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Hockings stays with the Force
19th April 2008, 11:45 WST
Rising lock Tom Hockings has provided a welcome consolation for the Western Force in the wake of their disastrous 29-12 Super 14 loss to Queensland.
North Queensland product Hockings, 22, has waved away strong interest from the Reds to remain with the Force and continue his fruitful second-row partnership with skipper Nathan Sharpe after this season.
Hockings was one of three former Queenslanders the Reds were hoping to lure home for 2009, with talks expected with teenagers Dave Pocock and James O’Connor in the coming days.
Reds high-performance director Ben Whitaker confirmed to AAP that Hockings’ management had advised he would stay in Perth.
It gives the Force a second reason to breathe easy on the youngster, tipped as a 2011 World Cup prospect, after he shrugged off a painful shoulder injury at Suncorp Stadium last night.
Hockings writhed in pain for a minute in back-play before being replaced but coach John Mitchell was relieved to declare the injury a mere stinger and he’s expected to be available for their next match against the Chiefs at Subiaco Oval on May 3.
Mitchell will consider swinging the axe for the Force’s final three matches and blood youngsters in preparation for the 2009 season.
He virtually consigned 2008 to the dust-bin after the “unacceptable” three-tries-to-nil loss when the underdog Reds outmuscled, outplayed and showed more enthusiasm than the Force.
The wavering westerners, clearly missing injured spearhead Matt Giteau and battle-weary from the rugged 17-12 loss to NSW, now sit seventh and will slip further after next weekend’s bye before a tough run home finishing with the Hurricanes and Brumbies.
“Clearly we have got to address and redirect in some areas and we have to readdress our goals moving forward and I even may have to consider building for next year’s season based on some of the things we are seeing,” Mitchell said.
X-rays cleared winger Haig Sare of a fractured fibula but he is expected to be ruled out for the rest of the season with ankle ligament damage.
Reserve flanker Tamaiti Horua also looks like he has played his last game in a stop-start season and may face surgery after having his left knee scanned on return to Perth tonight.
Horua suffered the injury in just his second involvement in the match.
A rare bright spot for the visitors was the record-breaking debut by O’Connor who became the youngest player in the history of the Super 14 at 17 years, 287 days when he ran on as Horua’s replacement midway through the second half.
O’Connor, now set to be given more time on the field by Mitchell, has been hailed as the next Matt Giteau and gave a glimpse of his talent with just a few touches.
The determined Reds pack laid the platform for the victory which coach Phil Mooney labelled as sweet as their 121-point turnaround win over the Bulls four weeks ago.
It was Queensland’s first Australian derby triumph in two years and only their second in their last nine matches.
Back-rowers David Croft and Leroy Houston, who scored after just 51 seconds, were superb but Croft is in doubt for Saturday’s clash against the red-hot Chiefs in Hamilton.
The warhorse flanker came off late in the game with a shoulder injury and his run of 90 consecutive Super matches appears in jeopardy.
Stand-in skipper James Horwill won a clear points battle over rival captain and lock Sharpe in a major boost to his Wallabies hopes.
Injured captain Sam Cordingley, who first took the reins for the 40-8 upset of the Bulls, should return against the Chiefs but coach Phil Mooney has a dilemma.
“The disappointing thing is we have to consider changing our captain because every time we pick a new one we win,’” Mooney quipped.
AAP