“We haven’t had an above 50 per cent [winning] season in Super Rugby across all teams since 2006,” Fisher said. “So it’s a long time – all of a sudden we haven’t won a Bledisloe Cup in 30 years [the last win was in 2001], so I understand where we are.
“Ideally, if we can have four Super Rugby teams all have winning seasons, and that transfers into quantity and quality at the next level.
“At the moment, we’re addressing at the top level. I know the Super Rugby coaches will be working super hard to make sure next season is successful. We get a combination of those two, and then we’ll start growing better from the ground up as well, and that’s what it takes.”
Fisher’s primary brief at the Wallabies is defence, which provided some rare highlights against South Africa, particularly Tom Wright’s scrambling try-saving tackle on Springboks winger Makazole Mapimpi.
A particular area of focus ahead of the Tests against the Pumas will be the Wallabies’ weak maul defence, which allowed the Springboks to score three tries in the second half in Perth.
Fisher was particularly disappointed at how focus dropped in the forward pack in the second period due to the departure of four front-rowers and stressed that it is an area that needs to be improved.
“We’ve been where we are for a period of time now,” Fisher said. “It takes time to set a standard, and then for players to understand how they can adhere to that standard … the maul defence being an example.
“We start off in the first half with a couple of good ones, [then] we lose some players, it gets a bit dysfunctional, we go off script, and that’s where we are at the moment.
“[We need] the ability to maintain focus, to play to a standard, to play to an expectation, to play to a skill set from minute one to minute 80 and not be distracted by other things that happen in the game.
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“Now we need to fast track that; we need to put some heat on the boys.”
The Wallabies will play their first Test in Argentina in the compact home stadium of soccer team Estudiantes in La Plata on Saturday night (Sunday, 8am, AEST), before making a rare journey north to Santa Fe the following Saturday for the final game against Los Pumas.
Fisher is wary of the threat Argentina pose after defeating the All Blacks in their first Test of the Rugby Championship in Wellington and is prepared for an even more dangerous side in front of their passionate home support.
“They can maul, as they showed against New Zealand in the first Test,” Fisher said. “They’re a pretty well-rounded team – you don’t play in a World Cup semi-final if you’re not a well-rounded team – and the addition they’ll have at home is unbelievable support and the passion that they play with.”