Thread: The game that batters: the rugby thread Board: The Circus / Ship of Fools.


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Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Down south where we stand on our heads the international season is about to begin ... France against a re-hashed but fired up All Blacks. Okay ... let the meaning of life begin [Yipee]

[ 13. February 2013, 04:38: Message buggered about with by: Ariston ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Or not ... [Frown] The French played like a team. So did the All Blacks, occasionally.
 
Posted by davelarge (# 186) on :
 
Man, that's a turn-up for the books! I think the French should prepare for a backlash in the second test.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Ouch, but true. The All Blacks will need to play - er - Test Rugby tonight if they're going to win. Obviously. The born to rule attitude got kicked in the bum last week - and the French are keen to add another nail to the coffin of arrogance. I think a tougher game is shaping up, but one that the French could shock all by winning by 6-12 points.

Ironically in last week's game the ABs for once had their often abysmal line-out in order. Here's hoping they continue that - and remember a few other basics about, er, using some strength in the scrum (preferably in forward gear) and actually hanging on to opponents in a tackle.

And don't attempt running the ball out from your own goal line with flashy a la Francais back line movements. They look really silly when the French grab the ball in a tackle and go on to score a try.
 
Posted by davelarge (# 186) on :
 
Speaking of painful losses, the Lions were shaping up for a thrashing but managed to claw back some respectability. If we can sort out our penalty count and win first-phase ball more reliably, I reckon we've a shot in the final two tests.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I didn't see the game but the penalty problem appears to be in the scrum and Phil Vickery did seem to concede more than his share. He does so for England too, so his place for the next test must be in doubt. I'm not sure about David Wallace either: he's better about the field but Martin Williams does the dirty work so much better and Ryan Jones or Andy Powell could keep the 'Boks back row busy (and run at and over their no 10).

That apart the Lions ought to be encouraged that they came back into the game. Oh, and we should have another lock with a bit of dog about him, like Nathan Hines or Donnacha O'Callaghan. Give Matfield a black eye, so he plays with double vision which will mess up his line-out!
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
The All Blacks won against Italy, but not as convincingly as the 27-6 scoreline suggests. They only had about 35% of the territory, and the possession split about 50/50. The scoreline should have been higher, and if they're to match against either the Boks or the Wallabies they're going to have to strengthen many aspects of their game, especially their back line penetration.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Somehow, against the run of recent form, and against all odds (I would have thought) the All Blacks held out the Wallabies for a come-from-behind 22-16 victory. McCaw was back of course (and scored a try). But they looked like a unit for the first time this season. Donald kicked well, after missing one difficult one (Giteau didn't). And, paradoxically, the one feature of their play that has been lookintg good this season was attrocious at first, their lineout letting them down and costing a try.

Not either an easy or a pretty game, but a good win.
 
Posted by davelarge (# 186) on :
 
The IRB has this week given a one year ban to Tom Williams, a winger for Harlequins who faked a blood injury to allow a substitution in a Heineken Cup game in April.

Is a one year ban too much (the article reports that Quin's point out that this is longer than the bans for stamping, gouging and pushing match officials) or does compromising the integrity of the game warrant such a harsh penalty?

If the injury was faked by using a blood capsule, what does that say about the premeditation of the Quin's players and staff?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The IRB say that this will be a deterrent to cheating. What bollocks! Neil Back, Richard Hill, Richie McCaw, Martyn Williams and every other player worth his number 6 or 7 shirt would have been banned for life if cheating was effectively banned!

I think this harks back to the days when rugger was about gentlemen knocking seven shades of shit out of each other and drinking pints afterwards. I'm afraid the game has changed and if the IRB spokesmen took some of the knocks that are routine in professional rugby nowadays they wouldn't give 6 week bans for "a bit of shoeing" as we used to say.

FFS, Tom Williams has been given a longer ban than Justin Harrison, who has been given eight months for Class A drug use. Harrison I gather, intends to move into broadcasting and coaching, of all things.
 
Posted by davelarge (# 186) on :
 
But Sioni, to play Devil's advocate, isn't cheating and bringing the integrity of the game into doubt even more serious than behaving in an inappropriately violent manner on the pitch?

To use another example, is taking performance enhancing drugs worse than gauging and so on? Bans for substance abuse are often several years in length, but nobody complains about them. Which offence is faking an injury closest to? It doesn't directly harm other players, as gauging and stamping do, but it does bring the game into disrepute and threatens the whole ethos of the game, as taking performance enhancing substances does.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I don't doubt that cheating is not serious, but I was giving a few more examples of cheating that, at their worst, are punished by a yellow card and a penalty (so it's usually three points).

Williams' offence (and does anyone here really think it is his alone??) was hardly worse than the fairly routine way sides with one prop on the subs bench take one off at half time then replace another starter with the one who was withdrawn, at about the hour mark. I remember a time when a doctor had to certify a player as unfit to continue before a substitute could come on. That rule didn't last long - how many doctors would tell a player that he was fit when the player said he wasn't? Should Rugby Union adopt the "interchange" rule from Rugby League? That alows up to 12 changes amongst the 13 starters and a four-player bench.

FWIW "faking an injury" is taking the piss out of the rules and regulations. The IRB are more concerned about this kind of regulation than with all the offsides, interfering with the ball, tackling off the ball and violent conduct you'll ever see.

And as for performance enhancing drugs, others do get injured. If someone can build themselves up by thirty pounds amd still move as fast, they will do a lot more damage to anyone they run into.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
So, the autumn internationals are on their way. England's missing half their first choice team, and Rob Andrew says they will be a fair reflection of England's progress under Johnson. Is that even vaguely true?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I didn't get to see the game, so was England's loss today as bad as the report says it was?
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
I didn't get to see the game, so was England's loss today as bad as the report says it was?

The article you linked was spot on IMO.

On form we are currently on the bottom of the Tri-Nations. That is pretty right, sadly.

England are not up to All Black or Springbok standards currently. Neither are we. We are in the process of rebuilding with what we've got.

The game could've gone either way. It took us a large part of the first half to begin to gain confidence and get into our stride.

I think we just had more hunger to win and better backs who can score tries.

It was a fair game and I didn't see the professional fouls that were so much part of the All Blacks game in Tokyo. Psychologically I think that's what broke our confidence in ourselves there, but you have to mentally tough it out anywhere, in any circumstances.

England have a lot going for them and I think Martin Johnson needs to move beyond his current pedestrian game plan. It doesn't work. [Disappointed]

The games at Croke Park and Millenium Stadium will show whether we are one day wonders or not.

If we lose at Murrayfield. [Help]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
England were controlled and deliberate but slow, which was OK in 2003 when they could strangle anyone but they can't do that at the moment.

The linked piece says "England had to play catch-up, but were not equipped to do so." which was all too true. There was no incisiveness behind the scrum.

Australia weren't a whole lot better but, unlike England, they could recycle ball quickly and in Will Genia and Matt Giteau they have a class act at half-back, which made all the difference.
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
Ireland or Australia?

The rugby correspondent for the Irish Times was on the radio here this afternoon and he pointed if Australia wins, it would be a case of the third best team in the southern hemisphere beating the best in Europe.
 
Posted by The Weeder (# 11321) on :
 
Not that bothered about rugby, but I happened to be in Cardiff last week, when Wales played the All Blacks.
I was staggered at the crowds in red, lots of girls dressed to the nines, and the sheer good humour of the people.
Had it been a Football crwd in Manchester, I would have been very nervous, aware of the tension and potential for aggro- but this crowd were so happy and cheerful.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Congratuations, les Bleus!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
The Weeder, I have never felt intimidated at a rugby match. Even when I'm an away fan, and the home team has lost due to poor refereeing! For me, that's one of the great things about rugby: The vast majority of fans take it seriously and have a great time, but at the end of the day everybody knows it's only a game.

Big question for me is whether England can avoid making fools of themselves today... [Paranoid]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
The Weeder, I have never felt intimidated at a rugby match. Even when I'm an away fan, and the home team has lost due to poor refereeing! For me, that's one of the great things about rugby: The vast majority of fans take it seriously and have a great time, but at the end of the day everybody knows it's only a game.

Big question for me is whether England can avoid making fools of themselves today... [Paranoid]

[my italics]
I have - but only as a player! I think that is key. All the unpleasantness (and I don't pretend there isn't any) stays on the pitch and few if any players bear any rancour, so that it doesn't spill into the supporters.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
few if any players bear any rancour

which is an interesting difference to Rugby league.

Looks like the All Blacks were unconvincing against Italy. [Frown]
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
27 - 6 convinced me??

Big game later tonight (2 of my grandparents were GREEN) but the rest of me is all over the spectrum
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
A 20-20 draw courtesy of a last minute try to BOD.

A pretty accurate indicator of where the game's at in both countries, I'd say.

OK: no Mortlock; no Barnes but that's the way the dice fell. No discredit to the Irish.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
In BOD we trust [Biased]
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
In BOD we trust [Biased]

I believe the Irish sometimes refer to him as G-D but that's a bit much.

Didn't quite part the waters.

But that's the luck of the Irish. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
YEEEESSSS!!!!!! [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]

That has to be the most nerve-racking rugby match I've ever watched. Winning even after a try in the last minute. I still don't quite believe it.

Anyone would usually think a 9-8 scoreline meant a stinker. Not this time...
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
'mon the boys !!!!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
What CK and WK said! [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
[Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]

I think my heart rate has finally returned to normal!

[Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Beenster (# 242) on :
 
Really cracking result for the Scottish. No, I don't support Scotland nor Australia but I can't help feeling really impressed by the performance.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Aagh! [Waterworks]

Defeat out of the jaws of victory! [brick wall]

[Votive]
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
Sir Pellinore said

Aagh!

Defeat out of the jaws of victory!



Exactly [Frown]
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Herrick:
Sir Pellinore said

Aagh!

Defeat out of the jaws of victory!



Exactly [Frown]

I'm tossing up whether to watch the match at Millenium Stadium. [Ultra confused]

Sadly, I think the word 'tossers' would be appropriate to the losers of the Hopetoun Cup. [Waterworks]

All credit to the Jocks. No sour grapes there.

I think the ARU really needs to look at our Super 14/15 setup and the grassroots.

Robbie Deans did nothing wrong. It's a case of (vastly) overpaid nonachievers. Psychology. Courage under pressure. [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Well, we did win the match against a gallant and talented Welsh side which started without some of its best players and rapidly lost a couple of real tryscorers early during the game.

Digby Ioane's return was a godsend. Gitteau found form. Everyone gave their utmost.

Wales never gave up. I suspect, under Warren Gatland, they will be very effective in the Six Nations next year.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
I'm never too upset if the All Blacks lose to the Barbars - (well ... it only happens every few decades!). It was a great wake up call after a superb tour and a brilliant game against Les Bleues. Habana was magnificent, Steyn is utterly destructive, and it was a timely reminder who really are at the top of world rugby. Nice to see Matt Giteau looking at his dangerous best, too - and the work of Roberts around the field was mind blowing. Matfield was, most of the time, absolutely brilliant in leadership and play. I'm pleased too that Rokocoko had a win: he won't I think ever again play for the All Blacks as the turning and catching game has moved past him, but he can, if wise, depart on an eccentric high note.

The ABs are in lethal form - but take McCaw, Carter and two or three others out and the gel ceases to gel. On the other hand our new Zac Guildford is an exciting prospect. While my money would be on South Africa for the World Cup on present indications, the future of rugby is exciting.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Speaking of the All Blacks losing to the BaaBaas, I watched The Try from 1973 on YouBend, and was interested to note how many head-high tackles went in (including a blinder where the tacklee ducked out, and the tackler ended up on his arse!) in the space of one move.

I guess the high tackle law (rule?) is a more recent innovation - does anyone know when?

AG
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Now of course we could have whole conversations about whether Gareth Thomas' sexuality has any implications for his rugby!

In fact there was an infamous but excellent play in NZ in the early 1980s, Foreskins Lament, that raised questions of sexuality in rugby. I know at least one All Black of the 1950s and 60s who, although married, had a lurid private life which did not involve women. I admire Gareth Thomas' honesty, though I wish, for the sake of the gay community, he had been willing to speak out ten years earlier.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Zappa, I honestly fail to see why it should have any bearing on his rugby at all. He's a decent winger and talismanic presence on the field no matter what.

Perhaps this is more purgatorial, but it grates slightly that people expect sports players to be spokespeople for whichever minority they happen to be a member of. I think it's perfectly acceptable for Thomas to have his private life and not be a poster boy for gay rights. That we seem to rely on celebrities to do that campaigning for us speaks only to our lethargy.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Agreed in toto - but it was headlines in kiwiland this week.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Bill McLaren has died, aged 86.

May he rest in peace. [Votive]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
RIP Mr. McLaren. [Votive]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
And now, sadly 1995 world champion Springbok Ruben Kruger has succumbed to his brain cancer. May he rest in peace and rise to glorious stadia. [Votive]

( details )

[ 28. January 2010, 17:09: Message edited by: Zappa ]
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Even a Japie hard man can make it to the Great Playing Field in the Sky, I believe. [Votive]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Some good news on the rugby front. I watched the second leg of the Championship play-off between Bristol and Exeter last night. Bristol had the classier performers but Exeter had everything else: great setpieces, ball retention, a top-class goal kicker and game-manager and much more desire.

A great couple of hours entertainment. I'm not sure how well Exeter will do next year in the Guinness Premiership but they don't lack for courage and effort.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
And some bad news. NSW and Queensland are out of the Super 14 finals which will be an all South African affair.

Ah well, they tell me 'it's only a game'. [Confused]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I grew up about two hundred yards from the back door of the Memorial Ground. I still follow Bristol's up-and-down fortunes with interest, and wish I was able to watch them play more often.

On balance, I think I'm fairly glad that we're not going to be back up in the Premiership next season. We need another twelve months to keep rebuilding and giving the younger players the experience. I'm not honestly sure that we're really a top-flight club these days because we don't have the commercial clout to compete for foreign players and so on. Richard Hill did a great job helping us punch above our weight when were were up, but the magic hasn't been there since his departure.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Bristol were - at least in my memory - always overshadowed by their neighbours down the road at Bath but were a very good team. West Country rugby is still strong and the number of schools (and the university) will provide good players in future.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd):
Bristol were - at least in my memory - always overshadowed by their neighbours down the road at Bath but were a very good team. West Country rugby is still strong and the number of schools (and the university) will provide good players in future.

This indicate that I must be getting old!

Maybe it was an exceptional period but when I first came to know Bath FC they were definitely third in the pecking order behind Bristol (who were good) and Gloucester (who were almost as violent as their supporters [Biased] ). They always gave a good account of themselves and had some very good players, including our chemistry teacher, through whom the school got unlimited schoolboy tickets! Bath always used to beat the flash Harry's from London though: Saracens, Wasps (who were pretty poor then), Rosslyn Park and Harlequins, Bob Hiller's goal kicking notwithstanding.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
A good effort from the Irish -apart from Heaslip's brain explosion.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
There's rugby happening? Somehow that got lost in all the round-ball hype that is flooding the media. A quick look at the BBC website reveals that England are playing Australia today (and losing [Frown] ) and I didn't know! Scandal!!

Zappa, how can conceding 66 points be painted as a "good effort"? That's a bit much, even for a Kiwi! [Biased]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
At 13:00 today (BST) South Africa played France. To be accurate, South Africa started then but France didn't show up for until quarter past by which time they were 17-0 down. It was a bit less one-sided after that but 42-17 is a comfortable win.

3-0 for South v North overall [Frown]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Zappa, how can conceding 66 points be painted as a "good effort"? That's a bit much, even for a Kiwi! [Biased]

Yeah - it was probably a bit generous! The ABs brought six new caps on - who all played dangerously well - but the Irish clawed back from 38-0 to 66-28 once the coaches started playing tiggy.

New cap Israel Dagg was sensational.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Scotland won!! [Yipee]

They beat Argentina 24-16.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Japes:
Scotland won!! [Yipee]

They beat Argentina 24-16.

Thanks for doing something for the North's battered reputation. Argentina are serious opposition, especially at home.

I read that Martin Johnson is critical of the England players: he's got a point with some missed tackles and England's inability to cross the line by why, with Australia's scrum in disarray, did he take Tim Payne off and replace him with the entirely ineffective David Wilson? Many of the missed tackles came from England not understanding how Australia play - fast and loose - and being set up for that. That's a preparation problem and Johnson's problem; someone's got to tell him that he's fallible.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
One of the Good Guys joins the post-match celebration in Heaven.

God Bless you, Andy Ripley.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Yay! England beat Australia, in Australia for just the third time (IIRC). They only just managed it but they actually turned up and played in the first half, which always helps.

So long as this doesn't ensure that Martin Johnson continues as coach I don't mind. He's not a coach and unlike Clive Woodward, another non-coach, he doesn't have the strategic vision.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
[Yipee]

Take that, you smug Aussies! It wasn't even your scrummaging that let you down today, you just got beat fair and square!!
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
It was too late for me to watch the OZ - England game but NZ reports this morning suggest a hint of complacency from the Australians - well done England (as my tee shirt says, I support two teams: NZ and any team playing Australia). Wish I'd seen it.

The ABs played two halves, but in reverse order to last week's effort. Held up by a feisty Welsh team in the first half the only break out (Cory Jane's try) was utterly opportunistic, after Wales forgot that defence is a useful ingredient of attack, and that seventy metres clear runway without a defender is a fairly unsmart strategy. Two of the AB tries - the Jane one in the first half and Kahui's in the second, exposed woeful "oh it's time to do up my shoelace" type tackling.

The second half had the ABs looking fit and clinical, and by three-quarters the welsh were gasping for breath. As media said here though, the South Africans will be a different kettle of fish. And, thanks to England, the Wallabies may wake up, too.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
[Yipee] [Big Grin] [Yipee]

Scotland won again!! That's twice they have beaten Argentina. Twice.

[Yipee] [Big Grin] [Yipee]

[Japes dances happy dance, makes lots of noise, then retires to recover from all the excitement]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
would've liked to have seen that one, too ...
 
Posted by Foaming Draught (# 9134) on :
 
Dig the new NZ and Wales strips.

FD [Cool]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Okay ... tonight the ABs will get bashed by the Boks. I'm always a pessimist, but going on Super 14 form we just kiwis ain't as tough (tougher, though, I suspect, than the Wallabies at present). The ABs will have a competitive line-out, but Victor Matfield is all but unstoppable in that part of the game. Morné Steyn makes Jonny Wilkinson and even Dan Carter look like ping pong players - expect drop goals and penalties from incomprehensible distances. Bryan Habana is like a bloody antelope, so expect rushed defence from the ABs to try to counter him. Schalk Burger will get sent off at some stage so perhaps the ABs may get back into the game then.

We shall see. Let the real battles begin. Tonight I say the Boks by 12 points. I also predict that the tri-nations will continue to be in the Springboks' hands, ABs second (with the Bledisloe Cup), and the Wallabies a fragmented third. I also predict that the Boks will win the (real!) World Cup, but that's a way out yet.

I'm looking forward to the Pumas joining the party one day soon. Go the All Blacks - surprise me. Cory Jane and Conrad Smith will have a great game, so will Dan Carter, and of course McCaw.

[ 10. July 2010, 04:05: Message edited by: Zappa ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Wrong on all aspects of tonight's game. The ABs produced the best football I've seen in some years: 32-12 was reasonably convincing: four tries to none and some simply brilliant play particularly from Muliana, Donnelly and Kaino. Possibly half back Cowan was off his game but no other problems from go to whoa, and the Boks were simply stunned, unable to find rhythm or pace. Botha rather than Burger was sin binned!

A fantastic game.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
I agree it was a great performance by the ABs. Passion and pace all round, good handling, strong set pieces. It's not often you see Matfield beaten to his own ball in a lineout or the Bok scrum going backwards.

But two questions:

(1) what has happened to Fourie du Preez? has he retired while I was in hospital?

(2) Have NZ peaked way too early forthe World Cup, as they have so many times before?

[ 11. July 2010, 05:14: Message edited by: Tukai ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
The rematch was sweeter still - not least because, although the Boks played better, it was still the ABs game.

I haven't worked out what has happened to Fourie du Preez and will try to find out. As for the ABs peaking too soon, I doubt it. I think this is a different season, and the coaching staff will work hard to make sure 2011 is very carefully monitored.

Last night it was again pleasing to see that Carter and McCaw were not particularly visible around the field. Well McCaw was, because he is irrepressible. And Carter was in field play but not, certainly in the first half, with the boot. But he chuckled when Weepu got one over, and again as he tried to avoid kicking (which he did successfully) in the second half. But others were, especially Ma'a Nonu and Kieran Read. They were simply everywhere.

New boy Israel Dagg's try was simply poetic.

Awesome.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:
ns:

(1) what has happened to Fourie du Preez? has he retired while I was in hospital?

It appears he's hurt his hand. But the come back seems a little slow.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
The All Blacks on paper should hold the Wallabies out tonight ... but will they. [Paranoid] The Wallabies have a mercurial back line, especially inside backs. They will do their best to get inside the Ref's head to expose McCaw's exploitation of legal grey areas - though McCaw is also a master of adjustment in his personal game plan and execution. I predict a blody good game, and may even stay up late to watch it ... but there are no promises
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
The last time the Wobblies beat the All Blacks was July 2008. Now it is July again. Stranger things have happened, and they did play well last week.
 
Posted by Foaming Draught (# 9134) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
may even stay up late to watch it ...

Who's a happy boy then? [Biased]

FD
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
[Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Should rename this Zappa's thread. [Hot and Hormonal] Ah well.

The Wallabies' pride is on the line, and they're hurting bad. They'll give the ABs one helluva a run for their money tonight. A wet track and greater fitness will give the ABs a win, by a smaller margin. Unless they go out on the field as complacently as the NZ media and public appear to be ... here's hoping Dan the man has his radar tuned ... and let's get a match with 30 players on the field from go to whoa (or, perhaps, woe)
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
...

but proof that defence wins games

... is anybody out there?
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
My thoughts exactly, the AB's defence was terrific. Australia has a good team but NZ has a better one! Apart from the first scrum I Thought the refereeing was fair and consistent.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
... is anybody out there?

Yes, but I'm not in the right part of the world to follow the Tri Nations, and it's still a bit before the European season gets going. I'm reading your posts with interest but I don't have much to contribute. Sorry. [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
*happy sigh*
I was feeling a bit lonely there for a while!
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:

what has happened to Fourie du Preez? has he retired while I was in hospital?

An answer at last
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Oops - no it wasn't. Synapse problem!
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
*very happy sigh*
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
An away win in South Africa? Not a bad result, I suppose... [Biased]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
More than the Wallabies could muster, at any rate. And Peter Bills is right: the Wallabies v Boks game was spectacular, but not for traditional rugby - or even good rugby. I git the impression both back lines tended to play a game of 'let's pick up the ball and run this way and see what happens'. The Bok forwards were better, and it won them the game.

That said, Francois Hougaard is looking very good at halfback, as he was last week against the All Blacks. The old warriors, Matfield and Smit, looked good, Smit redeeming himself after last week's game (for which he has publicly but needlessly berated himself).

The Australians' much vaunted Genia simply doesn't impress me: slow to pass, probably nearly a second slower than Hougaard, and with no penetration in his running. One top-spinning chip kick looked good, but that's not exactly 80 minutes of rugby. And Quade Cooper, who was allegedly present, achieved little more than a demented fruit fly. Best of the Australians? Um. perhaps Kurtley Beale.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
The ABs dominated the TriNations (and you can't get much more dominant than winning all your games!)

One of the main reasons seems to be that they are the only side that can be guaranteed to play out the full 80 minutes (plus, if need be, the 5 minutes play after the 'full-time' siren that sometimes happens in rugby!). They beat SA by a point with 2 unanswered tries in the last 3 minutes and Australia by a point with 2 unanswered tries in the last 20 minutes.

In contrast, Australia (a much less experienced side) managed to lose to both SA and the ABs despite leading both matches by ~15 points just after half-time.

But, is the ABs admittedly superb form this year once again leading up to a choke at the Rugby World Cup next year, as on so many previous occasions?
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
Originally posted by Tukai
__________________________________________
But, is the ABs admittedly superb form this year once again leading up to a choke at the Rugby World Cup next year, as on so many previous occasions?
___________________________________________

I could only hope so!!
Last night was [brick wall]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I just read this blog by Robert Kitson on a new pilot scheme aiming to encourage young English players to develop a more running, intuitive style of play. Any thoughts?

I think it sounds like an interesting idea, but I wonder if it won't get swamped by the combined forces of the traditionalists and modal English weather (and therefore pitch) conditions. Another interesting (to me) philosophical question is why should English players wish to emulate French or Kiwi styles? If that style of play is not suited to them or the conditions then isn't that a fools errand? England won the World Cup, and came runners-up by playing a thoroughly 'English' style so if it ain't broke, I don't see any need to fix it.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:
you can't get much more dominant than winning all your games!

One of the main reasons seems to be that they [the All Blacks] are the only side that can be guaranteed to play out the full 80 minutes (plus, if need be, the 5 minutes play after the 'full-time' siren that sometimes happens in rugby!). They beat SA by a point with 2 unanswered tries in the last 3 minutes and Australia by a point with 2 unanswered tries in the last 20 minutes.


Though the ABs once again played out the full 80 minutes, so (for a change) did Australia! So well done the Wallabies, now beginning to look like contenders for the 2011 World Cup.

But I don't envy England, who next weekend face the ABs on the rebound!

[ 02. November 2010, 08:49: Message edited by: Tukai ]
 
Posted by Rev per Minute (# 69) on :
 
Yes, the autumn internationals begin now, the annual test of how often the fans are willing to fork out for an international ticket. The Six Nations has only two or three home games over seven weekends, so four home matches in four weeks is totally ridiculous [Mad]

Anyway, the matches.
- Eng v NZ may be the closest of the games, unless the Blacks rediscover their TriNations form quickly. Can anyone predict how England will play?
- W v Aus could well be washed out (will we leave the roof open again?) but possibly only a Wallaby-specific tornado will give Wales much of a chance if Aus play as they did last week.
- Ire v SA is one where I have no idea at all - the Irish have shown themselves able to beat (almost) anyone on their day, but those days are getting fewer as BOD, ROG and the rest qualify for their pensions.
- The Scots get a week off...

So who is brave enough to make predictions on scores?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Ireland have to be brave and start selecting the younger players. There is plenty of talent (and some genius besides), they just have to select Fitzgerald, Jonny Sexton, Buckley, Healy etc and get stuck in. I've seen Leinster play without BOD and they won in a tough match and Munster, within POC put 40 points on Toulon. Neither had overseas players in the proportion to English and French club sides. They could do it.

England and Wales will be roasted. It won't be pleasant and Martin Johnson will be damn-near uninterviewable.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
So, England come up short again and Johnson does his usual routine of "we're getting better, we just have to capitalize on our chances". I admit that I only watched the highlights, but England seemed second-best throughout the game to me. I thought our decision making was particularly poor: too many tap penalties taken when the space wasn't there, overlaps missed, opportunities forced in the name of running rugby when a good tactical kick would have done better.

But on a positive note, I thought the back three played well, and Flood's goal kicking was excellent. A bit more experience of the pressure of the hardest Test matches and there is a chance that this team will become winners.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
All three NH teams played well, but not well enough while all three SH teams were a bit below-par and still won! That was my view.

Captain Thug (as Martin Johnson is known in Wales) must be thoroughly detached from reality. England are not 'Getting better': we are close to the best, but we are not getting closer. Quite who replaces our World-cup winning captain (is there any other reason he still has the job? Has no one the bottle to sack him?) I do not know.

Like Wales and Ireland, we can do the right things but we either make more errors than SH teams or, as Imaginary Friend says, we make wrong decisions.

Against Australia England may win if we slow down the game, keep it as tight as a gnat's chuff, hang on to the ball (even unto rucking and mauling in our 22 rather than kicking so they have a lineout on their 22) and eliminate the errors. That might not be enough against the Hairybacks though.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
England are not 'Getting better'

They're not. And they're not even playing in a way that I think they can get better at. See below...

quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... England may win if we slow down the game, keep it as tight as a gnat's chuff, hang on to the ball .. and eliminate the errors.

I agree that we would be more successful like that. But that style is not in vogue so I doubt it will happen. And this shows the difficulty of having Johnson as coach: He was never a throw-it-around kind of player so how can anyone expect him to coach like that?
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
My day job is getting in the way of watching the AB v S game - that and the fact that I don't have sattelite TV anyway. 28-3 to the ABs after 31 minutes suggests they may be rediscovering pre Hong Kong form - warnings to McCaw will simply mean he will pull back fractionally from the breakdown, rejig his timing and get into it once more. I look forward to the TV replay this afternoon.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
I heard it said before last week's game that both England and Australia would play 10-man rugby, with England playing numbers 1-10 and Australia playing numbers 6-15.

But it didn't work out that way. England showed up with all 15 and Australia's back 10 never really got going. Perhaps they were confused by seeing blokes in black shirts actually running with the ball, and not kicking it or dropping it all the time, and thought they were playing against the All Blacks.

Let's hope that at least 10 Australians turn up for this weeks match, or even all 15 though the front row are a bit of a lost cause.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
In 2007, Fiji beat Wales, and I could hear the cheers all over Suva even though it was 3 in the morning our time (Literally true - in the warm tropical nights, the windows here are always open.)

Presumably the stadiums on the far side of the world have good lighting that enables them to play rugby at 3 am!.

This week Wales conceded an advantage by playing in the daytime (8am here) and again I could hear the cheers all over Suva as Fiji outplayed Wales once again, even though the scoreboard showed a draw.

So much for Wales pretending to be like the All Blacks by playing in dark jerseys. If Wales play like that next week against a team that wears dark jerseys with pride, they'll be in for a hiding. Perhaps Wales should play in white, because it will be a cricket score.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Phew. Dan having an off day, despite passing Johnny, and the welsh looking feisty, and Braid sent off, and ... *happy sigh* ... final whistle and a Grand Slam
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Wales, not for the first time, played to their strengths but lost bravely. South Africa on the other hand forced England to play 'their' game. England couldn't rely on their scrum, conceded at least a penalty per man (including replacements) so I was amazed they only lost by ten points.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Most telling incident for me this week from the All Blacks: scoring a try from an overlap (i.e. having an extra man where it mattered) at the very time when they were actually playing with a man short (Braid in the sin bin).

And from last week: well in front on the scoreboard with 1 minute to go and the ball goes out. Do they stroll up for a leisurely lineout and then kick into touch, as most teams would do? No fear! Non-stop McCaw takes a quick lineout and they score a try on the opposite side of the field.

And what about Australia's finish against France? 5 unanswered tries in the second half. So much for "our big men will smash your little men so they can't run"!.

Is scummaging an over-rated skill when 3/4 of them at this level seem to end in a penalty or a reset?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
France had an odd side: Rougerie at centre, some unknown on one wing and no proper no 8 - If you do pick Chabal, for goodness sake don't select him where he hasn't the technical skills and it's criminal to leave Bonnaire out of any side he is eligible to play for. He's a better prop than Chabal is a no.8.

Mostly though, Australia played their own game in the second half (I'm going from press reports) and maybe France thought scrummaging superiority alone would win the game. What French coaches have thought has baffled me for years and Lievremont is getting some terrible stick now. It's true that England outscrummaged Australia but they didn't stop there.

Ireland beat Argentina well too, not conceding a try, and the combination of Sexton and Stringer, a mixture of old and new, looks good.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:
Is scummaging an over-rated skill when 3/4 of them at this level seem to end in a penalty or a reset?

Not if you can dominate to the extent that 80-90% of those penalties go your way.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
<bump>

I had to bump this, with England beating Wales in Wales for the first time since 2003! It wasn't one sided or pretty but a win's a win, we've now got three home games against Italy, France and Scotland and finish away against Ireland. Not a bad schedule!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I thought we played alright, really. And it was a great game to watch, too!

Flood, Tindall (defensively), Ashton, and Hartley had particularly good games, and the pack was great for the most part*. One thing that I thought was interesting was that it was only later on in the game when Thompson, Shaw, and Worsley came on that the pack looked like it might be second best. The old-timers might have had their day.

* The only time they looked a bit weak was when they were trying to make ground near the breakdown. But that was often as much about good Welsh defense as anything else.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Odd morning. Here I am in an open plan office in Wales, about forty people present, and not a word about rugby. Football, yes. England's cricket team's travails yes. Discussions of Friday night's game? No. Not even blaming the ref, which is a national pastime. Then again, the only thing he missed was a trip, by someone who claims not to be a dirty player. OK then, you're a cheat. Is that better?

Elsewhere weren't the Irish lucky? And weren't France poor one Harinordorquy went off and that great hairy oaf Chabal came on! I don't like Harinordorquy but he's mighty effective but what is Chabal for? They should have pulled away but almost let Scotland in. In Ansbro Scotland appear to have their best new centre since Scott Hastings. He almost made up for Nick De Luca.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Oh dearie me.

After losing heroically in Paris last week Scotland lost pathetically yesterday, at home. Wasn't it the worst performance by an international team ever? I'm not even sure England have ever played quite that badly: we've been soundly thrashed, we've failed to put sides away but we haven't been as conclusively hopeless as Scotland were. The Princess Royal must be looking to lend her support to another sport. Korfball? Octopush? OK, ma'am, Curling it is.

Still, it's not all lost. Euan Murray, who dead-heated for the poorest performance of the day with Dan Parks, cannot play on Sundays, so he won't be there for Scotland's next game.

Note to England: stop giving away those penalties at the ruck. They didn't matter on Saturday but they will against France.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
The long decline of Scottish Rugby continues.

Their only recent victories seem to have been when teams, like our Wallabies, were overconfident and let their psychological guard down. Masters of surprise psychology at Murrayfield but otherwise totally undistinguished.

If Wales had lost against these inepts they would have deserved utter ridicule.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
There's something about Andy Robinson's coaching, isn't there?!

And while we're on coaching, it looks like Johnson must be taking a back seat at the England training ground. I can't believe that it's his influence inspiring that gorgeous support running. On any other day, the man-of-the-match would have gone to Haskill who I thought played brilliantly. But when is it a bird, is it a plane, no it's Chris Ashton scores four tries it's a bit tough to give it to anyone else.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Yay! A (narrow) win for England. Not a great match to watch and I suspect one that flew by for the players. England reduced the penalty count compared to their previous matches, which won the game IMHO. Scotland next at Twickenham on 13th March the Ireland in Dublin on 19th March.

Had Italy's goal kicking been as good as England's they would have beaten Wales, but it wasn't, and that's been their problem for years.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Nothing like a try to spur on your iffy goal kicker! Mirco Bergamasco was having a very mixed afternoon, then he had to kick a tricky conversion from which point he delivered! Italy's biggest win ever: they have beaten France before, but that wasn't in the six nations. This was the real thing.

Wales v Ireland, OTOH, was horrible. Did anyone spot a redeeming feature? OK, Sean O'Brien and Sam Warburton did well, but back row players always get noticed.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I reckon this will change the dynamic in Dublin next week, and probably not in England's favor. Ireland now have to bounce back and prove themselves, but my main theory is that they tend to choke in big games. Now that they can't do the Grand Slam I reckon it takes the pressure off them so that they can perform.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
England damn near threw it away against Scotland today, failing to retain the ball legally at least ten times. If thy don't improve there will definitely not be a grand slam.

ps: anyone got an idea why Andy Robinson took Ruaridh Jackson off and replaced him with Dan Parks? Mike Blair or Rory Lawson was a good call, but Jackson is far better.
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
England damn near threw it away against Scotland today ...

Not quite nearly enough. [Frown]
 
Posted by Rev per Minute (# 69) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Wales v Ireland, OTOH, was horrible. Did anyone spot a redeeming feature? OK, Sean O'Brien and Sam Warburton did well, but back row players always get noticed.

Redeeming feature - I watched Wales win at home against Ireland for the first time since my teens! No wonder my kids thought I was losing it when I was bouncing up and down at the final whistle!

Technically dreadful, even ignoring the 'ballgate' saga - back to ping-pong, with kickers regularly missing touch or hitting the waiting backs with suspicious accuracy. But, for the sides' spectators and (IMHO) the unworried neutral, it was a fascinating and exciting game that was only ever a good move away from a change of lead, where the result was in doubt till the final whistle, and where there was a lot of end-to-end movement (that last may have been the effect of sitting in the lower stand, mind). Only three scrums, apparently, and 18 penalties, which could be put down to a generally poor refereeing performance - knock-ons and off-sides were largely ignored, plus the interpretation of the touch-line varied by official.

I rarely come out of a game being able to pick good players and it was made much harder this time because I couldn't get a match programme. I saw no reason for O'Gara to be taken off when he was; Lee Byrne needs a better pair of boots, as he fell over every time he tried to change direction; Tommy Bowe was everywhere.

A win's a win, though - now for the French, who could either bulldoze us to get the memory of Rome from their minds or do a Marechal Petain and collapse under pressure. Who knows?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I think we should have a sweepstake on when Andy Robinson collapses with a heart attack. He seems to be an unusually angry man, even by the standards of sports coaches. My bet would be at 55 minutes in the final group game of the world cup. Any other guesses?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
I think we should have a sweepstake on when Andy Robinson collapses with a heart attack. He seems to be an unusually angry man, even by the standards of sports coaches. My bet would be at 55 minutes in the final group game of the world cup. Any other guesses?

Andy Robinson hasn't been the same man since 'The Chief' put this tackle on him a few years ago!

(at the end of the clip).
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
That made my eyes water.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
England! Oh England! Gosh that was embarrassing. I'm going to get some stick back in the office on Monday irrespective of the result of France v Wales (kick off in about ten minutes).

Well done Ireland and especially coach Declan Kidney for getting the side to play exactly the right game (ie, a lot like the Scots did last week, only better).
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Most important game since the World Cup final in 2007, and we don't turn up!

We were atrocious. Lazy around the park, not supporting the ball carrier or committing enough men to the breakdown, sloppy with ball in hand, tactically abysmal kicking from hand, our decision making sucked, and tackling was woeful.

Johnson would have been livid with that kind of performance of a player so I can hardly think what the dressing room would have been like after the final whistle.

And the worst part of it all? I watched the game in an Irish pub. [Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
And Scotland won a game. At Murrayfield. We can die happy.
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
And Scotland won a game. At Murrayfield. We can die happy.

And even scored a couple of tries.
 
Posted by amber. (# 11142) on :
 
I would say something about the England performance, but I'd be breaking my Lent promise not to say rude words [Disappointed]
 
Posted by Rev per Minute (# 69) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
England! Oh England! Gosh that was embarrassing. I'm going to get some stick back in the office on Monday irrespective of the result of France v Wales (kick off in about ten minutes).

Luckily for you, we did badly enough (ending up fourth AGAIN) that I doubt you've had much stick. At least it wasn't Wembley '99 again!
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
There have been some cracking games in the Super 15 tourney this year, notably last week when the Queensland Reds got up in the last minute to beat the Canterbury Crusaders by one point, after they had gone end to end (mostly by running) for the previous 79 minutes.

But what can this and similar games tell us about likely performances at the World Cup? Perhaps that Dan Carter and Quade Cooper in their different ways are streets ahead of other 5/8 running around, especially now that Cooper has learnt some defensive skills.

Perhaps also that penalty kicking can make a winning edge in tight games - and so therefore can the lottery of scrum penalties.

What do other shipmates think?

[ 09. June 2011, 09:48: Message edited by: Tukai ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
It's right that penalty kicking can make a difference: too many teams base their defence on conceding three-point penalties instead of five (or seven) point tries. There may even be a case for a 'penalty escalator', so that any after a threshold are worth more points, to discourage this highly professional but utterly cynical method.

Scrum penalties are mighty difficult. We need two clued-up officials, one on each side for a start and utterly rigorous implementation of the 'binding' laws. Anyone who has played at prop, in just one competitive modern game, will know the difference between being held on the arm and on the body of their shirt. I'm sure some other offences could be declared technical and therefore subject to a free-kick or another scrum.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:
There have been some cracking games in the Super 15 tourney this year, notably last week when the Queensland Reds got up in the last minute to beat the Canterbury Crusaders by one point, after they had gone end to end (mostly by running) for the previous 79 minutes.


And now these same two teams will [deservedly] contest the final next weekend.

[ 03. July 2011, 09:26: Message edited by: Tukai ]
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
It should be a rivetting Super 15 Final here at Suncorp Stadium.

I'm not even going to pretend to wish the Crusaders good luck. [Devil]
 
Posted by Johnny S (# 12581) on :
 
I've got a question about the England away shirt fiasco. (Even Jonah Lomu has weighed in today.)

Isn't the NZ away strip white? (And was white when the WC was held in the UK?) If so then how is that any different in reverse?
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Consider all questions answered ... by and large I think the All Blacks have only worn white when playing France in black mud (to their detriment!)
 
Posted by Johnny S (# 12581) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
Consider all questions answered ... by and large I think the All Blacks have only worn white when playing France in black mud (to their detriment!)

Thanks Zappa.

So why all the fuss then?

If it is okay for NZ to have an all white away strip why is it so sacrilegious for England to have an all black away strip? (Especially since Lomu picks up on the fact that England is known for its white strip?)
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
So long as we don't get the farce of a Scotland v New Zealand match a few years ago when both teams wore variations of their traditional strip that made it all but impossible to tell the difference! Murky day, Scotland in dark blue, some black and white trim; New Zealand in black, grey and white trim. I think the referee handled the game on the basis that a) New Zealand players don't make mistakes b) except that Richie McCaw will be offside at any time.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I had to laugh at the announcement of the England team for the weekend 'friendly' against Wales. England v Wales? Friendly? Who are they kidding!
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
Entertaining game this evening (for New Zealanders).
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
A far more emphatic win than I expected from the ABs, basically shutting Quade Cooper out of the match and stamping authority all over the game in the first 20 minutes. Interesteingly I thing that stats would show the Wallabies had more possession - but the AB defence was massive, and when they got it they scored.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
World Cup warm-up matches are rarely of any quality but yesterday's Scotland v Ireland game set a record for ring-rustiness. The England v Wales match was better, except for Morgan Stoddart's broken leg; hope you get well soon [Votive]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
It was interesting to watch how England played. I know it wasn't their first choice team (and it wasn't Wales' either) but it was a bit worrying to see their defensive system broken down for the first try and the disallowed one. I'm sure other teams will notice...

