Connor said the Wallabies "enjoyed each other's company" but were not getting carried away. "That's the thing about rugby - you're already on to next week. I know my mind went there," he said. "I thought straight away: 'What are they going to be coming with - 6-2 bench, back to basics, bomb squad, aerial contest? "They're going to meet us in the trenches there, so I'm already thinking about what's coming and then just focusing on recovery." With winger Dylan Pietsch (broken jaw), utility back Ben Donaldson (abductor muscle) and prop James Slipper (concussion) all returning home, Filipo Daugunu, Hamish Stewart and Rhys van Nek will fly to South Africa to join the Wallabies. Under no illusions, Australia are bracing for some fierce backlash from South Africa in the two sides' return Rugby Championship stoush in Cape Town. While delighted with his side's resilience and growing belief shown in Saturday's colossal comeback win over the back-to-back world champions in Johannesburg, Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt isn't getting carried away. He believes the Springboks took their foot off the pedal after motoring to a 22-0 lead inside 18 minutes before succumbing to the Wallabies at Ellis Park for the first time since 1963. "I've coached enough teams because I'm really old," the 60-year-old Kiwi said. "I've had teams who got a very, very rapid start. It can sometimes just cause a bit of a lapse in effort and concentration. I think they just gave us a little bit of belief. "As well as (man of the match) Fraser (McReight) did and the other players did, we were probably a little bit lucky because Pieter-Steph (du Toit) at one stage just went to pick and go and he just knocked it on." Schmidt said it was unlikely the Springboks would repeat such mistakes next weekend. "There were a couple of uncharacteristic errors from the Springboks where, I think next week, if they pick and go there, he (du Toit) is such a powerful, athletic man, he will be a handful," he said. "It was probably a mix of us and a little bit of inaccuracy from the Springboks because when they were accurate, you saw that first 20 minutes. "I saw wave after wave and even that very first drive was impressive. "We probably got a little bit lucky, even when Andre (Esterhuizen) went down the left-hand touch a couple of times. "One of the times, (Wallaby) Tom Wright went 70 metres and scored at the other end." Schmidt says the Wallabies can't expect a repeat of the Springboks' second-half lapse when the two teams meet again next Sunday morning (AEST) at DHL Stadium. "We know that pressure is coming," he said. "I've coached against the Boks with a few other international teams and come out second. "I know whether they're favourites or not, they're a heck of a team." Lock Will Skelton and veteran flyhalf James O'Connor revealed the Wallabies quietly celebrated while also reviewing the epic 38-22 triumph on laptops, knowing full well the Boks will likely respond in ruthless fashion. "A lot of the boys are already onto next week. The boys are reviewing, everyone's clipping stuff," Skelton said. "We know what's going to come. They're going to try and punch you in the face this week. "So we're going to have to have a good week of preparation again, and really fight until the end." After playing a lead role in his first Test since 2022, 35-year-old O'Connor said the Wallabies "enjoyed each other's company" but were not getting carried away. "That's the thing about rugby - you're already on to next week. I know my mind went there," he said. "I thought straight away: 'What are they going to be coming with - 6-2 bench, back to basics, bomb squad, aerial contest? "They're going to meet us in the trenches there, so I'm already thinking about what's coming and then just focusing on recovery." With winger Dylan Pietsch (broken jaw), utility back Ben Donaldson (abductor muscle) and prop James Slipper (concussion) all returning home, Filipo Daugunu, Hamish Stewart and Rhys van Nek will fly to South Africa to join the Wallabies.