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AAP, The West Australian
March 4, 2012, 1:29 pm
Ben Seymour at Western Force training. Picture: John Mokrzycki / The West Australian
Unheralded five-eighth Ben Seymour may be thrust into Western Force’s problem position to spark their sputtering attack after impressing off the bench in the Super Rugby loss to Queensland.
Force coach Richard Graham is strongly considering moving incumbent No.10 James Stannard to halfback and pitching Seymour into the playmaking hot seat against the Hurricanes in Perth on Friday night.
Graham was well pleased with the pair’s combination after he made a gutsy call to replace former Test No.9 Brett Sheehan after 50 minutes with the Force down 26-6 and struggling at Suncorp Stadium.
The West Australians immediately looked more dangerous with Stannard at halfback as he and captain David Pocock both stepped through some feeble Reds defence for two tries in five minutes.
Back in the game at 26-20, the Force were then punished by their ill-discipline and the boot of Queensland sharp-shooter Mike Harris who slotted three straight penalty goals to consign the visitors to their second straight loss.
A NSW Waratahs academy player last year, Seymour was the last man signed by the Force - as a third-string five-eighth - but the disgraced Willie Ripia’s pre-season exit, Stannard’s versatility and his own training exploits made for a swift rise.
Graham admitted it was a big call to replace Sheehan by gambling with the 21-year-old Manly flyhalf.
“At that point I just felt we needed a change in momentum and that paid off for us,” he said. “It was a good change and it was good to see Benny Seymour make his debut.
“He’s trained well with us in pre-season and done everything that’s been asked of him so I felt that worked reasonably well for us.”
Despite the loss, Graham rated it a much improved performance on the opening 19-17 loss to the Brumbies and was heartened by how his new-look halves harnessed the backline after they were starved of possession in Canberra.
“That was a really big focus for us,” he said. “I think Chucky (Stannard) and Benny Seymour got that balance right in that involvement. We just have to play a little more field position.”
Ball scavenger Pocock was once again the Force’s best and he is keen to see his team become more clinical and patient in try-scoring positions after wasting some early chances after pressuring the Reds into error.
“We did that well and got down in the 22 but I thought at times we were a little bit manic,” he said.
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