The set pieces were good (apart from one lineout on the Welsh 5-metre line which went astray), and England's scrum was dominant for much of the game. The breakdowns seemed to be fairly fluid (helped by some tight refereeing) so that must mean that the back row had a decent outing.

Otherwise, I feel that Shaw and Armitage have staked out a strong claim for a place in the squad, but I don't agree with Stuart Barnes' ravings about Wilkinson. He had a sturdy game, and kicked well, but his distribution was nowhere near as good as Flood's, and I thought England were somewhat lacking in attack.

Finally, if I was a Welshman* I would be seething about the commentary. It was painfully Anglo-centric, and Barnes had almost nothing to say about the Welsh team or their prospects going forwards. Perhaps Barnes should have been replaced by a Welshman (or at least a neutral) for the game, and Sky should definitely consider it for next week.


* and with apologies to Catatonia, every day I thank the Lord I'm not.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Have to agree with you there. England were strong without being outstanding up front and the referee was just about Man of the Match. The puff round here was that Wales looked faster and fitter, which was true, but they have just come back from a fitness camp. If they aren't careful they will have peaked too soon.

Wilkinson was at fault for Wales first try and the disallowed one. His defence has been crucial to England's performance over the years and if he isn't doing that right better sides will make hay. I've got doubts over Hodgson too, but that's because he's simply not good enough!

We need another genuine no 8 too: Haskell hasn't the feet for it which is the key to defensive scrums on your own put-in (says a failed no 8).
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Oh, and isn't Rhys Priestland the spitting image of Ronan O'Gara?!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Oh, and isn't Rhys Priestland the spitting image of Ronan O'Gara?!

There are similarities and he is from the Wild West of Wales, like most of the great Welsh fly-halves, and that's hardly a day's coracle paddling from Ireland, so they easily could be related.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
I rarely congratulate the Wallabies, but they deserved their grinding win over the cynical 'boks last night.
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
Thanks Zappa, the wobblies surprised most of us here too. Hope we can show that form in the world cup. But after last weeks game the ABs must be favourites.
 
Posted by Og: Thread Killer (# 3200) on :
 
Watched the second half of US vs. Canada last night. Admittedly at altitude in Colorado but still.....neither team is going to worry Tonga or Samoa, let alone the 6 nations teams they will play. I suspect there will be some very very lopsided scores, again.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
At least the Tri-Nations is competitive! The Six Nations, the Pacific Islands and Argentina are engaged in warm-up matches which are achieving little other than injuring some important players and exposing others as not fit for purpose*. The matches are nothing to write home about either.

Wales were very pleased to beat England but to be honest England were clueless! They had obviously practiced with the Flood-Ashton moves in mind and had no Plan B when Ashton pulled out. Wales defence was exception but England should have had the game won by half-time. Fortunately for Wales, England played pretty stupid rugby, which isn't unusual.

*Not necessarily a total waste; Moody's a crock, Thompson is past it and Hodgson, Hape & Tindall form a midfield partnership from the Dark Ages.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I hate losing to Wales. Doesn't matter what the circumstances are, it still sucks. [Frown] [Disappointed] [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Wet Kipper (# 1654) on :
 
I'll be heading along to Murrayfield for the Italy game this weekend. I'm looking forward to it, although the last time I went to see those 2 teams play, the result was memorable for all the wrong reasons
Scotland v Italy 2007
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Wet Kipper:
I'll be heading along to Murrayfield for the Italy game this weekend. I'm looking forward to it, although the last time I went to see those 2 teams play, the result was memorable for all the wrong reasons
Scotland v Italy 2007

I'd forgotten about that. There aren't 'own tries' in Rugby but the opening few minutes gave three to which that description could be applied!
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
The Six Nations, the Pacific Islands and Argentina are engaged in warm-up matches which are achieving little other than injuring some important players and exposing others as not fit for purpose

For all three Pacific Island teams, the warm-up matches are important - particularly the later ones - as they are the one chance to gather the players together from the various overseas leagues (England, France, Japan, NZ, etc ) in which they play as professionals. For Fiji, for example, probably only one or two of the starting side in the RWC will be based in Fiji, where all the players are 'amateur'. So getting the teamwork and combinations familiar with each other before the cup is much more important than for the Tri-nations or the Six nations squads.

As a guide to form, Samoa, Tonga and Fiji have all played each other, with one win and one loss each. They are still all looking a bit rusty, especially if compared to the Pacific Islanders A-squad (other wise known as the All Blacks).
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Sorry Tukai, I was loooking at this more from a Northern Hemisphere perspective. The genuine Pacific island sides do need warm-up games rather more.

In Cardiff last week the Welsh supporters sounded really worried about facing Fiji, Samoa, South Africa and Namibia in the World Cup. How many of their squad will be left standing after those four matches?
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
I see Scotland acquitted themselves reasonably well in the Italy match. But they could have done even better.
 
Posted by Rev per Minute (# 69) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
I hate losing to Wales. Doesn't matter what the circumstances are, it still sucks. [Frown] [Disappointed] [Waterworks]

There are so many possible smilies in reply but I'll stick to one [Razz] . Not that I saw either game as I was in Spain at the time.

We Welsh now have an almost instinctive fear of Samoa sides (even though the defeat in '99 made no difference to the outcome of the Group) plus now we have the Fiji factor to contend with. At least we haven't sacked the manager just before the RWC as we did in 91, 95, 03... Of course, we could repeat 07 and sack him after the tournament instead!

The above may give you the impression that I have little hope for the Welsh team in NZ. That would be wrong - we always have hope - but if I were a betting man I wouldn't put money on Wales getting through the group stage.

Interesting to see how Eng v Ire goes when both squads have already been announced - will anyone take risks?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rev per Minute:
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
I hate losing to Wales. Doesn't matter what the circumstances are, it still sucks. [Frown] [Disappointed] [Waterworks]

There are so many possible smilies in reply but I'll stick to one [Razz] . Not that I saw either game as I was in Spain at the time.

We Welsh now have an almost instinctive fear of Samoa sides (even though the defeat in '99 made no difference to the outcome of the Group) plus now we have the Fiji factor to contend with. At least we haven't sacked the manager just before the RWC as we did in 91, 95, 03... Of course, we could repeat 07 and sack him after the tournament instead!

The above may give you the impression that I have little hope for the Welsh team in NZ. That would be wrong - we always have hope - but if I were a betting man I wouldn't put money on Wales getting through the group stage.

Wales will get through, but with too few players to continue effectively. Back in the seventies JPR started a match at flanker (against Australia IIRC) and it could be Mike Phillips this time round!
quote:


Interesting to see how Eng v Ire goes when both squads have already been announced - will anyone take risks?

It's a particularly stupid time to hold a warm-up match. I'm surprised the Irish agreed to it.

[ 22. August 2011, 12:26: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
wallabies utterly fired up [Frown]
 
Posted by Johnny S (# 12581) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
wallabies utterly fired up [Frown]

Wallabies triumphant.

First the Super 15.

Then the Tri Nations.

What are the odds of the entire AB side spontaneously combusting from the pressure of the WC build up?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Johnny S:
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
wallabies utterly fired up [Frown]

Wallabies triumphant.

First the Super 15.

Then the Tri Nations.

What are the odds of the entire AB side spontaneously combusting from the pressure of the WC build up?

And the Hopes of The Nation.

AB sides have failed to turn up to a crucial match at least three times now. I reckon it's caused by The Hopes of The Nation.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Johnny S:
What are the odds of the entire AB side spontaneously combusting from the pressure of the WC build up?

There is significant historical precedent for choking in the final stages of the world cup, isn't there?
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
*bump*

As the opening game of the World Cup 2011 has been played, and I am eagerly awaiting the second match, it's time to bump this thread up!

I have my time zones all worked out, I have allowed for the daylight saving time change on 25 September, I have my Scotland Rugby shirt all washed and ready for wearing, I have my colleagues all prepared to allow for my insanity for the next few weeks or so - we support at least five different teams in my team at work.

I think I'm prepared.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
England's games are all at stupid o'clock in the morning here, so I doubt I'll be watching any of the group stages. If they get through to the semis or the final then I'll make the effort. This is one downside to living on the wrong continent for Proper Sport™ [Biased]
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
And there is an upside to living next door to the world cup venue, all games are at civilised times here. [Smile]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
There have been five matches so far, none of them outstanding exhibitions of skill but the teams from any distance away have all looked pretty ordinary. England infringed at every opportunity (and Wlkinson couldn't have beaten a one-legged man at an arse-kicking contest), Scotland started brightly but didn't get back into the game until Romania took off their most inspiring and effective players, France were unconvincing until late on, which leaves New Zealand and Fiji.

So, in addition to watching rugby in the middle of the night, are some teams playing at that hour too?!?
 
Posted by BessHiggs (# 15176) on :
 
Grrrr, I'm so frustrated. I can get all the games (OK, it's Pay Per View, but I can still get them) but I don't have a DVR. My rugby buddy has a DVR but his satellite provider is only offering a few of the games (sadly also PPV) and I'm fairly sure that my husband would be less than thrilled about us watching the games live at my house at O'dark-thirty. The little ticker thing on the official web-site is so very less than satisfying [Frown]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Italy - minor brain explosion at the penalty [Frown]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Italy matched it for 30 mins but I think they're a gone-burger now ... brave effort

[ 11. September 2011, 04:05: Message edited by: Zappa ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Or maybe not - 6-6 at 40 minutes!
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Blow-out - a point a minute
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
interestingly, I didn't really see much attack cohesion from the Italians while they were still in the game. Great defence - for one half. Then the Australians became a juggernaut.

[ 11. September 2011, 05:12: Message edited by: Zappa ]
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
They were only playing Italy
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Wales (I have audio only) making a decent fist of it at half time ...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
RWC is shaping up as per usual:

- Wales snatch defeat from the jaws of victory
- England grind out a sort of win
- Coaches (notably England's) complain about the ball
- New Zealand look OK, but with their no 10 injured could they be about to bottle it again?
- East European sides look as hard as nails, making us grateful the Cold War never got hot

Game of the tournament thus far this morning between Canada and Tonga, Canada winning by making fewer errors.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Yeah, well done to Canada. Tonga aren't usually that terrible, right? So I think that's a decent win.

Also, the USA beat Russia this week. Probably not quite the same atmosphere as when the hockey teams play, but still...
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Evidence of England last weekend refutes the myth that anyone in New Zealand who pulls on a black jersey automatically becomes stronger and faster. It seems this only applies to New Zealanders!

One comment I saw suggested that for anyone else to wear black on a rugby field in NZ was like a chick turning up to someone else's wedding in a white dress!

Meanwhile Fiji flags are flying on every car and shop in this country and 'Go Fiji Go!' T-shirts much in evidence as we await the big game against South Africa this evening. Custom here is watch it live on TV in a group gathered round a large bowl of kava. Looking forward to doing just this - and at a reasonable hour for once.

As a preview I'm a bit worried that SA's ace kicker Morne Steyn may have heard that in Fiji's first game, the Namibian 5/8 kicked 3 field goals in 6 minutes. We hope that the notoriously swirling wind inside the 'cake tin' at Wellington makes this hard even for Steyn.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
And then there was Ireland [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I saw a guy walking through DC wearing an Aussie rugby shirt this morning (so after the game was played). I almost went over to congratulate him but didn't quite have the courage. [Disappointed]
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
In the other code NZ beat melbourne [Yipee] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Herrick:
In the other code NZ beat melbourne [Yipee] [Yipee]

Full-contact Basketball you mean?
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
No, rugby league.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Way upthread, I reckoned ahead of the Cup that Samoa were the strongest of the island teams, and so it has proved, after they convincingly beat Fiji. They had Wales on the ropes too, but at the critical point no fewer than 3 burly Samoans missed early tackles on a small Welshman , who wriggled under them, then ran 30m and offloaded for the winning try.

Contrary to my pre-match post, South Africa beat Fiji at their own game, running in half a dozen tries from backline movements, although their backline is far more renowned for its defence (which was as solid as expected) than for its running attack. On that form, they will be a real match for Australia in the quarter-finals, especially with many of the Australians now injured.
 
Posted by Johnny S (# 12581) on :
 
Congratulations to Scotland for gaining the bonus point they so eagerly desired.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
Yes indeed. Gives the Argentinians the task of not losing to Georgia by more than seven.

What happened to France though? Credit to the Tongans - they were seriously fired up for that game - but France seemed like they couldn't be bothered for large chunks of the match. France still go through though because I somehow can't see Canada running in four tries against the All Blacks, even minus Carter and McCaw.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Johnny S:
Congratulations to Scotland for gaining the bonus point they so eagerly desired.

I don't think I've ever seen so many turnovers in a match between supposedly decent international sides. Conditions weren't perfect, but it wasn't a Murrayfield mudbath.

Between the turnovers and the referee penalising every offence he saw whether it mattered or not there wasn't much chance of a rugby match breaking out.

Congrats therefore to both sides for awesome commitment and come on Georgia! Do your stuff!

(btw, I don't think Lawes and Wilkinson will start the QF: any views?)
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
England looked better when Flood was at fly half. I was not impressed by Youngs at scrum half. He's a nippy runner, but so slow to pass. He seems incapable of getting the ball away without taking a few steps first. Why give the defence that time to come up? I like Tuigalagi better each time I see him. Best England player on the field today in my view.
 
Posted by Johnny S (# 12581) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
(btw, I don't think Lawes and Wilkinson will start the QF: any views?)

I'd pick Flood over Wilkinson but leave the rest as is.

Overall I can't understand the media response. England haven't played well but they've done enough to win their group. Talk of Wales having played the best of the NH sides is (IMHO) ridiculous - they lost to the Boks.

The only team I'd fear is the ABs outside of the final. If England manage to make it to the final then the infamous NZ 'choking' factor comes in to play.

England's biggest problems seem to be occurring off the pitch.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Just out of interest, has anyone else seen the All Black Jesus? We spotted it in the Metro some days back, but I'd have thought it was just the sort of thing that the Ship would love...

AG
 
Posted by Johnny S (# 12581) on :
 
Well I didn't see that coming!

I know the French have a habit of suddenly turning it on for one match in the WC but I didn't think it would happen against the English.

Well played France - I think that spell of about 20 mins in the first half won it for you.

England weren't great but they did have opportunities that they failed to take. On the day they just weren't good enough.

Wales vs. France is a tough one to call. (Mainly as it depends on which French team turn up.)

I like the French but they can be kind of French.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
I thought England were riding for a fall, and you never can tell with the French. There is always a danger that they will play well enough for long enough, even when in a bad patch. A disappointment, but not really a surprise.

I'd prefer Wales to win, but judging by my 100% wrong record on the baseball thread, it's probably prudent to tip France!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The French team looked very together before, during and after the game; apart from talking to the press I'm not sure the Marc Lievremont did anything at all!

England didn't turn up in the first half and if ever it could be shown that Lewis Moody is not a leader today was it. Give it to Nick Easter who is the only effective no 8 we have. Selecting a tight-head to play loose-head was dim (Matt Stevens can do it, but it isn't smart to start him there) which shows that bringing over another back-row for the injured Andrew Sheridan wasn't a good idea. Once we had loose- & tight- head props playing there, and Flood at ten instead of inside centre, England improved no end. Lawes didn't look lost at no 6 either; I wouldn't play him there on a muddy day at Lansdowne Road or Murrayfield though.

Oh, and Wales were brilliant! Was O'Driscoll on the field?
 
Posted by Herrick (# 15226) on :
 
Bad luck any English or Irish supporters.

Hope you have no cause to say the same to me tomorrow.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Great display by Wales last night. Good defence, even if they were pinged quite often by the ref. And it was good to see a knockout match won not by penalty kicks but by 3 well-constructed tries.

I predict a close match today between SA and Australia. As with France, it will depend on which Australian side turns up tonight, particularly the forwards. The Aussie backline is one of the few with the skills and speed to run in tries against the always solid Saffa defence, but to do so they will need the forwards to get them good ball, unlike against Ireland. Having Pocock on the ball should help, but Brussouw is a worthy opponent for him.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
The statistics lied and Australia won. Next week will be scary for me - I didn't think the ABs found a rhythm against les Pumas. Whatever happens now we have an inter-hemisphere final.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The Australian defence was awesome, like that of Wales and yes, Pocock made a big difference. New Zealand did a good job, especially as their top #10 and his replacement were missing. To get that many penalties shows that the AB forwards were on top, which was no mean feat against Argentina.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Scary weekend coming. I want Wales and NZ to win ... but will they?

[ 11. October 2011, 20:38: Message edited by: Zappa ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Ugh
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
Can someone tell me whether the name of the Welsh player Leigh Halfpenny is pronounced half-penny or ha'penny?
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
It's halfpenny, not ha'penny.
At least, that's what the commentators say.

[ 14. October 2011, 13:46: Message edited by: kingsfold ]
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
So will it be a trip to the pub at a silly time in the morning or should I find a friend with a satellite dish? An Irish breakfast sounds tempting.

Go Whales!

[ETA weak pun]

[ 14. October 2011, 14:49: Message edited by: Jonah the Whale ]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Several of my colleagues are going to the Millenium Stadium in Cardiff tomorrow to see the match on the big screens there.
If Wales wins, Cardiff is going to be full of drunks tomorrow. If Wales loses, Cardiff is going to be full of drunks tomorrow. Either way, the Western Mail ("The National Newspaper of Wales") is going to be unspeakable all of next week. This week, the first couple of pages each day have been about rugby. Other, lesser, news has started to appear about page 4.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
I'm tipping Wales to beat France. What a team! Just kept up the pressure against a gallant Ireland.

Us versus the All Blacks? A hard one to call. Is McCaw in or out? Will Cooper fire or choke? Will Deans drop him and put Barnes in his place?

Which Anzac side, if either, is going for the Super Choker Award? [Eek!]
 
Posted by Carys (# 78) on :
 
Friends and parents are going to the Millennium Stadiwm tomorrow to see it on the big screen -- I've got a Franciscan Quiet Day to the West, so may well be reduced to listening to it on the radio.

But given how Wales have been playing, it should be a very good game. We should have beaten SA in the first match and we've been a lot more consistent than the French. Bought myself a shirt today.

Carys
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Another glorious defeat for Wales [Frown]

They had the chances, three penalties missed including two kickable ones, and France only very rarely looked dangerous going forward. They look unlikely to trouble either of the other semi-finalists (so they will confound me and win).

I'll be cheering Australia or NZ in the final, which has more to do with Imanol Harinordoquy than anything else.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Ah well, if Wales had won, my colleagues ere threatening to borrow a wheelchair from the hospital where we work and take me down to the Millenium Stadium - either that, or purloin a shopping trolley - so I'm saved from that!
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Pity about Sam Warburton's seeming brain implosion. Andrew Slack, former Wallabies captain, commented that the worse side won.

Thierry Dussotur really showed leadership. Imanol Hardinoquoy is superb.

We'll see what happens tonight. [Confused]
 
Posted by Carys (# 78) on :
 
I'm not sure 'brain implosion' is fair. He has said there was nothing malicious about it and to me it looked as though he lost control and let go rather than deliberated pushing him at the ground. But we should have got one of the kicks. Doesn't say much for France that they only won by one point when they were a man up for 3/4 of the match and it was the Welsh who scored the try.

Carys
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
The commentary team (it's ITV, isn't it?) and Michael Owen in particular were vehement that it should not have been a red card. Absolutely vehement.

I disagree - it was only because the French player tucked his head forward at the last second that he didn't land with his full bodyweight on his neck. That would have been very nasty. I wouldn't have been outraged if Rolland had only given a yellow, but by the letter of the law the red was justified.

In my humble opinion.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Carys:
Doesn't say much for France that they only won by one point when they were a man up for 3/4 of the match and it was the Welsh who scored the try.

Carys

Yes, if France are as unenterprising as tonight against either New Zealand or even Australia, they will be thrashed. Carys is right that if either Hook or Jones could kick straight,or if they their lineout had performed properly (not impossible even with a man down) Wales would have had a well-deserved win. But not if Halfpenny's kick had gone over, as it looked to me like the penalty went the wrong way, with the Welsh player holding onto the ball.

And I agree with IF that while Warburton certainly deserved a yellow card, a red may have been a touch harsh. But the ref was certainly entitled to give a red. The send-off certainly spoiled the expected spectacle, as Wales would have been mad to play a wide game with a man short.

Interestingly that's the second match in the knock knock-out stages where one team has won everywhere but on the scoreboard. I'd be surprised if Australia can pull that off twice in succession though, as they must all still be feeling battered and bruised even more than usual after a rugby match.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
This little bunny is very nervous as game time draws near. Last night's was a sad affair, and I foresee an brutal thrashing next week, but at whose hands?

Where's the nail biting need a stiff whisky smiley?
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
McCaw in, Beale out ... as Sir Pellinore says, will Q Cooper at last keep his two brain cells together (okay, I said that)? The crowd will hound Cooper mercilessly - no-one messes with a much loved EnZed captain. Much intrigue - huge injury lists to both sides. The half backs have very different styles, the NZ 1st 5/8 is much admired in NZ but little international track record ...

Be very afraid, NZ, if the ABs go down. Forget an apocalyptic oil slick or a few cantabrian aftershocks - the entire nation will slip beneath the waves - with Wales - and whimper through eternity.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The ABs closed Australia out pretty efficiently, and Cruden didn't let anyone down. Only a lack of a goal kicker prevented it looking one-sided. Hardly a spectacle though.

99% of the principality is saying 'we wuz robbed' after Warbuton's red card, but that's a national characteristic; Wales may conceded more points than they score, but they are never, ever beaten! That said, it was nowhere near the worst tackle I have seen. You have to go back to 1960's Rugby League for genuine 'spear tackles'.

I'm for NZ in the final, for reasons stated earlier: Harinordoquy may be in the form of his life, but I still don't like him. Oh, and the ABs are a better side to watch.
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
Well, there is no doubt the best team won yesterday. [Waterworks]

I think the ABs answered any questions put to them.

Glad Quade Cooper didn't fizzle but came back. Great drop goal.

Piri Weepu is really something. Can't help liking the bloke. [Waterworks]

It will be a grand final.

I'd tip the All Blacks, but, with the French, you never, never know. Thierry Dusottor has real leadership abilities, there could have been a real donnybrook after Sam Warburton's brain implosion, which he stopped. Haridinoquoy is a Basque with real fire and drive. When the French combine. Sacre bleu!

Amie's late father was French so it'll be Allez Les Bleus in the Pellinore household next Sunday. But I wish our Anzac cousins well. At least I won't be stressed out watching the game. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
The ABs closed Australia out pretty efficiently, and Cruden didn't let anyone down. Only a lack of a goal kicker prevented it looking one-sided

The scary thing is that Weepu had the flu [Eek!] Look out France if he's 100%
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
Alas, going by this weekend's performances, I don't think Europe's representatives will stand a chance against the Happa Clappa ballet boys.

[edited bc "goting" isn't a word]

[ 17. October 2011, 09:03: Message edited by: Sylvander ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
"Happa Clappa ballet boys"????????????????????
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Wait a minute - I kind of misread the conditional tense ... gotcha now!
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
"Happa Clappa ballet boys"????????????????????

Each time I see them they perform this cute ballet before proceeding to the slaughter of their foes.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I dare you to say that to their face. [Biased]
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
I'm very brave that way, you know.
Because I am quite a decent runner [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
You think you'd outpace an international winger? Riiight.

[Smile]

But on a similar note, Cory Jane has a very girlie-sounding name.
 
Posted by Og: Thread Killer (# 3200) on :
 
Who was it that once stood up to the AB during the thing and stared them down after, making the AB turn first?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Og: Thread Killer:
Who was it that once stood up to the AB during the thing and stared them down after, making the AB turn first?

I don't know if the AB's turned on it, but I remember an Ireland side under Willlie Anderson forming up, arms over shoulders, and moving slowly towards the AB's while they did the haka.

The New Zealand authorities caled it disrespectful. I thought it was brilliant, if possibly unwise.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I've often thought that England should do a quick Morris dance in reply. Or the macarena.
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
Scotland could perform a highland fling. That should strike fear into the hearts of the bravest. Especially as its traditional form requires the presence of a few broadswords or a spiky shield on the ground.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sylvander:
Scotland could perform a highland fling. That should strike fear into the hearts of the bravest. Especially as its traditional form requires the presence of a few broadswords or a spiky shield on the ground.

Scotland should play in kilts which, if worn in the approved manner, would enable them to employ the 'Highland Farewell' as their war dance.
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
quote:
posted by Siono Sais:
Scotland should play in kilts which, if worn in the approved manner, would enable them to employ the 'Highland Farewell' as their war dance

Never mind the war dance. Think of the scrum... [Eek!]

[ 19. October 2011, 13:06: Message edited by: kingsfold ]
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
Two weeks ago I ran a marathon in my kilt. Can't say it intimidated or made the opposition any slower. But it certainly made the audience (especially the female half of it) far more appreciative of my efforts.
I my case doing a highland fling by contrast would only strike pity and sympathy into the hearts of the meek and tears of laughter into the eyes of the brave.
I wonder how much time the AB spend practicing their ballet? It looks extremely well rehearsed.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sylvander:
Two weeks ago I ran a marathon in my kilt.

Do you mind if I ask what your time was, and whether you think your attire had a beneficial or retarding effect?
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
Can I ask further, did you have any trouble with chafing? Answer by PM if you deem it too personal.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by kingsfold:
quote:
posted by Siono Sais:
Scotland should play in kilts which, if worn in the approved manner, would enable them to employ the 'Highland Farewell' as their war dance

Never mind the war dance. Think of the scrum... [Eek!]
It would make no difference whatsoever, and I played many games at lock forward.

Modern lineout play would be more interesting.
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
quote:
posted by Jonah the Whale:
Can I ask further, did you have any trouble with chafing?

The juxtaposition of that question with Jonah's location of Nether Regions is either [Eek!] or [Killing me] or quite possibly [Waterworks]

[ 19. October 2011, 15:29: Message edited by: kingsfold ]
 
Posted by cosmic dance (# 14025) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Og: Thread Killer:
Who was it that once stood up to the AB during the thing and stared them down after, making the AB turn first?

The "thing"! The "thing"?
Have some respect or we'll send out a raiding party.
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
[Tangent to answer questions]
Did I hear the words "kilt" and "retard" in the same sentence? [Mad]

Time was 5'15". I have never remotely run for so long. The pace allowed me to chat away the whole time with two friends come over from Scotland for the day. Actually the fact I had not had time to train reasonably since May was the reason why I treated the matter lightly and wore the kilt and a hat with red hair coming oot (Cologne is Germany's carnival capital). The kilt (even a light sports kilt like this one) is not an attire for a competitive time, especially if it was your own birthday party the night before [Smile] Imaginary Fiend, if you consider running a race in a kilt I'd reckon it slows you down by about 5 to 10 percent, the longer the distance the greater the effect. Mainly due to extra weight.
In hindsight I can recommend to any competitive runner to at least once do the marathon at the back of the field. It is a unique and beautiful experience, very social and relaxed. Other British runners came up, a cyclist and even some spectators ran with us for a few minutes. And I even had time to drink half a glass of beer which a spectator offered en route.

Chafing is an issue obviously? A few friends and I once did a 5k with my real kilt (heavy rough wool) and a 10k in the sports kilt, both worn traditionally. It was ok (except for a group of Dutch trying to lift kilts before the start) but I would not recommend a longer distance without an extra layer underneath.
2 weeks ago I was more worried about the constant rubbing / light slapping on the thighs. I suspect that this might indeed become a factor if one runs properly, but with our jogging the effect was not so strong.
So, overall only good news for the ladies. No untoward after-effects were recorded. [/tangent]

On Sunday I shall watch in an Irish pub in Dusseldorf (nobody in Germany even knows there is a world cup on). Question is how to find the one where the handful of hardy French gather. At least I want to have company to share my grief. Or does anyone think they stand a chance?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sylvander:
On Sunday I shall watch in an Irish pub in Dusseldorf (nobody in Germany even knows there is a world cup on). Question is how to find the one where the handful of hardy French gather. At least I want to have company to share my grief. Or does anyone think they stand a chance?

I find it strange that Germany hasn't taken to Rugby in a big way. Lots of 'big units' as the saying goes and plenty with the, er, uncompromising attitude that helps in the game.

Many nervous Kiwis think France have a chance, and bookies are wearing the knees of their trousers out hoping for a French win too.
 
Posted by Johnny S (# 12581) on :
 
I'm willing to admit that this is probably sour grapes but I'm struggling to see how this WC has been such a success for Wales (as a lot of media hype claims) when they managed to lose three times and didn't beat any southern hemisphere opposition.

In fact it was really just about one win against Ireland.

For me this has not been a very good WC as far as the quality of the Rugby goes. The ABs are the only team that has played some.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Johnny S:
I'm willing to admit that this is probably sour grapes but I'm struggling to see how this WC has been such a success for Wales (as a lot of media hype claims) when they managed to lose three times and didn't beat any southern hemisphere opposition.

In fact it was really just about one win against Ireland.

You have to remember that for Wales, it's not results that count, but how they play. They said they'd come and throw it wide and they did, ergo, successful tournament. That they were 'robbed' by an (obviously bitter and vindictive) Irish ref only adds a further veneer of self-righteousness.

Oh, and a couple of their forward played well so that gives hope for the future, and Shane Williams was retiring so his damp squib of a career had to be immortalized by a missed try-scoring opportunity or two.

[NB, the views expressed here are probably influenced by my Bristolian upbringing. So sue me. [Razz] ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Johnny S is right to be disappointed in the standard of rugby in the RWC but there have been some poor competitions before. I don't remember the 1991 competition as an outstanding example of the game. Then again, rugby doesn't lend itself to spectacle, hence the attempts to make it 'exciting'.

Wales can point at an embitterred ref all they like, but ultimately they lost against France because of poor goal kicking, and you can put today's defeat down to that too (although who wants to play for third place?)
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
... getting nervous again ...
 
Posted by cosmic dance (# 14025) on :
 
Nervous is an understatement. In this household we are nearly beside ourselves with anxiety!
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
what was that about a team that formed up and moved towards the AB during the haka then? We had a French arrowhead this morning...

[tangent] Sylvander - why have you changed your avatar? I'm [Waterworks] [/tangent]

[ 23. October 2011, 08:14: Message edited by: kingsfold ]
 
Posted by cosmic dance (# 14025) on :
 
Clearly another raiding party is called for.


Its half time. I would have hoped to have few more points on the board by now....aauuuggghhhh
 
Posted by joan knox (# 16100) on :
 
well done the AB's!
 
Posted by cosmic dance (# 14025) on :
 
Whew!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Are you kidding me? How can a team score so few points and yet win a game of that stature? Wow!
 
Posted by Bernard Mahler (# 10852) on :
 
Tres snikki, hein? [Overused]
 
Posted by cosmic dance (# 14025) on :
 
The World in Union and New Zealand in a massive , collective hangover......
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Sean Fitzpatrick (former AB captain) summed up nicely:
"I'm not sure that the ABs deserved to win that match, but they did deserve to win the Cup".

I agree, because they were the only team to play consistently well throughout the tournament, not to mention the previous 3 years. Wales were having a good go and playing rugby worth watching; and with a decent goalkicker they would have won those close ones. As for the rest...
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
France are to Rugby what the Netherlands are to football [Frown] [Waterworks]
Did Brits tend to support France in this final (Europe vs South) or rather NZ (Commonwealth relatives)?

quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I find it strange that Germany hasn't taken to Rugby in a big way. Lots of 'big units' as the saying goes and plenty with the, er, uncompromising attitude that helps in the game.

Yes. But seeing our collection of trophies in football and other world famous sports (with world cups) like this, this and this we like to be generous that way. Is there any other sport where NZ can win a world cup?

The truth is of course more simple. We hate having to say: "Yes, sir!" to the referee.

[ 24. October 2011, 08:45: Message edited by: Sylvander ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sylvander:
France are to Rugby what the Netherlands are to football [Frown] [Waterworks]
Did Brits tend to support France in this final (Europe vs South) or rather NZ (Commonwealth relatives)?

This one didn't and I don't think too many others did.
quote:

quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I find it strange that Germany hasn't taken to Rugby in a big way. Lots of 'big units' as the saying goes and plenty with the, er, uncompromising attitude that helps in the game.

Yes. But seeing our collection of trophies in football and other world famous sports (with world cups) like this, this and this we like to be generous that way. Is there any other sport where NZ can win a world cup?
Pretty obscure sports, one of which I have never seen before and the last one looks like cycle polo.
quote:


The truth is of course more simple. We hate having to say: "Yes, sir!" to the referee.

There are many ways to say 'Yes sir'. Simply leaving the exclamation mark off changes it substantially. If the man saying it is a head taller than the referee, that makes a difference too.
 
Posted by Johnny S (# 12581) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:
Sean Fitzpatrick (former AB captain) summed up nicely:
"I'm not sure that the ABs deserved to win that match, but they did deserve to win the Cup".

I'm sure that this is sour grapes this time but my take would be that the ABs choked, again, but on this occasion (somehow) managed to win.

[I agree that they were by far the most worthy winners of the tournament as a whole though.]
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sylvander:
... Did Brits tend to support France in this final (Europe vs South) or rather NZ (Commonwealth relatives)? ...

I would support anyone against the French, even the Welsh. [Big Grin]

Definitely Commonwealth over Common Market.

For the record, I'm a Scot married to an Englishman.

PS Congratulations to NZ.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Alfie quits

Gareth Thomas, Wales (Union & League) and British Lions three-quarter has retired. He's been around, I think, forever.

Have a long, happy and peaceful retirement.
 
Posted by Og: Thread Killer (# 3200) on :
 
So apparently the powers that insist the Haka being watched by the opponents with blanc stares and fined the French for this.


I thought NZ rugby people were not wusses?
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
I thought the Haka is a war dance, obviously meant to intimidate and ridicule the opposition (I know that nowadays it looks ridiculous but its intention was/is the opposite, no?).
How on earth can one expect the recipients of this war dance to watch "with respect"? Surely if the others do show a reaction you must be able to take a little bit of what you give?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Og: Thread Killer:
So apparently the powers that insist the Haka being watched by the opponents with blanc stares and fined the French for this.


I thought NZ rugby people were not wusses?

Pathetic. It isn't as if the French turned their back on it - which would be showing disrespect. But it is typical of sports administrators. [Mad]

I say give the ABs a choice: haka or national anthem (which I'd miss, because it's a very good anthem, and the haka we get now isn't the proper one).

btw, Australia's women's Rugby team was fined last year for 'not showing respect' to the haka. Don't know what they did though.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
To be fair, I doubt the ABs were too perturbed by France's advance on them. This seems like IRB meddling rather than Kiwi whining.

But the historical records do show that traditionally, the tribe on the receiving end of a Haka would stand and watch politely while the formalities we dealt with, give a polite round of applause, pause for a cup of something restorative and then continue with their business of warfare.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
To be fair, I doubt the ABs were too perturbed by France's advance on them. This seems like IRB meddling rather than Kiwi whining.

You're right, the response from the All Blacks was actually that they thought that the French response was a fantastic way of taking up the challenge. They also disagreed with the fine, which hopefully the IRB might convert into a donation to the French team's chosen charity which the IRB could match.

The Welsh got it right in a home game a few years ago, they simply insisted that the last thing before the match would be the Welsh national anthem. The All Blacks spat the dummy and did the haka in the team rooms rather than before the Welsh anthem.

Perhaps a good neutral alternative could be for every Test to have a cultural presentation and a national anthem from both nations, with the order to be decided by the hosts in a regular match or by a coin toss in tournaments.

[ 27. October 2011, 02:07: Message edited by: the giant cheeseburger ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Og: Thread Killer:

I thought NZ rugby people were not wusses?

As hinted above, I think most kiwis respected the French response, and are horrified at the IRB's decision.

[ 27. October 2011, 09:01: Message edited by: Zappa ]
 
Posted by Og: Thread Killer (# 3200) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
quote:
Originally posted by Og: Thread Killer:

I thought NZ rugby people were not wusses?

As hinted above, I think most kiwis respected the French response, and are horrified at the IRB's decision.
Fair enough.

Anybody know who asked the IRB to introduce this bylaw or regulation? It sounds like it came from the time when NZ didn't want to do the haka before the anthem.

BTW, does anybody know when they run up against the Tongans, who does their dance first?
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Og: Thread Killer:
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
quote:
Originally posted by Og: Thread Killer:

I thought NZ rugby people were not wusses?

As hinted above, I think most kiwis respected the French response, and are horrified at the IRB's decision.
Fair enough.

Anybody know who asked the IRB to introduce this bylaw or regulation? It sounds like it came from the time when NZ didn't want to do the haka before the anthem.

BTW, does anybody know when they run up against the Tongans, who does their dance first?

The IRB regulate everything like that for a World Cup event, whether they do for a regular Test where the event is by the home team's Rugby Union is another question. They had organised it such that the All Blacks were to stay behind a certain line and the other team was to stay behind a certain line in the other direction. What the other team is supposed to do I'm not sure, with teams having previously been fined for ignoring the haka, fined for taking it seriously, fined for getting in an extra three minutes of practice etc.

A consistent rule is needed that protects the sporting tradition of NZ teams doing the haka before a game (not just in Rugby, the only NZ team I've seen on TV not doing one is their third-rate cricket team) and also allows space for sporting traditions of other nations to have the same space on a match day. Any fines or sanctions should only be applied after a complaint is made, not for arbitrary rules
 
Posted by Sylvander (# 12857) on :
 
They do that in football, too?
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sylvander:
They do that in football, too?

I don't know about football (soccer) cos I've never seen them on TV. Basketball, women's Rugby and Hockey (Field) are the ones I've seen, at least in games against Australia. I don't think the Netball team does the haka, maybe they should have on Wednesday night to get them closer to matching the Aussie girls!
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
I think the IRB fell off their tree. The haka is a challenge. The French responded. No punchup occurred.

The reception of the team in Paris was magnifique. A class show.

Amie's father being French we supported Les Bleus. The ABs are the cousins we love to hate. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
Six Nations time is upon us.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Oh Yes ! .... And what a hugely physical clash between Scotland and England today.

The result went England's way [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Robert the Bruce can stick that where the sun don't shine - his boys really didn't like it up 'em today. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Waaales, Waaales.....
I felt it was the right result but not necessarily the right score. Wales were certainly the dominant side.(But then, I'm biased)
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Dan Parks was definitely Man of the Match on Saturday - for England! He had a terrible time and but for him Scotland would probably have won. I suppose he's Australian again now. It wasn't simply the charged down kick that led to a try, but the possession he kicked away. We'll see just how good England's new defensive midfield is when they play Wales.

Ireland looked sick and angry as they trooped off, but if you concede a try when a man up, you won't win many.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
The 'Spear tackle' controversy seems to be following Wales around like a bad smell.
I think they can count themselves as pretty fortunate with Sunday's outcome.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:
The 'Spear tackle' controversy seems to be following Wales around like a bad smell.
I think they can count themselves as pretty fortunate with Sunday's outcome.

Even Wales' coach says Bradley Davies was fortunate only to get a yellow. He might get cited for it anyway, in which case he would miss two or three more games, and he's crucial for Wales as their World Cup locks aren't fit. Ryan Jones, usually blindside or no 8, might play at lock.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
England 0 - 6 up against Italy with 3 mins to half-time , and then go into the changing room 12 - 6 down [Ultra confused]

Tell me that didn't happen.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Goodness me England have won !
All very unbelievable,
rather like the abundant snow falling on the Rome pitch.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
Never in doubt rolyn, not for a second.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I'm just watching a recording of the Italy v England game now, so I haven't read today's posts on this thread yet, but can I just say...

Jeremy Guscott's scarf! [Eek!]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
...And the only thing better than the scarf was Young Farrell's goal kicking. Do you think they'll start using the Mitre ball at Twickenham? [Overused]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I only saw the first half of the Wales match as our afternoon/evening service is at 4.30, but was very pleased to hear the final score! The first half was certainly tough and Wales and Scotland seemed pretty evenly matched.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
At full strength and when concentrating Scotland were indeed equal to Wales, but they started the second-half appallingly then played one if not two men short for 15 minutes. Wales won the gamme in the first fifteen minutes after half time, but they were out on their feet at the end.

So far there have been two really good games and Wales have played in both. The rest has been forgettable.

[ 13. February 2012, 11:32: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
So how do you rate Wales' chances against England?
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
So how do you rate Wales' chances against England?

We can hope....
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
So how do you rate Wales' chances against England?

England have the better set-piece and they are improving but I take Wales by 11 points, to reflect that England will score more penalties but Wales more tries. I doubt any Welsh no 10 will be so slow to allow a chargedown!

We could even have Farrell at 10 with Barritt & Tuilagi at centre. A decent defensive midfield.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Wales by 11? Ouch!
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Triple Crown down, Grand Slam to go. Go Wales!
 
Posted by Kitten (# 1179) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
Triple Crown down, Grand Slam to go. Go Wales!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Your boys were bloody lucky.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
England's young new team put in an inspired performance, but the upper-body strength on some of the Welsh players carried the day.

The only problem with bringing on substitutes late in 'the game that batters' is that they're not hardened like those who've been in it from the start.
The winning try came about with our chap being dispossessed of the ball like taking candy off kids.

Well done Wales, the Triple Crown was well deserved.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
I only saw the second half, but well done Wales!
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
You wouldn't know it in Darwin, but the southern hemisphere season is under way ... but not on any free to air format I have access to [Waterworks] ...
C'mon the Hurricanes (Wellington)
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
It's Lent, Zappa and I'm trying to give up SOF for the duration but your post tempted me and I fell. [Devil]

Although a born again Thugby fan, I too, have no access to Pay TV.

