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Baby Waratahs' new skipper Gordon defiant

Jake Gordon makes a break during the Waratahs 28-8 victory over the Force on the Gold Coast Chris Hyde/Getty Images

Jake Gordon can lean on just one game of captaincy experience after taking over the leadership of a NSW Waratahs squad banking on youthful talent to offset big losses.

The Wallabies halfback will skipper a squad stripped of experience and its usual star power, with Michael Hooper's Japanese club deal ruling him out for the entire Super Rugby season and leaving them without a single member of their 2014 title-winning side.

Last year's captain Rob Simmons (London Irish) has joined Kurtley Beale (France's Racing 92) in Europe, while the Waratahs chose not to extend tri-code veteran Karmichael Hunt's contract.

Hunt's departure was a call coach Rob Penney described as "heart-tearingly" tough, but a nod to their regeneration efforts.

It's left 27-year-old Gordon, who boasts 55 Waratahs caps, five Wallabies appearances and one game as captain at second-tier NRC level two years ago, in charge.

Last year's finalists Queensland Reds and the Brumbies enter Super Rugby AU largely unchanged - the Reds welcoming NRL star winger Suliasi Vunivalu to an all-star backline - while the Western Force have been bolstered by high-profile domestic and international additions.

Asked why the Waratahs shouldn't be written off as easy-beats this season, Gordon was happy to oblige.

"Last time you guys wrote us off, when we played the Reds we won 45-12," he quipped of their record hammering of Queensland at the SCG, in which Gordon scored three times.

"To be honest I don't really care; we have a great bunch of young guys with extreme amounts of talent.

"I know we've lost a lot of maturity in Simmons and Hooper ... but we'll be an exciting team.

"The guys like Angus Bell, Lachie Swinton, Will Harrison, James Ramm; they've been exceptional at training and I'm expecting big things from them this year."

Coach Rob Penney expects his squad to rally behind a man he thought was the obvious choice to lead, despite his lack of captaincy experience.

"He's a true-blue Tah and underpinning it all is his outstanding character; people warm to him and embrace (him) and he's a fierce competitor," he said.

Penney expects progression from a Waratahs side that finished the domestic tournament with a 4-4 record.

And he is mindful of putting on a show as domestic rugby is shown on free-to-air for the first time on Channel Nine.

"Playing attractive rugby and winning aren't mutually exclusive," he said.

"(But) we can't be stodgy and set piece-driven all the time; we've got to be able to show rugby is a beautiful game when it's played quickly, but still retain the essence of the brutality of the defence, collision and the breakdown."