Super Rugby
Hooper sets himself for Pocock duel
April 27, 2015
Hooper said he's ready to take on rival David Pocock in a clash of the flankers on Friday © Getty Images
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He enjoys the rivalry, welcomes the challenge and relishes Friday's looming head-to-head battle with him, but just don't call Michael Hooper David Pocock. That's what one of Hooper's team-mates tried after the flanker responded to Pocock's three-try haul from the Brumbies' rolling maul on Friday night with his own five-pointer from a rolling maul for the NSW Waratahs 24 hours later.

"Someone from the peanut gallery," Hooper said. "One of the boys ran in and said 'Nice try, Pocock'. I wasn't happy with that."

But Hooper was happy to break his try-scoring drought for the Tahs and then lay on another for Adam Ashley-Cooper in a nerve-wracking 18-16 win over the Melbourne Rebels at ANZ Stadium.

David Pocock of the Brumbies wraps Nasi Manu of the Highlanders in a tackle, Brumbies v Highlanders, Super Rugby, GIO Stadium, Canberra, April 24, 2015
Pocock has made a huge return from injury to make a play for a Wallabies jersey © Getty Images
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Hooper's man-of-the-match display had Waratahs and Wallabies coach Michael Cheika marvelling at the openside flanker's class and set the stage for an epic personal duel with Pocock in Canberra on Friday night. As well as top spot in the Australian conference being on the line at GIO Stadium, Hooper's match-up with Pocock takes on greater significance after Cheika last Friday admitted he was considering luring the great George Smith out of retirement for the World Cup.

A master motivator and tactician, Cheika also said he probably couldn't accommodate three specialist No.7s in his 31-man squad, doubtless prompting Hooper and Pocock to rise to the challenge.

"He is one of the most consistent footballers I have ever encountered," Cheika said of Hooper, Australia's incumbent captain. "His consistency is ridiculous really."

Speaking to Sky Sports Radio on Monday morning, Waratahs team-mate Nick Phipps praised Hooper's tenacity and hard work: "He's so consistent and brings so much to our side. Week in, week out, he fronts up. A true warrior.

"Hoops is really looking forward to the challenge. He's a really great bloke and he's someone that the team looks for for big plays, we're all behind him, we like to follow. He always gives 110%, you know that when you sit behind him that something is going to happen."

Pocock, himself a one-time Wallabies skipper before knee injuries wiped him out for the bulk of 2013 and 2014, excelled in the Brumbies' 31-18 victory over the Highlanders.

"I woke up and I saw he scored three tries. I didn't know what capacity until I saw they were driving maul tries," Hooper said. "So probably the biggest worry for me right now is going up against that next week. Three tries there is huge. We did pretty well in the lineout [against Melbourne] so next week is going to be a huge focus for us and Poey's at the back of that so we've got to shut him down."

Phipps also spoke of the Brumbies set-piece and the Waratahs need to dismantle it if they hope to challenge the Australian conference leaders: "Their set piece is so good. If we can stifle that and free up our backs, we'll be right in it."

Hooper conceded that would be easier said than done and said the Waratahs would study the tape of the Brumbies' deadly driving maul - and how the Highlanders were unable to defend it.

"It's an intent thing," he said, adding that taking on Pocock and the Brumbies in such high-stakes encounters were the sort of things he played for. "I'm a pretty competitive bloke and I enjoy the challenge."

© AAP

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