When Easter comes I will regret it, but, for Lent [Angel]

I know the Reds won but I am glad to see a Jake White inspired Brumbies revival and I am glad to see the Rebels improve.

Australian Rugby can only, I hope, improve. [Votive]
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
OMG England beat France on their home turf [Yipee]

Only saw bits of the game . Enough to see the Ref didn't do us any favours . So double congrats to the lads [Overused]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I just got round to watching the France v England match. Oh boy, what a game! Some interesting refereeing, a French team that seemed to have an identity crisis, and an English team that seemed intent on doing just about enough and no more. But what about Tom Croft's line when he scored the try? Sublime!

But on another topic, did anyone else see the BBC's shout out to the Women's Six Nations? England have won their first four games and only conceded six points in doing so! Very impressive. [Overused] It's now set up for a Grand Slam decider against Ireland.

[ 14. March 2012, 13:33: Message edited by: Imaginary Friend ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
RIP Merv the Swerve.

Back in the early seventies, until his career was cruelly cut short by a brain haemorrhage, Mervyn Davies was the best number 8 in the world. The can't have been many lanky rugby-playing schoolboys anywhere who didn't want to emulate him.

It's going to add something to tomorrow's match at the Milleneum Stadium.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Yay Wales!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Boo Wales!

I'm now officially trying to avoid the result of the England game so that I can watch the replay in the morning. Whether I'll be successful is doubtful, but here's to trying!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
And St Patrick can suck on that!
 
Posted by piglet (# 11803) on :
 
God Almighty - we even got stuffed by the Italians. [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Apart from the emotion in Cardiff and the sight of England's scrum pushing the Irish all over Twickenham (Oh how different to last year!) it was hardly a weekend for quality rugby.

I've got to admit that the Italian crowd is definitely the best looking in the championship! That, or the director picks out the eye-candy.
 
Posted by Marvin the Martian (# 4360) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
the sight of England's scrum pushing the Irish all over Twickenham

I picked the right day for my first Six Nations visit to HQ [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
It was definitely a game for the purists! And to be fair to the Irish, it was only when their first-choice tighthead went off that they were so comprehensively beaten.

But I'll take it. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Never mind competitions between 6 nations or 15 'provinces'. This coming weekend will see a truly international feast of rugby, with 32 nations contesting the Hong Kong Sevens. What's more, it will all be running rugby, and isn't what it supposed to be about. The top players are all quick in the legs but also between the ears.

No wonder that sevens is about to become an Olympic sport, as it much more international and suited to a wider range of physiques than the boreathons featuring 6 successive scrum resets, after which the ref [mentally] tosses a coin to decide which side should spend a minute or two lining up a penalty goal.

The whole tournament will be broadcast live into Fiji, where it is the national game, and the only sport in which Fiji has been world champion.

Fiji are in with a good chance of winning, but the competition in these tournaments is always close, particularly once it gets to the quarter finals. New Zealand and England are nearly always in the last 8, helped by the number of Fijian emigres in each of their sides. Samoa and South Africa are always serious contenders too. Others not normally thought of as rugby nations, such as Kenya, also win many matches.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
I love watching sevens. It's a bugger to play though unless you are a lot fitter than I was when I tried it. I went to HK one year, long ago, and had a fantastic time. I think some of the smaller rugby nations see it as an area where, with a bit of investment, they can compete on much more level terms than 15s, witness Kenya, as Tukai said, but also Portugal and Spain.
The women's competition has also been growing in recent years. It is not all the same suspects as the men's game. England and Australia will be good (NZ won't be there), but watch out too for the Dutch (Yay!), Spanish and particularly the Canadians who I think have a good chance of winning it.
In my view sevens is a much better spectator sport than the full fifteen-a-side, not only because it is faster paced, but also with fewer players on the field there are far fewer infringements for the ref to make an arbitrary decision about. This makes it much easier for a non-rugby person to understand and appreciate.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
On another matter - if you were one of the 57 Old Farts, would you give Stuart Lancaster the England job full time?
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
I would. I think a young England team performed quite decently, and improved as the tournament went on. I suppose we were fortunate to play Scotland and Italy first, while still finding our feet, but finishing second behind a good Welsh team is not a sackable offence in my view.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Paradoxically I have no interest in Sevens - or about as much as I do in League. Which is none. Sevens demands fitness I concede, but seems to be over before it's started, and lacks the titanic struggle and forward/back duality of the real game. Like League, in fact (at least insofar as the forward/back duality is concerned. I admit League lasts longer. Interminably longer).
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I'm with Zappa. Sevens, like League, is all about try scoring, which is like saying cricket is all about sixes and great catches. In Sevens or League, one missed tackle generally means a try, and I'm afraid that appears superficial to me.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Can I have a whinge about the farce which is the Championship in England?

It's a twelve team league, so in the 'Regular Season' each team has 22 fixtures. They then divide into three four-team pools for the 'Playoffs'. The top eight teams form two 'Promotion Pools' features the top four teams, and the 'Relegation Pool' has the bottom four. Once the six pool games are completed, the top two teams in each of the Promotion pools advance to the 'Championship Semi Final' which is a two-legged tie. The winners of these games advance to the 'Championship Final', another two-legged game. The winner of the final will be promoted to the Premier League, so long as their ground measures up against various minimum standards.

Does anyone else think that this is ridiculous? Perhaps I'm biased because I support Bristol (who ran away with the Regular Season league) but this seems to be needless Americanization (sic) in pursuit of a bit of "excitement" which apparently can't be generated by appreciating the sport for what it is. If Bristol stuff up the semi or the final (it's happened before) I shall be even more annoyed than I am now.

Do other countries have this kind of lunacy in their lower divisions?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Un-frickin'-believable! We go 0-17 up, 9-17 at halftime, and finish 45-24 down.
 
Posted by Trisagion (# 5235) on :
 
I watched it IF. You were powned. Great game of rugby for the neutral and, for a retired loosehead, the second half had a couple of belting tries.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
In the final leg of the World Sevens Series in London, Fiji beat Samoa in the final, but New Zealand clinched the series by taking the third spot.
Final standings after nine weekends of glorious running rugby:
code:
Series Standings
TEAM PTS
1 NEW ZEALAND 167
2 FIJI 161
3 ENGLAND 135
4 SAMOA 133
5 SOUTH AFRICA 125

In the women's tournament the Netherlands lost to England in the final, having beaten the likes of France, Canada and Australia on the way. This weekend there is a huge sevens festival - nine pitches in concurrent use - in Amsterdam. Mostly club teams for the men, but more than a dozen international women's teams.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
It isn't the end of the season in the northern hemisphere but the big match tomorrow is the Heineken Cup Final. It's an all-Irish affair with Twickenham sold out so the pubs in West London ought to do a roaring trade!

I'm putting the price of a pint of Guinness on Ulster*. They are all team, through and through and Leinster have too many just back from injury.

*I think that's about four quid in that area!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
It seems that the RFU has read my bitching about the way the Championship season is constructed, and have decided to change it. They still have a playoff, but it's not quite as crazy as it has been for the last few years. Phew!
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
6-6 ... unfortunately i can find as yet no free to air coverage of OZ v Scotland ...
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
We are now up to the semi-finals of the Super 15 competition. Only in the very last "ordinary" round were the 6 teams to make the "play-offs" determined, with a few late form reversals being decisive. Of the underperformers, The Auckland Blues (packed with All Blacks) finally won a game, thus just keeping the "no names" of the ACT Brumbies out of the playoffs.

The Brumbies were obviously well coached, unlike the NSW Waratahs (packed with Wallabies) who lost their 8th match in a row, and yet seem likely to retain their hopeless coach.

The final is certain to be a NZ team vs a SA team. My money is on the Canterbury Crusaders to win the comp. As usual (!) they look to be peaking at the right end of the season.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
The cowbells are ringing in the Waikato district of New Zealand, after the [Waikato] Chiefs convincingly won the final of the Super 15, beating the jet-lagged [Natal] Sharks 37-6 (4 tries to none).

I may not be much good as a tipster, but as a former Waikato resident, I am pleased by the result, which is a big turn-round from the Chiefs' form of last year, in part because of so many new young faces in the team. And no other team had a prop who scored 9 tries in the season, even if all of them were from 2 metres out or less!
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (ret'd) (# 12163) on :
 
You are a rotten tipster Tukai. I sincerely hope you didn't bet on the outcome as we Australians are encouraged to these days by the ads before every Wallaby international on TV.

Waikato have done really well, beating both Canterbury and the Sharks. I hope this "opens up" the competition a little.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
I reckon heads in the foggy, damp Waikato will still be sore for a few days yet
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
:Bump:
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
:Bump:

A disturbingly apt term. Most of the early season news has been about players retiring from the game with persistent injuries. I suppose this is that time of year, but it shows how the game has changed. Players are bigger and stronger, the game is faster so the contact is harder. I quit when I still hurt on the morning of the next match. I doubt players are ever pain-free now.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Half-way though the [southern hemisphere] rugby championship, and the all Blacks have won all their games, though none of them by runaway scores. Argentina have won none, but they have been very close on each occasion , not least when South Africa only just managed a late draw against them.
So the competition is close, which makes it worth watching, even if (heresy?) there is a lot more movement in the rugby league (ARL) finals which come to a climax this month.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Good riddance ... I have seen very little evidence that you're any use in a rugby team anyway
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (# 12163) on :
 
There was an article in the Weekend Australian with those sentiments, Zappa. The author thought Quade Cooper unsuitable to say what he did. BTW, have you changed your allegiance? I always thought you were an All Blacks supporter. [Devil]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
No change of allegiance here! I felt for the Wallabies, and had hoped that they might make a good showing agianst the Bopks last night. In the end I only saw the last seven minutes - including another Boks try to Habana - but it looked like a debacle. Quade has been even mouthier this past week and may well be right that there is disarray in the Wallabies camp, though I'd believe it more if I heard it from someone like Sharpe.

I feel for Deans - it's never really worked out for him. Ironically I think he has given Quade Cooper far too many chances. Biting the hand that feeds, et cetera. The only good point about Cooper was the moments in which ther commentators managed to say "Hooper to Cooper to Ashley-Cooper" (though that presupposes Quade ever managed to get a pass away!).

Kurtley Beale had some good moments and some awful moments last night. I dodn't think anyone else could claim any good moments.

From what I can read the Blacks were in devastating form in La Plata
 
Posted by Sir Pellinore (# 12163) on :
 
Some of the commentariat - including Mark Ella - think Quade Cooper needs to be dropped from the Wallabies until he gets himself together. I think the All Blacks are going from strength to strength. Given the Oz Rugby setup and the number of Super Rugby games the Wallabies individually play as against the All Blacks I think we're on a hiding to nothing. Australian Rugby administators appear to have sold our national interest out to make money. Until that changes I think we're done.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I read with dismay some of the scores from the weekend's European club matches. The only utterly one-sided game in the Heineken Cup was at Edinburgh where the home side lost 45-0 to Saracens. OK, Saracens are a mean outfit, but to get no points whatsoever is a sorry state of affairs.

In the Amlin Cup things were far worse: This weekend we have seen Grenoble, Bayonne, Perpignan, Stade Francais and Worcester Warriors put 59, 71, 79, 68 and 85 points respectively over their opponents.

Over the years some internationals have ended with near cricket scores. England scored over 120 points against Rumania, New Zealand have scored more than 100 a few times as well as thrahing England by about seventy a while back.

I don't see the point of these one-sided affairs, so I propose that, as in boxing, the referee should be authorised to stop the contest when it is clear that there is no contest. If one side is doing all the tackling and does not have the ball Rugby is a bloody awful game to play and a boring one to watch. Maybe as soon as one side gets a fifty point lead they should all shaake hands and have an early bath.

What do you think?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
This Saturday, my arm was twisted to act as stand-in coach for the five-a-side soccer team that some of the kids in my wife's second grade class play in.

They were not very good, and were very quickly several goals down without even coming close to scoring themselves. At half time, the coach of the opposition asked if we wanted to play with an extra player to try and even things up a bit. I politely thanked him for the offer but declined. Back on our sideline, I was quietly muttering about the patronizing little so-and-so for a good few minutes.

My point is, taking a hiding is sometimes what sport is about. Unfortunate for those on the losing team, but a fact of life. As far as I can see, the only reason to stop a game is if there is a significant safety risk to the players. So in the case of rugby, I could image that a referee could call for uncontested scrums if one team is losing so badly that it puts them at risk of serious injury. Or even (possibly) if one team is so much bigger and stronger than the other that tackling and rucking become dangerous. But the chances of the latter case happening in professional rugby is essentially zero, I'd imagine.

So no - if a competition is generating a lot of cricket scores I think it means that the qualifying structure should be looked at for future years, but I don't think that individual games should be stopped if at all possible.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
I haven't been able to watch the Northern Hemisphere games, and I support England over the Wallabies, but I am kinda hoping for an upset if only to keep rugby on the radar In Australia. It is already behind AFL, League and soccer, and may well be behind hockey.

I have never fathomed why Deans dropped Giteaux who I thought was a great attacking player, and very much more reliable than any other Wallaby back except perhaps Ioane.

Would love to see this weekend's games, but alas ...
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
I haven't been able to watch the Northern Hemisphere games, and I support England over the Wallabies, but I am kinda hoping for an upset if only to keep rugby on the radar In Australia. It is already behind AFL, League and soccer, and may well be behind hockey.

Australia are 3rd in the IRB rankings, England are 5th. What kind of upset are you hoping for?
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
To be honest I think the rankings are seriously out of touch. Zimbabwe B run a risk of out-playing the Wallabies at the moment. Even David Campese is calling for Dingo Deans' scalp.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
So - Robbie Deans and his crew rose from the French ashes, and the media in Oz will remember rugby exists for one more week. While I feel for England it is in many ways a relief. To fall behind at least four other codes for men's sport - basically to be a most a single paragraph two or three pages from the back page or buried in the links on e-papers - would be too much to bear. Well done Wallabies.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
The All Blacks are fairly mowing down Wales (23-0 currently). It makes Scotland's performance the other week (a mere 22-51 loss) look positively respectable.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Today at Twickenham the All Blacks became the All Black and Blues. Their 20 match unbeaten run came to an end in ten mad minutes in which England scored three tries. They have conceded more and been beaten by more points but 38-21 represents new records for both for England v NZ matches. Almost makes up for the narrow defeats by Australia and South Africa.

Bring on the Six Nations!
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
The IRB sevens series resumes this weekend with the Wellington Sevens. Go Fiji, GO!

And if Fiji don't win it , there's a fair chance that Fiji-B will, i.e. the New Zealand team , who are fielding no fewer than five Fiji-born players.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Start of the Six Nations today. Lovely day for it - bright, clear and sunny.

Scotland will, as usual, lose the Calcutta Cup match at Twickers.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Which they did, but they were competitive throughout and look a better side with their new coach. England need to cur the errors out with the more expansive style as better sides will punish them harder.

Wales on the other hand - oh dear! Injuries are part of the problem, but they appeared pretty clueless in the first half and there really wasn't a way back.

A good first weekend. Forza Italia!

[ 02. February 2013, 19:05: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Scotland can take some consolation from the performance of their sevens team in Wellington, who made the quarter-finals of an international tournament for the first time in 3 or 4 years (IIRC).

In the process they beat Fiji, whose performance was an affront to the pride of a country where sevens is the national game. This was the first time ever (i.e. in >10 years) for Fiji not to make even the quarter-finals of an IRB tournament! Since every village plays the game, Fiji has a vast pool of individual talent to call on, but as the competition improves (prompted by the lure of the next Olympics) it is no longer good enough for Fiji just to put any 7 of its good players on the field and just let them run. Discipline and combinations that can function under pressure are also needed, as Kenya showed when they made it to the final and lost only in extra time. .
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Which they did, but they were competitive throughout

Did you think so? I admit I was dipping in and out of the match, since I was working at something - but they seemed to be doing their usual thing of being really good for the first 20 minutes, not bad for the next 20 and then losing it.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Which they did, but they were competitive throughout

Did you think so? I admit I was dipping in and out of the match, since I was working at something - but they seemed to be doing their usual thing of being really good for the first 20 minutes, not bad for the next 20 and then losing it.
OK, they were second-best throughout, but not so abjectly as they were under Andy Robinson. The players will be a happier bunch with Scott Johnson too. England helped them by kicking the ball long which asked trouble as Stuart Hogg is already the best full-back in the Six Nations - he's more Andy Irvine than Gavin Hastings!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
What about that then! Italy hold on to beat France and may even have found a decent #10. If they keep this up anything could happen, especially as Wales go to Rome in a fortnight's time.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
I was well impressed with the azzurri (even though they were playing in white). I will be very interested in their matches this season.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Firenze:
I was well impressed with the azzurri (even though they were playing in white). I will be very interested in their matches this season.

Especially the match next week, at Murrayfield!
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
I'll be in Paris, probably a-doing of the Impressionists, so I won't see it.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Week 2: England win in Dublin! First in ten years!

France lost, and I'm sorry Wales, but France lost that. Some players on the field shouldn't have been there and of those that were on, some were in the wrong positions, moreover some of those who were in the right positions made the wrong decisions! M. Saint-Andre, you were a great player, but I'm not convinced you cut it as a coach.

Scotland beat Italy, showing that Italy's win over France for much the same reasons as was Wales, and that Scotland aren't so shabby after all, especially at home.

If France get their selection right, they have a fair chance at Twickenham in a fortnight!
 
Posted by ken (# 2460) on :
 
Odd game today. Very scrappy and some timewasring from both sides. Almost no passing and all those points from penalties. Second half all about forwards. But England won.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by ken:
Odd game today. Very scrappy and some timewasring from both sides. Almost no passing and all those points from penalties. Second half all about forwards. But England won.

On a day like that it was exactly as I'd have expected! Keep the ball in their half, force them to make mistakes, kick the points, grind it out.

Oddest thing was that it was won by the away side, who were younger and a man down for ten minutes. Oh, and the lack of urgency from Ireland in the last quarter was very strange.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Yeah, it was definitely a game for the purists today*. Ireland were even forced to bring on the stand-off who should have been ideally suited to the game. O'Gara's kicking was noticeably better than England's, but constant knock-ons, and English dominance of the scrum made it difficult for Ireland to capitalize.

In short, an excellent technical performance from England (I didn't even mention their defensive organization, especially in the first half) but I suspect they may have to find another gear in the second half of the tournament.


* And yes, I count myself as a purist so I enjoyed it thoroughly!
 
Posted by Stephen (# 40) on :
 
Well I hope none of you are Dragons supporters - it's an absolute massacre - 3-53 to Glasgow and only a couple of minutes to go...........
 
Posted by Stephen (# 40) on :
 
Oh, this is the end - Glasgow have scored another try!!!


Final score Dragons 3 Glasgow 60

Flipping 'eck!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I live in Newport and several of my friends would have been at the game. I saw some of it on TV and, when I heard one of the commentators mentioned that the Dragons had missed nine(9) tackles in the first half alone, I gave up. Some of that would have due to the absence of their top players, notably Dan Lydiate and Toby Faletau, but the other Welsh regions have better stand-ins. Many of the Dragons team were under twenty and had little first team experience and it showed. Worse still, young, inexperienced players, even if they are physically equipped for the task, don't learn much if they are thrown into this situation together as was the case tonight. That's a damn good way to discourage young rugby players. Yes, get them playing the big boys asap, but alongside plenty of experienced players.

Had it been boxing, the referee would have stopped the fight with fifteen minutes to go, and he'd have been right.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
The Knotweed and I made our first visit to a rugby ground for a very long time today and, seeking a high class match, we went to see bottom of the table Sale Sharks taking on third form bottom London Welsh. Okay, some of that is a porkie - we went as the Kassam Stadium is just down the road.

The first 35 minutes were pretty dull, with the Exiles 12-6 up with the boot, but just before half time Sale suddenly had a run of scores and went in for a cuppa ahead. The second half was like another game - both sides went at it hammer and tongs, and with a minute to go Sale were a point up and camped on the Welsh line, yet the Welsh won a turnover and carried on several minutes into extra time before conceding a penalty near the Sale 22 - at which point, of course, Sale just biffed it into touch to win 25-26. It was a really exciting second half and a real "Who writes your scripts?" finish - a cracking afternoon's entertainment.

Final impression of the day - bloody hell, Richie Gray is tall! I reckon he was at least three inches taller than anyone else on the pitch even without allowing for the barnet.

AG
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Anyone see the England v France game today? It would appear that even if England don't have the best starting XV in the Six Nations, they may very well have the best squad of 23. They were excellent in the last twenty minutes as the French players tired and the substitutes came into the game.

I now can't wait for the game in Cardiff.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
I thought the French try in the first half was a fine bit of work though.

Meanwhile, a heavy sleet shower is falling on Embra. If this keeps up, conditions could be taxing at Murrayfield.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Updated to say it has now been snowing steadily for an hour. They will need to brush the pitch to find the white lines.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Duw, but that was a close-run thing.

[ 24. February 2013, 15:16: Message edited by: Firenze ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The Italy-Wales game was about as good a game as one could have hoped for in a Roman downpour. Lovely try by Alex Cuthbert, finding the perfect line that would have beaten any defence.

Quite how England were still in the game at half-time was a mystery. Thirteen missed tackles (including four contributing to Fofana's try) told the story and the French side was going beautifully. Then Saint-Andre panicked, and replaced the excellent Trinh-Duc with the spectacularly useless Michelak, simply because his place kicker had missed a couple of shots. England's replacements all improved the side, France's damaged theirs and with a couple of decisions going England's way they got a ten point win! We did find out that while Courteney Lawes is a magnificent athlete he's no international rugby player, especially at #6.

As for Scotland v Ireland; Isn't it good to see a Scotland coach and players looking happy again, even though it took an Ireland side that was off the boil throughout.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Can someone please explain why Shane Warne is playing hooker for Wales?

AG
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Can someone please explain why Shane Warne is playing hooker for Wales?

AG

Maybe that explains why Hibbard hasn't cut his hair since then!

I'm sure Warney could give him some lessons on line-out throw-ins.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Italy's second-half fightback plus England's lack of precision in the first means that next week's Wales v England match really is a championship decider! England have a 14 pt advantage going into the game but given Wales' hard running backs and England's missed tackle count, a two try margin is distinctly possible.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Go Wales! Though I think the Azzurri are a much improved side this season.

I know everybody and their dog have beaten France this year, but Scotland still need to concentrate. They threw away a chance at a try yesterday.
 
Posted by Chapelhead (# 21) on :
 
Great performance by Italy. It wasn't luck, or even just hard grind - for at least half the match they looked like the better team. And very unlucky with that forward pass call that the touch judge could see came off an English player. Even when Italy were down to 14 men England still couldn't make much headway against a fine defence.
 
Posted by Chapelhead (# 21) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
England have a 14 pt advantage going into the game but given Wales' hard running backs and England's missed tackle count, a two try margin is distinctly possible.

And Wales don't need to beat England by 14 points, 7 will do, I think (with Wales then winning on number of tries scored). Each point reduces England's margin and improves Wales'. A 7 point victory seems quite possible.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Chapelhead:
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
England have a 14 pt advantage going into the game but given Wales' hard running backs and England's missed tackle count, a two try margin is distinctly possible.

And Wales don't need to beat England by 14 points, 7 will do, I think (with Wales then winning on number of tries scored). Each point reduces England's margin and improves Wales'. A 7 point victory seems quite possible.
You're quite right and I realised it within minutes of posting . Seven points is very possible - one Welsh back going through an over-committed English tackle and that will do.
 
Posted by Stephen (# 40) on :
 
I think it has to be 8 pts doesn't it? Not sure.... Not impossible but I think England will be up for it - although they'll have to play better than they did this weekend
Sadly I think they will [Frown] but I'm keeping my fingers crossed for Wales......well OK biting my fingernails!
My gut feeling is that we all need to get real about Italy. The days of going to Rome and coming away with cricket scores are gone. Same at club level. The Ospreys played Zebre not so long ago and they were very lucky to come away with a win......and no Zebre haven't earned their stripes [Two face] Played 17 lost 17....
So what do people think of Sale beating Sarries then?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stephen:
I think it has to be 8 pts doesn't it?

If Wales win by 7 then both teams will have the same points difference. I believe that the next decider is points scored, which Wales will be ahead on. So yeah, a 7 point win will be enough for them.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I live surrounded by the Welsh and the impression I get is that they don't mind England winning the championship, just so long as they don't complete a triple crown, and hence a grand slam, in Cardiff! That would hurt much, much more.

FWIW, I reckon it will be all or nothing: either England will be goaded by Sunday's poor performance into a win, or a big enough Welsh one to enable them to retain the title.
 
Posted by Chapelhead (# 21) on :
 
I think I might be channeling Wood.

If Wales beat England by 7 points, then the competition will be decided on number of tries scored, which currently stands 7 to 5 in Wales' favour. So unless there is a really bizarre result, with England finding the ability to score tries (which seems to have escaped them for the last few games) while still losing by 7 points then a 7 point win by Wales will be enough.

In the event of Wales winning by 7 points, but England scoring two more tries than Wales, so both teams have the same number of competition points (8 points from 4 wins), the same match-point difference and the same number of tries scored then the Championship is shared between them.

Personally I fancy Wales. England's position in the table flatters them. They were lucky to get the result against Italy, and were fortunate that France turned up in self-destruct mode.
 
Posted by Stephen (# 40) on :
 
Wow,what a game!
I'm speechless - and breathless!
Wales 30 England 3

Think we've won the Championship...... [Biased]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I half-expected Wales to triumph but not by 30-3!

Wales concentrated on wrecking England's scrum and succeeded. England missed tackles, and with no scrum ball, lots of penalties against them, only one side was ever in it.

I worry for the Lions this summmer, as they have selected Andy Farrell as defensive coach, and he has done that job for England.
 
Posted by Gamaliel (# 812) on :
 
What a match, what a Welsh side, what a result!!!
 
Posted by Stephen (# 40) on :
 
I must admit I was hoping for a 10 point lead, as it wasn't enough just to win the game but if anyone had mentioned a 27 pt lead I'd have laughed at them


I feel sorry though for Sioni not only because his side loss but also I have a feeling his Welsh friends are probably going to be unbearable for a while! [Biased] However as a Hell host I know he'll cope...

Great game and a very good advert for rugby I'd have said
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Stephen:



I feel sorry though for Sioni not only because his side loss but also I have a feeling his Welsh friends are probably going to be unbearable for a while! [Biased] However as a Hell host I know he'll cope...

I'm hidden away to some extent and of my ten colleagues only two are Welsh! I doubt they will be quiet about it, but there are eight English on the team, plus one South African who will probably be worst of all!

[ 16. March 2013, 21:06: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Both sides certainly took a battering . That was really physical stuff, and fortunately didn't boil over too much.

The score line didn't reflect the effort England put in. As you say something was badly wrong with the scrummaging, we might as well have just given Wales the ball as give away 3 points every time.

But yeah , well and truly beat. There's no other way of dressing it up.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
In the after meeting fellowship today I was truly ashamed to be an Englishman abroad (OK, in Wales, but it feels foreign). The whinging about the ref by my compatriots was appalling! Steve Walsh isn't my favourite official - he's a pernickety sod - but if he tells you to stand here, engage here and do so straight and level, one cannot be surprised to get pinged if you don't!

I don't recall England having anyone yellow carded. That would be our sole achievement [Frown]
 
Posted by Carys (# 78) on :
 
I was fairly sure we'd win and hopeful that we'd get the points for the championship, but didn't expect the hammering that ensued. I was at my parents' in Cardiff for the match then caught the train back to Bristol. The carriage was about 50 50 Welsh English and there was much singing and teasing. I suspect a similar mix of football fans would have been less good natured.

Carys
 
Posted by Stephen (# 40) on :
 
I wasn't nearly so relaxed about it Carys - in fact I thought it could have gone either way. With us playing at home with the passionate Millenium crowd I thought we might have had a chance of winning but not by enough points. I was hoping we'd win by 10 points but felt I was fantasising!!
Floating on air at the moment......you don't have to drink much to get drunk
I was very pleased to see that the vestments were red on Sunday - for Passiontide
I approve of that! [Smile]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
Got to half time and was able to breathe again!That was an amazing 2nd half, fair play - in fact, tidy!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
On The Stupidest Thing in Sport thread The Great Gumby suggested that the current state of the scrum in Rugby Union is the second-worst (after the designated hitter rule in baseball). On the BBC website, former England hooker Brian Moore gives chapter and verse on why it doesn't work.

Here's Sioni recipe for scrums in the 21st century (and yes, I have played there, at tighthead prop, which is the fun position in the front row).

- The "hit" must go. It's dangerous and, as Brian Moore says, makes it impossible to referee every other aspect of the scrum.
- The front rows must engage and wait. They must be at the line determined by the referee and must be straight and level.
- The remaining ten players (the second rows and back rows) then bind on in the approved manner. Again, the scrum must not move.
- The referee stands on the open side of the scrum, with the touch-judge looking down the line of the scrum on the blind side. Either official can call when a law is contravened, such as the ball going in crooked, one side shoving early or someone binding illegally.
- Now the scrummage starts. Better strength and technique (of teams and individuals) will still be rewarded and IMHO, it will be clearer to everyone what is going on and why referees make the decisions they do. Oh, and it will probably be safer.

What does the team think?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I've never played front row, so I probably don't have the technical understanding to comment. But I will say two general things which is that as they stand, scrums are a complete mess so something should be done. Then, for me, it would be a shame to lose the combative nature of the hit. My gut feeling is that most collapses happen after the hit, not during so I'm not sure it's the most pressing safety issue. But I'm happy to leave this one to the experts. And I certainly appreciate Moore's comments on the issue.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Front-row fiasco #3

I was at "Judgement Day" earlier, a double-header at Cardiff's magnificent Milleneum Stadium, featuring Newport Gwent Dragons v (Llanelli) Scarlets and Ospreys v Blues. A couple of good, but different games. Newport didn't get the drubbing some feared.

Scarlets and Ospreys won so the West Walians have bragging rights this year, but the most notable factor was that in the Dragons v Scarlets games the scrums generally ended satisfactorily (ie, the scrum restarted the game) and I don't recall any penalties from scrums. In the Ospreys v Blues game it was another story. Adam Jones, who made a mess of England's scrum last week started off in the same destructive manner but after 20 minutes one of the locks was replaced by a no 8/flank forward; a big lump, but no second-row, so I don't think there was the same shove coming through The second half was more competitive but both sides tried so hard to get the "hit" as the ball was put in, that scrums collapsed as a consequence, penalties were common and at one time it too nearly three minutes to get to a post-scrum phase of play after the sides formed up for the scrum!

Different referees of course, and the sides in the first match could just have agreed beforehand "Look, no funny stuff, we've got a paying public here".
 
Posted by Stephen (# 40) on :
 
Well Nigel is a spectator sport in his own right I think! [Two face]

I saw the Glasgow v Ospreys match and the scrums were a diabolical shambles

I think you're right about the hit, Sioni. Seeing collapsed scrum after collapsed scrum in a game is a real pain in the proverbial
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
The 2013 Lione Squad has been named
FIFTEEN WELSH PLAYERS [Overused] [Smile]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
About right. I'm surprised Tom Youngs is in, as Ken Owens is more experienced as a hooker and is a great replacement with 25 minutes left. Two of the locks are injury prone (Gray and O'Connell) and there isn't anyone who looks like a third no 10.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
SS - I agree: they should have put in James Hook because he can be used as a kicking utility back.

As for O'Connell - he could be a liability if he gives in and punches someone (not an unknown occurrence).

Tom Youngs is in for purely political reasons - they need the English RU to support the Lions.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:

As for O'Connell - he could be a liability if he gives in and punches someone (not an unknown occurrence).

I thought that was exactly why PO'C is going! You need an enforcer, especially in Australia, and he's the best in the Home Nations.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
...but still not a patch on either Fergus Slattery or Terry Cobner in that role

(Oh dear, I'm showing my age!)

Good to see they're taking Brian O'Driscoll - he deserves a last hurrah.
 
Posted by McChicken (# 2555) on :
 
quote:
The 2013 Lions Squad has been named
FIFTEEN WELSH PLAYERS [Overused] [Smile]

The 2013 Lions Squad has been named
THREE NZ PLAYERS, a Tongan, a Samoan and a KIWI COACH [Overused] [Smile]

[Two face]
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
So the first test is this Saturday. Do the Lions have a chance? After some comfortable wins earlier on in the tour against meagre opposition they lost 14-12 midweek, which doesn't bode well. Bob Dwyer, former Australia coach says the Lions are cheats. What do the assembled Ship folks think?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Typical Aussie gamesmanship, nothing more.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
As usual, the game will be decided by the scrums and rucks. That is, who wins the referee's mental toss of the coin when he decides which side to give the penalty to, as under strict RU rules he could award a penalty to either side at almost every scrum and at every second ruck. And at this level, the penalty kickers don't miss many.

But I'll be watching (on TV) anyway.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:
And at this level, the penalty kickers don't miss many.

Don't they? [Two face]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
What Tukai said. The Lions gave too many penalties away and if you do that there's no point arguing with the referee (As England found in the Six Nations) because he won't change his mind (as England found in the Six Nations).

I've still got doubts about Sam Warburton - Tipuric would be better suited to a game with faster rucks, which reduces the penalty count. Mike Phillips was pretty ordinary and I don't think Vunipola is up to the job. Somehow Corbisiero has to do 80 minutes!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
The Lions gave too many penalties away...

In fairness, I thought a few of them were a bit harsh. There was one in the second half in particular where a Lions loose forward came right through a ruck, claimed the ball, and got pinged for entering at the side. Wrong decision, I thought and I told the referee so (via the psychic link in my laptop) in no uncertain terms. [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Although the final score did depend on penalty kicks (both those taken and those missed- oh Dear!), the two star wingers (North and Folau) made the game worth watching. Predictions in some UK media that Folau would be a weak link were somewhat off.

And spare a thought (and prayer) for the unfortunate Christian Lealei'ifano. Last season he was injured just when he was ready to make his test debut, and this season he got on the field but was carried off injured in the first minute.
 
Posted by the giant cheeseburger (# 10942) on :
 
The silence on here is deafening! Taking a bit of effort to come to terms with?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Not really. Just sets up a great finish in Sydney next week.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
The silence on here is deafening! Taking a bit of effort to come to terms with?

I only followed the game on line. No Sky TV and I couldn't even find a radio commentary! Congratulations Australia and it sets things up for the Third Test.

It sounds like Australia can scrummage better than in days of yore and have an awesome defence. That recipe's worked for a century and more for, ahem, the All Blacks, so there's no reason it shouln't work for Oz.
 
Posted by Patdys (# 9397) on :
 
Just leaving Melbourne. Lots of supporters, still happy, still raucous but in a friendly way. Lion supporters. All the Aussies are in bed . 5 am btw.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Patdys:
Just leaving Melbourne. Lots of supporters, still happy, still raucous but in a friendly way. Lion supporters. All the Aussies are in bed . 5 am btw.

Lightweights.
 
Posted by Patdys (# 9397) on :
 
Hey, I didn't say their own beds...
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
It's the Aussie supporters who are in bed. The players (or at least some notorious ones among them) are probably still out on the town boozing.

Defence on both sides was so strong that there was hardly any running with the ball. And the shape of the game was again determined by 'toss of the coin' penalties at scrums and rucks. The best I can say as a spectator is that the game was as closely contested as teh scoreline suggests.

Now to watch the World Cup Sevens, where we can guarantee to see players run more than 3 metres without spilling the ball. Go , Fiji, go!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Is it just possible that the Lions will go into the decider without Brian O'Driscoll? He is hardly the weakest link but he has given away more penalties than before and I think the Aussies have worked him out.

If Jamie Roberts is fit I'd start with him and Jonathan Davies and then I really don't know who to have as backup! There are cases to be made for Tuilagi (power), BOD (class) and Twelvetrees (unknown quantity).

Shame about Sam Warburton but I'd love to see Tipuric start and here's hoping Corbisiero is fit - his absence probably cost England the Grand Slam.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
You Beauties! Gatland gets it right, BoD is not God and what a difference it makes when scrummaging can be done properly.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Northern Hemisphere refereeing! [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Northern Hemisphere refereeing! [Big Grin]

I expect we'll hear a lot about that from Australia, certainly more than we heard about it from up north during the previous matches, refereed by a New Zealander and a South African.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
At one point, Stuart Barnes referred to Romain Poite as "the premier scrummaging referee in the world" or something like that. I don't know if that was based on today's performance or previous ones, but it's hard to argue.

But it wasn't just the scrums where the Lions were better. Their kicking game and general choice of option was better. Sexton played very well, the back three were tight in defense and quick in attack. Australia's previous domination of the breakdown was also broken by the Lions' back row and that made it a much more even contest in midfield. So if there's any Aussie griping about the scrums then we've got plenty else to point to.

And to borrow a song from football:
quote:
Campo, what's the score?
Campo, Campo what's the score?

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by the giant cheeseburger:
The silence on here is deafening! Taking a bit of effort to come to terms with?

You were saying?

AG
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
It's a set-up by SANZAR. They were worried that if the Lions once again failed to win a series, then all those Lions supporters who so boost brewery profits and gate takings in the south might lose faith and not come on tour again. So the ARU were instructed to make sure that (a) the series was tight, and (b) the Lions won in the end.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
A new English season is kicking off, and Bristol have not only hired a high profile coach (Andy Robinson), but are tipped to secure promotion back to the Premiership. I'll believe it when it happens, but maybe that'll convince me to pay a bit more attention to them this year!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
A new English season is kicking off, and Bristol have not only hired a high profile coach (Andy Robinson), but are tipped to secure promotion back to the Premiership. I'll believe it when it happens, but maybe that'll convince me to pay a bit more attention to them this year!

I wish them well, if only to give Bath v Bristol games the spice they had when I followed Bath as a schoolboy 40+ years ago (with our chemistry teacher playing at no 7) Back then Bristol won, more often than not. Bath were very much third in the local pecking order, behind Glaws & Brizzle, but regularly beat the London softies.

Andy Robinson may be high profile but he's never convinced me as a coach. Maybe he's still feeling the pain after That Tackle which all but ended his career!
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
A new English season is kicking off, and Bristol have not only hired a high profile coach (Andy Robinson), but are tipped to secure promotion back to the Premiership. I'll believe it when it happens, but maybe that'll convince me to pay a bit more attention to them this year!

Depends who you listen to. We (LW), have recruited *very* encouragingly. The Rugby Paper has actually got us as favourites. Not that that means anything. I'll settle for top four, and then the play off lottery....
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
I have to say that the All Blacks are looking impressive recently. Their game against the Springboks two weeks ago was probably the highest standard of play I've seen all year - and that goes for both sides, as the SA press rightly pointed out. The Springboks scored 4 tries, but the ABs got 5, both against good defences. It was end to end running with very few 'errors', with the few scrums cleanly decided without five minutes of resets and/or penalties, and very well refereed - no big disputes afterwards or on-field.
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
Is there room among all this talk of Union to discuss the League Word Cup?

Can anyone beat the Australians?
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
Is there room among all this talk of Union to discuss the League Word Cup?

It's like 1895 never happened.... I watch RL (indeed, i have a club membership) but am rather of the opinion the Northern Union isn't quite "rugby."
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
And I'm rather of the opinion that since Union has been professional it has become more like League.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
And I'm rather of the opinion that since Union has been professional it has become more like League.

As scrums are more tightly regulated and the ball is suposed to be recycled more quicly at ruck and maul, it looks more like RL than it used to, but Union is still a more varied game: you don't get a successful side consisting of fifteen guys all 6'3" and 16 stone, which can be basis of a good RL team as there is no particular need for line-out or front-row expertise.

btw, I wonder if Italy's win over England in the RL World Cup warm-up will inspire their Union counterparts?
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Cardiff Blues 19 - Toulon 15

Of course, the Welsh clubs can't possibly be up-to-standard for the Heineken Cup... [Killing me]
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by balaam:
And I'm rather of the opinion that since Union has been professional it has become more like League.

At its free flowing best (as with the All Blacks this season) rugby union is a pleasure to watch, but when it degenerates in to endless "pick and go" it looks like the boring bash and barge of old-style RL, without the compensations of a 10 m separation between the sides (which gives some room for a runner to wind up) or a 6-tackle rule (which forces some attempt at constructive play).
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
50 years and one day ago Newport beat the All Blacks.

It's still known as "Glyn Davidge's Match", from that man's efforts, mostly at the bottom of rucks preventing the New Zealanders getting their ball quickly, if at all. Now it would be penalised, then you got kicked, raked and rucked back with the ball.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
The Springboks are now training at the University of Glamorgan's sports ground in Trefforest.

I'm told they look to be in "awesome" form (apologies for word - blame 19 year-old gibbering son who was there) and were also very good at mixing with the students, posing for photos, etc.
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
Well, that was an interesting match. I honestly thought we were going to lose to Japan at one point [Ultra confused] .

With the latest changes to the scrum rules, it was amusing to hear the commentators deciding that none of the modern hookers actually knew how to hook the ball. Wonder how long before the next set of changes?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Celtic Knotweed:
Well, that was an interesting match. I honestly thought we were going to lose to Japan at one point [Ultra confused] .

With the latest changes to the scrum rules, it was amusing to hear the commentators deciding that none of the modern hookers actually knew how to hook the ball. Wonder how long before the next set of changes?

In the Good Old Days one would find that tight-head props could usually hook better than hookers. Yes, it's illegal but, if you're desperate and scrummaging well enough to do so on one leg for a second or two, worth a gamble.

Maybe Dan Cole and Adam Jones could enlighten us?
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Oh Wales - what happened?

I know the 'boks were played in because of the different season, and I know they played dirty, and I know losing 3 key players in the first half-hour is bad but

WHAT WERE YOU DOING? [Tear]
 
Posted by pererin (# 16956) on :
 
It was the blind French referee!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Anyone else watch the England game today? After 15 minutes I honestly thought we would be completely obliterated, so England's comeback was very credit-worthy indeed, IMNVHO.

