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Posted: 2022-10-03 07:41:54

It's difficult to imagine anybody who believes in the green and gold jersey more than Mal Meninga. 

As he announced Australia's squad for the upcoming World Cup, the passion he has for the Kangaroos was plain to see. 

He is one of the great Test players of all time, the only man to go on four Kangaroo Tours, a living embodiment of the ideals every player who pulls on an Australian jersey must live up to if they're to prove themselves worthy of inheriting the mantle.

That is why Meninga is the perfect Australian coach for this moment in time, when the Kangaroos find themselves at a true crossroads for the first time in their history.

It's not because the team hasn't played in almost three years. That was a symptom of what's happened, not a cause.

Think about why that lay-off happened in the first place. The COVID-19 pandemic shook up the world and many sports were reduced to their most basic elements in order to keep the show going.

Australian rugby league players look on dejected after losing to Tonga.
Australia have not played a match for almost three years. (AAP)

So when it came to rugby league, the club competition was always going to continue. So was State of Origin, even if it had to be played at the end of the season. They were both non-negotiable. There is no rugby league without them.

International footy, and by extension the Kangaroos, was deemed expendable and thus were shelved. This was the culmination of years of degradation where the prestige of the green and gold jersey was gradually chipped away, even if Test football has been about more than just the best team in the world for some years now.

It's a far cry from the days when honour was measured in Test caps and tours to England, but there was no one root cause for the dinting of the legend.

The fan and media obsession with Origin, a lack of organised series and tournaments, resistance from clubs to allow their players to appear in end-of-season matches and thus miss part of the pre-season and fan apathy because of Australia's dominance all played a part.

But the old ways can return, harder and stronger but also updated for modern times, and Meninga is the man who can do it.

Meninga will take a fresh squad to England. It's exciting and star-studded, as nearly all Australian squads are, but it's also packed with new faces. Not only are there 13 debutants, but only three players in the touring party have played for the Kangaroos more than five times. Even James Tedesco, the new captain and one of the best players in the world for almost half a decade now, only has four caps.

This means there is a tremendous opportunity before them. A popular maxim with a lot of teams is that nobody owns a jersey, you only rent it. It's something you inherit from the person who wore it before you and pass down to your successor.

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