Having said that, New Zealand weren't the same team in attack after Dan Carter went off. Equally, England got noticeably worse when they started making substitutions in the pack. Definite issue in strength in depth there. But it was a very enjoyable game to watch and quite encouraging for England's rebuilding project.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Normal service restored.

We beat the Pumas handsomely; No 1 son says we could have scored more...

Cardiff is a happy place to be tonight [Smile]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Good performance by Wales. A win in an autumn international is rare and this was a big one, more convincing than England's.

I agree about England after the substitutions. The front row was much weaker and less capable around the field and the all-round usefulness of Launchbury is now obvious. If he was a New Zealander, he would be an All Black. All those England injuries demonstrated a problem whenever you play the ABs: not only do they make very few errors, but in every contact situation they inflict as much pain as is possible within the rules.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
So which of the home nations has come out best from the Autumn Internationals (Scotland v South Africa is all but over)? How do things look ahead of the Six Nations? My impression is that it's probably between England and Wales again.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
It does look between Wales and England. If Wales beat Tonga and Australia they will be ahead, if they run Australia close they will be level but should Wales be trounced by Australia or not beat Tonga handsomely, they are behind England. Scotland were brave as ever but the Saffies looked very mean. Ireland will just have to admit that the old gaurd is now too old and have a couple of painful years while their younger players get used to international rugby.

In any event, England will host Wales in this season's Six Nations, which ought to make a difference to that particular contest.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
The great unknown is always which France will turn up which can add an element of surprise, but I would agree that Scotland, Ireland (and Italy) are not looking very hopeful.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by iamchristianhearmeroar:
The great unknown is always which France will turn up which can add an element of surprise, but I would agree that Scotland, Ireland (and Italy) are not looking very hopeful.

I didn't mention France for that very reason. They only lost at Twickenham last season thanks to bizarre substitutions! They can go toe-to-toe with England up front and they are far better behind the scrum.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Wales begin the 2014 Six Nations at home to Italy so we should get off to a decent start.

France? Well, they've got England in Paris same day: if the French win then they'll be in contention.

Agree about Ireland, they've got a tricky season or two but don't write them off completely, they'll still be capable of pulling off a blinding performance against all the odds.

England? On paper should be solid but they weren't convincing against the Pumas, nor against the Blacks. I know the rugby correspondents are all starting to rate them but I think they're being a little over-hyped.

Remember last season? All they had to do was draw in Cardiff? Simple, eh. [Snigger]
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Blimey!

Ireland have just gone in at half-time 22-7 UP against the All Blacks!
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
...so Jonathan Sexton misses a penalty. the All Blacks have desperation to aid them and they score to go level at 22 points each.

But then the some Irish loons decide to start towards the kicker before he moves on the conversion - which he initially misses - do the referee has no choice but to let him have another go. Which he puts between the posts.

New Zealand 24 - 22 Ireland [brick wall]
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Moral: as has been the case for as long as I can remember, the All Blacks will keep coming at you not just until the hooter sounds , but right up to the final whistle.

(Incidentally Rugby Union is the only game I know of in which these two events can be so far apart.)
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:
not just until the hooter sounds , but right up to the final whistle.

(Incidentally Rugby Union is the only game I know of in which these two events can be so far apart.)

You'd love northern hemisphere Union - we don't have hooters (far too much like rugby league), just a clock stuck on zero for what can seem like days, then the final whistle.

Actually, I went to Moseley on Saturday with London Welsh (English second division), and they didn't even have a clock. We poor supporters just looked at our watches at the end of the second half and thought, "well, we kicked off this half 52 minutes ago, so it *must* be nearly over....."
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
But even that isn't a flawless approach these days, since (if I understand correctly) the referee can stop the watch while a player is injured or if there are disciplinary issues to be dealt with.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
But even that isn't a flawless approach these days, since (if I understand correctly) the referee can stop the watch while a player is injured or if there are disciplinary issues to be dealt with.

Well that was sort of my point, given that (for the uninitiated) there are only 40 minutes in each half. Once you get out to beyond 50 minutes, you can be pretty confident it's nearly the end!
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
But even that isn't a flawless approach these days, since (if I understand correctly) the referee can stop the watch while a player is injured or if there are disciplinary issues to be dealt with.

Well that was sort of my point, given that (for the uninitiated) there are only 40 minutes in each half. Once you get out to beyond 50 minutes, you can be pretty confident it's nearly the end!
Basically the rule is that if you have a clock, it has to be synchronised to any television coverage (including the 4th official if any for replays), and the referees watch. Timings are dictated by the ref starting and stopping his watch. Outside the Premiership, where there is (usually, unless you're appearing on Sky) no video equipped TMO and everything stands on what the ref does or doesn't see at the time, it's often cheaper to just not have a clock, rather than paying for a very clever one....
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
The house is in deep gloom.

No 2 child came home to watch the match with me - and we lost. [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
Ok, I only saw very brief highlights, but how was that try NOT a forward pass? Might as well be playing American football.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jonah the Whale:
Ok, I only saw very brief highlights, but how was that try NOT a forward pass? Might as well be playing American football.

Rugby Union appears to have adopted the idea that if the passer's hands are not facing ahead of a line across the field, then any pass is OK. That allows fancy-dan finger work, handing the ball to a player as he runs past you if you put the ball straight into his hands and the so-called 'momentum' pass on the basis that if the passer is going forward the ball is likely too. Horseshit I say, forward is forward. If the ball moves closer to the opponent's try-line it's a forward pass.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
That Wales v Australia clash was heck of a game though .

This tournament has brought back the open and break-through play that seemed to have left the game in recent years.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:
That Wales v Australia clash was heck of a game though .

This tournament has brought back the open and break-through play that seemed to have left the game in recent years.

I've heard Welshmen who have played top class club rugby agree it was a cracking match. The autumn internationals have seen some good rugby. Even England have played well at times! I suppose most teams will revert to the tired and tested "Play it through the phases" come the Six Nations.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
quote:
Originally posted by Jonah the Whale:
Ok, I only saw very brief highlights, but how was that try NOT a forward pass? Might as well be playing American football.

Rugby Union appears to have adopted the idea that if the passer's hands are not facing ahead of a line across the field, then any pass is OK. That allows fancy-dan finger work, handing the ball to a player as he runs past you if you put the ball straight into his hands and the so-called 'momentum' pass on the basis that if the passer is going forward the ball is likely too. Horseshit I say, forward is forward. If the ball moves closer to the opponent's try-line it's a forward pass.
Quite right. It was perfectly clear from the replays (put up on the screen in the stadium at the time) that it was a forward pass. Everybody around us (Australia fans included) recognised this. An absolute disgrace that the referee allowed it.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
OK, I realised that I was not sure what the laws actually say, so I did some research. Law 12 states clearly:
quote:
A throw forward occurs when a player throws or passes the ball forward. ‘Forward’ means towards the opposing team’s dead ball line.
That is all it says. No mention of relative motion, arm movement, sleight of hand or anything. For me that is 100% clear. "That" pass, by the definition of the IRB's own laws, was forward. No try.

Ah, but then you get the folks trying to make the law more understandable. This following clip was made, it seems, by the IRB itself and made available by a refs organisation:
http://www.therefzone.co.uk/interview.asp?trzid=9 .

It transpires that a ball travelling towards the opponents' dead-ball line only appears to be going forward by virtue of the fact that the ground beneath it is not moving forward at the same speed as the player who made the pass. Or something.

Either apply the laws or change them I say.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
It's clearly a question of the frame of reference you choose to use. 'Backwards' defined in the frame of reference moving at the same speed as the player who gives the pass may appear 'forwards' in the frame of reference of an observer who is stationary with respect to the pitch. Clearly the IRB should hire a physicist to write their rules for them. [Biased]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
It's clearly a question of the frame of reference you choose to use. 'Backwards' defined in the frame of reference moving at the same speed as the player who gives the pass may appear 'forwards' in the frame of reference of an observer who is stationary with respect to the pitch. Clearly the IRB should hire a physicist to write their rules for them. [Biased]

Oh goodie, That'll bugger up the knock-on too! If I am moving forwards and knock a ball forward *but* knock it forwards less than I advance, has it actually been knocked on?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
And, our prop didn't kick their flanker in the face, it was the flanker that headbutted the prop's foot. [Biased]
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
poor old refs are damned if they do and if they don't though given they can't be everywhere at once it's almost an argument for not letting tv cameras anywhere near live sport.

I have to say that one of the nice things about following a team on a (hopefully) brief sojourn away from the Premiership this season has been the general lack of tv cameras and hence video refereeing, allowing us to adopt the old simple pleasures of screaming at the ref for redress that never comes....

Having said that, if you think it's a problem in Union, it's nothing to the situation in League. At Oxford RL last summer we might as well have come with pre-printed cards saying "Forward Ref!" to hold up and save our voices...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:
poor old refs are damned if they do and if they don't though given they can't be everywhere at once it's almost an argument for not letting tv cameras anywhere near live sport.


The IRB sanctioned the video in Imaginary Friend's link. That and similar "rulings" actually make the referees work harder than it need be!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Credit where it's due, it was Jonah's link, not mine.

Although again, to give due credit, watching this year's autumn internationals was the first time that I've seen the new laws for setting scrums in action. I have to say, I'm impressed. The IRB seems to have come to a decent compromise there.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
Try watching them week in,week out below international level. I used to play 13 so it's not my area of expertise, but from an interested layman/back's point of view, I think it's more time consuming and more dangerous. I've also never seen such regular standing up as this season.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Standing up isn't anything to do with process for setting the scrum, is it? And I don't understand how the current process can be more dangerous. The hit now happens from very close range, so there's much less chance of one front row slipping under the other and an immediate collapse. And that has to be good for everyone. As for time-consuming, one slightly longer procedure to set a scrum has to be quicker than how it was a couple of years ago when each scrum might have to be set several times.

But you're right, I haven't watched any domestic rugby for ages* so my pool of evidence is limited.


* That's the price you pay for living in countries where they don't even know what rugby is!
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:
poor old refs are damned if they do and if they don't though given they can't be everywhere at once it's almost an argument for not letting tv cameras anywhere near live sport.


The IRB sanctioned the video in Imaginary Friend's link. That and similar "rulings" actually make the referees work harder than it need be!
'Sanctioned by the IRB...' As a warning that you are in for a large dose of confusion and lack of clarity and general needless sodding-about, that has to be the Rugby equivalent of 'Published by Kevin Mayhew', doesn't it?

[ 05. December 2013, 05:05: Message edited by: Albertus ]
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
Fair point about standing, although I did preceed that with "I've also." The two are linked though I think, especially as what the teams certainly in the championship seem to be doing is transferring the aggression that they used to get from the hit into the first 10 seconds of the scrum proper - before the ball's been put in.

The effect of that, coupled with the fact that hookers still haven't got to grips with actually having to hook again now (and some of the 20 year olds have never played under rules where they have to....)* means that scrums are wheeling and collapsing all over the shop. I totally get that standing up is a penalty infraction stemming from failure/inability to contest the scrum properly, but it's now happening so frequently that for whatever reason I think the new rules are contributing to it somehow. Even in the Premiership the difference from last season to this is startling.

*Admittedly, not being able to hook is something we can do something about, but it is going to take time.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
For clarity, I suppose what I'm saying is that the new process is leading to more dangerous scrums, rather than the new process in and of itself being more dangerous. The close range hit alone ought to be safer than the old engagement, but I think it makes the scrums more unstable overall.

Possibly this is something that will decrease as the new laws bed in, but it certainly isn't pretty at the moment.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Warren Gatland - Coach of the Year [Overused]

Bring on 6 Nations 2014
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
And the Six Nations is here again!

Despite a fightback England were just too poor in the first-half to deserve to win. OK, they had some bad luck, but if people put kicks into your territory these things happen and if your scrummage is dysfunctional, it's a hard day for your no 8 and scrum-half.

England's substitutions, especially behind the scrum, were weird. Quite why Nowell was withdrawn and Burrell moved to the wing in his place baffled me: hands up everyone who was surprised when the French outflanked our three-quarter line which consisted of three centres and a full-back? Oh, with a crocked Owen Farrell in support.

At least Courtney Lawes looked international class at times. He needed to be replaced though - I don't think he's fit enough: bags of strength, but he can't do the mileage.

Just as England did nothing in the first-half, Wales did little in the second. If they do that against anyone else, even Scotland, they could be in serious trouble.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Both matches today definitely Not What Was Expected. Italy do seem to be an improving side. France had the home advantage, but they showed from the off that they were going to play an attacking game.

I would like to think Scotland will similarly upset expectations tomorrow. I would like to think that, but I don't.

[ 01. February 2014, 21:11: Message edited by: Firenze ]
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
I think Mr Gatland will be giving the lads a little talk about tightening up.

Anyone else think the new rules about binding at the scrum seem to be causing more problems than they're (supposedly) solving?

I do think the TV official might have noticed that the first Italian try came off an incredibly forward pass...

Still, we won!
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:

Anyone else think the new rules about binding at the scrum seem to be causing more problems than they're (supposedly) solving?

See my posts five or so up from this...
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Can't help thinking England could have stolen a win if they'd just kept the ball in rolling mauls etc. for the remaining 15 minutes.
OH Nooo .... got to keep punting the damn thing in the air, right down the throats of the French runners.

Always looks easy from the armchair view .
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
On the bright side, the English press won't be spending the next few weeks masturbating over the Grand Slam England were guaranteed, as they did last year...

AG
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:

Anyone else think the new rules about binding at the scrum seem to be causing more problems than they're (supposedly) solving?

See my posts five or so up from this...
The general view around our Shack is that the new rules have reduced Adam Jones to a lumbering mass. The "hit" has all but gone, so the advantage a 120kg tight-head has over a 110kg loose-head is a lot less. You now want scrummaging front row players, not those suited to the initial impact. I think the French showed that.

btw, rolyn is dead right. Keepball is the #1 rugby tactic. Always was, always will be.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:

I do think the TV official might have noticed that the first Italian try came off an incredibly forward pass...

Yes, I think we found out in the Autumn Internationals that try-scoring forward passes are now allowed, as long as they are not too extremely forward.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Anyone else notice that wonderful STRAIGHT put-in during the Ireland-Scotland match.

Even the commentary team remarked how rare it was.

Also noted that the new scrum rules are exposing a lack of basic scrummaging skill - hookers unable to hook, etc.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:


Also noted that the new scrum rules are exposing a lack of basic scrummaging skill - hookers unable to hook, etc.

Problem is, as I noted upthread last year, that for the best part of two decades hooking *hasn't been* a required scrummaging skill, basic or otherwise. As a consequence we've now got internationals who have literally never been required to do it at school, colts, academies, wherever. It's consequently like re-introducing contested scrums into RL; something that was onc ebread and butter is going to be something that is wrongfooting international-level players.

It will get better with time, and hookers actually having to hook is something I very much welcome, but it's not going to be pretty whilst they essentially learn what their jobs are again. Actually, SS makes a very good point, maybe we're going to see some current internationals pushed aside (no pun intended) as we start looking for technical competency again over brute strength. Maybe some of the curent crop of household names actually haven't got it in them and are being found out by a return to a more traditional way of playing the game...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
In what some may think a rare display of common sense one of the bravest rugby players of modern times has quit.

Andy Hazell has retired on medical advice due to concussion. God knows how many knocks he has taken in an top-class rugby career of seventeen years, mostly from players bigger than himself. I hope he's OK and that others take notice of what he has done now and says in the future.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
In what some may think a rare display of common sense one of the bravest rugby players of modern times has quit.

Andy Hazell has retired on medical advice due to concussion. God knows how many knocks he has taken in an top-class rugby career of seventeen years, mostly from players bigger than himself. I hope he's OK and that others take notice of what he has done now and says in the future.

His first quote though does rather suggest that they won't and he wouldn't have when younger either...
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
If anyone in the Scotland setup has watched any videos of the England scrum they will have worked out how to beat England this weekend:

I think Scotland should be capable of this.

Enough of those penalties should be convertable into 3 points.

[ 04. February 2014, 19:01: Message edited by: Jonah the Whale ]
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
27:6 -I don't need to say anymore [Yipee]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
27:6 -I don't need to say anymore [Yipee]

I don't think I have seen a French rugby team so grumpy! You wouldn't know that Wales were without their first-choice lock forwards and had a wing playing in the centre. France on the other hand looked clueless at half-back - decent players but a poor combination.

If (and this is a big if) England beat Ireland tomorrow, the championship will be wide open but I make Ireland favourites, even at Twickenham.

In the other fixture Scotland play Italy in the annual Wooden Spoon match.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Thank goodness!

Normal service resumed.

French were grumpy until they reached the bars afterwards - #1 son tells me Cardiff was very lively last night.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I expect the Irish are pretty down now. The national side lost to England by three points and London Irish have just lost at home to Leicester by five, having missed two very kickable penalties and butchered a try opening with two minutes to go. [Frown]
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I expect the Irish are pretty down now.

England were fortunate to come away with a win considering we were pushed around all over the park in the scrum . Still, losing your own put-in is better than giving away a penalty.

Credit to the players for coming back from 10-3 down, and to the Twickenham crowd for providing the necessary encouragement .
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Is there where I crow about England beating Wales? England were more physical than Wales, just the opposite to last year's debacle at the Millenium Stadium, but the best aspect of the match was that England won penalties against Wales at the scrum - with our second-string props! We still gave penalties away and that kept Wales in the game but everything else was good.

In other news Ireland thrashed Italy - they could have scored sixty - and France won undeservedly (yet) again. I'm hoping they do the same again next week to give England a realistic chance of the championship, but that means supporting France against Ireland, which is against my nature.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
We didn't play well. Tactially we haven't moved on from last season and it showed.

Having failed with a closed-down game in the first half we should have opened it up more in the second but we didn't, and paid the price.

Leigh Halfpenny is a great player but he can't and shouldn't be expected to win a match entirely on his own.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Two major lapses in concentration by Wales were punished with 2 England tries.

As with the Ireland game I daresay home advantage helped swing things a bit. Not that I'd want to take anything away from a generally much improved England effort in this tournament.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
England have shown how serious they are by selecting Manu Tuilagi over Alex Goode for the Italy match. Let's face it, no one in international rugby is afraid of Alex Goode while Manu is another matter. Given half an hour against a tiring side he, plus the rest of England's Heavy Brigade, could do some serious damage.

OTOH, Italy's forwards always have a chance in the scrums and Dylan Hartley gifts the opposition six points on his own.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
1) Ireland deservedly won the Six Nations Championship, giving BOD a great send off.
2) England finish runners-up, with the consolation of beating the champions on the way to the Triple Crown.

(I believe Wales had a training run at the Milleneum Stadium)
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Ireland played very well - French a bit curate's egg.

England were OK but maybe should have done more when Bortolami was in the sin-bin.

We were fine, greatly helped by Scotland being reduced to 14 after the disgraceful body-slam by Hogg.

Final analysis: it was a great end for Brian O'Driscoll and Ireland were the best team overall for their 5 matches.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
Perhaps it's time to part company with Scotland and Italy. Let them form their own competition with Romania and Georgia, or anyone else of that kind of standard.

JtW
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I rather suspect that won't happen because the commercial pressure won't allow it.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
You're right of course, but it's fun to speculate. The Georgians, incidentally, are crazy about rugby. They sold out a 55000 seater stadium for a match against Russia last month.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Georgia could get 55,000 in for anything against Russia.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The much heralded West Country derby (Glaws v Bath) was, according to the commentary team, a poor game of Rugby. It was certainly badly refereed until the last ten minutes and it was violent at times with five yellow cards and two reds, both to Gloucester, one for a high tackle and an another for starting an all-in fight close to the end. Oh, and Bath won by one point thanks to a penalty try two minutes from the end.

It might not have been great rugby, but it was unmissable, like Wales v Ireland in the Good Old Days.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Anyone else notice that the summer tours have started.

It came to my attention when England were already 60 minutes into their first Test against the All Blacks. Score was 9-9, and apparently it was tight as a whelk's arse.

Some dodgy refereeing*, a few missed tackles, and moment of All Black ingenuity later, England concede a last minute try and lose the game.

Shucks.

But at least we weren't annihilated.


Nigel Owen, that Welsh unmentionable, again.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Disappointing result and it shows what depth England have, but having seen it I wasn't surprised at Yarde's yellow card. Others on both sides could have been carded at other times, but that's international rugby.

Despite their returning stars England will be playing against a NZ side that are far more together than they were at kick-off this morning.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Disappointing result and it shows what depth England have, but having seen it I wasn't surprised at Yarde's yellow card. Others on both sides could have been carded at other times, but that's international rugby.

Yeah, I had no argument with Yarde's yellow. But it was the absence of one when a Kiwi did the same thing on the line just a few minutes before that got me.

quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Despite their returning stars England will be playing against a NZ side that are far more together than they were at kick-off this morning.

Yeah, I fear our chance to win a game has been and gone.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Anyone else notice that the summer tours have started.

That would be the winter tours [Roll Eyes]

Funnily enough I thought 28-27 was close to a reasonable reflection on a game that the ABs really only broke open for about 20 minutes - when Smith, Smith and Smith really got their pace on.

The last try will annoy the ABs and I reckon Steve Hansen will have given them a bollocking.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Just for the record, I am fed up losing by narrow margins.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by me me me:
a game that the ABs really only broke open for about 20 minutes

quoting myself but as I said
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
looks like you might not have your heart in your mouth this time, Sioni ...
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Half time. The BBC minute-by-minute summed the game up as "Men against boys? Men against zygotes." Ouch.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
looks like you might not have your heart in your mouth this time, Sioni ...

My heart was sunk after about twenty minutes. [Frown]

I was afraid we'd get tonked in one of the games and our no-show for the first-half made sure of that! No that our absence was all our fault: the AB's don't want you to play. They have been the best defensive team for as long as I can remember, making fewer errors, unforced or otherwise, than anyone.

It's good to see some players back from the cold, and Cipriani appears to have his head switched on now.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Marland Yarde had a great second half ... you're right, though ... somehow England went missing in the first 30 - from the bad kick-off on
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
The final of the Super 15 was a very good game to watch, with both sides running the ball at most of the opportunities they got. Two good tries apiece. The Canterbury Crusaders didn't wake up for the first 15 minutes, but which time they were trailing by 14-0. But (as you expect from a top NZ side) they came back strongly and had got into the lead by 32-30 with 4 minutes to go. But uncharacteristically the failed to shut it down and a counterattack from a misplaced kick saw the NSW Waratahs get close enough to kick a last-minute penalty to take the game by 33-32.

And about time, as NSW have been stacked with internationals for years, but have previously failed to gel as a team and this is their first premiership in this comp.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
First Bledisloe: a grinding unattractive game that I felt the wallabies dominated - but the whistle of Jaco Peyper dominating - not, most of the time, without good cause.

Against some complacent kiwi expectations the Wallabies turned up with an outstanding front five - Slipper for me was, with Israel Folau, man of the match - the latter proof that occasionally league players really can play rugby (I don't rate Sonny Bill Williams that hot). The ABs spent 20 minutes of the game with players sin-binned, and are going to have to make adjustments to their handling of the ruck in particular if that's not to be a season-long pattern.

The ABs had one or two moments, but squandered them. the Wobblies had far more, but threw away a couple of 3 pointers which could have saved the game - and one they did take Kurtly Beale hit the upright. Scrambling AB defence saved the day for NZ a few times, and Julian Savea (probably the best of the ABs) finally repaid that 1994 tackle of Gregan on Wilson with a massive game saving hit on a rampant McCabe.

Probably a game to forget in terms of spectacle, but the ABs tilt at a world record 18 straight wins is over, deservedly, and the Wallabies probably deserved better than a 12-12 (penalties only) draw.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Congratulations to England's women for winning the Rugby World Cup in France on Sunday, and a big thank you to Ireland for efectively putting New Zealand out.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Congratulations to England's women for winning the Rugby World Cup in France on Sunday, and a big thank you to Ireland for efectively putting New Zealand out.

[Waterworks]
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
I was worried in advance of the second Bledisloe test that we might see a re-run of what happened in the England -NZ series. In the first test, the All Blacks play below par (for them) and are almost beaten, but then sweep back with their 'A-game' for a massive win the second test.

And that is indeed what happened to Australia tonight. The ABs blew them away with power, pace and relentless backing-up at speed , both in attack and defence. And that's even with McCaw in the sin -bin for 10 minutes of the first half.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Well done Wallabies over the 'Boks - couldn't watch that one. The ABs sort of neutralized and then ground down a dogged Pumas side in wet conditions ... Beauden Barrett showed explosive pace at 10 but had a shocker at the place kick (one from five) ... Julian Savea was deadly and deserved his two tries; he was best on field. Dagg on his home turf was a superb territory gainer with his massive kicks almost reaching our back yard (we live close to the park). The hidden work though was the forwards, Captain McCaw as ever leading a tough crew who in the end wore down the mammoth South American machine.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
To a dank Billesley Common on Friday night to watch Moseley come up just short against the rugby-club-formally-known-as-Leeds. Still bodes well for the season though. A great club, very much on the up - and will generally send you home smiling even when they lose.

In other news, London Welsh, my other club, are not only still looking for a win but also for a way to not get hammered every week.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:

In other news, London Welsh, my other club, are not only still looking for a win but also for a way to not get hammered every week.

They aren't the first promoted club to struggle in the top tier of English Rugby, and it's early yet. Treat the first half of the season as a learning experience, then gain points at the expense of clubs missing international players in the second half.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
The Boks deserved their cliff-hanger win over the ABs this morning ... they played the better rugby in the first half and all but shut the ABs out of the game with explosive attacks. Strangely the ABs seemed the fitter, faster side in the second half, and clawed back into the lead, but were sunk in the end by a mind-blowing 53 meter penalty. A fantastic game - for me the quiet work of Serfontein was a man of the match performance.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
So who has got their tickets for the RWC already? A colleague of mine was lucky enough to get tickets for the final. I got a couple of minor games, not the ones I was really after.

A few little matches coming up in the next few weeks. Does anyone think there is a chance the All Blacks can be beaten? What about Australia or South Africa?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
England will run them close (again) but they won't win simply becuse even when you are better than New Zealand, they win because they make fewer mistakes. Moreover England are without their first-choice locks, Parling and Launchbury, who are streets ahead of anyone else.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Spot on SS.

And McCaw is a much better (and more experienced) captain.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Two other reasons why NZ are so hard to beat are:
(1) They nearly always make you pay for your mistakes.
and (2) they never give up and are still running strongly until the final whistle has sounded- not just the hooter. Witness the win they "stole" from Australia last month with a try just as the hooter sounded.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jonah the Whale:
So who has got their tickets for the RWC already?

No joy here yet. Considering it's four for Scotland vs Japan I'm after, that's a bit galling, though possibly not as galling as discovering I could have ordered "second-best" priced tickets... and still been at one end of the ground! Ho hum, at least I'm getting donations form family for the tickets that are presents...

AG
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:
Two other reasons why NZ are so hard to beat are:
(1) They nearly always make you pay for your mistakes.
and (2) they never give up and are still running strongly until the final whistle has sounded- not just the hooter. Witness the win they "stole" from Australia last month with a try just as the hooter sounded.

It's the topography. We're used to farming both siders of the acre, so playing both sides of the whistle is a cinch.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:
Two other reasons why NZ are so hard to beat are:
(1) They nearly always make you pay for your mistakes.
and (2) they never give up and are still running strongly until the final whistle has sounded- not just the hooter. Witness the win they "stole" from Australia last month with a try just as the hooter sounded.

More seriously though (than my previous) I thought one thing stood out in the ABs performance, and that was their ability to adapt. It seemed to me that they came out with a different game approach after half time, shutting down some of the things England were doing well (not least their kick offs). Then when the rain came they adapted more rapidly than England, keeping the ball close, shutting down any risks of slippery passes. Finally, when they were down to fourteen - even before the card came out, McCaw seemed to be calling in a new strategy, and potential gaps immediately closed.

Against Scotland I would imagine Dan the Man will get a lot of game time. I hope they bring Ben Smith into fullback - I'm not convinced Israel Dagg is firing on all cylinders, and I think Ben Smith has some outstanding abilities to attack from deep defensive positions. Conrad Smith has gone home but Ryan Crotty will bring some pretty serious talent to the midfield. Sonny Bill is warming to the task at last - he's never completely convinced me before, but this time round is looking like an All Black.

And then there's Savea. [Overused]
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Rejoice, Rejoice!

Wales beat the 'Boks.

Not a brilliant game. We need to be more clinical and get the ball over the try line but a WIN nonetheless.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
A scrappy and bitty game with SA playing rather negatively, I thought ('jump on them and then kick for distance', and a rather finicky referee who seemed to get very worked up about fairly minor knock-ons (knocks-on?) but didn't appear to be too bothered about the odd tackle at throat height.
But still- we won! (Also journey from my seat back to new flat took literally five minutes!)

[ 29. November 2014, 21:27: Message edited by: Albertus ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Rejoice indeed. The BBC website says 'gutsy' Wales and that had a lot to do with it. They fronted up to the 'Boks.

Moreover, Wales did it without emptying the bench. They brought on just one substitute, Scott Williams, which must have maintained cohesion and morale compared to some games that get very loose from the hour mark. I wonder if other sides will now look at this?

Oh, and England didn't do so badly either. Our forwards look good, and Lawes did a lot of good things without giving too many pens away; we just need judgment and penetration in midfield.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
posted by Albertus
quote:
journey from my seat back to new flat took literally five minutes!
Cathedral Road, Albertus?

I've always hankered after a flat in one of the blocks beside the Arms Park...

Son #1 said the atmosphere was very tense in the last 5 minutes but is now feeling much more relaxed, if the sound of drunken singing and breaking glass in the background when he just called is anything to go by [Snigger]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
<bump> for Bath's performance at Toulouse where they won! Not only did they win but they did so by 35-15.

The only sour note was some football-style "simulation" by Yoann Huget. It was almost enough to make one hope he gets stuck at the bottom of a ruck, ideally against the All Blacks.
 
Posted by deano (# 12063) on :
 
Anyone apart from me disapointed that Steffon Armitage isn't in the England Six Nations squad announced today?

Call me old fashioned but I think you pick your best players and if there is a better English Flanker in the game at the moment then I've yet to see them.

To be honest, come the world cup if we don't win or come very close, then people are going to be pointing fingers not only at Stuart Lancaster, but the ERB as well.

It would have been better to include SA, tell him the jersey is yours to grab so show us what you can do in the six nations. If he does great, if he doesn't then Easter, Morgan - if he recovers in time of course - etc will step up and nobody can point fingers.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I'm disappointed too, as Armitage has overshadowed players from the Southern hemisphere and France in all the club tournaments.

The only problem is that he's playing at no 8 right now, presumably because he does the scrum work better than the far taller men who play on the flank (SA is only 5'9", Toulon's regular flanker's are both 6'5"). That would IMHO make him a candidate for England's no 8 position where Morgan is out and Billy Vunipola, while a wrecking ball in broken play, isn't so good in the tight and no one, apart from possibly Julian Salvi of Leicester, is as good at ruck-ball turnovers.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Looks like some hopefuls will get a game against Wales next month as quite a few of England's first-choice players got injured in the European Championship matches over the weekend.

It worked out pretty well for the clubs though. Four English teams through to the quarter-finals (very good), although they are up against three French teams plus Leinster, all away from home (not so good).

Come on Wales! Where are the regional teams?
 
Posted by deano (# 12063) on :
 
Farrell is out. Cips to start against Wales? Hope so.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by deano:
Farrell is out. Cips to start against Wales? Hope so.

Wales would love Danny Cipriani to start against them. He's tougher than he was, but I'm certain that Wales will send any number of runners down the no 10 channel, and their entire three-quarter line enjoy contact.

With Farrell out I'd rather have have Steven Mylor in the 23, because he's more suited to England's strengths.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Are there actually fifteen fit rugby players left in England at the mo?

AG
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Are there actually fifteen fit rugby players left in England at the mo?

AG

From memory there were never fifteen fit players on any Wednesday through the season. By Friday, things may have changed.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
As of this morning England have 23 fit rugby players so the match is on. Rumour had it that Martin Johnson was doing circuits to provide some backup if the second-riow crisis got much worse!

How do shipmates think the matches will go? This weekends games are:

Wales v England (tonight)
Italy v Ireland (Saturday)
France v Scotland (Saturday)

I take Wales to win, partly because of England's injuries but mostly because it's in Cardiff. Ireland, despite retirements and injuries ought to be too good for Italy but Scotland just might do the job against France, who are vulnerable early in the tournament and also because, by tradition, everyone in the team is loathed by at least one other player, even if it's only by club affiliation.

[ 06. February 2015, 12:32: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Isn't it a wonderful morning to be an Englishman?!

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
Yes.

That was genuinely unexpected.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
Bloody awful morning to be Welsh, though, or at least Welsh in rugby nationality. What a shower. They had the whole nation behind them, this is the most important game of the year in many ways, they were expected to win, they took an early lead- and then they just couldn't get it together. And now all the Tims and Roddys and Ruperts and their vacuously adoring white-jerseyed blonde girlfriends are having- deservedly- a good old laugh at us.

I don't know what was sizzling in Gatland's frying pan this morning but it should have been 15 pairs of bollocks. I am thinking of supporting France for the rest of the tournament.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
It was a Very Good Evening indeed! England's rookie midfield was first rate and Wales three-quarters, all of them bigger and more experienced achieved virtually nothing all day. Warren Gatland is plain, dead wrong to put the defeat down to "Individual errors" - England changed their tactics at half-time and Wales didn't respond, which is a coaching & leadership issue.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
My house is in mourning.

The sons are distraught, going around the house muttering: 'What on earth happened?' and 'Pam y duwiau o rygbi wedi gadael ni?' (Have the gods of rugby cast us out?).
 
Posted by deano (# 12063) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
My house is in mourning.

The sons are distraught, going around the house muttering: 'What on earth happened?' and 'Pam y duwiau o rygbi wedi gadael ni?' (Have the gods of rugby cast us out?).

A) you were beaten by the England B team
B) Yes. Very much so.

It was the roof that did for you of course.

Hee....

[ 07. February 2015, 14:36: Message edited by: deano ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by deano:
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
My house is in mourning.

The sons are distraught, going around the house muttering: 'What on earth happened?' and 'Pam y duwiau o rygbi wedi gadael ni?' (Have the gods of rugby cast us out?).

A) you were beaten by the England B team
B) Yes. Very much so.

It was the roof that did for you of course.

Hee....

Some of the incomers, like Kruis, Ford and Joseph are going to take some shifting.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
After fairly close games at the weekend (Ireland won by 23 points, but their tries were both scored when Italy were a man down), news comes of this match in Belgium.

Embarrassing all round.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
I've just seen a try awarded to England when an Italian player had the ball when it touched the ground...

And the fourth official was meant to stop these f**k-ups!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Yeah, even as an Englishman I thought that should never have been given.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Fuck me, who writes Cipriani's scripts?

Incidentally, I agree about that try - very surprised to see it given.

AG
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Fuck me, who writes Cipriani's scripts?

George Ford, he's set things up nicely for him.
quote:


Incidentally, I agree about that try - very surprised to see it given.

AG

Me too. Overall everything changed with England winning a penalty after Brown was carried off. I think the ref altered his view of the game then!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I thought Twelvetrees was excellent, and he came on at that time. But Italy seemed to give up in the last half hour. Disappointing, really.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Agree with you about Twelvetrees, he did well against Wales in just a few minutes too. Jonny May had a patchy game - does anyone think Joseph may stay on the wing in his place?
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Not a convincing Welsh performance but still, we won.

Think the English will have to tighten things up considerably before they meeting the Irish.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Not a convincing Welsh performance but still, we won.

Think the English will have to tighten things up considerably before they meeting the Irish.

Yes to the first and emphatically yes to the second. Our line defence was pretty shabby at times and we missed tackles. Moreover Ireland won't throw 11 points away like Italy did.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Is the dog OK?

AG
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Is the dog OK?

AG

I see that it was described as a "Slight domestic incident". I'm not sure Castro' can be involve in a slight anything.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Least of all ending in that many stitches!

Adrian
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Go on, who would be a rugby ref? I can see why George Clancy made the critical decision he did at the end of the Scotland v Italy match but oh, it's tough and the margins are so tight.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
C'mon Wales! All of England hopes that you can beat Ireland on March 14th in Cardiff.

That's another way of saying that Ireland were way better than England and must be wondering how they only won the game by ten points.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Really disappointed with England's performance against Ireland. Fair play to Ireland, they outplayed us in almost every area of the game and deserved their win. I'm only glad they didn't win it by the margin they deserved!

I think we can probably expect some changes now players are returning from injuries.

In the pack I think we'll see one of Atwood and Cruis making way for Courtney Lawes. Atwood gave away too many penalties, and what was up with the lineout? I'd also like to see someone coming in for James Haskell - again, gave away too many penalties (that was his fault of old).

I think Lancaster will stick with George Ford at half back, and I think that's the right move. Youngs looked off the boil at SH - really need him or Danny Care back to their best, otherwise Wigglesworth or even Joe Simpson will end up pushing their way in.

Three quarters I'm not sure we've got quite right yet. I wonder if Lancaster will a Twelvetrees/Joseph combo a go? I like Burrell as a player (I support Northampton after all) but think Twelvetrees might just edge him.

Back three - if Brown is fit he walks straight back in at FB. I prefer Nowell to May on the wing. Still not convinced about the selections at wing, though. Can't Ashton (or even Banahan) rediscover some of their form please?!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Can't help but agree with you. Attwood & Kruis, especially the latter, have done well, but Haskell is a liability, especially compared to Wood who is nearly as good as Richard Hill. Ideally we need Lawes back with Parling to run the line-out.

I don't think our centres did much wrong against Ireland: their defence was superb and Watson & Nowell did all they could. Goode simply wasn't.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Did no one else watch the matches this weekend?

Thought we were a lot better against the Irish - yes, slightly lucky with the last penalty decision but before that our defence was magnificent. For those who would have preferred a more open game, so would I: but the stakes were too high for that and, to be blunt, I'm amazed there wasn't a serious brawl before the end.

England played efficiently but, God, they're dull to watch: if only the Scots had some defence and more stamina they'd be a far more entertaining prospect. As it is, they showed in the first half some real flair as a team which one hopes can be built on in time for the World Cup.

As for the match between Italy and France, I thought Eddie Butler summed it up beautifully on the Beeb when he said it was a dreadful day in Rome and left the listener to decide whether he was referring to the weather (which was appalling) or what was happening in the Stadio Olimpico.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
How can you say that England were efficient but dull? In the first quarter, and sporadically at other times England they were exactly the opposite. They were exciting, but woefully inefficient! Had they been efficient then the score would have been about 19-0 after fifteen minutes and we would have put fifty points on them (estimates range from five to six utterly butchered try-scoring chances). I reckon we have gifted the title to Ireland, again.

I'm also amazed that Wales v Ireland didn't turn into an allinscrap, but doubt the Welsh would have had the energy for it - their defence was awesome and legal too!
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
Will the real France finally show up this weekend and ruin England's six nations? If they are as bad as they have been at times this season then I think England can still pull it off. I'm not counting on it though.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The real France consists of a decent scrum (though Kayser really ought to start) and a capable back three. Elsewhere they are pretty clueless, especially the coaching staff.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
So, any last-minute predictions on how the Six Nations is going to finish today? Ireland are in the box seat, surely?!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I thought Wales would win in Rome, but their second half, even with that last-gasp Italian reply gives them a serious chance of the title.

I make them favourite now, so all my coworkers will be happy on Monday.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Just pray that Dan Biggar's failure to tackle doesn't cost us the championship...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Oh well, looks like Wales won't win it after all. Ireland have thrashed Scotland, who weren't much better than Italy, so England's main hope must be that France are as generous as Italy and Scotland.
 
Posted by Sipech (# 16870) on :
 
Bloody hell, that was an astonishing day of rugby. There were so many small moments that seemingly conspired to grant Ireland their barely-deserved win. Stuart Hogg's drop gave them the points advantage and the wrongful awarding of the French try (the one where the guy had a foot out of play and dropped it) turned out to be pivotal.

Entertaining, but ultimately heartbreaking and frustrating. [Waterworks]
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Actually the French guy didn't have his foot in touch before the ball was down - there were at least 4 replays that showed that. As for control of the ball - his hand was on it when it touched the ground so the try was awarded.

Look, the English played well but the French also started to come good; and don't forget the 9 points (3 conversions and a penalty) the French gave away because Plisson was having an off day.

Plus Lawes should have been at least yellow carded for the high spear tackle on Plisson.

Ireland are champions - yes, the Scots could have put up a better show of it but they didn't.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Actually the French guy didn't have his foot in touch before the ball was down - there were at least 4 replays that showed that. As for control of the ball - his hand was on it when it touched the ground so the try was awarded.

I agree with this, and I am an an England supporter. I am still breathless. I watched 160 minutes of rugby and saw 170 points scored (I missed that dull, low-scoring Scotland-Ireland game).

What I want to know is why don't England, Ireland and Wales always play like they need to win by 20 points or more. Can't they just pretend they need to win by a huge margin?

[ 21. March 2015, 20:18: Message edited by: Jonah the Whale ]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Plus Lawes should have been at least yellow carded for the high spear tackle on Plisson.

It wasn't high and it wasn't a spear tackle, but apart from that, you're spot on.

If you want to make a case for a yellow card for being late then you would have more chance. You'd still be wrong, but you would be closer to being right! [Smile]

But at the end of the day, England scored enough points to win it. They just turned the ball over and forgot to tackle once or twice too often and gifted France too many points. Too bad.

Thoroughly entertaining day though.

[Edited for code. [Hot and Hormonal] ]

[ 21. March 2015, 20:20: Message edited by: Imaginary Friend ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I'd like to add a word for the referees who, on an utterly chaotic day made far fewer errors than the players.

Noted too that Nigel Owens was ref for the England - France match, Steve Walsh having retired: there are mixed messages about how much notice Steve Walsh gave, but communication wasn't the best point of his refereeing either.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I thought Nigel Owens had a great game. Got most of the big calls right, didn't make any obvious errors, and kept the game flowing. There was one particularly good moment near the end. England had a scrum in the French half, and you could clearly hear on the mic that Owens said to the English front row "I am going to referee this properly. If you bore in looking for a penalty, I will penalise you. But if the French infringe then I will penalise them. Understand?" At the scrum, the English went as straight as any scrum ever does, the French went around, and England got the penalty. Well done all round.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Owens is one of the best referees around at the moment.

And bearing in mind what happened to him when he refereed at Twickenham in November I take my hat off to him for the way he handled yesterday's match.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jonah the Whale:
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Actually the French guy didn't have his foot in touch before the ball was down - there were at least 4 replays that showed that. As for control of the ball - his hand was on it when it touched the ground so the try was awarded.

I agree with this, and I am an an England supporter. I am still breathless. I watched 160 minutes of rugby and saw 170 points scored (I missed that dull, low-scoring Scotland-Ireland game).

What I want to know is why don't England, Ireland and Wales always play like they need to win by 20 points or more. Can't they just pretend they need to win by a huge margin?

Just on the come-down from watching all 240 mins... On your last point, there is a simple solution, one I've been advocating for years (as a watching layman), and one which will sort out the game once and for all....

Upweight the points for a try. It's ludicrous you get 60% of the points off a penalty as you would for crossing the line. And, while we're at it, reduce the occasions for which a penalty kick at goal can be taken.

Rugby League's big criticism of union has been that it is dull and attritional. Saturday showed there's nothing actually wrong with the rules of Union which bog down the play (another League criticism about contested scrums and ruck/mauling) - just incentivise the players to run the bl**dy ball rather than reliying on engineering a penalty infringement from the opposition!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
For goodness sake don't increase the points for a try or decrease those for a penalty! All that will do is increase still further the number of penalties given! Unless a side is likely to conceded points when they infringe, they will infringe more often (especially at rucks and mauls).

By all means dish out more yellow cards, as that opens up space and does lead to tries, as we saw when that useless oaf Haskell spent ten minutes off the field, but we don't need infalted try scores.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
For goodness sake don't increase the points for a try or decrease those for a penalty! All that will do is increase still further the number of penalties given! Unless a side is likely to conceded points when they infringe, they will infringe more often (especially at rucks and mauls).

To be honest I'd replace most penalty options with a tap and go only, and infringements which lead to a penalty should be a straight yellow. That ought to keep both sides honest...

If I was being really radical then I'd go for points from only tries, conversions and drop goals, straight yellows for any infringement, no replacements (even for injury - you're just a man down), no kicking tees, and no lifting in the line-outs....

While we're at it bring back shirt letters...
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
What an astounding day of rugby that was! I think Ben Youngs was correct in his assessment of where England lost the Six Nations: all those mistakes and wasted opportunities against Scotland...

On making the game more exciting, and trying to see more tries scored, why not introduce a bonus point for scoring four tries, as they have in the premiership and world cup?
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by iamchristianhearmeroar:
What an astounding day of rugby that was! I think Ben Youngs was correct in his assessment of where England lost the Six Nations: all those mistakes and wasted opportunities against Scotland...

On making the game more exciting, and trying to see more tries scored, why not introduce a bonus point for scoring four tries, as they have in the premiership and world cup?

I will go away and google furiously, but I'm pretty sure the last time they looked at bonus points for the 6N it was turned down on the grounds that, I think Ireland, would the previous year have achieved the grand slam and not won the tournament. England would have lost one but topped the table on bonus points....
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
So, England fans, what's your match-day 23 for the RWC assuming everyone England qualified is fit and available?

Here's mine (I suspect Lancaster may differ!)

1 - Corbisiero
2 - Hartley
3 - Cole
4 - Lawes
5 - Launchbury
6 - Wood
7 - Robshaw
8 - Vunipola (B)

9 - Youngs
10 - Ford

11 - Nowell
12 - Tuilagi
13 - Joseph
14 - Watson
15 - Brown

16 - Marler/Vunipola (M)
17 - Youngs (T)
18 - Brookes/Wilson
19 - Parling
20 - Morgan
21 - Care
22 - Farrell
23 - Burgess!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Ah, this is where the fun starts. Quite a few differences as you'll see. Again, assuming everyone is fit and available:

Here's mine (I suspect Lancaster may differ!)

1 - Corbisiero
2 - Youngs (T)
3 - Cole
4 - Parling
5 - Launchbury
6 - Wood
7 - Robshaw
8 - Morgan

9 - Youngs
10 - Ford

11 - Nowell
12 - Tuilagi
13 - Eastmond
14 - Joseph
15 - Brown

Subs:
16 - Marler
17 - Hartley
18 - Brookes
19 - Lawes
20 - Vunipola (B)
21 - Care
22 - Cipriani (and for goodness sake, play him!)
23 - Watson

Spares (squad of 35 I believe):

M Vunipola
Wilson
Webber
Kruis
Croft
S Armitage
Wigglesworth
Barritt
Slade
Strettle
Wade
Burgess

Steffon Armitage is my true wild card. With him, Robshaw and Wood in the back row I don't think the opposition would ever get the ball.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Is anyone else out there still attempting to do battle with the World Cup ticketing shambles?

I lost out in the ballot, lost out on the secondary allocation and now, having 'bought' tickets for a match when the last lot were released, have just been emailed to say that due to a 'technical error' the tickets I thought were mine aren't and there are no more available.

What a cock-up.

And has anyone at Twickenham yet explained why Debbie Jevans walked out?
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Was going to get 4 to Scotland vs Japan at Gloucester as it was the day after Father Knotweeed's birthday, and an hour down the road, but when I didn't get them I said "arseholes" to them. I could have paid £65/ticket and still been at one end of the ground. That's not at one end up the side, that's actually at the goal end.

I'll carry on paying a fiver to see the Blues, and know I can get a pint of real ale and a soss and chips at half time and still be back in my seat for kick-off, thank you.

AG
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
There's some weird stuff going on in the European U18 championship. The final will be between France and Georgia. Georgia won their semi on penalties after drawing 6-6 with Italy. They also won their quarter-final on penalties after 8-8 with Ireland. Yet another match went to penalties. Portugal beat Scotland after a thrilling 0-0 draw.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
I'm still in the "ignoring the world cup phase" - priority number one is keeping everything crossed for Moseley's last three matches this season.... Nothing with Mose is ever simple or straightforward - you'd have thought i'd have worked that out by now...

Up the red and black.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
If you registered for World Cup tickets you can't ignore it because you're inbox will be under siege from the organisers trying to flog various items of Cup related tat.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
<bump> (appropiately for this thread)

What's going on at Welford Road? Leicester Tigers are, almost unthinkably losing top class players. Moreover these are forwaards which for as long as I can remember has been the basis of the Tigers strength (since the days of lettered shirts and the Redfern brothers to my certain knowledge)

Last year Thomas Waldrom left for Exeter and at the end of this year Geoff Parling, probably England's best lock and now Julian Salvi, possibly the best flanker in the Premiership are leaving, again for Exter. No one is going to want to play Exter next year, least of all Leicester.

Any more for any more?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
They're going to be without Manu Tuilagi for a bit as well.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
They're going to be without Manu Tuilagi for a bit as well.

At least this season has shown that England have strength at centre. This makes the "Bath Axis" of Ford, Eastmond and Joseph more likely than ever.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
The World Cup organisers are now sending out emails offering more tickets for some matches.

For others (such as Wales-Uruguay) they're having trouble selling - hardly surprising seeing that what would normally be a mid-priced seat (c£40-60) is on sale at £125.

We're going to see Wales-Ireland in August, sitting in top-price seats - tickets for 3 of us will cost less than one ticket for Wales Uruguay!

Obviously the English RU knows something we don't and is convinced the valleys are full of closet millionaires... [Killing me]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Looks like England's less stable characters are being weeded out one way or another. Dylan Hartley will miss the first match of the World Cup. Personally I reckon he's lucky to get the minimum, four-week ban as his disciplinary record is awful. Mike Brown had better watch his step.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
This. Playoffs are un-British, unfair, and unwanted.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Looks like England's less stable characters are being weeded out one way or another. Dylan Hartley will miss the first match of the World Cup. Personally I reckon he's lucky to get the minimum, four-week ban as his disciplinary record is awful. Mike Brown had better watch his step.

He's out of the World Cup period. No alternative IMHO and it's not as if we don't have adequate replacements. Our top four hookers are now Youngs, Webber, Cowan-Dickie and Jamie George. While none of them are as good as Richard Hibbard they are pretty useful.

Anyway, *the* big club game tomorrow then on Sunday England play the Barbarians giving a few hopefuls (Cowan-Dickie, Henry Slade and Josh Beaumont) a run out and Launchbury returns to the fray.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
This. Playoffs are un-British, unfair, and unwanted.

Well, unwanted except by the majority of the clubs in the Championship (last time they voted on it).

The wider problem is the RFU want a professional second tier, and don't want to help fund that happening. Without the play-offs we'd just have de facto ringfencing as the relegated team came down and went straight back up the next season.

Bristol are an outlier because they have consistently failed to rise to the big match occasion for 6 years, but leaving them to one side the only non-relegated-the-season-before teams to have gone up since the playoffs came in are Exeter, and London Welsh in 2012.

Bris and Wuss moan that they "need to get out of the Championship" - have they considered the relegation option if they're that desperate? I'm sure Cov and Rosslyn Park would gladly step up and take their places...
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
This. Playoffs are un-British, unfair, and unwanted.

Well, unwanted except by the majority of the clubs in the Championship (last time they voted on it).
Of course they did! If there's one or two teams who are clearly better than everyone else in the division, then the other ten or eleven teams are always going to vote for a mechanism that still gives them a shot at promotion. That's politics, but it doesn't make it right.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
This. Playoffs are un-British, unfair, and unwanted.

Well, unwanted except by the majority of the clubs in the Championship (last time they voted on it).
Of course they did! If there's one or two teams who are clearly better than everyone else in the division, then the other ten or eleven teams are always going to vote for a mechanism that still gives them a shot at promotion. That's politics, but it doesn't make it right.
See my point on the wider problem. Outside the premiership it's not all roses. There's a gang of clubs at the top of the sport that want to keep all the sweets for themselves, a governing body that wants a professional second tier and free gangway to the top tier but not to pay for any of that to happen...

When they came up with the "tier 2 must be professional" line ten years ago or however long it was, the RFU slashed 4 clubs from the championship to take it down to 12, but made up for the loss of income to the remaining clubs from number of games by introducing the playoffs and the B&I Cup.

AFAIC the answer is play-offs between the championship winner and Premiership last place, home and away. Otherwise, what's the solution (apart from ringfencing - which is exactly what you described the playoffs as; un-British, unfair and unwanted - although most of the premiership clubs want it)?

Bris and Wuss have got lucky with multi-millionaires/billionaires getting their cheque books out. In Bris' case, that's taking a traditional big club back to where the supporters believe it should be. In Wuss' case, it's taken a historic junior club to the top of the tree. There's an argument, certainly, for a 14 team premiership to accommodate all the clubs with the cheque books to pay for admission, but I'm not sure that's particularly fair either if they can't do the business on the field - I'm still waiting for Leeds to finish eighth next season and be assumed into the ringfenced prem on the basis of geography and shares....

Presumably, when I win the euromillions and bankroll Moseley back to where I and their fans believe they should be, we can expand the prem to 15, because clearly here cash is the decider.

The real elephant in the room, of course, is that both Bris and Wuss would probably struggle in the prem. Too good for one tier by a country mile (allegedly, unless Bris are away at Pirates or Wuss in Jersey - and it was only 2013-14 that Bris first won away at Billesley Common...), not good enough for the one above.

The top team should go up (or at least play-off with the bottom one of the prem), no argument there. But rugby in this country has got a few more problems top to bottom than just who gets promoted from the Championship, and that in itself is but a symptom of the wider malaise.

Sorry, this is veering towards purgatorial, happy to take it there...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Another of England's Bad Lads has blotted his copybook in the run-up to the World Cup.

Tuilagi & Hartley out, no comment yet on Cipriani, are players trying to solve Stuart Lancaster's selection dilemmas?
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
looks like it.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Makes our problems with George North's injuries look like a mere nothing and at least Jonathan Davies' withdrawal means a chance for Scott Williams.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Just seen the awful news that Jerry Collins and his wife have died in a road crash in France.

[Votive]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Good news on the sports front for Australia (to make up for losing The Ashes).

This was for The Rugby Championship though, not the Bledisloe Cup which is a separate match next week.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
All Blacks maybe a bit uncharacteristically disorganised this week but all credit to Australia.
What about South Africa; did they play the B team?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
All Blacks maybe a bit uncharacteristically disorganised this week but all credit to Australia.
What about South Africa; did they play the B team?

Looks like the "non-B" team. Bakkies Botha has retired, so Matfield & co didn't have their minder.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
I thought Bismark Du Plessis was their enforcer.
Be interesting to see if the Pumas can back up and do it again.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
I thought Bismark Du Plessis was their enforcer.

Nah, he just *thinks* he is. Most hookers are like that and have been since three-man front rows were introduced c 1900. Look at Dylan Hartley and the up-and-coming Luke Cowan-Dickie who has the advantage of being Cornish.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Warren Gatland has lost the plot: he's just released Hibbard from the squad for the world cup - the best defensive hooker in the northern hemisphere.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Warren Gatland has lost the plot: he's just released Hibbard from the squad for the world cup - the best defensive hooker in the northern hemisphere.

Seconded (and I'm English). Hibbard's good all round and the one Wales' opponents would least like to play against. Must be personal.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
What did people think of the weekend internationals? Scotland fought like they meant it, as they did in three games in the Five Nations, but came up short yet again. England and France appear to have swapped roles with England's backs looking deadly despite new centres while their pack couldn't hold France's. Then again it was England's second-string front row against France's best three and Calum Clark, in for Robshaw, is even less of a #7 (as well as being a hothead).

In other totally unsurprising news the ABs took the Bledisloe Cup, thrashing Australia at Fortress Eden Park.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I only saw the first half of England v France. I thought England looked okay. Inventive behind the scrum, as you say, but our defence seemed organised and that big number 12 can't half put a hit in! Having not seen much rugby for the past few years, I can't really comment much more widely than that forty minutes, but I'll be interested to see if the pack gets a bit better when the front row is at full strength.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
I only saw the first half of England v France. I thought England looked okay. Inventive behind the scrum, as you say, but our defence seemed organised and that big number 12 can't half put a hit in! Having not seen much rugby for the past few years, I can't really comment much more widely than that forty minutes, but I'll be interested to see if the pack gets a bit better when the front row is at full strength.

I'm sure our first-choice front row will do much better and our attack looked good with, remember, two centres on debut playing alongside a #10 they haven't played alongside before. Sam is definitely worth taking as no centre in world rugby wants to play against him and he offloads very well, which will bring the back three in (whoever they are). I don't know about starting a game with him but when the opposition are blowing a bit he could be just the job.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Eng-Fra was a bit of a nailbiter wasn't it, but given how many of our first-string pack weren't playing I think Eng did well.

I'm sure the scrum will tighten up with some of the first team back in, but my big worry is the line-out which has never been Tom Youngs's greatest strength. Stats they were showing during the match showed Jamie George had the best percentage in the line-out in last season's premiership. Don't know him at all. Can anyone else comment on his scrummaging and general play?

Slade and Burgess could both make the final cut, meaning Burrell may be out of luck...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Jamie George has the advantage of playing for Saracens, so most of the time he has two of Alistair Hargreaves, Jim Hamilton and George Kruis at lock. I won't say they make bad throwing look good, but they don't make many mistakes. George is a good, vigorous all-round forward but we have plenty of those at #2, including Mike Haywood, Dylan "Mad dog" Hartley's deputy at Northampton.

We'll see on Saturday if Mike Brown really has recovered from his knocks; if he hasn't I hope Lancaster has the bottle to select Anthony Watson, who has a bit of Jason Robinson about him, at FB instead of the decidedly limited Alex Goode.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Well, Courtney Lawes runs a pretty tight ship in the lineout, so hopefully George will have some decent, well-timed jumping to aim for.

Agree about Watson and Jason Robinson. But...Robinson was a class act on the wing as well as FB, and I think Watson can be too. Alex Goode...hmmm, I wasn't really a fan, but I thought he did pretty well in the match on Saturday. Certainly wouldn't have expected Mike Brown (or Ben Foden for that matter) to have looked for that kick-pass to Johnny May.

As one of the pundits (can't remember which) said, it's more a question for Lancaster of what style of rugby he wants England to play, and then that will dictate who he picks where. So, if he wants three distributors on the field, it's Slade somewhere in the centres and Goode at FB. If George Ford on his own is considered distributor enough (which he may be), start Browne at FB, and then take your pick at centre.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Alex Goode has played a lot of Rugby at #10, so he's got that kind of vision, but he hasn't the dynamism and awesome courage that Mike Brown brings to FB (or Ben Foden) still less the raw pace of Watson or Jack Nowell.

I agree about the midfield and I'd like a genuine distributor alongside Jamie Joseph (who is a shoo-in). England had Luther Burrell there in the Six Nations but I'd like to start with Slade (now that Kyle Eastmond has been given the cold shoulder) with Sam Burgess on the bench to change the game later on.

With all that talent I really think the RWC is England's to lose.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Jonathan not Jamie Joseph surely?!

So 10, 12, 13 you'd go for:

10 - Ford
12 - Slade
13 - Joseph

It would be fantastic in attack, but I wonder if it might be considered a bit porous in defence? Ford doesn't have the stopping power of a Farrell or Wilkinson. I'm not saying we shouldn't start with this 10, 12, 13 combo, but I think Lancaster and particularly Farrell senior will go for something more defensive as the starting line-up, so Barritt (fitness permitting) or Burgess to start and Slade on the bench. I fear poor Burrell may lose out here, unless Barritt is unfit.

Still on fullback, I'd certainly go for Brown over Goode, if Brown is fit, not least for strength under the high ball. Playing against SA or NZ we can expect a barage of high balls with very strong kick chases. This used to be a real strength of the English game when we last won the RWC, with Cohen going after those pinpoint bombs from Wilko. Don't seem to use that so much right now.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
quote:
With all that talent I really think the RWC is England's to lose.
I'm not sure even I would be that optimistic! The RWC is usually New Zealand's to lose, and they have done that quite often in the past.

I'd say that looking at the amount of young talent in our squad the 2019 RWC may be ours to lose!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by iamchristianhearmeroar:
Jonathan not Jamie Joseph surely?!

So 10, 12, 13 you'd go for:

10 - Ford
12 - Slade
13 - Joseph

It would be fantastic in attack, but I wonder if it might be considered a bit porous in defence? Ford doesn't have the stopping power of a Farrell or Wilkinson. I'm not saying we shouldn't start with this 10, 12, 13 combo, but I think Lancaster and particularly Farrell senior will go for something more defensive as the starting line-up, so Barritt (fitness permitting) or Burgess to start and Slade on the bench. I fear poor Burrell may lose out here, unless Barritt is unfit.


You were spot on about the centres. Looks like we have two solid ones and two silky ones. I reckon England will start with Barritt and Joseph against games Australia and Wales, but I wouldn't be surprised to see one or both of Burgess and Slade start the matches against Fiji and Uruguay.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I reckon Warren Gatland (Wales' coach) has lost it. After sidelining Adam Jones last season (OK, not at his best, but a very useful stand-by) he then dropped Hibbard from the World Cup squad and now, having selected George North for the World Cup squad he admits that "one or two more knocks could end his career". If North is that close to a career ending injury (at age 23) what is he doing in the World Cup squad having not played since March and making his comeback game is tomorrow's pre-World Cup warm up match against Ireland?

If concern for players' welfare really was "paramount" (an overused word IMNSHO) George North wouldn't be selected for the RWC and might perhaps already be retired.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
We read that the same, SS.

Meanwhile, if you look at the 'obvious' 8 sidelined by Stuart Lancaster, you'd have the basis of a goodish team. The decision to leave Cipriani out is astonishing.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
We read that the same, SS.

Meanwhile, if you look at the 'obvious' 8 sidelined by Stuart Lancaster, you'd have the basis of a goodish team. The decision to leave Cipriani out is astonishing.

Leaving Goode in is even more so as there are already three people who play FB and #10 better than he does. Cipriani is a genuine alternative.

[ 28. August 2015, 12:58: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Son #2 has a theory: says that Lancaster can pick teams which will reduce opposition to confused/incredulous laughter, thereby gaining England an advantage.

[I'm not saying I agree with him [Snigger] ]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
This tactic hasn't worked very well for the footballers so far...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
This tactic hasn't worked very well for the footballers so far...

It didn't work at the previous rugby world cup either. Martin Johnson was so out of his depth it was painful. Mind you, all my Welsh friends loved that!
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
I think it's because Goode plays in the mode that Lancaster favours - dynamic, yes, but controlled, played to patterns.

So, I had a thought. As the RWC is getting closer there's lots of stuff flying around about the team of 2003 (Building Jerusalem film out soon?). I wondered which of the current squad would get into that 2003 team which started the RWC final. I don't think it would be many. (Let's ignore the obvious general increase in fitness from then to now).

2003 team which started the RWC final was:

1 - Woodman
2 - Thompson
3 - Vickery
4 - Johnson
5 - Kay
6 - Hill
7 - Back
8 - Dallaglio

9 - Dawson
10 - Wilkinson

11 - Cohen
12 - Greenwood (but wears 13)
13 - Tindall - (but wears 12)
14 - Cohen
15 - Lewsey

I think in the front row Vickery would be a shoe in. Woodman was solid, but could possibly lose out to a more dynamic player like Marler or Vunipola. If Hartley hadn't been a naughty boy he could have pushed Thompson out as Hartley can, well, actually throw the ball. None of the three hookers we have in the current squad would push Wally out for me though.

Second row, obviously Johnson wouldn't be pushed out. I think there could be an argument for one of Lawes or Launchbury replacing Ben Kay.

Back row - no change from 2003, obviously!

Half backs - again, no change.

Centres - Will Greenwood is the player England have been looking for since...Will Greenwood so he would in at Inside. I think Joseph would probably have had a sniff at Outside instead on Tindall.

Back three, Robinson is a dead cert. Maybe Watson in for Cohen, but Cohen was bloody effective at what he did. Brown in for Lewsey, but possibly not.

So, I reckon maybe 4 or 5 out of the 15 could go to players from the current squad. But, that is wild speculation of course. What do others think?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I agree with most of that. Ben Kay was our main line-out weapon while Johnson was his minder. I'd put Launchbury or Parling in for Kay, as both are excellent in the line-out but Lawes would be an essential bench player, like Tim Rodber or Martin Corry.

Greenwood and Joseph would be a joy to watch while I would leave Cohen in place, have Robinson at FB and then it's a toss-up between Jack Nowell and Anthony Watson on the "other" wing.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
The house is in deep gloom: terrible injuries to Rhys Webb and Leigh Halfpenny look likely to scupper Wales's World Cup campaign before it even begins.

Can Biggar do some of the kicking? Of course, but he hasn't the consistency of Halfpenny.

As for replacing Webb, it looks as if the deeply flawed Mike Phillips is likely to be brought back - not a prospect that fills one with joy.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
Splendid performance by England in the first half, which rather fell apart during the replacements in the second.

On another note, the high point of weekend rugby was surely the mighty Moseley's victory over London Scottish!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:
Splendid performance by England in the first half, which rather fell apart during the replacements in the second.

Ain't it always the same? I take the view that if you are going to replace the front-row, which seems to be a universal ploy, it makes sense to replace it as a unit. Similarly with midfield changes and I feel that Barritt and Joseph did enough to start the World Cup. They tick the boxes for defence, attack and intelligence, and considering that it was their first time as a pairing with Jared Payne and Robbie Henshaw against them, they did very well.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
first live match of the season tomorrow (I'm not counting the farcical friendly vs France the other week).

Off to watch Moseley away at Bedford tomorrow afternoon, and if that doesn't quite hit the spot I may well do Oxford University vs some Japanese side on Sunday as well.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Rugby world cup begins shortly.
Any advances on an Ireland /England final won by Ireland?
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I don't think England will make the final. I reckon they'll bottle it in the semis (probably against the All Blacks although I haven't checked the schedule to see if that's possible) because I'm not sure we're mentally there yet.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
I think whoever wins the group of death (and it is looking increasingly unlikely to be Wales, with their injury woes) will make it to the final, and will suffer against the All Blacks. I'm hoping it will be England but well aware that that is wishful thinking.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
It doesn't matter. Winning is everything and England will be very, very lucky to avoid playing the Big Three Southern Hemisphere countries if they get to the final, which is how it should be, because true winners ought not to rely on others doing the hard work for them.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
The All Blacks have evolved some kind of mystique as they rarely lose but in a tournament anything is possible. England were in NZ last year and signalled they were very strong up front. The ABs have an aging pack. If any side can deny them possession they are beatable. I think at home,England will be very staunch but Ireland are my pick.

The other issue is the officiating. Rugby refs have redefined the breakdown so many times in recent years that players have had to learn each refs proclivities at the cost of penalties.

Last thing, if Wayne Barnes refs the ABs they tend to lose. Very strange but he is a bogy ref for them.
 
Posted by Cod (# 2643) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
It doesn't matter. Winning is everything and England will be very, very lucky to avoid playing the Big Three Southern Hemisphere countries if they get to the final, which is how it should be, because true winners ought not to rely on others doing the hard work for them.

If England win their pool, they will avoid either SA or NZ.

The QF draw is:
1. B1 (almost certainly SA) v A2
2. C1 (almost certainly NZ) v D2
3. D1 v C2
4. A1 v B2

5. 1 v 2
6. 3 v 4

SA and NZ have no opposition in their groups within a country mile of them. Accordingly, SA and NZ will meet each other in the semis, unless England finish runner up and then beat SA in the quarter final.

Jamat - everyone brings their A game to the ABs, who only have to lose once.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Thanks for sorting that out Cod. Only two of the strongest three then!

Apropos Wayne Barnes and New Zealand: could it be that he has Richie McCaw taped? McCaw says Barnes is a "Top Bloke" but when you are the captain and the other guy is a referee, you've got to say that.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Thanks for sorting that out Cod. Only two of the strongest three then!

Apropos Wayne Barnes and New Zealand: could it be that he has Richie McCaw taped? McCaw says Barnes is a "Top Bloke" but when you are the captain and the other guy is a referee, you've got to say that.

Barnes is very personable when I've seen him interviewed but as an official( never thought I'd say it) I think he tends to under use the whistle. In pressure situations he doesn't give many penalties and is inclined to be liberal on forward passes. He'll often say the ball went down or back when the crowd has seen a knock on. I like a flowing game though so if it is consistent that's fine.

Yes thanks Cod for the analysis. The prob for the ABs and the boks is that they will cruise to the quarters and in a tournament that is dangerous but I guess there's 2 sides to that.

Argentina are actually a very good outfit but in the outing they had in NZ this year they went into their shell a bit. The ball they got never reached the backs really but they did beat SA in one of the 2 times they met them.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Thanks for sorting that out Cod. Only two of the strongest three then!

Apropos Wayne Barnes and New Zealand: could it be that he has Richie McCaw taped? McCaw says Barnes is a "Top Bloke" but when you are the captain and the other guy is a referee, you've got to say that.

Barnes is very personable when I've seen him interviewed but as an official( never thought I'd say it) I think he tends to under use the whistle. In pressure situations he doesn't give many penalties and is inclined to be liberal on forward passes. He'll often say the ball went down or back when the crowd has seen a knock on. I like a flowing game though so if it is consistent that's fine.


Barnes is easier on the whistle than many and his interpretation of the forward pass law is generous in the least. When it comes to penalties I think he warns players at the first instance but only gives one such warning, especially if it is something that has been mentioned before the game. He doesn't stand for any foul and abusive language either.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Go, Fiji, go! ("or "Lako, Lako viti!", as we say in Fiji). Let's hope the ref doesn't penalise Fiji out of the game.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tukai:
Go, Fiji, go! ("or "Lako, Lako viti!", as we say in Fiji). Let's hope the ref doesn't penalise Fiji out of the game.

Or England. I'd suggest that both teams have failings but different ones. The ref is a South African, Jaco Peyper who has already refereed 19 tests and he's just 35. He must be well thought of.

I have read that the officials have been told to look out for "football-style simulation". If anything they should also look out for players pretending to be OK when they are anything but. The average player is now 6'3 and over 16 stone, so when they come together at any pace, at least one of them is going to feel it. With so much at stake I'd rather have a very tough line taken to discourage anything resembling high tackles.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Fiji will compete for sure!
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Nice 4 try bonus point win for England. Depth of their bench told in the end. Good goal kicking as well. Fiji very brave though!
 
Posted by alienfromzog (# 5327) on :
 
A lot will be said about the England performance but at the end of the day 35-11 against the 9th best in the world ain't too shabby.

Oh and England will get better.

AFZ
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I feel for Fiji. They did everything they could, apart from land penalties, and they come away with nothing. Now they have to play Australia on Wednesday which is at least two days too soon. I know TV coverage is an integral part of the tournament but I'm sure it could be organised better.

I expect Australia to take advantage of a tired Fiji side and put fifty or sixty points on them.

As far as England were concerned, Brad Barritt didn't look so great and I reckon Stuart Lancaster could go for control in midfield and play Farrell and Burgess from the start against Wales next week.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Any thoughts on how the TMO was used? I thought it was slow, boring, and unnecessary. And for the extra official to call back a try and check it when the kicker is already lining up the conversion is undoubtedly a step too far!!
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Any thoughts on how the TMO was used? I thought it was slow, boring, and unnecessary. And for the extra official to call back a try and check it when the kicker is already lining up the conversion is undoubtedly a step too far!!

As IRB sevens champions, Fiji are accustomed to taking quick drop-kick conversions, so I suspect they and many other teams will aim to put those points on the Board before the TMO can intervene, especially for any tries scored near the goal posts.
And in real time , I reckon there was a forward pass in the movement leading to the final England try, but unfortunately the TMO didn't replay the whole movement.
Other wise I thought the refereeing by Jaco was reasonably good and pretty consistent; he gave quite a few penalties both ways for holding the ball (quite correctly) and even penalised the England scrum once. (Although like most scrum penalties I have no idea what for.)
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
What do shipmates think about todays three games?

I don't think the bookies are taking bets on South Africa to beat Japan and Ireland to beat Canada, but there's a market to be made for Tonga v Georgia at 12:00 today. It could be decided by the team that has the better breakfast and comes out of the blocks quickest, because midday looks awfully early in the day for a rugby match. Either way, it'll be a bruising encounter (remember Stalin was a Georgian: I can imagine him as a hooker) I take Tonga to win by eight points, and there will be three yellow cards and the first red of the tournament.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I was wrong there! It wasn't a thing of beauty but I don't think anyone expected that. Tonga played as if they expected everything to go by the script and didn't have a Plan B to fall back on when it became obvious that physical confrontation wasn't going to work.

Georgia v Argentina could be another battle up front. Don't expect that to be pretty either. To be honest this whole group looks dry.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
I say!
Japan putting on a good show against South Africans.
Tide does seem to turning in SA's favour as I speak.
 
Posted by Chapelhead (# 21) on :
 
Did that just happen? [Eek!]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Wow.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Amazing. What a display of "bottle" going for the win instead of settling for a draw. Apart from Ireland's dismantling of Canada the other games have been competitive: England didn't pull away from Fiji until the subs came on and Fiji tired.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Incredible. SA is so inconsistent but all credit to Japan! Rewriting the history books. In 2011 they were called minnows as I recall. No more.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
I was out of the loop, so when it came up on my phone feed it was like er wow.

Australians are crowing because the coach is Australian. On this occasion I say fair enough. 'e's done good.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Yes. A great coaching triumph for Eddie Jones, with perfect execution by the players. Pushig South Africa back with an "all-in" rolling maul for a try was a master-stroke and a huge psychological blow to the huge Springbok pack.
Eddie Jones is indeed an Australian, but his mother is originally from Japan and he has lived there for quite a few years, so is well in tune with Japanese culture and mindset.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
So, the Pumas go in at half-time with a point over the All Blacks and having scored the only try.

Earlier the Welsh gave a solid performance: a first-haf hat-trick of tries from Allen (a world cup first!) 2 from Gareth Davies and an all-round good team effort got the job done. 8 Tries in all and Wales head the Pool table on points scored.

On the downside there were worrying injuries: Dan Lydiate in particular needs to be fit if we are to do anything this world cup, and Allen also went off hurt: Gatland has another headache.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I thought Wales did well, but why do players talk the performance down so much in interviews? It wasn't perfect, but Wales had a number of alternate selections, especially in the back row and at scrum-half. Others like Alun Wyn Jones were absent but with the possible exception of Jake Ball (who looks a penalty-giver) and Hallam Amos (who just looks 'green') they did well.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
The Pumas also look ominous and could be giant killers.They rattled the ABs for 60 mins and showed great all round skills. The difference in the end as with England was the depth of their bench.

I thought Wayne Barnes had a good game. For once the ABs won when he ref'd them? Did anyone else pick up that McCaw is not the most popular man in England ATM?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
The Pumas also look ominous and could be giant killers.They rattled the ABs for 60 mins and showed great all round skills. The difference in the end as with England was the depth of their bench.

I thought Wayne Barnes had a good game. For once the ABs won when he ref'd them? Did anyone else pick up that McCaw is not the most popular man in England ATM?

You're spot on there. The Pumas have been respected in the British Isles for a long time now, probably since they gave Wales a scare in (I think) 1978. Then Federico Mendez, their teenage hooker, laid out Paul Ackford, the English lock and the die was cast.

Right about McCaw too, who is simply a serial offender. Barnes did however card him. I was amazed that yesterday's was just his third yellow card in 142 matches! He's almost as sly as our Richard Hill was!

[ 21. September 2015, 09:33: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
I was English on Friday night, Japanese on Saturday, and Argentine yesterday. I think SS is right that the British Isles have been generally fans of Argentinean rugby for a couple of decades now (except when they happen to be playing whichever home nation is your choice).

My own highlight of the weekend of course was a very competitive showing by Moseley against London Welsh, although they didn't quite pull of the losing BP in the end. Last year they wouldn't have stayed in touch with them though so this is progress.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
Incidentally, the main thing I learned this weekend was that England have a better Wales kit than Wales do... [Big Grin]
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Amazing atmosphere at Twickenham for the opening ceremony and England v Fiji. [Smile]

Unfortunately, my wife and I got caught up in the travel chaos after they shut Twickenham station... [Mad]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:
I was English on Friday night, Japanese on Saturday, and Argentine yesterday. I think SS is right that the British Isles have been generally fans of Argentinean rugby for a couple of decades now (except when they happen to be playing whichever home nation is your choice).

Yes, (although perhaps I would go with "admirers" rather than "fans", but we're on the same page [Smile] ) which is a bit strange, considering that the footballing support (at least in England) still has a severe hangover from the Falklands when it comes to "the Argies". At one point, wasn't there a thought that they could be included in the 6 Nations as well, playing their "home" games in Spain? Perhaps I misremember.

But I think it's definitely true that it's Good For The Sport™ to have a strong team from South America.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
England fotball supporters have never had much time for Argentina. Back in 1966 Antonio Rattin was probably the dirtiest player present while later there was the notorious cheat Diego Maradona, he of the "Hand of God".
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
posted by iamchristianhearmeroar
quote:
Unfortunately, my wife and I got caught up in the travel chaos after they shut Twickenham station... [Mad]
Managers at Twickenham Station were already talking about closing it due to over-crowding when someone fell onto the tracks, which caused the station to be closed and many trains to be cancelled - so it wasn't only rugby fans who were inconvenienced.

What is unforgiveable is the chaos on FGW because they hugely underestimated the demand for trains to the Ireland v Canada match in Cardiff, and again on Saturday for Wales v Uruguay.

Surely the people running the World Cup have some rough idea of the geographic spread of people buying tickets and so could have sent figures of those outside Wales who were going to matches at the Millennium Stadium? They knew there weren't many Welsh going to the match against Uruguay because of the lack of take up of tickets in the Principality, largely due to the astronomical ticket prices. (The most expensive ticket for the Friendly Wales-Ireland match in the run-up to the world cup was only £15 more expensive than the cheapest ticket to see Wales-Uruguay.)
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:
I was English on Friday night, Japanese on Saturday, and Argentine yesterday. I think SS is right that the British Isles have been generally fans of Argentinean rugby for a couple of decades now (except when they happen to be playing whichever home nation is your choice).

Yes, (although perhaps I would go with "admirers" rather than "fans", but we're on the same page [Smile] ) which is a bit strange, considering that the footballing support (at least in England) still has a severe hangover from the Falklands when it comes to "the Argies". At one point, wasn't there a thought that they could be included in the 6 Nations as well, playing their "home" games in Spain? Perhaps I misremember.

But I think it's definitely true that it's Good For The Sport™ to have a strong team from South America.

Football likes to have cartoon villains so it magnifies problems/issues. Rugby much less so. That and the fact that IME as long as you stay off "the war" English and Argentineans (and Chileans) get on like a house on fire.

There's an old (and kindly) definition of the Argentines which runs something like:
a race of Italians living in South America who speak Spanish and think they're English.

Their participation in the 6 Nations was talked about - not least because most of their leading players at that time were playing in the N Hemisphere (for a variety of reasons but mainly because the Argentine game was still amateur until a couple of years ago so they had to make all their money in the off-season).

There was always IMO a much greater claim to be taking part in a competition aligned with their own domestic season but for a long time the Championship trio held out against because (amongst other things) they didn't fancy splitting the money 4 ways.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Discussion point.
England/Fiji.
Should Peyper have reversed the decision on the Fijian try by the halfback. He had already signalled it and that reversal seems some kind of precedent. Never seen that before at any level.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I thought the whole way the TMO was used in that game was somewhat farcical. But I'm a traditionalist when it comes to these things: refereeing mistakes have always been part of the game: I don't see any reason to change.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
All Blacks beat Namibia(yawn) but Namibia score a good try! [Smile]
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
What do shipmates think of the rolling maul as a tactic? It always looks to me like a form of legalised obstruction, and thus outside the spirit of the game
It would be different if the player with the ball was at the front, where he could be tackled, but as it is, any attempt to tackle the the bloke with ball is ruled to be "offside" and penalised. And any attempt to "clear out" the players obstructing the tackler is also penalised as "tackling someone not in possession".
It would be fair enough if the ball carrier is being pushed forward by his teammates and backwards by his opponents, but that's not what we see.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
At first sight it does look like legitimised obstruction but vthen, what is a pushover scrum? The ball is (fairly) safely under the number 8's feet with the second row and flankers, plus the front row between the opposition and the ball.

Some years ago a brave tactic was tried by Australia. When a rolling maul formed they disengaged, which effectively changed the situation into open play so any man in contact with and ahead of the ball carrier would be offside, though possibly accidentally.

OTOH, we could do something about "lifting" in the line-out, which is the principal source of ball for rolling mauls. I know it's not called lifting, but it is just that.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
A pushover scrum results from a fair contest of strength 8 against 8, and so is IMO different in character from a maul, rolling or otherwise. .
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
It is an eg of how the officials have dictated how rugby has developed. It is inconsistent given that in every other situation where a side puts players between the ball carrier and the defender it is called obstruction.
In fairness, they do not allow supporters to join a maul in front of a ball carrier nor can they break off and rejoin, that is penalised as truck and trailer. The issue for me is that they also penalise the pulling down of a maul and that gives almost no defensive options.
For mine it seems to be a general play reinvention of the scrum but where the ball is off the ground. If a defending pack can halt a maul they do get the scrum at least but in a maul it is possible to conceal the ball and confuse opposition.
I actually get more miffed with scrum penalties and resets. The officials could sort this by insisting the ball is immediately used as they do with slow rucks.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Typically bruising encounter between England an Wales in progress. I wouldn't want to call it even though England are currently leading.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
It'll be a tense last ten minutes, I'll wager.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
If Wales were playing a more disciplined side they would be beaten by now.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
My word, Wales are they fighting for it! They are down to iron rations behind the scrum but they keep England out. Amazing stuff.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Crap. We had that and we threw it away. Gutting.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Crap. We had that and we threw it away. Gutting.

We kicked quite a lot of it away! Hubris played a part too, especially after that spate of Welsh injuries when England, I think, thought they only had to be there to win.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
[Killing me] [Killing me] [Killing me] [Killing me]
WA-LES! WA-LES! WA-LES! [Overused] [Overused] [Overused]
 
Posted by marzipan (# 9442) on :
 
Yay Wales! Was a good match, Wales were getting a bit sloppy before half time but they managed to get it together in the end. Though how much of Wales's squad will be not injured by the end of October I'm not certain...
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Hubris played a part too, especially after that spate of Welsh injuries when England, I think, thought they only had to be there to win.

Yep, did the hard work then just relaxed and ..... Bish-bash-bosch , result goes to the away team.

Seen it before, dare say we'll see it again. Mind you questions will soon arise as to how far England are actually going to get in this tournament.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Mae Duw* We won!

The children are ecstatic and have a massive flag ready to hoist first thing in the morning.

It was lovely to see Warren Gatland jumping for joy. Also good to see that Prince William knows the national anthem - no Redwood he!

WAL-ES WAL-ES WAL-ES
[Overused] [Yipee] [Overused] [Yipee] [Overused] [Yipee]

* there is a God
 
Posted by Leorning Cniht (# 17564) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:

WAL-ES WAL-ES WAL-ES

The 'L' is in the first syllable in your way of speaking? Really?
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Crap. We had that and we threw it away. Gutting.

Why on earth did they not take the draw?
Unbelievable decisions by England in last 20 mins!
 
Posted by Gamaliel (# 812) on :
 
It's the way it's chanted in rugby stadia, Leorning Cniht, not the way it would be said in normal speech.

TypicAlly, in Welsh accENts, the stress is on the penulTIMate sylLAble ...hence the sing-song effect.

But no, we don't say 'WAL-ES' unless it's for emphasis - but thinking about it, Wales tends to be pronounced more like 'Way-els' rather than 'wails' - but only slightly more like that. It sounds like 'whales' for the most part - and even very posh people here would no longer pronounce the 'h' in that.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Sounds like England have got to beat Australia to stay in it.

No pressure then [Help]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
There's always a chance that Wales, the perennial bottlers that they are, will lose against Fiji or Uruguay. [Biased]
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
Not Uruguay- that was last week. But yes, it would be just like us to go down to Fiji now. And of course there's the little matter fo Australia, too.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Quite a few of the Welsh people I spoke to at church this morning said that they are worried about Fiji. They will be OK though, even if Tipuric has to start at wing. Come to thing of it he'd be just right to mark that big guy who kicks for goal for Fiji.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
posted by Leorning Cniht
quote:
The 'L' is in the first syllable in your way of speaking? Really?
No, I don't think so (now I've had the chance to listen who knows?) but then I usually think of my country by its name in the language, Cymru.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
posted by Imaginary Friend
quote:
There's always a chance that Wales, the perennial bottlers that they are, will lose against Fiji or Uruguay.
1. We've already played Uruguay: we scored 8 tries and ran out winners 54-9.

2. Bottlers? Are you thinking of Wembley 1999, or the Six Nations in 2005, 2009, 2011, 2012 or maybe 2013? If you look at the last 10 years of the 6 Nations you'll see that honours are even.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
posted by Imaginary Friend
quote:
There's always a chance that Wales, the perennial bottlers that they are, will lose against Fiji or Uruguay.
1. We've already played Uruguay: we scored 8 tries and ran out winners 54-9.

2. Bottlers? Are you thinking of Wembley 1999, or the Six Nations in 2005, 2009, 2011, 2012 or maybe 2013? If you look at the last 10 years of the 6 Nations you'll see that honours are even.

Given your injury list your guys have been awesome so far.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
2. Bottlers?

On the wind-up mate. Nice to see someone bit. [Biased]
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Ugh. Yet another high pressure situation under which England crumble. Lancaster has pulled off some amazing one-off wins in his tenure - being the only Northern Hemisphere team to beat the All Blacks in the last 6 years comes to mind. But, but, but, when push comes to shove in the high pressure games, six nations deciders for example, England come up short time and again.

I think Robshaw's shown that he doesn't have "it" when it comes to captaincy, whatever "it" is. Yet again a tight call is made between kicking for points or pressing for a try. Yet again, the "wrong" decision is made. (Who knows if the kick would have gone over; all we know is that kicking for the corner didn't work). Good captains have a knack of making the right call in that sort of situation. Robshaw has shown he doesn't have that knack: ergo...

Captaincy can be changed. What can't be changed so easily is Lancaster's seeming obsession with taking players off the field who are playing well - all of Dan Cole, Joe Marler, Tom Youngs and Sam Burgess were taken off for "tactical" reasons. All were playing well. Even Youngs!

Lose against Australia (50-50 game I reckon) and we're out. In that situation I think Lancaster's also out.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
Heard Will Carling on BBCR4 this morning saying that Robshaw should have gone for the points rather than the chance of a win. Carling, for all that he's a figure from the past, encapsulates so much that many of us loathe about English rugby culture and so that comment came as no surprise. Going for the corner was brave and sporting and exciting and Robshaw deserves credit for it. If it had succeeeded everyone would now be saying what a good decision it was.

[ 28. September 2015, 09:50: Message edited by: Albertus ]
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Well, Carling or not, I still think it was the wrong decision in retrospect. My point from my earlier post was that over time captains should get the knack of making the correct call (i.e. the call that works) in those high pressure situations. Robshaw did not make the right call, and rarely seems to.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Yes, it was the wrong decision - but it wasn't the choice to go for the corner that did the damage but the call to shorten the lineout. A longer lineout would have meant a much longer Welsh line to be defended: taking the shortened option immediately raised the possibility of the receiver, plus any other England players immediately involved, being bundled into touch. Which is exactly what happened and meant that, the clock having just turned red, Biggar could boot the ball into the stands.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
Heard Will Carling on BBCR4 this morning saying that Robshaw should have gone for the points rather than the chance of a win. Carling, for all that he's a figure from the past, encapsulates so much that many of us loathe about English rugby culture and so that comment came as no surprise. Going for the corner was brave and sporting and exciting and Robshaw deserves credit for it. If it had succeeeded everyone would now be saying what a good decision it was.

It's always good to compare and contrast the England centre partnership from that era nowadays. An RFU tie and blazer really suits Will Carling who appears stuck in the 1990's (if not the 1950's) while Jerry Guscott actually appears to understand rugby as it is played now.

Unless England pull something out of the bag, such as a win against Australia and at least a semi-final place Lancaster is going to have to think long and hard about the composition of his team. England didn't lose because of one bad decision late on, but because they gave away seven kickable penalties which Dan Biggar didn't miss. Many of them were for ruck and maul offences which were usually due to Wales being first to the breakdown, such that England had to infringe in an attempt to get the ball or slow it down. That in turn wasn't helped by England playing without a genuine #7, which to my mind puts Robshaw's position in the team in doubt.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Do I recall right that, in the Carling era, England once won the Five Nations and didn't actually score a try until they already had the tournament in the bag?

AG
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
An RFU tie and blazer really suits Will Carling...

Which is a bit ironic, considering his famous words about fifty seven old farts.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
An RFU tie and blazer really suits Will Carling...

Which is a bit ironic, considering his famous words about fifty seven old farts.
If you can't beat'em, join'em.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Hmm, have just rewatched these highlights of the autumn international against Australia last year. If England get that scoreline, I'll be happy. Potentially not that many changes (for England) from the side that won last time they met.

My starting XV for Australia (assuming all are fit...) would be

1 - Marler
2 - Youngs
3 - Wilson(!)
4 - Launchbury
5 - Lawes
6 - Wood
7 - Robshaw (c)
8 - Morgan

9 - Youngs
10 - Ford

11 - May
12 - Slade
13 - Joseph
14 - Watson
15 - Brown

Bench: Vunipola, Webber, Cole, Parling, Easter(!), Care(!), Farrell, Burgess

I don't think we can go in to win by grinding out a victory through penalties; we have to score tries, so has to be a 10-12-13 of Ford-Slade-Joseph.

A bit harsh to drop Cole to the bench maybe, but Wilson is a scrum specialist and we need to be dominant there - not sure whether Vunipola would be a better scrum option than Marler, probably not.

I think I'd want the cooler heads of Easter and Burgess ready on the bench to bring a bit of sense in a close finish. Also, why not bring a bit of flair in Care over the pretty predictable Wigglesworth?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I feel rather differently about it. We can win by grinding out penalties but we have to be a lot smarter, especially at the breakdown. That will be difficult because in David Pocock and Michael Hooper Australia have two flank forwards quicker than any of ours. Pocock in particular is an outstanding operator. It's probably best not even to compete all the time, and concentrate on stopping the man behind the line when they break.

I'd start with Parling and Launchbury too. They work really well together and are practically the same size which is a good thing for locks in the scrum. Lawes may be bigger and stronger but I don't think he's any better and the others put in more tackles although they make fewer spectacular hits than Lawes. He would be a good option at about 55 minutes though.

I agree that Care has flair but right now he is out of form. Ben Youngs was having an outstanding game, but like others I reckon he was taken off when lancaster thought England had the game in the bag.

I'm really undecided about the centres. I'd like to play Burgess aand Joseph but I'm not sure about Big Sam as a playmaker.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Yep, breakdown we're way off the Aussies so we have to be super smart and only give away penalties if we absolutely have to to prevent a try scoring situation.

I can see Burgess/Joseph having a good balance, but you'd want Ford as your flyhalf not Farrell. If you're only taking one playmaker, you want to use your best. Equally, if Tuilagi was in the squad you'd think about playing Tuilagi/Joseph. Both are players that the opposition worry about and both can turn a game.

I think Burgess is so good on the offload (both giving and receiving as it were) that he makes a pretty good foil to Joseph. Slade on the bench?
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
I hope the Stop Paloma Faith petition gets somewhere soon - that appalling caterwauling at the ad breaks is driving me nuts [Mad]
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Oh, it's her! I wondered why I didn't like it...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
I hope the Stop Paloma Faith petition gets somewhere soon - that appalling caterwauling at the ad breaks is driving me nuts [Mad]

Here's something the English and the Welsh can agree on. Not that it's much of a song in the first place.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Yes, it was the wrong decision - but it wasn't the choice to go for the corner that did the damage but the call to shorten the lineout. A longer lineout would have meant a much longer Welsh line to be defended: taking the shortened option immediately raised the possibility of the receiver, plus any other England players immediately involved, being bundled into touch. Which is exactly what happened and meant that, the clock having just turned red, Biggar could boot the ball into the stands.

That short lineout, whether Wales read or not I duuno, just looked like a pathetic schoolboy rugby blunder.
We can but hope England forget all about that against the Aussies. Only a return to top-class professional rugby is going to produce an England win on Saturday.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Yes, it was the wrong decision - but it wasn't the choice to go for the corner that did the damage but the call to shorten the lineout. A longer lineout would have meant a much longer Welsh line to be defended: taking the shortened option immediately raised the possibility of the receiver, plus any other England players immediately involved, being bundled into touch. Which is exactly what happened and meant that, the clock having just turned red, Biggar could boot the ball into the stands.

That short lineout, whether Wales read or not I duuno, just looked like a pathetic schoolboy rugby blunder.
We can but hope England forget all about that against the Aussies. Only a return to top-class professional rugby is going to produce an England win on Saturday.

Australia is beatable in set piece and vulnerable in the tight 5.They just lost one of their best in Skelton. If England are not really tight and especially if they kick away possession Australia will hurt them.
If I was Lancaster I'd have good tight forwards on my bench. I'd also start Burgess as he is as good as anyone in an arm wrestle and will be like having an extra tightie. Defence and treasuring possession are the keys for England. I think grind up, play for penalties and kick the points and they will do it.
I do have doubts about Robshaw's decision making after the Wales debacle.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
It has just been announced that Lancaster has left Burgess out of the England team to play Australia.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Sounds like trouble 't mill
 
Posted by Cod (# 2643) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
Do I recall right that, in the Carling era, England once won the Five Nations and didn't actually score a try until they already had the tournament in the bag?

AG

I don't doubt it, despite them having players like Guscott and Underwood in the backs. It was very frustrating to watch.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
England's team to face Australia. This is the side we need but we have to be a lot smarter than against Wales, although it always looks odd when your locks are more mobile than your back row! Burgess at about the 55 minute mark could be just the job.

For today however - C'mon Fiji!
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Wales' great run continues!
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
I wouldn't put it quite like that, but at least we didn't slip up on that particular banana skin.

Our players looked knackered beyond sense by the end - thank goodness we've got 8 days before we face Australia.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
I wouldn't put it quite like that, but at least we didn't slip up on that particular banana skin.

Our players looked knackered beyond sense by the end - thank goodness we've got 8 days before we face Australia.

Wales missed a load of tackles (the stats showed 25 missed with a few minutes to go) and had a harder time in the scrum than they did against England. Dan Lydiate saved the day at least three times and Gareth Davies is doing a great job at scrum half. It really was a day for men pretending not to be hurt for eighty minutes.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Face it, there is something slightly skewed in the number of rest days that teams get between matches. England had 7 clear rest days between their first and second matches and have 6 clear days between their second and third, and third and fourth.

If Wales looked knackered its because they had five clear days between matches 1 and 2 and then only four between 2 and 3; granted they'll get 8 clear days now before facing Australia, but over the whole cycle they still end up with fewer rest days than the English.

As for the Australians, they've had/will have 3, 5 and 6 clear rest days between their matches.

It can't be viewed as fair that one team should get 19 clear rest days in the Pool stage while another only has 14 - and how strange that the team to benefit most is from the host nation in the so-called Pool of Death.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
There's been a lot written about this but I'm sure the host nation has always had a better schedule. It's worse for some sides (eg, Wales, Ireland and Scotland) because they have fewer top level sides to provide the necessary depth although they are very definitely tier 1 sides.

I'm sure I could work out a schedule that would give each team at least six days between fixtures and possibly fewer days with no fixtures, during the group stages at any rate.

[ 02. October 2015, 09:09: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
New Zealand scored seven tries against a heroic Georgia team who gave them a hard time at the scrums and forced a lot of handling errors.

It looks like more of the teams outside the Six Nations/Southern Hemisphere Championship are getting closer to the Big Ten. They seem to be fitter, bigger, stronger and better coached and a few need only to improve their attack to be more of a threat to the top teams.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
The ABs looked like a team of individuals. they don't have what Wales has.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Just watched the first half of England v Australia [Eek!]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Still just alive! 15 minutes to go, England seven points behind - and Burgess is coming on for Barritt.

Cometh the hour?
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
Quite touching- sincerely, no schadenfreude- to see Robshaw in tears at the end of the game.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
Quite touching- sincerely, no schadenfreude- to see Robshaw in tears at the end of the game.

Looks like it really mattered to him, unlike some on the sidelines who were just doing a job.

Unlike the Wales game though, Australia beat us properly. Too much pace, 1-to-15, and they were more than equal in the scrum.

They are going to take some stopping.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Much gloating in Australia today [just after dawn, our time]. Great games by Foley and Pocock in particular, but the whole team looked good apart from a few slip-ups.
 
Posted by Cod (# 2643) on :
 
33-13: a very fair result. England were outplayed from start to finish.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Darn shame for the tournament. England were in the game till Farrell's yellow card. Interesting, Burgess didn't go as well. Decisions to kick possession away seems to be bête noire of Northern teams. To kick is to commit to making about 30 tackles nowadays and that sucks the energy.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Outplayed from start to finish. But then again, before the tournament started, I don't think anyone really expected us to win that game. The Big One was Wales last week: That's where we let ourselves down.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
Quite touching- sincerely, no schadenfreude- to see Robshaw in tears at the end of the game.

Just as well I didn't stay tuned for that, not that it's wrong for grown men to weep.

England never looked like winning last night. The Wales game went to the wire when it shouldn't have, and the opener against Fiji should have been a whole lot more convincing.

Maybe it was all the hype, maybe was other stuff. Not to worry. Good luck to the remaining teams. The ABs look pretty invincible.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Not sure I agree with point 8 (the media scrutinises everyone!) but this is mostly reasoned and thoughtful from Eddie Butler.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Thanks the link IF.

I'm inclined to agree with the point made about England lacking the tight unit factor, and the electricity that comes as a consequence from having that.
One felt it was there in 03 . Well that, plus a fly-half who could consistently pop drop goals over at crucial stages of a game.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:
Thanks the link IF.

I'm inclined to agree with the point made about England lacking the tight unit factor, and the electricity that comes as a consequence from having that.
One felt it was there in 03 . Well that, plus a fly-half who could consistently pop drop goals over at crucial stages of a game.

In '03 we had a couple of backrow players who could get to the breakdown first and didn't therefore get penalised. That counts for much. Extra discipline at the scrum too. You know, all the dull stuff.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Not sure I agree with point 8 (the media scrutinises everyone!) but this is mostly reasoned and thoughtful from Eddie Butler.

He makes an excellent point about the draw.and the economic repercussions of making one pool too hard and others too easy.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Right, but on the other hand, if you have nine/ten good teams (NZ, Aus, SA, Eng, Fra, Wal, Sco, Ire, Arg/Ita) and only eight quarter final slots, then something has to give.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Grant Hansen(shag) says NZ on a go slow!
Arrogance. Hope they lose!
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Nice bloke as he seems, Lancaster has to go. His reputation is now shot, and it's always going to be a chink in the England armour (which is pretty porous in any case) if their coach oversaw an exit from the group stages. Even if Lancaster miraculously stays, Robshaw's certainly out - doesn't have that decision-making ability needed for captain.

Perhaps England will finally appoint a head coach with significant previous coaching experience, and with a record of actually having won stuff.

They've got to stop this ridiculous policy of not picking overseas players too - the policy hasn't been around for ever: didn't use to stop us picking Wilko when he was at Toulon!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by iamchristianhearmeroar:
Nice bloke as he seems, Lancaster has to go. His reputation is now shot, and it's always going to be a chink in the England armour (which is pretty porous in any case) if their coach oversaw an exit from the group stages. Even if Lancaster miraculously stays, Robshaw's certainly out - doesn't have that decision-making ability needed for captain.

Perhaps England will finally appoint a head coach with significant previous coaching experience, and with a record of actually having won stuff.

They've got to stop this ridiculous policy of not picking overseas players too - the policy hasn't been around for ever: didn't use to stop us picking Wilko when he was at Toulon!

I'm not certain about Lancaster, but the coaching group as a whole seem too sold on the work ethic at the expense of talent. You do have to work very hard, be very fit and hone your techniques, but you aren't going to win much unless your team has people with the talent, whether it is for kicking goals, beating the man or winning the ball. I can't believe that England hasn't the material to do that, especially with our record at Junior World Cups.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
It is sporting tradition now for coaches to pay for failure with their jobs.
Interesting indeed that the NZRU kept faith in Graham Henry after a failure and it paid off. NZ smashed the French by 1 point in the final of the last world cup. I like Lancaster and also think Robshaw is a fine player. I heard Henry in a recent radio interview state that in his view England just lacked the talent of the Aussies at that kind of level. If so, I kind of hope Lancaster gets another go.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
The difference, though, is that Henry had been a very successful club manager (winning with the Auckland Blues six years out of his eight in charge) and had significant experience at international level (admittedly he didn't win very much with Wales, but had some success). Lancaster had neither previous club success, nor international experience when he was appointed.

So with Henry it was a case of he's had success before, he'll probably have success again. With Lancaster it's has he done it before? can he do it now?

To be honest, Lancaster and Farrell's defence of their own regime since the loss to Aus has done nothing to convince me they are the men to continue in the role. Lancaster has admitted he will never get over this - how can he continue to lead the team? Farrell's answer to any criticism - of selection, of tactics, which have been shown to be ineffective - is that they were right and the commentariat are wrong... Deluded.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
I was startled to hear that Launchbury was man of that match - who the hell decided that? I can understand the Georgian captain getting it against the All Blacks for a display that obviously had the Abs rattled, but Launchbury when Foley scored more points in the match than any Australian has ever done against England? That's just bizarre!

AG
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Joe Launchbury is a splendid player, but Saturday wasn't his finest hour, even though he was probably England's best on the day.

If it should have gone to a forward then I would have given it to Stephen Moore, the Wallabies hooker and captain.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
MotM was decided by Twitter, so what do you expect.

England squad to play Uruguay:

15. Alex Goode (Saracens, 18 caps)
14. Anthony Watson (Bath Rugby, 14 caps)
13. Henry Slade (Exeter Chiefs, 1 cap)
12. Owen Farrell (Saracens, 34 caps)
11. Jack Nowell (Exeter Chiefs, 9 caps)
10. George Ford (Bath Rugby, 16 caps)
9. Danny Care (Harlequins, 52 caps)

1. Mako Vunipola (Saracens, 26 caps)
2. Tom Youngs (Leicester Tigers, 27 caps)
3. Dan Cole (Leicester Tigers, 55 caps)
4. Joe Launchbury (Wasps, 27 caps)
5. Geoff Parling (Exeter Chiefs, 28 caps)
6. James Haskell (Wasps, 61 caps)
7. Chris Robshaw (captain, Harlequins, 42 caps)
8. Nick Easter (Harlequins, 53 caps)

Replacements

16. Jamie George (Saracens, 2 caps)
17. Joe Marler (Harlequins, 36 caps)
18. David Wilson (Bath Rugby, 43 caps)
19. George Kruis (Saracens, 9 caps)
20. Tom Wood (Northampton Saints, 41 caps)
21. Richard Wigglesworth (Saracens, 26 caps)
22. Jonathan Joseph (Bath Rugby, 15 caps)
23. Mike Brown (Harlequins, 42 caps)

Is Owen Farrell really a 12? Hmmm...
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
What, no one else watch Fiji-Uruguay yesterday evening?

It was a cracking game - scrappy play to be sure but hugely entertaining with the whole pitch being covered at break-neck speed.

Highlight was Uruguay scoring their first RWC try for 12 years: cue pitch invasion by most of the squad. Then they scored another - deep joy.

What a shame they've only got three rest days before they play England...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Many of the games in which the "lesser" teams have featured have been great to watch. Japan have now beaten Samoa and have a chance of making the quarter finals if Samoa can beat Scotland. Romania's comeback against Canada was amazing, Tonga ran Argentina hard even though they fell well short at the end, but Argentina are playing the big southern hemisphere sides regularly now.

I'm looking forward to Namibia v Georgia tonight, which Georgia ought to win but won't find easy.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I'm looking forward to Namibia v Georgia tonight, which Georgia ought to win but won't find easy.

It was quite a game!

Meanwhile I'm worried for the ABs ... and on form would be picking Australia, South Africa or (wild card) France.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
It certainly was - the best I've seen so far, and good value for money with that insanely long first half! Anyone any idea what exactly was going on there?

AG
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sandemaniac:
It certainly was - the best I've seen so far, and good value for money with that insanely long first half! Anyone any idea what exactly was going on there?

AG

A lot of (mostly necessary) refereeing intervention, for calls and injuries as well as consultation with other officials.

Great game though.

[ 08. October 2015, 09:52: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Ah yes - was most amused by "Georgie"!

AG
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
After some though I think I'll place Ireland above the French. They've worked hard with a bit of flair.


There's my call

and in the game that really matters Hawke's Bay should/might defeat Waikato tonight
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
PS ... the (in)famous 2011 world cup final winning and much parodied kicker Stephen Donald, er, isn't playing for abovementioned Waikato tonight. He's out injured. Hawke's Bay has a young player, a first five eight who I think will be much heard of in international circles soon, Ihaia West. Watch this spot, and I think he's knocking on the door of All Black selection pretty soon.

You heard it here first. [Razz]
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Ihaia is a great goal kicker but is a bit one dimensional as a 10. He made little impression with the Blues who had their worst season ever. The Waikato 10 was all class though, Damian Mckenzie, and he might be a man of the future. NZ is awash with class first fives.
The ABs made a bit of a statement against Tonga this morning though.

[ 09. October 2015, 23:55: Message edited by: Jamat ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Samoa v Scotland is a mad game. Samoa are really going for it and at times Scotland's defence is in tatters. There are just three points in it at half-time.

If Samoa do pull it off then Japan, not Scotland, will probably* go to the quarter-finals and Samoa will regret being so poor against Japan.

*Scotland could go through if they lose, get two bonus points and Japan get four points or fewer against the USA.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Sounds like Scotland are through.

Wales Australia was a titanic scrap. Even found myself rooting for the reds at one point.
I see that giving up a close-to-the-line penalty for a line-out in the corner is standard practice now.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:
Sounds like Scotland are through.

Wales Australia was a titanic scrap. Even found myself rooting for the reds at one point.
I see that giving up a close-to-the-line penalty for a line-out in the corner is standard practice now.

I was cheering for Wales throughout. Some people are 100% "Anyone but England" and I find it very hard to cheer for Australia. They put up one heck of a defence though.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Scrum penalties seem a lottery. On that defensive effort Australia deserved the win. Very dodgy reasons for the second Aussie yellow card!
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Scotland by a whisker!
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Try scoring came easy to England in a game where nothing much mattered apart from regaining some esteem.
Hey ho, not to worry.
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
Scotland by a whisker!

[Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]

I haven't been following the matches (the only channel I've seen it mentioned is in French) but delighted that Scotland are through (I thought we'd gone out at the same time as England).

Australia next though ... [Eek!]
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Wales were in the unfortunate position of playing not just the Australians but also the referee. How on earth he justified not awarding Wales a penalty try is beyond belief.

The TMO for the match also seems to have been blind to people being tackled in the air and a shoulder charge on Alex Cuthbert that left him winded on the pitch was completely ignored.

Still, we're through to the quarter-finals and now have a team of South Africans to look forward to, as opposed to just one SA referee.

It was interesting to note that the ITV commentary team called the Wales-Australia match the best of the tournament so far: bearing in mind there were no tries that says a lot.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The referring for Wales-Australia was pretty poor all round. Although both teams were through, a lot rode on the result and erratic use of the whistle didn't help. Wales didn't help themselves when Australia were down to 13 players, for the dreaded "white-line fever" set in. Teams really ought to practice more against uneven opposition, because it happens in almost any game in which you have a chance of a result.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Sad that Wales turned down 3 points with 10 mins to go and more than once. I always say take the points when the game is close . Wales gave Aussie a big fright. Agree that penalty try could have resulted from one of those scrums close to the line. Be interesting to see after that if Joubert gets a QF gig.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
I'm gobsmacked to read in The Sunday Times that the reckon Joubert had an excellent game; to say he was inconsistent is to be kind.

Yes, I agree that Wales displayed more than a little white line fever, but then who wouldn't? The whole point of the game, after all, is to carry the ball across the line and score a try, not kick endless penalties.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Ireland are starting it look like the real deal.
InterestingQF match up between ABs and France. All we need now is Wayne Barnes on the whistle.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
Ireland are starting it look like the real deal.
InterestingQF match up between ABs and France. All we need now is Wayne Barnes on the whistle.

France have as good a record aganst New Zealand as anyone, probably because they no hangups about the All Black Magic; they treat them like any other team, albeit a very good one. The ABs still look good, and Cane makes me wonder how McCaw has held his place so long.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Ritchie is a NZ folk hero hero.
If the ABs win they will probably make him Sir Ritchie.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Not much "probably" about that!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
After a tough contest between Wales and South Africa the first half of the evening's QF between New Zealand and France has been spectacle with some brilliant running, passing and stunning finishing.

I expect New Zealander's are having a very pleasant breakfast!
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Unfortunately for Wales they gifted the 'Boks 3 penalties, and Wayne Barnes chipped in with another 2. And a shame that the TMO/ linesman didn't see fit to do anything about clear infringements.

Still, we've only ourselves to blame: we missed a fantastic chance to score and early try and then got slack. But all-in-all not bad bearing in mind our injury list.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
That pretty much sums it up. Indiscipline + iffy refereeing nullified some thrilling play.

[ 17. October 2015, 21:52: Message edited by: Albertus ]
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
ISTM that the ABs still haven't had a testing game. If SA put them under pressure next week things could at last get interesting.

Pity about Wales though they played really well I thought. Pity they struck Barnes. He blew them out of the game.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:


I expect New Zealander's are having a very pleasant breakfast!

I'm in the USA at the moment, but mine hosts agreed to a pay per view and I introduced them to a level of carnage that made US football look tender.

It was the sweetest ABs game since one of their 50+ annihilations of OZ some years back. They're back.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
I'm in the USA at the moment, but mine hosts agreed to a pay per view and I introduced them to a level of carnage that made US football look tender.

It was the sweetest ABs game since one of their 50+ annihilations of OZ some years back. They're back.

More than anything it was relentness. Once New Zealand got their foot on France's throat they didn't lift it. Savea's try just before half-time was actually a better illustration of power than Jonah Lomu's smashing his way through England's defence in 1995. Milner-Skudder's was a thing of beauty and I hope he's fit for the next match. Credit to France for not rolling over in the hope that the ref would stop the fight but how on earth do you play a side that is so comfortable with ball in hand from 1 to 23?

The third QF is coming up - Ireland v Argentina. Let's see if at least one Northern Hemisphere team can make the semi-finals.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Given the level of Schadenfreude dished out to the English last week, I must say I'm quite enjoying this weekend. [Big Grin] [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The NH teams have got to accept that positional skills, power and passion are not enough. We're being stuffed by teams that play 15-man rugby, and it isn't just New Zealand.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Well, that goes down with the Flodden and Culloden in the list of national tragedies. But given the practice Scotland have had, I expect we'll get as much fun out of commemorating it as if we'd won.
 
Posted by Albertus (# 13356) on :
 
Bunch of mutants, Aus & NZ. Our own fault (us & the French) for testing our nukes down there years ago.

[ 18. October 2015, 16:50: Message edited by: Albertus ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Cruel that. At least Scotland can hold their heads high.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
Maybe it's because the ball spins in the other direction below the Equator?
 
Posted by agingjb (# 16555) on :
 
Perhaps, to ease the traffic in Middlesex (OK, West London) they should play the last few matches somewhere the other side of the Line.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Wow! never expected that from the Ireland game [Confused]

As for the Scots? Bravo ! Made the Wallabies dig deep. Even had me shouting for joy when Scotland intercepted and went under the posts in the 75th min.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
I just hope they carry that through to the Home Internationals - win the Calcutta cup f'instance and all will be forgiven.
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Yea and amen, Firenze. To borrow an expression from The Other Sort Of Football, we was robbed.

[Waterworks]
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Yes, I have to say I (as an Englishman) am not particularly hopeful about the next Calcutta Cup match! Hats off to the Scots, they deserved to beat Oz and were very unfortunate with the ref (who sprinted off the field!!). I think the improvement in Scotland's play, more than anything else almost, shows the importance of having a really top head coach in place. England suits take note...
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by iamchristianhearmeroar:
... England suits take note...

Just not until after the next Calcutta Cup ... [Devil]
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
I think there's every likelihood of that happening. I have a nasty feeling that the current England coaching setup may be exonerated and remain in place - if that happens my prediction is that England will suffer their worst Six Nations for a long time, after which the coaching team will walk. Back to the drawing board. Again.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by iamchristianhearmeroar:
I think there's every likelihood of that happening. I have a nasty feeling that the current England coaching setup may be exonerated and remain in place - if that happens my prediction is that England will suffer their worst Six Nations for a long time, after which the coaching team will walk. Back to the drawing board. Again.

Provided that the backroom coaches go (walk, run or planked) I'll be content. Stuart Lancaster and most of the players deserve to be there, though the forwards need to toughen up. If England don't acquire a bit of 'dog' from somewhere we'll be bullied out of the championship. Someone like Dave Ewers of Exeter might be useful.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
I'd stick with Lancaster I think - he's a decent chap and it is his team which is going to come good in 4 years time - if anything this was just a bit early. There was a chap in The Rugby Paper the other week saying that the final kick in the teeth is likely to be 2019 in Japan when someone else does very well with a team that Lancaster identified, assembled and grew.

However, I'm pleased to note the absence from the England fall-out review panel of the hitherto teflon Mr R. Andrew. I was beginning to think old Will Carling may have had a point.
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
It's now official: we was robbed.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
It was a rubbish decision, made at an absolutely crucial stage of the game and, yes, it cost Scotland the match and a well-deserved place in the semifinals.

Having watched back the replays of that moment, I have a more major concern than the "mistake". If you try to pause this at around 18.5 seconds you can see Joubert's arm going up to indicate the penalty *before* Jon Welsh has even caught the ball!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by iamchristianhearmeroar:


Having watched back the replays of that moment, I have a more major concern than the "mistake". If you try to pause this at around 18.5 seconds you can see Joubert's arm going up to indicate the penalty *before* Jon Welsh has even caught the ball!

Had it been cricket one would be wondering ....
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Well, I wonder if he was considering awarding a scrum for the knock on - arm coming up to signal that as the ball squirts forward. But then it was the Aussies calling for it that made him give the penalty.

All seems a bit strange to me.

He has previous of course.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Albertus:
Bunch of mutants, Aus & NZ. Our own fault (us & the French) for testing our nukes down there years ago.

[Killing me] [Killing me] [Killing me]

sadly I fear I won't be able to watch the ABs v Boks from downtown Chicago .... but I'll try to find a way
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
It'll be X certificate stuff between the Boks and the ABs. I reckon the Boks know they will have to cut the supply of ball at source, so it will be a brutal game. Not at all suitable for those of a nervous disposition.

[ 22. October 2015, 21:57: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Yeah, that's me alas. Best I watch the Chicago Blue sox or someone.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Don't want to put in a spoiler for anyone yet to watch. Other than to say it was a good, hard, and tight match.

Another wet Twickers, always a nice leveller.
 
Posted by Oscar the Grouch (# 1916) on :
 
Sat watching it with a couple of Kiwis. It was 8am here, so no chance of a few beers to calm the nerves.

Not a great match in terms of exciting play, but a thunderous game by two sides, neither of whom were willing to give an inch.

The best side won (just), but those last 10 minutes were enough to turn anyone's hair grey.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
Was it just me or did both the tries come from forward passes?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jonah the Whale:
Was it just me or did both the tries come from forward passes?

The second was very lateral indeed. I'm always struck by the enthusiasm with which referees penalise knock-ons compared with the way forward passes are overlooked.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
Yes, agreed. That first one was described as a basketball pass, and I thought "yes, in more ways than one". But it was understandable because it was Richie McCaw and we realise that he can't be penalized. I didn't know that extended to forward passes though. Still, NZ were the better team and deserved to get through so those tries helped them overcome the penalty lottery which S.A. won.

I just re-read this post and it sounds really cynical. Actually I enjoyed the game, though I would describe it as intense rather than entertaining.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
At the risk of getting egg all over my face, I'm pleased to see that Nigel Owens is going to be in charge of the RWC final. Of all the international referees, he seems to have a wonderful balance of grasp of the rules and humour.

Its also great news for equality: I only hope he doesn't get any more of the disgraceful homophobic abuse that has, in the past, seemed to be a Twickenham speciality when he referees.
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
I'm going to watch the game tonight together with a South African friend. I don't know much about rugby, but I'm going to cheer a lot [Smile]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Believe it or not there's rugby tonight! In England the Aviva Premiership has got going in earnest a little earlier than expected while there's the third place showdown at London's Olympic Stadium between South Africa and Argentina.

South Africa must be favourites but Argentina will go for everything, and with their back three I don't blame them! I only hope they are little more careful than against Australia whom they gifted three tries (an interception, one for limp defence and another from an iffy yellow card).

Most of the better Argentinians will still be around in 2019, including their excellent young locks, so with their involvement in the Rugby Championship, and the Super Twelve participation to come, they will be a match for anyone. I can see the Six Nations struggling to make the semi-finals again.

eta: L'organist makes good points there. Twickenham can be a nasty place. I remember Chris Oti being booed by some, and he was playing for England and had scored three tries.

[ 30. October 2015, 12:09: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by LeRoc (# 3216) on :
 
Heh, even the South Africans congratulated the Argentinian with that last minute try.
I enjoyed that.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Not such a great game, but the attitude of the Boks at the end did them a lot of credit.

Quite an array of 'Boks are retiring or at any rate won't be at the next World Cup, but I don't expect them to be any weaker.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Half time, All Blacks significantly the better team. Uphill task for Aussie now.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Good final, with a fair result.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Indeed. The first half was pretty much one way traffic, but the second was a cracker.

AG
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
Well done the Kiwis. [Smile]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I thought the yellow card was a bit harsh, and it was really that which let the Aussies back into the game.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
The Aussies were having big troubles winning their own line-out ball which put them under a lot of unnecessary pressure.
Even without that the A.Bs looked the better side from the start. It did get exciting when there was 7 points in it towards the end.

2015 will rightly go down as a good and entertaining tournament overall.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:
The Aussies were having big troubles winning their own line-out ball which put them under a lot of unnecessary pressure.
Even without that the A.Bs looked the better side from the start. It did get exciting when there was 7 points in it towards the end.

2015 will rightly go down as a good and entertaining tournament overall.

Seconded. Away from the final stages which had some high-class and very intense rugby, some of the second-tier nations have really stepped up which improves the whole competition. Japan especially were unlucky not to make the final stages.

It doesn't really come much better and the Six Nations have a lot to learn.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
England beat New Zealand!

(for those who can't view this video coverage on the BBC site it's a Rugby League international. Still England and still NZ though)
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Bye bye Sam Burgess...

Honestly, the England rugby setup should be ashamed of themselves for this alone.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
To be scrupulously fair, it was always likely to happen, with brothers, mother and fiancee all in Melbourne.

Where it all became more likely was with Bath seeming unable to decide where to play him - first unsettling cock-up.

Then no one had the wit to advise him to turn down the invitation to join the England squad - second cock-up.

Finally, no one seemed able to get through to Stuart Lancaster that Burgess was out of his depth - although if SL had any sense at all he wouldn't have even considered him for England duty.

Anyone heard how the whitewash (sorry, "review") into England's RWC fiasco is going?
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
Have just returned to the internet after a few weeks in rugby-mad Fiji, where plenty gathered at 3 or 4am to watch the semis and the final matches on TV. (All matches were free to air in Fiji, with the government making a special decree to override the more limited rights "awarded" by the IRB to pay TV!).

Unlike in 2011, the general view was that (unlike in 2011) Fiji played well but were undone by the draw. However there was a feeling of schadenfreude that England (held responsible as hosts for the draw) got what they deserved from "rigging" the draw. Is there any other other sporting tournament with the seeding based on form of 3 years ago?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Not really news, is it?

Overall I think Lancaster has done a decent job but he'll forever be remembered for England's performance in the World Cup. I expect the whole of the coaching team (and the financial tipster aka kitman) to go too.

As for the players, it will be quicker to name those who will remain rather than those who will go.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Shocking news from New Zealand about the untimely death of Jonah Lomu. [Votive]
When you consider how short his career he made a huge impact on the game, and continued to be a wonderful ambassador for rugby when his playing days came to an end. A great loss for the game both in NZ and worldwide.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Yeah, we're all pretty gutted downunda ...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
Yeah, we're all pretty gutted downunda ...

You're not the only ones. I doubt anyone ever disliked Jonah Lomu (quite a few feared him, but that's different), he always came over as a really nice, modest guy but he actually changed the game of rugby. Before Lomu there had been big wingers and quick ones. I don't think anyone had ever been so big and so quick. Now every side wants a big, quick wing-threequarter.

RIP Jonah Lomu, you'll not be forgotten.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Really sad news about Jonah. A real superstar and by all accounts a very nice person as well.

So...it's Eddie Jones for England...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I can understand Eddie Jones wanting a more confrontational captain for England but Dylan Hartley?

He has all the skills but plays in a red mist most of the time. I feel that Joe Launchbury is probably too nice a chap to be captain but how can anyone captain a team when they are off the field? I'd like to see Mike Brown given the job. He never lets the side or the supporters down.

As far as Robshaw is concerned, if he is considered as a blind-side he's had it. There are just too many better #6s around: Haskell and Wood are the obvious ones plus plenty of alternatives, like Dave Ewers and Matt Garvey. There is still a shortage of open-sides once one goes beyond Matt Kvesic - unless Jones pushes the limits to select Steffon Armitage!
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Like you, SS, I'm amazed at talk of Dylan Hartley being captain material. His bans over the past 8 years add up to more than a year:

Moreover, rather than learning from experience and calming down a bit, he seems to be getting worse.

Its not just a question of can he captain from off the pitch, but what sort of example is he to the younger players England should be bringing on for the next RWC?
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
So, with the Six Nations about to start predictions etc?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
OK, for a start Hartley makes it to match one, half-time before getting carded. Jamie George comes on and shows what he's worth. Mike Brown gets the captaincy.

Not sure what will go on in detail but I reckon Wales have a chance of a Grand Slam. If not then France v England, the last match, could have a basketball score like last year.

[ 28. January 2016, 13:56: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
And now the pain really starts. I've just seen Eddie Jones first England teaam and here it is:

Mike Brown; Anthony Watson, Jonathan Joseph, Owen Farrell, Jack Nowell; George Ford, Danny Care;

Joe Marler, Dylan Hartley (captain), Dan Cole, Joe Launchbury, George Kruis, Chris Robshaw, James Haskell, Billy Vunipola.

The most radical step has been to swap Robshaw andd Haskell round, but apart from the Burgess debacle, what has changed since the World Cup?

No one truly "new" has come in, and it's not like there isn't talent out there.
 
Posted by Garasu (# 17152) on :
 
The thing that gets me with England squads is that the whole doesn't seem to match the sum of the parts!
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Well, I guess us England fans are in a position we never really thought we'd be after the first round - top of the table!

Jones's selection for Scotland seemed pretty conservative. Will be interesting to see if he mixes things up against Italy.

Farrell at 12 was the biggest negative for me. He's not a 12 (at least not a modern 12). If he's there because Ford's kicking can't be trusted, then Ford shouldn't be there.

Oh, and Haskell at open side. He's not a 6.

Biggest positive was that Billy Vunipola lasted the 80 minutes and looked like he's stepped up a gear.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
What - Monday already and no one with anything on the start of the RBS 6 Nations??? OK, my thoughts, FWIW:

England - Did no better than they might have been expected to do under Lancaster, completely according to the form book, even to the display of petluance by Owen Farrell.

Scotland - It wouldn't have been a massive upset if they'd won, so they should take heart and look at beating France and Italy at the very least.

Italy - Must be in despair because they deserved to win, but have no chance until they get a reliable kicker.

France - Seem to be getting back to how they were in the 1970s: either brilliant or dreadful and frequently a combination of the two in the same match.

Ireland - Solid and with good skills; I can't see any of the other teams causing them a major headache, with the possible exception of the French, if they're on form.

Wales - Solid and the defence is very good; the loss of Biggar so soon is a major worry but Priestland is up to the job. Gatland is unhappy but likely to get a bit more out of the backs next time out.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
I beat you by 3 minutes!

Afraid I don't agree with your assessment of Scotland v England. Scots were more settled than the English, home advantage, much better form coming out of the WC, and they blew several opportunities to take that match. Don't think I'd be taking heart if I were Vern Cotter. I'd be furious! Oh, and Farrell needs to grow up fast...

The tournament is between Wales and Ireland realistically. Who can do best against the English at Twickenham may decide it between them.

(I'm still holding out for the English to sneak in 2nd, but let's see!)
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
I'll come late to the party as always..

England - I sort of agree with commentators who have suggested that the squaring of the Ford-Farrell circle is to pick them both if in doubt.

Having said that, Farrell's radar was well off on Saturday. Not sure we've got a 7 worth the number either.

That game went as expected really, dire bore-fest with England pretty magnificent in defending against anything thrown at them.

So much for the new era, that could have been an England performance from anytime since about 1972, and as an England fan I'm more than acquainted with grinding out dull victories.

Scotland - I've been saying since the beginning of last year that there's a good team there struggling to spark. I'm not going to get too excited by their performance at the world cup given who they actually had to play, but overall they still somehow seem to be less than the sum of their parts. If and when they do click, they could be a sturdy mid-table rather than competitors for the wooden spoon.

France - I don't agree that they've regressed to the France of old, I think they're visibly trying to be England, and it's inhibiting the natural way they've usually played rugby as a nation. If they carry on like this then they're going to be in trouble.

Italy, on the other hand, *are* actually playing like the France of old - flinging the ball around with abandon and going for some audacious play. It doesn't always come off of course, but they really are a shining beacon of team spirit, belief, and courage outweighing shortcomings (as noted upthread, they are hampered by lack of a top flight kicker).

I was gutted for them on Saturday. On their day, not exaggerating to say they're currently the most entertaining northern hemisphere side to watch IMO, and it wouldn't surprise me if they're actually most peoples' second team these days.

Wales V Ireland - I'll be completely honest that it's the only match I didn't see.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Provoked by that, I have to own up that England aren't blessed with options at #10. Ford is out of form, Farrell is marginal and I doubt Eddie Jones has the bottle to pick Cipriani. Of the 25 Devoto is probably the best #10!

As for the forwards Hartley is a shoo-in, Mako Vunipola was so much better than Marler he has to start and I'd give Cole a start because he is so much better with Hartley alongside. Then again, most tight-heads are.

In the back row I'd be brave, chose Itoje over Robshaw (he's a proper ball-winner, despite being 6'6") although in the longer term he's a lock forward. Kruis really ought to start although Lawes extra weight will be useful against Italy. At least the lineout ought to go well with them.

Meanwhile, Scotland are doomed until they find a good #10. England have enough strength elsewhere but Scotland just don't.

[ 11. February 2016, 11:38: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
have all the rugby fans shuffled off??

I've been watching England since the mid/late 1980s. In all that time I've become used to the boredom and tedium as they ruthlessly, efficiently grind out results. Never flair, never excitement just brutal effort to more often than not chalk up a W.

Yesterday was quite literally the worst England performance I have ever seen.

On a bright note, the last try was lovely. Difficult to knock Joseph for reliably poaching the other three, but poaching was what they came from.

Other than that, the breakdown was dreadful, they got turned over more times than I've ever seen in a match before, and the lineout was mostly appalling. The scoreline does not reflect another game performance by the Italians, and I can't say that the Irish, French and Welsh will have seen anything to worry them unduly. Big improvements needed.

OTOH, at least Moseley won.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I agree, that was the worst thirty-point win ever. The turning point was when Lawes and Canna went off. Lawes had played a stinker, giving up more ball and penalties away than anyone while Canna was playing beautifully and he didn't appear to be injured or worn out. Shame his goal kicking isn't better.

There's going to be a lot of lineout practice over the next two weeks, focusing on the calls and supporting jumpers.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Now the Six Nations starts in earnest. Wales have le big one, against France. Wales have a good record against France so at home should deal with it. For one thing, Dan Lydiate is back and he provides a very physical presence.

Scotland meanwhile are desperate for a win. On the one hand they were unlucky through last year's campaign and unjustly lost to Australia in the World Cup but ain't that just the way things go?

For England however the waiting is over. the first of the bigger boys is there although it is at Twickers and Ireland are depleted. That doesn't mean England will win at a canter or even win at all for Ireland are still Irish and will give you a good shoeing (strictly within the laws of the game of course). It could get a bit tasty, then we will find out whether England's fit, fast and strong forwards have that bit of "dog" about them that gains a rugby player respect* from his opponents.

*I suppose I mean fear. Yes, what will prevent Jamie Heaslip from chinning Maro Itoje at the first opportunity?
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
The first half was awful: nervy, niggling and safety-first at all odds.

I'm not sure what Mr Gatland said at half-time but it seemed to do the trick: heads were up when the teams came back and the Welsh seemed more purposeful. George North's try, while including an element of luck, was still wonderful and the entire team defended like trojans.

Bearing in mind we were also playing the referee (Wayne Barnes doesn't mind which team he aids so long as he can give a decision against Wales) I think it was a decent result.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
The first half was awful: nervy, niggling and safety-first at all odds.

I'm not sure what Mr Gatland said at half-time but it seemed to do the trick: heads were up when the teams came back and the Welsh seemed more purposeful. George North's try, while including an element of luck, was still wonderful and the entire team defended like trojans.

Bearing in mind we were also playing the referee (Wayne Barnes doesn't mind which team he aids so long as he can give a decision against Wales) I think it was a decent result.

Barnes did Wales no favours yesterday, but he didn't help the game as a whole. As a referee I think he is past it.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
It wasn't a particularly entertaining game, it seemed to be mainly scrums and defense, very little running, a few nail biting moments when the French were right up to the try line, but nothing really memorable. It was the right result though - ok, I know I'm going to be biased, but Wales were the better team.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
In the Wooden Spoon match in Rome you would have thought Scotland had won the Six Nations, if not a Grand Slam. Good to see a smile on their faces at last.

After respectable if unsuccessful performances against France and England Italy were woeful when they were not in possession. Even their scrum misfired and they missed way too many tackles.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Don't want to put a spoiler in for anyone yet to watch. Cracking good match though, England v Ireland .
 
Posted by balaam (# 4543) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
I'm not sure what Mr Gatland said at half-time but it seemed to do the trick:

He probably said nothing, just came round with 15 cups of very strong coffee. Wales woke up for the second half, fading before the final whistle/hooter when the caffeine rush wore off.

I could be wrong though.

For those thinking yesterday was the wooden spoon decider, you could be wrong, the next round in Dublin could be that. How embarrassing is that for last years winners?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Taking a break from the internationals, some medics have suggested/appealled for a ban on tackling and scrums in school rugby.

I reckon they have a very good point. Rugby is a technical game, moreso than soccer but you have to be comfortable with contact, which for all but a few will mean contact with people bigger and faster than you are. The most serious problem is that if players aren't comfortaable with contact then they will get in the wrong position for tackles and the like.

It might be worth mentioning that in the entirely amateur American Football as played in Britain, all football for under 18's is non-contact "flag" football. Adult gridiron here is fully-kitted and you can hear the hits from quite a way off. It's not quite the NFL, but it demands technique and comfort with contact.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Well - that was a game of four quarters!
What the hell were we up to for the first hour - apart from gifting the English 18 points, that is?
Still, good to see that even as they lift the Triple Crown they do so in the knowledge that we out-scored England by 3 tries to 1.
We'll be back to get our trophy next year England.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:

Still, good to see that even as they lift the Triple Crown they do so in the knowledge that we out-scored England by 3 tries to 1.

that knowledge and the knowledge that Wales don't seem to have many answers when playing a team of 15 players...
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
actually, I forgot eye gouging - that appears to be a Welsh answer to playing against 15 men. Oh to be a fly on the wall when the citing committee sit...
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Looking good for England but blimey that was hell of a last gasp effort by Wales.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
Feckin' Nora - Scotland win in some style, and could finish second if they can get past Ireland! I have had to chain the Knotweed to an anvil to stop her floating away!

AG
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
[Yipee]

I love it when the little guy wins, especially if the little guy is Scotland. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Beenster (# 242) on :
 
Happy for England, winning, hoping for the grand slam, but it's still a win and a long time coming.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Saturday felt like very sweet revenge for being dumped out of the WC by Wales last year. Bring on Le Crunch!

It does the English disservice to say that Wales "gifted" 18 points. (England gifted 21 points??) OK, a few of your guys had a bad day at the office on Saturday, but many of the Welsh mistakes came from English pressure.

Oh, and I don't think any English supporters will worry for one second that Wales outscored us by three tries to one. Never been an English concern.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
From the Grand Slump to a Grand Slam is quite a turnaround, in just six months and many of the players are the same. The style of play isn't so different but the attitude has changed out of all recognition, so thanks Eddie Jones and the coaching team.

It isn't perfect but a Grand Slam with a team that is improving rather than one already at the top is a good result.
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
That's a promising squad with a very good coach. Let's see how they do against a Southern Hemisphere team.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
...and Hartley survives unscathed! Somewhat literally, given that ten minutes from time it looked as though he could have broken his neck, but has come through the tournament without a booking.

Could this be his redemption? Or could it all go mammaries skyward yet?

AG
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Barnabas62:
That's a promising squad with a very good coach. Let's see how they do against a Southern Hemisphere team.

I'm sure there will be some embarrassments against them, especially the All Blacks, but it's going to be in those games where, for example, we find out whether Ford is up to the mark as a #10 (he's not been on form all season) and how Itoje responds to the rough stuff.

Eddie Jones's trickiest task is to manage the inevitable changes to the team, because there are going to be plenty! Come the next World Cup I reckon ten of today's starters won't be anywhere near the team.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Sioni, would be interested to know which five of the starters will still be around for the next RWC and which ten will not.

Here's my pen'orth:

Brown - not sure. Think he'll be eclipsed by 2019
Watson - starts in the RWC
Joseph - torn over this one. With Tuilagi and Slade in the mix, Joseph might miss out.
Farrell - won't start at 12! Might start at 10...
Nowell - less likely to start than Watson. Think we'll see others coming through, or coming back into contention.
Ford - depends if we see a return to previous form
Care - bench?

M Vunipola - won't start. There'll be a new, young gun here. Bench?
Hartley - Jamie George will start. Bench?
Cole - Again, think there'll be a newer face here. Bench?
Itoje - starts in the RWC
Kruis - starts in the RWC
Robshaw - not sure. May well lose out to a younger gun.
Haskell - won't start in the RWC. We'll have a #7 by then.
B Vunipola - starts in the RWC

So if I were to pick five definite starters from Saturday's XV it would be Itoje, Kruis, Vunipola, Watson and Farrell/Ford.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Having read your analysis I reckon only four will make it for sure, plus Farrell who is likely to stay as a Wilkinson-like kicker and defender. Ford isn't reliable enough in those areas. Tuilagi and Slade is a dream ticket. Watson will be there, probably at full-back.

The back row will be interesting as there are almost too many options. Nathan Hughes will be available soon, plus the lump that is Dave Ewers and there are a few candidates for the openside like Clifford, Luke Wallace a Will Fraser. Billy might have to be in form to get a game!

I seriously wonder if Lawes will be in the squad if players like Josh Beaumont develop.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
How about promotion and relegation between the Six Nations and the European Nations Cup? This has been proposed in the past but as Bernard Lapasset and Lynn Howells mention, teams like Romania and Georgia won't progress unless they have incentives and opportunities.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
This isn't the "battering" form of the game but congratulations to Kenya which has won its first World Rugby Sevens tournament.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I think the England Women's team won their World Sevens as well!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
On the other side of the game, Jonathan Davies who can be relied on to shoot straight from the lip, reckons the Italian sides should leave the Pro12 tournament. This is the competition for the Welsh, Irish and Scottish regions plus the top two Italian sides. They aren't doing well, about as well as Newport Gwent Dragons most years, and until recently they were no worse than Connacht, traditionally the weakest Irish province, but if you look at the record of Welsh clubs and regions in the Heineken (now European Champions) Cup, where's the justification for their participation in that? Over twenty years the Welsh have managed to reach just the very first final and they lost that.

Worse still, Davies suggests the Italians should play French sides! That's daft, because if they play good French sides, like the Top 14, they will be murdered (it's brutal) and they play others Italian rugby won't progress.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
while the winter code is sleeping, anyone else on here a closet (or not so closet) League fan?

SuperLeague this season is all over the place - it might just be the most entertaining top flight in northern hemisphere sport this year (with due apology to Leicester City).
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I've not takn much notice of SuperLeague for years. At times it looks like a more crowded version of sevens, which isn't a bad thing!

It's the semi-finals of the Avia Premiership tomorrow. Saracens are at home to Leicester while Exeter host Wasps.

I've had a look at the teams and reckon Saracens ought to win. They have home advantage, a better starting XV and their bench is full of players who could easily start. Leicester's starting XV is good but their bench isn't in the same league, so Sarries ought to pull away in the last quarter, unless Leicester provoke Ashton and Farrell, which isn't out of the question.

Exeter came so close to beating Wasps in the European Championship six weeks ago so home advantage ought to see them through now, but this match is a lot closer. It's a battle of the back rows I think!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
No surprises in the semi-finals but there was some good rugby. A higher standard of rugby by more clubs (and different clubs) has been a contributor to England's Six Nations success.

What do you think of Eddie Jones' selection for the Australia tour? On the one hand he has made selections from way out in the left-field (Ben Te'o and Ellis Genge), a prop who is a so-so scrummager (Kyle Sinckler), the persistently injured Manu Tuilagi and retained Ford and Lawes who aren't in any kind of form. At least there's the hope of ball winning in the backrow with Clifford and Harrison but I do wonder what Matt Kvesic has done wrong.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:


What do you think of Eddie Jones' selection for the Australia tour? On the one hand he has made selections from way out in the left-field (Ben Te'o and Ellis Genge), a prop who is a so-so scrummager (Kyle Sinckler), the persistently injured Manu Tuilagi and retained Ford and Lawes who aren't in any kind of form. At least there's the hope of ball winning in the backrow with Clifford and Harrison but I do wonder what Matt Kvesic has done wrong.

I'm going to England v Wales on Sunday, so might make my mind up on the selections after that...
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Eddie Jones reckons that Chris Ashton "must fix parts of his game" to get a recall and this would appear to summarise them nicely.

Let's hope he thinks again. There might be a place for him back in the 13-a-side game.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Second leg of the Championship playoff final tonight. Bristol hold a 28-13 lead after the first leg in Doncaster. Eighty minutes of intelligent, precise rugby and the mighty Bris are back where they belong. Let's get this done boys: C'mon Bris!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Second leg of the Championship playoff final tonight. Bristol hold a 28-13 lead after the first leg in Doncaster. Eighty minutes of intelligent, precise rugby and the mighty Bris are back where they belong. Let's get this done boys: C'mon Bris!

I hope so too. This is Bristol's fifth attempt at promotion via the play-offs in seven seasons. Three times out of four previous attempts they have lost to sides who have come straight back down and I hope they come up and stay awhile so we get Bath, Bristol & Gloucester fighting out a battle within a battle in the Premiership (note: some of this will be "post-watershed viewing" because there's a lot of history between these clubs).
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
It's like you read my facebook post on the matter before the first leg. Such a proud history in the westcountry. Bristol need to be in the Prem. But I'm biased of course. [Smile]

Half time, 16-10 on the night, 44-23 on aggregate. Forty minutes to go. Donny are going to throw everything at this. Anything could happen. It's so tense and I'm really really nervous!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
An absolutely bonkers second half saw tries flying in at both ends and two sin bins. But somehow, despite massive pressure from Doncaster, we managed to keep our heads and not throw it away. A big factor was our fly half who didn't miss a single kick all night - amazing considering he's still only 20!

So now, the Premiership beckons. Bath, Gloucester: We're coming for you.

[Big Grin] [Big Grin] [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
A warm welcome back to the top tier for Brizzle. I fear for them however as last season's Aviva Premiership was a tough one and even London Irish, who were well adrift at the end and went down, weren't a bad side by any means. If anything they had some players a year or two past their best and others not quite ready.

If Bristol are going to stay up they will have to be at least on par with Worcester and Newcastle, so they will have to acquire some experience and talent.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Such a proud history in the westcountry. Bristol need to be in the Prem. But I'm biased of course. [Smile]

There are several teams that *need* to be in the Prem - to Bristol you could add Mose and Cov.

The difference between the three - who had comparable crowds and grassroots structures throughout amateurism, is that when all of them managed to go pop trying to keep up with carpetbaggers post 1995, only one has managed to get lucky with a billionaire to repair the damage.

Look at Mose and Cov, Bris fans - that's where you'd be without Mr Lansdowne's largesse. Rebuilding slowly with your pocket money and the widow's mite, with your crowds down to last loyal thousand from the 14,000 or so you got in the heydey.

I'm please for Bris, but hate what money has done to the sport in the last 20 years. Bris have got intrinsic worth, and a heritage that should put them at the top of the sport, but that's not why they're going there and fans shouldn't kid themselves that it is. It's one man's deep pockets.

Fans of Mose, Cov, Club, Fylde, Wharfedale etc will have to continue to console themselves with their heritage.

"Such a proud history in" all those places, they all *need* to be in the Prem.

But I'm biased of course.

Love the clubs, increasingly hate the sport and what it now stands for.

[ 26. May 2016, 10:19: Message edited by: betjemaniac ]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Lol, okay then. If you say so.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Lol, okay then. If you say so.

I had thought seriously about whether I'd gone over the top with that - to be honest modern rugby is a bit of a trigger for me, and I'm only 35. But I decided in the end that it read like a fan of the sport railing against the tawdry death of the sport so it was ok because it's true.

But, since, you've taken that line, and rather than rejoicing in your own good fortune, which I both recognised and wished Bris well on in my post, perhaps you'd like to point out where I was wrong in saying that Bris weren't any different to many other clubs outside the current top flight?

If you'd like to compare Bris as a club in its record or standing to Moseley or Coventry then I'm all ears. Aside from the last 15-20 years when all three have been borderline bankrupt and people have drifted away from 2 of them because no one with serious money has come in.

Bris have got lucky, that's a lovely thing for their fans. But I'd be desperately sorry for what's left of the sport if in the process they forget both where they came from and reality.

To their credit Exeter, for example, have come from nowhere and held onto that knowledge.

Bristol and Moseley are genuinely twin clubs, with almost entirely similar longevity at the top, contributions to the England side, and story of bankruptcy and struggles with getting to grips with professionalism. The only difference is that someone with money has (and I'm genuinely happy for them) turned up in Bristol. I've always enjoyed my visits to the Mem and Ashton Gate because people with a memory of more than about 10 years recognised that it was a meeting of two of the great clubs of English rugby that had been screwed over by the game going open.

If that hadn't happened, then Bris would have lost their ground (which of course, with the Mem, they did), and be struggling based on what they could raise from the die hards like Mose and Cov have been. Bris got lucky. Good for Bris.

I'm genuinely heartily sorry if in my post the balance of good feeling towards Bris tipped towards bad feeling towards the shafting of so many other clubs with an equal claim to the top tier based on anything other than money for the entrance ticket.

"Lol" doesn't quite cover it I'm afraid. Come to our ground and say hello - as with many other Bris fans I'll buy you a pint and we can chat about the past the present and the future.

Well done Bris, it's been too long out of the top flight and you deserve to be there. Hopefully you'll be the latest of many clubs that deserve to be there to get back there.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Okay, fair enough.

I accept completely that Bristol monumentally ballsed up the transition to professional rugby. That we managed to stay just the right side of bankrupcy was more down to good luck than good planning. And yes, if we didn't have Lansdown's money, we would not have won promotion. All of this is true.

But to post the comments at the moment that you did came across to me like pissing on our fire. It's totally okay for a supporter of another club to do that. But that doesn't mean that I have to engage with it in the moment of my euphoria. But now that the glow of finally winning promotion is subsiding, let me say a few things:
So, apology firmly accepted. No hard feelings. And good luck to Moseley.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Sorry Wales, you deserved better after a 70% excellent show up against the ABs. But your 40-7 drubbing at the hands of the Chiefs set this little country on fire (not least at seeing our mercurial hero Stephen Donald back on song) and we will dine out on this for many years.

In fact bring back (the brave new franchise world equivalent of) provincial games ... that was sheer delight.
 
Posted by Celtic Knotweed (# 13008) on :
 
Just watched a very enjoyable Japan - Scotland match. [Big Grin] I have to say that the Japanese try in the first half was a thing of beauty (and I'm a Scotland fan!).
As usual, Laidlaw kicked well - but I do wonder if Scotland's relying on him too much in the same way that England relied on Wilkinson... What happens if he's injured or when he has to retire?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Meanwhile in Melbourne there was a colossal encounter between two very good sides. A lot of focus has been on how the side that won did so with 29% of possession, 26% of territory and made 200 tackles (an average of over a dozen per man!) My impression is that there should never be a rugby international in that venue until the pitch is sorted out and Australia must sort out their midfield. Foley looks out of sorts and the big lads in the centre don't appear to have the class to penetrate. Essentially, if you can keep Israel Folau tied down, you're OK.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Not a bad weekend for England. Winning a tense final test in Sydney to take the series 3-0 than our under-20s win the age group world championship. Some of that group will be challenging for senior places very soon. The future looks good.

A bad weekend for Wales though, steamrollered by the all-conquering Black Machine while Ireland ran South Africa close, exposing all kind of flaws there.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
A legend bows out
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Oh wait ... I conflated two headlines. Another All Black, "Snow" White dies, Pinetree is merely playing in the hospital ...
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
While the franchise antipodean Super Rugby doesn't necessarily translate to international meets, I'd have to say the NZ dominance of the comp testifies to the way the code is deepening stupendously at the moment ... entire wells of replacement players simply stepping in on call with no loss of momentum or impact.

Though I admit the Jo'burg-based Lions may yet win.

NZ dominance

[ 24. July 2016, 18:38: Message edited by: Zappa ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I know the Bledisloe Cup matters but isn't this going too far?

TBH, I reckon some scummy paper wanted an exclusive.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I know the Bledisloe Cup matters but isn't this going too far?

TBH, I reckon some scummy paper wanted an exclusive.

I suspect the ABs have managed to manipulate the while thing about as brilliantly as they're playing at the moment. Tonight, alas, there isn't a game for me to watch. [Snore]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
(With apologies to betjemaniac.)

The Premiership kicks off today, and Bristol have a tough tough tough opening fixture away at Harlequins. Really wish I could be there! C'mon Bris!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
(With apologies to betjemaniac.)

The Premiership kicks off today, and Bristol have a tough tough tough opening fixture away at Harlequins. Really wish I could be there! C'mon Bris!

Actually it kicked off last night with Newcastle beating Sale, thanks to a missed penalty (in a pretty poor game from reports) while in the televised game at Kingsholm Leicester came back from 31-7 down to beat Gloucester 38-31! Another "last play" win, with a score after the 80 minute mark. The right game was on the box, as is usually the case.

[ 03. September 2016, 10:35: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
The scoreline of the ABs game last night (New Zealand 57 Argentina 22) makes Argentina look poor. They weren't. For fifty minutes they stretched the ABs as they haven't been stretched for a good while. At half time the ABs had clawed back a see-sawing lead to 24-22.

Then they found their mojo. Devastating mojo. [Eek!]
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
The fact that Aus beat SA also shows that NZ beat a half decent team (twice) in the previous rounds. Its easy to say that Aus only lost to England in the summer (your winter) but England are actually damn good under new management.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
The scoreline of the ABs game last night (New Zealand 57 Argentina 22) makes Argentina look poor. They weren't. For fifty minutes they stretched the ABs as they haven't been stretched for a good while. At half time the ABs had clawed back a see-sawing lead to 24-22.

Then they found their mojo. Devastating mojo. [Eek!]

Absolutely!
It is frankly gobsmacking how good they are.
Why? Coaching? conditioning? Talent?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
The scoreline of the ABs game last night (New Zealand 57 Argentina 22) makes Argentina look poor. They weren't. For fifty minutes they stretched the ABs as they haven't been stretched for a good while. At half time the ABs had clawed back a see-sawing lead to 24-22.

Then they found their mojo. Devastating mojo. [Eek!]

Absolutely!
It is frankly gobsmacking how good they are.
Why? Coaching? conditioning? Talent?

From what I've seen of them (starting with the 1967 ABs in the British Isles):
1 - Rugby is the "normal" sport in NZ. Five year old play. Wales is Soccer Nation by comparison.
2 - Their entire game is based on eliminating errors
3 - They are playing the same game now that they played a hundred years ago, so new players move into the team seamlessly
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
That, and Maoris are hard as fucking nails. [Biased]
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
(With apologies to betjemaniac.)

The Premiership kicks off today, and Bristol have a tough tough tough opening fixture away at Harlequins. Really wish I could be there! C'mon Bris!

I'm quite enjoying life in National 1 actually. Well, I'm not, but there are compensations:

- We've won the first 2 games for the first time in about a decade
- Relegation has seen the restoration of the Moseley v Coventry derby.

This was once one of the premier ties in English rugby - Mose v Cov on Boxing Day 1972 saw 16 England internationals on the pitch across the 2 sides (the away fixture in February 1973 saw an unbelievable 18!).

Bit different now, but a good crowd saw Mose beat Cov 19-14 on Saturday.

I thought Bris were really unlucky against Quins last week, but Saints was a slightly different kettle of fish - hopefully you'll be fine though. I reckon Bris are in the mix for the drop (whatever Mr Robinson says), but it's more likely to be Wuss or Newcastle, which should see you finish 10th or better.

Having said that, Wuss were pretty handy against Glaws on Friday night.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I think we'll be fighting for our lives the whole season. No illusions there. Sixty decent minutes against Quins doesn't make a campaign, or even close. Our best players have to stay fit, our mediocre players have to perform to their utmost, and we probably need a couple more in.

My expectations aren't high. But that's okay. [Smile]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
I think we'll be fighting for our lives the whole season. No illusions there. Sixty decent minutes against Quins doesn't make a campaign, or even close. Our best players have to stay fit, our mediocre players have to perform to their utmost, and we probably need a couple more in.

My expectations aren't high. But that's okay. [Smile]

Another factor is your coach. Andy Robinson lets things brood and could actually discourage the players if he isn't careful. He's good technically, but I think he has a problem at the "people" level.

In Jason Woodward however they have acquired one of those players who could make a difference. A couple of forwards now, and you'll be OK.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
That, and Maoris are hard as fucking nails. [Biased]

Well, there are a lot of Pasifika players as well who seem to have the basic physical equipment but how those guys are coached and handled is critical eg
Julian Savea, pretty average season yet last game back to his best after they benched him.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
The All Blacks do it again. 43~13 vs the Springboks. (Sigh) and they were far from their best.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
The All Blacks do it again. 43~13 vs the Springboks. (Sigh) and they were far from their best.

I was lucky enough to see it on TV. The ABs did make lots of errors (by their own standards), especially in the first half but the second-half was better. Dane Coles had a stormer, doing the hard graft and making three scoring passes. The 'Boks really looked off the boil.

On another tack, is anyone else of the opinion that the top teams play each other too often? It puts a huge pressure on players to play more often than is good for them. Personally I don't think modern rugby players should turn out more than fortnightly if their top-class career is going to be more than five years. It doesn't do them any favours in later life either.

[ 17. September 2016, 11:57: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Bristol conceded 70 points to a rampant Wasps team yesterday afternoon. I watched some of the game on TV, and it was men against boys. I know Wasps are a decent team, but ten tries is still a lot. [Help]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
IF, Bristol were disappointing but of all the sides in the Premiership I think Wasps are most likely to run up a basketball score. Sarries are a more resilient and reliable side and Exeter have talent to spare, although they always seem to let a try or three in, but with backs like Wade, Daly and Frank Halai, Wasps aren't going to butcher many chances. You need sides like Sale and Glaws to do that.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Stupid boy!

One of Eddie Jones' selection quandaries seems to have been resolved. There are probably half a dozen ahead of Ashton anyway.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
An arm chair expert's advice to the Springboks:
fire the coach, fire most of he backs, keep the pack and the 9 and don't kick away possession. All Blacks 57 Springboks 15.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
There was somewhat of a mismatch in that game. At the end of the first half it was 15-12 to the ABs - but the ploy of relying 100% on Steyn's boot was always likely to end in tears. It did. Big time. It could have been a much bigger score if Barrett's boots were on song.

[ 12. October 2016, 04:21: Message edited by: Zappa ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
We've sent a few of our boys to say hello to some of your northern hemisphere bros. We might even lend you a bro if you like.

But it's going to be a bugger getting up in the middle of the night to watch out for our boys, so look after them, eh?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Just thought I had better provide a link, but Ireland have beaten the All Blacks! That's the first time Ireland have done so, and end the ABs unbeaten run going back nineteen games.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
You beat me to it. I couldn't believe this. NZ have humiliated the rest of the southern hemisphere this season. Earlier today Australia shrugged Wales aside and I assumed we were in for another miserable northern hemisphere autumn. And then this.

The game was played in Chicago in front of a 60,000 crowd. Must be the biggest rugby crowd ever in North America I would guess. There is a rematch in a fortnight in Ireland.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Funnily enough most kiwis are thrilled for Ireland, even though we don't like losing (too often). It's great for the game, the better side won, and I'm delighted for them. What a thing to tell your grandchildren!
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
Funnily enough most kiwis are thrilled for Ireland, even though we don't like losing (too often). It's great for the game, the better side won, and I'm delighted for them. What a thing to tell your grandchildren!

Absolutely! Heaps of us are of Irish descent! Joey Carbury their 12 is a cradle kiwi anyway and the coach is a NZer.
I think we are all thrilled to see the ABs seriously challenged plus personally I am a bit sick of Hansen's condescending patronising attitude.
Remember though ABs were playing people out of position and did not have the 2 starting locks. There is always one chance at least to beat them in a season. This will encourage the lions.
The match up I'd have liked to see this season was NZ v England
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Ireland put the ABs to the rack and the ABs just escaped in the second game - 21-9 does not reflect any statistic except, weirdly the points. [Ultra confused] Possession, territory, penalties, all those vitals favoured Ireland, but Barrett had his kicking boots on, Ireland made a couple of bad scoring decisions, and we escaped a second loss.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Quite a weekend for international rugby: Apart from England's dismissal of Fiji, all the games were competitive, which must bode well. The All Blacks need to play more teams like Ireland that aren't afraid of them.
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
Scotland won!!! [Yipee]

And I went to my first rugby match ever (and it was damn cold!)
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Meanwhile, at the bottom of the Premiership...

Bristol sacked Andy Robinson - the director of rugby - two weeks ago. Then, they followed it up with a scrappy but respectable bonus point loss at the Rec on Friday night. I can't say I'm sorry to see Robinson go. His rugby was often dour and his ego frequently got in the way. Maybe, just maybe, things might take a turn for the better soon... [Help]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by kingsfold:
(and it was damn cold!)

Yeah. That is a down side.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
A very good argument made here by the Georgian coach. Georgia have become all but unbeatable in the European Nations Cup (which is the top tier of European sides ranked below the Six Nations teams). They have won the last six editions aided by state funding and there are some outstanding, not to mention fierce, Georgians playing in France and the British Isles.

I'm not sure simple promotion/relegation, or play-offs are the way to go, but I have to congratulate Scotland for inviting them to the appropriately named Rugby Park (at Kilmanock) for what could be a tricky fixture.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
The ABs looked, understandably tired against a feisty french side. In recent weeks they have done Buenos Aires, Durban, Auckland, Chicago, Rome, Ireland and Paris, and even übermenschen* are human, I guess. They held France off. Just.

I would love to see Georgia somehow absorbed into the European network more completely. As a comparison the addition of Argentina to the southern hemisphere gigs has been welcome and they are growing in stature. The glaring gap in southern hemisphere comps is the Pacific Islands, where some amazing rugby players wallow in invisibility (or defect to France, New Zealand, England, Australia, wherever).

*German for "big fit buggers"
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
The ABs looked, understandably tired against a feisty french side. In recent weeks they have done Buenos Aires, Durban, Auckland, Chicago, Rome, Ireland and Paris, and even übermenschen* are human, I guess. They held France off. Just.

"

Yeah I was betting on Barnes to help them lose again.
As one commentator put it, they got out of gaol with a couple of sucker punches.

But how about that defence?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The Great and Good who run the Six Nations championship have agreed from the 2017 edition to award bonus points as is done in most of the other leagues and championships hereabouts.

I realise this is being done to encourage try scoring and get the public in but Rugby Union is more than try scoring. Doesn't excellent, legal defence deserve recognition? Furthermore the scheme has this weird provision of a three point bonus for any Grand Slam winning team - to prevent a team that doesn't win all their games overtaking a Grand Slam team because they have picked up every bonus point going!
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
What a dog's breakfast. I sometimes wonder if sports administrators start manufacturing work for themselves just to ensure their own continued existence.

Is there any evidence that the Six Nations was struggling that prompted this change?
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:

But how about that defence?

I liked that Beauden Barrett 90 metre dash approach to defence! [Eek!]

Looks great when it works, but excruciating when it's mistimed. Barrett reckons he had the tackle covered too, though.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Way back when, a few people wondered what Eddie Jones was thinking when he appointed Dylan Hartley England captain. Last night in his first match back with Northampton, his club side, he got sent off for a "Swinging arm" at an opponents head just six minutes after coming on. That is, in old-fashioned wrestling parlance, a forearm smash and Sean O'Brien, who was on the receiving end, had to leave the field. It is worth noting that it was, even in rugby terms a very physical game but then it had the Ireland v England dimension.

I'm not entirely sure what Eddie Jones does now. He was shaking his head and muttering under his breath from the stands, but England need a new hooker, in at least the short-to-to-medium term, and they definitely need a new captain. I know England is a successful national side while Northampton is a struggling club side, which make them very different, but I can't imagine Hartley has any future as captain, and his run as hooker might be over too.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Hartley is a thug, has always been a dirty player and has a disciplinary record which beggars belief.

When Eddie Jones appointed him it gave a clear indication of the sort of values he would be likely to strive for in his England team.

Yes, there is "winning ugly" but that is a very different thing from "playing ugly" as a default setting.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Hartley is a thug, has always been a dirty player and has a disciplinary record which beggars belief.

When Eddie Jones appointed him it gave a clear indication of the sort of values he would be likely to strive for in his England team.

I imagine EJ has looked back at 2003 and thought "What did England have that we (Australia) didn't?" and as far as people were concerned figured it was due to a near-infallible #10, Richard Hill and one Martin Johnson, known the length and breadth of Wales as Captain Thug. It's fair to say that Dylan Hartley, the Vunipolas and most of the rest would all take a backward step when Martin Johnson turned up. Not sure about Itoje though, there's an air of brooding menace about him.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I reckon Dylan Hartley is a very lucky man. To get a mere six weeks isn't excessive for the offence itself but given his previous record I'm not sure he should be playing the game at all. Although his longest ban was nine years ago he has racked up six months out in the last five years.

Eddie Jones must have had some serious words with him regarding his position with England when he appointed him captain but EJ looked seriously pissed off when Hartley walked off. Remember that EJ was also a hooker, so he's got some idea what the job is like. Hartley's time as England captain must surely be over, his time as Northampton captain is probably over and he's got renewed competition from Jamie George, Tommy Taylor and many more besides for England's #2 shirt.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
As if Northampton didn't have enough problems with Dylan Hartley's ban and poor form, others are lining up against them following the authorities decision not to sanction them after George North had been allowed back on the field after, in the view of most people, he had been knocked out cold.

I don't want to see players forced out of the game, which is their livelihood, by injury, but while persistent physical injuries are bad they can almost always recover to an extent that they can make a living outside the game. Brain injuries, while physical in origin, aren't like that. They accumulate and recovery is uncertain at best. I'm worried about what will have to happen before the Rugby Unions stop taking chances with this aspect of player safety. It's all very well saying it wasn't like this in the old days but since the game became professional players have become much bigger, faster, stronger and are conditioned to expect hard contact nowadays.

What does the team think? How about weight limits for scrums, teams and maybe even players? It's used in bobsleigh to limit speed, which is after all the primary cause of accidents which on ice-covered concrete at 80 mph plus can easily be fatal.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
It's hard to know what you can do, short of changing the rules of the game so that size, strength, and speed are not rewarded in the way that they are now. But that would mean the rugby isn't really rugby anymore. [Frown]

And let's face it, the paying public are also partly to blame. We love big "hits" and competitive breakdowns and marauding fifteen stone centres.

One possibility might be to move to a thirteen player game. That would provide a bit more space so that nimbleness and acceleration are favoured over strength and power. Or we could all just watch sevens?

I don't know, I don't see a straightforward solution,
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I'm still trying to resolve the risk of brain injury with the rules of the game but for those who like to watch the game, Boxing Day sees Cardiff Blues play Newport Dragons and Edinburgh play Glasgow Warriors. These derbies are usually far more tasty than any roast turkey.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
I'll agree that - in fact the lads and self are toying with the idea of making the pilgrimage to see the Blues-Dragons match.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
BRISTOL WIIIIIIIINNNNNNNN!!!!!!! [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee] [Overused] [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Og: Thread Killer (# 3200) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
I'm still trying to resolve the risk of brain injury with the rules of the game but for those who like to watch the game, Boxing Day sees Cardiff Blues play Newport Dragons and Edinburgh play Glasgow Warriors. These derbies are usually far more tasty than any roast turkey.

I watched a good bit of those two and the Munster Leinster match and was thoroughly entertained. The Worcester Bristol match was another matter.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Og: Thread Killer:
The Worcester Bristol match was another matter.

Well, if the ref insists on ruining the game with an idiotic red card then what do you expect? [Biased]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
quote:
Originally posted by Og: Thread Killer:
The Worcester Bristol match was another matter.

Well, if the ref insists on ruining the game with an idiotic red card then what do you expect? [Biased]
We nearly had that at Twickenham where JP Doyle showed a red to Jonny May before changing it to the intended yellow. It was an entertaining game though with Glaws unlucky not to get more than a losing bonus point.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
BRISTOL WIIIIIIIINNNNNNNN!!!!!!! [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee] [Overused] [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]

Bristol win again!!!!. An away win, at Sale.

In other news elsewhere in the Premiership, Leicester have dismissed Richard Cockerill, their long-time coach. Leicester hasn't looked a happy place for a while, with Parling, Salvi and Waldrom all leaving for Creamtealand in the last few years.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Sadly, Worcester also beat Quins so we're still bottom of the table. But maybe, just maybe, we'll make the relegation scrap competitive.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
I appreciate it's the *dark side* but I'm not sure there's room or a need on the ship for a separate thread for the Northern Union.... Please can any closet leagies on here take a minute to mourn the passing of Bradford Bulls, liquidated this afternoon, to say nothing of the salaries of their players and back office staff?

4 weeks from the start of the season. I suspect some fancy footwork may see them back in some form but it will take a minor miracle sadly.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Many years ago a work colleague played for the then Bradford Northern. He also played Rugby Union under another name (as was then necessary), but had to stop playing 'League when he got an unlimited ban. He didn't say what he had done, so it must have been pretty bad.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Many years ago a work colleague played for the then Bradford Northern. He also played Rugby Union under another name (as was then necessary), but had to stop playing 'League when he got an unlimited ban. He didn't say what he had done, so it must have been pretty bad.

Quite - League was always much more forgiving usually.... It's not "proper" rugby (although a statement like that would get me lynched along the M62), but I love it all the same.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by betjemaniac:
Please can any closet leagies on here take a minute to mourn the passing of Bradford Bulls, liquidated this afternoon, to say nothing of the salaries of their players and back office staff?

I'm not really a closet Leaguey, but I do find it very disheartening that an established club in one of England's premier sports can't stay in business. Sometimes I hate the modern world.

[Frown] [Frown] [Frown]
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Good rugby today with some close matches.
I see that French rugby has turned to fielding the big beefed-up players and came close to beating England at their own game.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:
Good rugby today with some close matches.
I see that French rugby has turned to fielding the big beefed-up players and came close to beating England at their own game.

England started last season's Six Nations slowly with a narrow win over Scotland so this, even though it was at Twickenham, was always going to be awkward. As you say France's starting eight was picked for power, size and strength but they couldn't last the full eighty minutes, and England's bench was stronger than France's.

Eddie Jones must be thinking seriously about Farrell starting at 10, as Ford wasn't convincing, with Daly or Te'o starting alongside Joseph. Lozowski's time can't be far off but I wouldn't start him in Cardiff!

Before I forget, congratulations to Scotland and I expect Wales to give Italy a bit of a pasting: good sides have come badly unstuck at Cardiff.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
I think Farrell has stood the test of time, got his temper under control and takes the knocks.
Like you say the heavy French players were only really good for the first half. Maybe the Jones' tactic was to give them a runaround. A bit nerve racking with the new tackling rule, watching them power through leg tackles and having time to off load. England could easily have gone a couple tries down before half time.
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
I didn't see the match (over here they don't really go for sports that don't involve either sticks or body armour), but ...

Scotland 27 - Ireland 22. That'll do nicely. [Yipee]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
So, wins for England, Scotland and Wales this weekend. The big game is next weekend, right Sioni? [Biased]
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
England were bloody awful, but went back into 1990s mode and ground out a win through sheer drudgery. Quite apart from anything else, despite the best efforts of the French, no one can outdo England for mind numbing route one persistence and boring the opposition into submission. And I say that as an England "fan."

I thought Italy were good value for the first 60 minutes against Wales (who ran rings round them in the last quarter but it does show that Italy are making steady progress in the right direction).

Really happy for Scotland - I've been saying (including on here) for about the 3 years that their team has somehow been less than the sum of its parts but it's finally clicking.

Of course, the real action was up at Billesley Common where Moseley put Rosslyn Park to the sword 36-20. It was extremely cold, but I can now feel my fingers enough to type again.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I'd suggest that a big match is next week in Cardiff. Scotland's win has blown the competition open. I still make England favourites next week because Wales can only win if they make the most of home advantage (very likely), play out of their skins (possible) and England are worse than on Saturday (is that possible??).

In short, it's a two-horse race and as on Saturday I reckon England's 23 will beat Wales 23, although there might be nothing between the starting 15s. Any side that brings Jamie George, James Haskell, Ben Te'o and Jack Nowell on after an hour is going to gain something. It looks like Mako Vunipola could be back, at least for part of the game.

Elsewhere it's very sad to read of the death of Joost Van der Westhuizen at 45. Possibly overshadowed by Jonah Lomu and now they have both gone.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:

Elsewhere it's very sad to read of the death of Joost Van der Westhuizen at 45. Possibly overshadowed by Jonah Lomu and now they have both gone.

Just thinking about that tackle VDW put in on Lomu in the 1995 world cup final makes me hurt. Desperately sad end, but he did a lot to raise awareness of MND - not least in RSA.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
A couple of changes by Eddie Jones for England's team against Wales. I think they are both in response to the opposition: Jack Nowell is a better defender than Jonny May and he'll probably be up against George North, while Jack Clifford gets in because England need desperately pace against Warburton and (especially) Tipuric. Tom Wood didn't show anything special last week and I don't think Haskell can manage more than half a game just yet.

I reckon it'll be a nail-biter again. England should win with what is on the field but anyone who has been in the stadium, supporting England against Wales at Cardiff, knows that the crowd is worth at least ten points to Wales.
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
Even given England and Wales's form going into this match I daren't daren't daren't hope that England will have an easy time of it. Something about the Millennium Stadium (or whatever it is called now) seems to spook the English. Dreadful record there, but keeping fingers crossed for tomorrow.

I think we'll really miss Billy in the back row tomorrow. Plenty of potential in our back row but they're going to need to play out of their skins to keep up with the Welsh 6 and 7.

Bring it on!
 
Posted by Barnabas62 (# 9110) on :
 
England squeak home again! They really haven't played their best stuff yet but seem to be getting better at turning the tables.

I think the Irish might just end the winning streak. But a victory in Wales is always something to celebrate!
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
I'm utterly flabbergasted. I did not see England getting that back. Brilliant self belief lads, brilliant! Got to do better at the breakdown.
 
Posted by St. Gwladys (# 14504) on :
 
B****r!
 
Posted by Baptist Trainfan (# 15128) on :
 
But what a magnificent game!
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
What St. Gladwys said.

Why didn't we take the points when we had the penalty in the first half? WHY?

This is a house of mourning [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
[Big Grin] [Big Grin] [Big Grin] [Big Grin] [Big Grin]
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:

Why didn't we take the points when we had the penalty in the first half? WHY?

Playing in front of their home crowd?
Same with the disastrous late clearance kick into the middle of the park and gifting England's winning try. If the ball had gone straight to touch those last 5 mins would have elapsed with no further scoring.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Yep. And if my aunt had a penis she'd be my uncle.m [Biased] [Big Grin] [Roll Eyes] [Yipee]
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
And you wonder why the other home nations have a problem with England rugby supporters!

At least Eddie Jones can blame his lack of knowledge on probably not knowing the history of these islands...
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by St. Gwladys:
B****r!

What she said. [Frown]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
And you wonder why the other home nations have a problem with England rugby supporters!

At least Eddie Jones can blame his lack of knowledge on probably not knowing the history of these islands...

That is not the least of his virtues: he doesn't have the hang ups of too many Englishmen, coaches, players and supporters.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
What? The "hang-up" of absolutely insisting that, whatever else might happen, you cannot, must not, and shall not lose to Wales? [Biased]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
We haven't reached the halfway point of the Six Nations and the Great and the Good are already making pitches about who should be in the Lions tour party and captain it.

One of the subjects is that Alun Wyn Jones has the support of three former Lions captains to lead the NZ tour. The problem here is that there is so much strength at lock that I'm not sure AWJ is worth a place as a starter. England can pick any two from four and there are Scots and Irishmen worth a place too. Gatland has been singing the praises of Sam Warburton for his post-captaincy performances and whether this is out of order or not he is spot-on: how Wales lost to England when they stole so much ball in turnovers is a mystery to me, and Sam Warburton played a big part in that.

In fact, there's a chance that if England do win the Six Nations, grand slam or not, they will provide comparatively few players for the Lions, and some of those who do start for the Lions could well be occupying "second-places" for their countries right now.

So, to join in with the fun, here's my starting 15 for the British and Irish Lions:

Mako Vunipola
Jamie George
Tadgh Furlong
Jonny Grey
Maro Itoje
Sam Warburton
Billy Vunipola
Justin Tipuric

Conor Murray
Finn Russell
George North
Robbie Henshaw
Jamie Joseph
Leigh Halfpenny
Liam Williams
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
Meanwhile, over in t'other code....

Massive congratulations to the Pie Eaters and the Wire for a 2-0 clean sweep of whatever the World Club Series is calling itself this week. Cronulla and Brisbane never even got out of the blocks!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
England's latest code convert, Ben Te'o makes his first start on Sunday against Italy in an England side that is I believe designed to a) win the game b) get a try bonus point and c) rack up as high a score as possible. Te'o for Joseph will add power, May for Nowell will add pace while Danny Care will get the ball to George Ford a good deal quicker than Ben Youngs. I would have liked to have seen Watson or Nowell at fullback too.

I'll be very surprised to see Italy break their duck against England but England must be patient. Wales v Scotland will be tight (I've seen some classic contests between them) and Ireland could win by a distance, depending on how many Frenchmen are on the field in the last quarter.
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... Wales v Scotland will be tight ...

Really? [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Japes (# 5358) on :
 
I enjoyed the Scotland v Wales match very much. Especially as I didn't have to spend the last bit of it in agonies that they were going to throw away a tight lead...

[Yipee]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Bristol 12 - 11 Bath.

Fucking have that!!!!!!!! [Big Grin] [Big Grin] [Big Grin] [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Bristol 12 - 11 Bath.

Fucking have that!!!!!!!! [Big Grin] [Big Grin] [Big Grin] [Yipee] [Yipee] [Yipee]

The same could be said of England vs Italy at half time! I almost didn't bother watching as it was such a foregone conclusion. Well, that was wrong.

AG

[ 26. February 2017, 15:00: Message edited by: Sandemaniac ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Piglet:
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... Wales v Scotland will be tight ...

Really? [Big Grin]
It was until Wales kicked to the corner instead of kicking for goal early in the second half. That would have given them a 16-9 lead. As things turned out, they didn't score again in that half, hence Scottish joy.

Italy meanwhile gave England an awful scare and England did themselves no favours with nine penalties in the first half (three each to Dan Cole and Nathan Hughes - watch out guys). I think Eddie Jones and one or two cool heads did a good job at half-time, although I would have given Danny Care ten minutes more as he had Italy on toast.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
We were woeful against Scotland [Waterworks]

And what the hell was Dan Biggar playing at with all the histrionics? He should learn to suck it up, get the bloody kicks done, tackles made and have a go at persuading AWJ that the quixotic notion of 'winning pretty' by kicking for the corner is fine when you have a 30 point lead and 10 minutes to go, nNOT when you're in a tight game.

Very much enjoyed the first half of England-Italy - especially the moment when James Haskell was asking the ref how England should cope with the Italian tactic of refusing to ruck [Killing me]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Does anyone else think this indicates that Dylan Hartley should no longer captain England? He's right in what he says, but James Haskell was articulating the problem on the field while Hartley looked clueless. Moreover his place isn't certain, and he is one of the first to be replaced in a game, making me wonder if England should select a new captain sooner rather than later. It's difficult to select a captain as few places are absolutely nailed down. Joe Launchbury looks likely but when George Kruis returns and Robshaw is fit do we continue with the Lawes and Itoje combo? I suppose it's a nice problem to have.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
...The season after Bristol finally make it out...

Championship promotion playoffs axed.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
...The season after Bristol finally make it out...

Championship promotion playoffs axed.

I noticed that and thought much the same as you did. I'll be really impressed if the additional funding makes Championship sides better contenders and financially secure.

[ 04. March 2017, 16:34: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
...The season after Bristol finally make it out...

Championship promotion playoffs axed.

I noticed that and thought much the same as you did. I'll be really impressed if the additional funding makes Championship sides better contenders and financially secure.
Which it won't. Also, if we're to believe The Rugby Paper, the Championship clubs have decided that from now on the bottom end of the division will be settled by a playoff between the club coming last, and the winners of National 1.

Given that every club in the Championship receives over £500,000 of central funding, that's just as cynical as they've spent years accusing the Premiership of being.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
for info, central funding for National 1 amounts to "some" contribution "towards" travel expenses. And that's it.

So you've got clubs like Mose, Cov, Plymouth, who are running large squads, analysts, banqueting facilities, etc at one end (and entirely out of their own pockets, and teams playing on roped off pitches at the other.

Rugby Union in this country is a farce.

I'm genuinely beginning to wish for a return to amateurism, the abolition of leagues, re-introduction of merit tables, the RFU Knock-out Cup and fixtures worked out by club secretaries based on their own notions of their peer group.

Fingers crossed.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Guaranteed way to beat the All Blacks, that... [Biased]
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
As a Sassenach living in Scotland, would it be too much to hope for a draw tomorrow??
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by kingsfold:
As a Sassenach living in Scotland, would it be too much to hope for a draw tomorrow??

I'm English but my Dad was born in Edinburgh and his mother's family were Scots too. Many of Sister-in-law's family is from the Hawick area so I can't really lose, nor crow about anything other than a hard-fought draw.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
I'm at a wedding tomorrow. Who gets married, in Cheltenham, on the day of the Calcutta Cup and the first weekend of Gold Cup Week??? Well, clearly I know the answer to that one but even so.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Betjemaniac, IHope the wedding goes well, but also that it is not as hard-fought as last night's match in Cardiff between Wales and Ireland!

Ultimately Wales won because their halfbacks played better and Ireland, of all people, butchered a gold-plated try-scoring chance! The Wales halfbacks, especially Biggar, had been their weak link in previous matches but they achieved it in large part by knocking Murray and Sexton senseless at every opportunity. Not pretty but it happens more often than those who haven't played would suppose.

Two matches with clear favourites today: I wonder if Italy will use their ruckless breakdown today? It's a legitimate tactic but now people have seen it, it needs to be played wisely, maybe as a called play. As for the Calcutta Cup, Scotland have a clear chance but unless they have a decent lead with twenty minutes to go, England should win.
 
Posted by kingsfold (# 1726) on :
 
Given I'm watching the game in the pub with a group of Scots mates, I'm still hoping for the draw...

I'm hoping it's going to be a good, hard fought game and then it won't matter who wins.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
The Organist's household are all praying for Scots victory...

We're all shattered after the nailbiting match yesterday - especially since the only non-Welsh blood in my veins (about an armful) is Irish [Snigger]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
and that was a bit disappointing TBH. England (finally) turned up and Jonathan Joseph looked very classy, but once again they showed that any decent side can score at least a couple of tries against them. Let's see how the balance of physicality goes against Ireland, because I think that will determine the outcome.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Just seen the score. Ouch. [Hot and Hormonal]
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
"Ouch" doesn't even begin to cover it. [Waterworks]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Ouch doesn't just cover the score. Poor Scotland were almost too brave for their own good and they could very nearly now field a decent team from first-choice players who are currently injured. I hope they all recover because some of those knocks and injuries have been very heavy, and Scotland doesn't have that many top-class players.

[ 12. March 2017, 10:48: Message edited by: Sioni Sais ]
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
and that was a bit disappointing TBH. England (finally) turned up and Jonathan Joseph looked very classy, but once again they showed that any decent side can score at least a couple of tries against them. Let's see how the balance of physicality goes against Ireland, because I think that will determine the outcome.

If England turn on another display like that then Ireland will have a difficult time containing it. When Joseph gets away like that it takes a very strong lone tackler to stop him.
Mind you I seem to recall Ireland putting a spanner in the works of premature Grand slam celebrations once before.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:

Mind you I seem to recall Ireland putting a spanner in the works of premature Grand slam celebrations once before.

England have a habit of this. ISTR England falling at the last maybe three years in succession. Possibly 1999, 2000, 2001.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:

Mind you I seem to recall Ireland putting a spanner in the works of premature Grand slam celebrations once before.

England have a habit of this. ISTR England falling at the last maybe three years in succession. Possibly 1999, 2000, 2001.
And they have done it again! Well played Ireland although England did look off the boil.

I've had a look at this years results and of the fifteen matches, eleven ended in home wins, the exceptions being Italy's home games and Wales at home to England, which was very close!

There's usually some advantage to playing at home but I'm surprised it is that pronounced.
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... England did look off the boil ...

I wish they'd been a bit more off the boil against Scotland ... [Big Grin]

Still, well done Ireland - having lived in Belfast for 15 years I have a wee soft spot for the Irish team too (and I always like the little guy to win!).
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
I missed the Ireland England game which now appears was a happy accident as highlights looked pretty lacklustre. Didn't quite get why Ireland were being given pens for what looked like legitimate English tackles.

Also a bit confusing as to why France and Wales played for a 100 mins. Thought they stop the clock in rugby for telly screen stoppages.

Ah well, all over for another year.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:
I missed the Ireland England game which now appears was a happy accident as highlights looked pretty lacklustre. Didn't quite get why Ireland were being given pens for what looked like legitimate English tackles.

Not for the first time Ireland found a weakness in England's game. Under the current (ie, new) tackle laws, you have to tackle below the shoulders and make sure your arm(s) don't ride up to the neck or head. The Irish ran low, so that the tacklers made contact high, which increased the chance of a high tackle". It isn't the only game in which this has occurred and running low is effective too, but it does add problems to the tackle laws.
quote:


Also a bit confusing as to why France and Wales played for a 100 mins. Thought they stop the clock in rugby for telly screen stoppages.
Ah well, all over for another year.

I was surprised it went on that long. After a couple of scrum penalties I would have thought Wayne Barnes would have awarded a penalty try. Maybe he just chickened out, for fear of being the most unpopular Englishman in Wales, as if he doesn't hold that title already.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Any gloom in Cardiff was transferred into righteous anger towards Wayne Barnes who, as Sioni says, is already in the top 5 of most Welsh "Most Loathed" lists, other natural entries being Edward I (if you go for the historical), Tony Blair and Alun Michael.

But all that changed with the news from Dublin: the eruption of joy in Cardiff when the final whistle was blown in Dublin was universal. THANK YOU IRELAND!
 
Posted by iamchristianhearmeroar (# 15483) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
But all that changed with the news from Dublin: the eruption of joy in Cardiff when the final whistle was blown in Dublin was universal. THANK YOU IRELAND!

I'm going to take back-to-back championships and Wales fifth overall as cause to celebrate in England too!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
In the wake of the Six Nations Championship some rubbish is being talked. First prize must go to Eddie Jones's idea that there should be four captains, one from each country. Nice idea but a) it "bottles" the decision and b) only one of the current captains is actually the best in their position. Despite what everyone says I reckon your captain has to be an automatic choice, barring injury.

So I would give the job to Rory Best, in part because he is very good but also because he won't be the only Irishman in the front-row. Some aren't sure about Itoje this year but he's a shoo-in for me, not for his all-action play in the loose, which was last years trademark, but for his work in the tight. He has become a phenomenal scrummager and a terrific lineout forward. With him behind Tadhg Furlong (or Samson Lee?) any opposing loosehead will have his work cut out, so that could be their put in ruined.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
On the subject of the Lions tour party selection all I can say that it appears to be Warren Gatland's ambition to win a series for the country of his birth!

The England party for Argentina is much more interesting, although I would have liked to have seen one or two hard-running or heavyweight back row players, like Zach Mercer of Bath or Don Armand and Dave Ewers of Exeter, but Eddie Jones has gone for ball-winners there which could indicate his vision for England's future.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
On the subject of the Lions tour party selection all I can say that it appears to be Warren Gatland's ambition to win a series for the country of his birth!

Pretty much what the NZ Media are saying, too
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
A reasonable strt from the Lions, with Ben Te'o and Laidlaw for me amongst the best on the field.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
(played in my former town, by the way, and where I expect to retire to) [Axe murder]
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Yeah, I watched a few minutes of the game. Probably not a statistically significant sample, but I thought the Lions looked like they were still learning their lines a bit. Shaping up to be a fascinating tour. [Smile]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Yeah, I watched a few minutes of the game. Probably not a statistically significant sample, but I thought the Lions looked like they were still learning their lines a bit. Shaping up to be a fascinating tour. [Smile]

There's probably something to be said for starting with established partnerships, such as an all-Irish front row, English locks and an all-Welsh back row. Not necessarily the best players but as a basis, with ostensibly stronger players coming on later, it might work out, especially on a short tour.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
All Black great Justin Marshall is convinced the Lions are foxing.

Um .. if that's not a confusing concept [Ultra confused]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
A disappointing result for the Lions against the weakest Super Rugby opponents. Rob Howley, the attack coach, is getting a lot of criticism for a lack of imagination. The only good news is that this fixture weeded out a few more as nowhere near the team to play the All Blacks.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
But WG has proclaimed that there's not much difference between the Super Rugby sides and the All Blacks. That has the kiwi media in guffaws.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
But WG has proclaimed that there's not much difference between the Super Rugby sides and the All Blacks. That has the kiwi media in guffaws.

That looks a lot like Gatland preparing the ground for a one win against nine losses tour result.

I see Alun Wyn Jones is captain for the Crusaders match on Saturday - is there some rule that the match captain has to be Welsh? [Biased]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
There were a couple of moments last night when the referee(s) cost the Lions, but on the whole a sub-par performance - and the best Highlanders players were not on the field. I had hopes they'd stamp their authority on the game, to keep the tour interesting. Attention is waning in NZ because basically meh.

SAD.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
I imagine everyone will wake themselves up again for the first Test, right?
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
There were a couple of moments last night when the referee(s) cost the Lions, but on the whole a sub-par performance - and the best Highlanders players were not on the field. I had hopes they'd stamp their authority on the game, to keep the tour interesting. Attention is waning in NZ because basically meh.

SAD.

What hacks me off is that outcomes can be decided by dodgy officiating. It couldn't have been much closer and 3 tries to 2 has to tell a story.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
There were a couple of moments last night when the referee(s) cost the Lions, but on the whole a sub-par performance - and the best Highlanders players were not on the field. I had hopes they'd stamp their authority on the game, to keep the tour interesting. Attention is waning in NZ because basically meh.

SAD.

I'm wondering if the NZ public lost some interest when the itinerary was announced, more when the party was announced and having seen some performances they really aren't impressed.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
All Blacks 78, Samoa 0.
Ho Hum. Why even bother.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
All Blacks 78, Samoa 0.
Ho Hum. Why even bother.

I have the awful feeling we will be saying much the same in a week or so.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
McKenzie at first five against Sexton will be an interesting matchup tonight, and i think the Maori will have a shitload of ahi (fire) in the belly. On the other hand the Lions might be hurting. But i think the Maori will eat them, even in wet Rotorua conditions...
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
On second thoughts ....
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
On second thoughts ....

Lions 32 Maori All Blacks 10
Big forward statement by Lions. Good for the game.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
The Lions showed some form but Scotland beat Australia and an England side missing any number of first-choice players has beaten Argentina on their own turf twice. Some players with little or no international experience did very well which must show that Premiership rugby is of a good standard.

Some didn't do so well, notably in the three-quarters and I don't think Marland Yarde will be wearing an England shirt again.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
The English are on the up. All credit.
Regarding the Lions, Tuesday will be interesting. They will come across NZs 2nd best super team minus it's All Blacks. But they will have combinations the Maori lacked.
The Lions have the muscle that's for sure but maybe not the flair. Predictable sides generally get muntered down here.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
The English are on the up. All credit.
Regarding the Lions, Tuesday will be interesting. They will come across NZs 2nd best super team minus it's All Blacks. But they will have combinations the Maori lacked.
The Lions have the muscle that's for sure but maybe not the flair. Predictable sides generally get muntered down here.

The starting XV may have muscle and skill but the bench includes those flown in from the Scottish and Welsh squads out east, and once they get on the field everything will change. They simply aren't anywhere near good enough.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
A deserved win - Nowell and Cole were for me two standout players ... but a team effort. The series is alive!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I reckon that Gatland has selected the right 23 barring Lawes who has been the best lock on tour and he should be there instead of AWJ with Itoje on the bench. Otherwise I would have started with Sexton for Farrell (Irish combination) and North too.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
After watching as much of the All Blacks v Lions as I could stand I conclude that the ABs aren't supermen by any means. They have some outstanding players but they simply don't screw up. If you don't make errors, you don't lose matches.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Basically I think they won on aerobic fitness, managing to play the game at their pace. Some luck too - a couple of bounces of the ball went their way. Referee? When I used to coach netball I taught the kids to "play the referee" to adjust asap if they're not used to the style of decision. The ABs know Peyper and played him. I thought he had a goo game (but I would).

Lions of class for me were Sinkler and Itoje. To some extent I jest, but it struck me that both of those could break a game open ... Williams too.

I loved the battle between Te'o and SBW, the two leagies. I thought George Kruis and Jamie George had solid games.

The trouble is I think about 18 ABs had good games, and Retallick, Whitelock and Read - the engine room, were outstanding. Which kind of negated the Lions expected forwards strength.

I enjoyed the game, not just for the result. I'm a bit of a Lions fan anyway, though not quite enough to push my beloveds off the perch.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
Basically I think they won on aerobic fitness, managing to play the game at their pace.

Lions of class for me were Sinkler and Itoje. To some extent I jest, but it struck me that both of those could break a game open ... Williams too.


I enjoyed the game, not just for the result. I'm a bit of a Lions fan anyway, though not quite enough to push my beloveds off the perch.

Agree, pace of game is where teams cave against them but it is boring to see AB always dominating.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
I can't see the lions winning this but I've been wrong almost every tme. Good to see Itoje getting a start - he's been my Lions standout ... bring it on.

Itoje was interviewed, a gorgeous interview, tonight for the preamble. What a guy.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
PS - shame for the Lions he's up against Retallick.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Red card SBW - game over I reckon
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Well I was wrong. It was a game to the max - but only because the Lions didn't keep their cool for the remainder of the first half. They should have capitalised 12 points in that period. Then the ABs outplayed them for 20 minutes in the second. But with 14 if the Lions got their heads straight it was always going to ve a tough call. No complaints about the call on SBW, either. It was apiece of league brutality, a brain explosion which he does have occasionally. As it happens the last AB to be red carded was Colin Meads (now seriously ill) so he's in good company -0 buy the '67 ABs went on to win with 14.

Vunipola back in his city of birth had rocks in his head. My man Itoje went from hero to zero and back but on the whole showed what a talent he is.

The ABs will win next week but the Lions can be proud. And as for thier fans, the NZ populace have fallen in love!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
That was one hell of a game, and I think the loss of SBW mattered a lot in the end because the All Blacks led by 18-9 with 20 minutes to go. Playing a man down must have made a difference as I don't recall the ABs losing from a lead in the last quarter, let alone a nine-point one.

SBWs red, Mako's yellow (which must have been a very deep shade of orange) Sinckler outburst at the end and others were all indicators that there was an awful lot of commitment around, but most of it was legitimate. Rugby wouldn't be the same without a bit of intimidation, and the Lions aren't afraid any more.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
They might not be afraid any more, but I think we saw enough today to say that if the ABs keep 15 men on the park and kick their goals, they'll be the winners next week.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
3c8CH9
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
Well I was wrong. It was a game to the max - but only because the Lions didn't keep their cool for the remainder of the first half. They should have capitalised 12 points in that period. Then the ABs outplayed them for 20 minutes in the second. But with 14 if the Lions got their heads straight it was always going to ve a tough call. No complaints about the call on SBW, either. It was apiece of league brutality, a brain explosion which he does have occasionally. As it happens the last AB to be red carded was Colin Meads (now seriously ill) so he's in good company -0 buy the '67 ABs went on to win with 14.

Vunipola back in his city of birth had rocks in his head. My man Itoje went from hero to zero and back but on the whole showed what a talent he is.

The ABs will win next week but the Lions can be proud. And as for thier fans, the NZ populace have fallen in love!

Yep, Lions did their best to lose it and ref did his best to help.
When I played what they call 'cleaning' now was tackling players minus the ball. Vunipola deserved his card as he tried to take out ABs best back on the ground.and SBW did too.. what a turkey!

ABs now have selection probs in backs so don't write off Lions next week. Think of the changes from a very short time ago. no Fekitoa,no Savea and now no Crotty no SBW or Ben Smith. Whereas Lions backs are coming good. Don't know why Teo was not on their bench.
I hope they give Damian McKenzie a run.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
Well I was wrong. It was a game to the max - but only because the Lions didn't keep their cool for the remainder of the first half. They should have capitalised 12 points in that period. Then the ABs outplayed them for 20 minutes in the second. But with 14 if the Lions got their heads straight it was always going to ve a tough call. No complaints about the call on SBW, either. It was apiece of league brutality, a brain explosion which he does have occasionally. As it happens the last AB to be red carded was Colin Meads (now seriously ill) so he's in good company -0 buy the '67 ABs went on to win with 14.

Vunipola back in his city of birth had rocks in his head. My man Itoje went from hero to zero and back but on the whole showed what a talent he is.

The ABs will win next week but the Lions can be proud. And as for thier fans, the NZ populace have fallen in love!

Yep, Lions did their best to lose it and ref did his best to help.
When I played what they call 'cleaning' now was tackling players minus the ball. Vunipola deserved his card as he tried to take out ABs best back on the ground.and SBW did too.. what a turkey!

ABs now have selection probs in backs so don't write off Lions next week. Think of the changes from a very short time ago. no Fekitoa,no Savea and now no Crotty no SBW or Ben Smith. Whereas Lions backs are coming good. Don't know why Teo was not on their bench.
I hope Hansen gives Damian McKenzie a run.



[ 01. July 2017, 21:40: Message edited by: Jamat ]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:

When I played what they call 'cleaning' now was tackling players minus the ball. Vunipola deserved his card as he tried to take out ABs best back on the ground.and SBW did too.. what a turkey!


Ah, "cleaning".

Way back when I was new to the game (and "Pinetree" was still playing) our rugby teacher who played to regional level in England at wing-forward told us that anyone in contact with a ruck or maul can be "cleared out" and you can do that by pushing him back off the ruck or maul. I'd be amazed if Buck Shelford and Jerry Collins wouldn't do it. Has the game changed?
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
I'm not entirely convinced by McKenzie at the next level ... had a shocker in the Māori ABs game, though it was a game in which he wasn't fullback and didn't get very good ball at first five. Fekitoa is back, Laumape is showing considerable talent. I'd like to see three Barretts out there!
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Looks like I got my wishes though I doubt all three Barretts will be on at once. He's gone for youth. Id forgotten Rieko Ioane in the mix - which might be because so far he hasn't lived up to promise, though he will. Fekitoa is a scary reserve. Anton Lienert-Brown is all class, and Israel Dagg is a game-breaker. And I think there's some forwards there, too!

That said ... a youthful back line against the improved Lions is a big call. Should be a beauty.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I can't help thinking that's a better backline for the All Blacks. Every chance that Te'o will be on at the 50 minute mark to shore up midfield and make a few dents and I don't expect Read to have two quiet games in a row.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Yeah. Jordie Barrett is if anything a better player than Beauden, so I doubt his nerves will be too exposed. Davies has a tough night at the office ahead of him. Aaron Smith's jaw won't stop flapping all night (really don't like a lot of half backs. I was one, albeit pretty useless). I can't see the Lions winning this but I'll be happy enough if they do.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Now that the Lions aren't afraid and have worked out a way to win a game I think the result will depend on the breakdown or to be more accurate, how much interference the referee allows. The ABs are efficient at this point but if the Lions a) don't turn it over as often as they did in the First test (twenty-three times!) and b)don't get pinged too much they have a chance.

I'm not putting any money on the L:ions though: the game is in Auckland and I'm beginning to wonder why any side agrees to play there twice in a series!
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Now that the Lions aren't afraid and have worked out a way to win a game I think the result will depend on the breakdown or to be more accurate, how much interference the referee allows. The ABs are efficient at this point but if the Lions a) don't turn it over as often as they did in the First test (twenty-three times!) and b)don't get pinged too much they have a chance.

I'm not putting any money on the L:ions though: the game is in Auckland and I'm beginning to wonder why any side agrees to play there twice in a series!

Well, in Auckland it also looks like wet weather rugby. This means mistakes under the high ball so more of a lottery. Jordie Barrett is a newbie so a risk. So is Laumape. I think this one will come down to who wins the breakdown..and that will depend on the ref. Even more of a lottery. The French are possibly the most inconsistent stakeholders of the rugby world. This is a rare chance for the northern hemisphere style to triumph.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Jordie's been great under the high ball. Game on, but I think the ABs use of the bence will crush it.

Hope we get three Barretts.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Well well well
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
... and I got my three Barretts on the field at once, though I don't think Scott got to touch the ball
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I've heard a few suggestions that there should have been extra time to decide on a winner for the series, but I think that would be wrong. The Lions were underprepared, used the wrong plan and made selection errors in #, they had the man advantage in #2 and in #3 they made the yellow card count for just enough against a couple of tries. A draw is right.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Now that the Lions aren't afraid and have worked out a way to win a game I think the result will depend on the breakdown or to be more accurate, how much interference the referee allows. The ABs are efficient at this point but if the Lions a) don't turn it over as often as they did in the First test (twenty-three times!) and b)don't get pinged too much they have a chance.

I'm not putting any money on the L:ions though: the game is in Auckland and I'm beginning to wonder why any side agrees to play there twice in a series!

Well, in Auckland it also looks like wet weather rugby. This means mistakes under the high ball so more of a lottery. Jordie Barrett is a newbie so a risk. So is Laumape. I think this one will come down to who wins the breakdown..and that will depend on the ref. Even more of a lottery. The French are possibly the most inconsistent stakeholders of the rugby world. This is a rare chance for the northern hemisphere style to triumph.
ABs 15 Lions 15. ABs had edge but not on scoreboard. Farrell is my player of the series. French ref..shrug. At least it was not Barnes. Someone must have cleaned up at the TAB.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I agree that the ABs had the edge - they scored two tries and should have had another. Farrell's well worth player of the series as he missed far fewer kicks at goal, especially at Wellington. At times the ABs looked fallible and error-prone, which says something for the Lions, and the much criticised Warren Gatland.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
From neutral Australia, this looked to be a great match. And as a bloke watching (on TV) with me commented, "you'd never guess this mob [the Lions] came from the northern hemisphere; they are actually trying to run the ball".
That said, the ABs had slightly the better of the game, and would have won if they had seized all their opportunities as they usually so ruthlessly do. e.g. 2 missed kicks at goal, 1 dropped pass withe line open, and 1 try [rightly] disallowed for a forward pass. Though the Lions had a lot of the ball , inc from turnovers, they usually dropped it (under pressure, to be fair!) before that play became a real opportunity to score.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
Maro Itoje though. What a talent!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
Maro Itoje though. What a talent!

Not only a "talent". Talents get found out in rugby. Itoje has been outstanding at club and country level and was only "adequate" against the All Blacks because he was up against the best in the world. Barring injury he may get to return to New Zealand.

Furlong and Daly as first tourists impressed me too.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
That last non penalty.
News tonight seems to report a consensus that Poite made an error. The player caught the ball clearly then released it as soon as he realised what he'd done. This constitutes off side play not to be confused with accidental OS in which no volition is involved on the player's part.
ABs though and NZ rugby seem to have developed an entitlement mentality and surely it is good to see this dented. They had earlier chances to put the game away which they, uncharacteristically, did not take.
 
Posted by Imaginary Friend (# 186) on :
 
...And their defensive line was consistently offside, and they threw about a bazillion forward passes. So no, I'm not losing any sleep over that final call.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Imaginary Friend:
...And their defensive line was consistently offside, and they threw about a bazillion forward passes. So no, I'm not losing any sleep over that final call.

Me neither.
Interestingly the confusion of rugby interpretation is well illustrated by that episode. Poitecould have:
Allowed play to continue playing advantage to NZ in which case they may possibly have scored a try.
Penalised Kieran Read for interference with a player in the air because he had no realistic way of winning a challenge for the ball
Penalised the Lions for OS which was what most refs would have done
Or do the most unlikely thing by second guessing himself and awarding the scrum which all agree was wrong.
Ah..'tis a very strange game!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I suppose (no more) that he opted for the scrum as the "least impact" option. Might not be right but it's common enough.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Sorry about the silence ... frenetic since then ... the outcome was superb, the penalty far more complex than either side would admit, rugby the winner cliche cliche and fantastic all round. Great series and yes, a reminder to NZ that our boys in black ain't gods.

Except the Barretts, of course. Well the back line ones. Scott doesn't count.

And the interview I saw with Itoje shows he's a very intelligent, articulate young mad as well as an outstanding player. May he run many yards with a bladder in his hand.

[ 15. July 2017, 04:51: Message edited by: Zappa ]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Right, down this end of the world we are reaching the pointy end of the bizarre Super-However-Many-It-Is-Now comp, with the South African Lions team fronting up to the NZ Canterbury Crusaders for the final. Could be quite a battle.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
Right, down this end of the world we are reaching the pointy end of the bizarre Super-However-Many-It-Is-Now comp, with the South African Lions team fronting up to the NZ Canterbury Crusaders for the final. Could be quite a battle.

Lions v Hurricanes
Boden Barrett was sin binned totally unjustifiably. A horrendous call that wrecked the game and the Hurricanes' chances. Is there any other sport where the rules and their interpretations are so contentious and randomly applied?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
Right, down this end of the world we are reaching the pointy end of the bizarre Super-However-Many-It-Is-Now comp, with the South African Lions team fronting up to the NZ Canterbury Crusaders for the final. Could be quite a battle.

Lions v Hurricanes
Boden Barrett was sin binned totally unjustifiably. A horrendous call that wrecked the game and the Hurricanes' chances. Is there any other sport where the rules and their interpretations are so contentious and randomly applied?

His tackle was good, but he "moved out" so as to move the ball back to his own team. It might be common practice but it's a penalty anywhere and in the 22 usually a yellow card.

IANAR.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
Right, down this end of the world we are reaching the pointy end of the bizarre Super-However-Many-It-Is-Now comp, with the South African Lions team fronting up to the NZ Canterbury Crusaders for the final. Could be quite a battle.

Lions v Hurricanes
Boden Barrett was sin binned totally unjustifiably. A horrendous call that wrecked the game and the Hurricanes' chances. Is there any other sport where the rules and their interpretations are so contentious and randomly applied?

His tackle was good, but he "moved out" so as to move the ball back to his own team. It might be common practice but it's a penalty anywhere and in the 22 usually a yellow card.

IANAR.

Well that is how Peyper saw it. After replays ISTM very obvious that the Lions tackled player shoved the ball into Barrett who was actually not trying to play it but making an effort to roll away. Still, only a game but one of the reasons the ref's calls are a lottery. It is a shame Peyper and all the officials are South African..not a good look.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jamat:
Well that is how Peyper saw it. After replays ISTM very obvious that the Lions tackled player shoved the ball into Barrett who was actually not trying to play it but making an effort to roll away. Still, only a game but one of the reasons the ref's calls are a lottery. It is a shame Peyper and all the officials are South African..not a good look.

TBH, if I was playing nowadays there is no way the ball would have been rucked back to the attacking side, so I'd have got a ten-minute break too (and a few bruises).
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
I see Peyper is going to ref the final.
If the Crusaders win this one they will be indeed the best!
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
Nice wee touch for the Kids down under her in lil ol NZ.
Nigel Owens turned up to ref an under 15s final as a warm up for doing the All Blacksv Aussies on Sat.
Love it when these guys look after the kids.
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
NZ 57. SA 0
Boring.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
25-24 this time and wow. The 'Boks are back (again).

Oh look - the officials agreed with me: Malcolm Marks was named man of the match despite being on the losing side. Kitshoff had a massive game, as did the skipper Etzebeth and Serfontein ... just a mammoth struggle that coiuld have gone either way. A red card in the last six minutes didn't make much difference as it had to be a yellow at least under the laws. Crotty's try probably was the right call, but room for debate.

So the difference in the end was that the ABs had no stand-out players (though McKenzie was amazing)
All in all an invigorating start to the day and the universe in order at last but full-squad seamless depth. If the Boks continue to play like they did today then the battle for the World Cup will be amazing.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Oh dear, Gatland has thrown his toys out of the pram.

There were a few selection errors and I don't think he got everything right but Sean O'Brien and others should have paid some attention to other members of the coaching team, which was a pretty moderate assortment with little originality. I'd have taken Steve Borthwick as a line-out specialist but none of the others.
 
Posted by Tukai (# 12960) on :
 
For only the second time in 19 matches, the Wobblies beat the All Blacks. Game was close, very intense and fast-moving , esp in the second half. Admittedly it was the last match in a dead rubber, but it does suggest that the Wobblies may win a few more matches on the NH tour at the end of the year.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
So gallant Wales went down to the Wallabies. Handling errors and some poor discipline was our undoing - I've got to hope we sharpen up a bit before we take on the mighty ABs at the end of the month.

Thought there was some eccentric refereeing at the England-Argentina match: the sin-binning at the beginning really did look undeserved.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
So gallant Wales went down to the Wallabies. Handling errors and some poor discipline was our undoing - I've got to hope we sharpen up a bit before we take on the mighty ABs at the end of the month.

If Wales can sharpen up their defence and concede fewer turnovers they will be a real threat, especially if Jonathan Davies is OK. The idea of a ball-playing #12, like the Australasian second five-eighth, is gaining popularity so it looks like Jamie Roberts days could are over.
quote:


Thought there was some eccentric refereeing at the England-Argentina match: the sin-binning at the beginning really did look undeserved.

It should be a huge wake-up call to England who would have lost to a side with a decent goal kicker. The penalty count was not impressive. A good side works out what the ref is penalising and adjusts its game. There's no point whinging.
 
Posted by Jonah the Whale (# 1244) on :
 
Loads of international rugby over the weekend. Germany beat Brazil, showing that they don't only play football. The biggest climbers in the world rankings when they come out tomorrow will be the Netherlands, up from 33rd to 28th in the world after thumping Moldova 7-59. Just thought you'd like to know.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
Wet and slippery conditions turned to England's advantage in the end. The 'magic ball' which didn’t go for touch helped too.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by rolyn:
Wet and slippery conditions turned to England's advantage in the end. The 'magic ball' which didn’t go for touch helped too.

FWIW England did get the benefit of decisions, notably yellow cards. England could have had one or two.

I don't think the decisions by the TMO regarding Australian "tries" were wrong, but I reckon the ref. asked the wrong question for the one that would have levelled the score with 15 minutes to go: that knocked the spirit out of Australia.

Oh, and my Welsh friends all reckon Georgia were unlucky.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
The ABs turned on their last reserves of mojo against poor Wales. 1953 seems a long time ago, and my sympathies were almost - almost - with Wales.

Meanwhile congratulations Scotland. [Yipee] [Yipee]
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
Sam Cane should have been MoM, not Ioane. Bloody show-pony backs get all the glory [Roll Eyes]

Navidi was best of the plucky Welsh side.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
The atmosphere in Cardiff yesterday was amazing and the singing in the stadium unbelievable.

Obviously, I'm gutted that the ABs won, but we put up a much better show. Still frustrating that with all the possession we had in the first half wasn't converted to more points.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
The atmosphere in Cardiff yesterday was amazing and the singing in the stadium unbelievable.

Obviously, I'm gutted that the ABs won, but we put up a much better show. Still frustrating that with all the possession we had in the first half wasn't converted to more points.

I think Scotland's performance against Australia got the crowd going - The Scots were magnificent and should be a real force in the Six Nations this year.

Wales were up against Old Fashioned Kiwi resilience. Just when you think you think your through, there's a last ditch tackle (like the one that bundled Hogg into touch against Scotland).

England aren't going to win the 6N unless they cut the penalty count down - way too many against Samoa. They are brilliant behind but they have to get the ball legitimately.
 
Posted by Piglet (# 11803) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
... The Scots were magnificent and should be a real force in the Six Nations ...

I do hope you're right! [Smile]
 
Posted by Jamat (# 11621) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zappa:
The ABs turned on their last reserves of mojo against poor Wales. 1953 seems a long time ago, and my sympathies were almost - almost - with Wales.

Meanwhile congratulations Scotland. [Yipee] [Yipee]

Seconded!
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
A generally good performance by Wales against South Africa, with the very recently qualified Hadleigh Parkes looking useful in the centre.

This Six Nations could be better than ever and England have an embarrassment of riches at lock and in the back row. There are some conundrums there such as where one plays Maro Itoje. TBH, I'd start him on the bench: partly because he isn't one of our best two locks (Lawes and Launchbury fill those slots), he gets penalised far too often (bad for a back row player) and he simply isn't in the form he was in when he broke into the England side.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
Champions Cup group stages over and there are four French sides, two Irish, one English and for the first time in years, a Welsh team! I'm pleased to see Scarlets in as they have played some of the best rugby in the entire tournament. The English clubs have all been below par with Leicester and Northampton especially woeful. Exeter blew it at the last, losing to Glasgow.

One of the quarter-finals is Leinster v Saracens: On reputations that's probably equal to a final but it could be a walloping for Saracens.
 
Posted by betjemaniac (# 17618) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
Champions Cup group stages over and there are four French sides, two Irish, one English and for the first time in years, a Welsh team! I'm pleased to see Scarlets in as they have played some of the best rugby in the entire tournament. The English clubs have all been below par with Leicester and Northampton especially woeful. Exeter blew it at the last, losing to Glasgow.

One of the quarter-finals is Leinster v Saracens: On reputations that's probably equal to a final but it could be a walloping for Saracens.

2 seasons ago Moseley travelled to play Leinster in a pre-season friendly. Of course, we all assumed that, such is the disparity between the teams, we'd be playing some sort of Leinster A/Academy side. Leinster had other ideas. It was the full Leinster side, and the result wasn't pretty.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
It really is the game that batters. England have sixteen of the Italy match squad out injured (including five starters) so Eddie Jones has changed the training plan. This isn't the first time he has done so: the ill-fated "judo training" a while back put a few on the injured list and it looks like EJ's training scheme causes more injuries than it prevents. I'm all for vigour and contact but you can't play 30+ games and train twice a week from August to May without getting broken, possibly permanently.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
The Welsh injury list gets longer and longer.
How on earth is Warren Gatland meant to name a side, never mind an in-depth squad, with an injury list like that?
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
That doesn't include tight-five forwards. I think Kenny Owens and Jake Ball are out too, maybe more.

Wales and Ireland just don't have the depth that England and France have, while Scotland and Italy have fewer players still playing at the top level. England could leave the entire Italy match squad at home and select an alternative one that would be competitive although it probably wouldn't win more than a couple of games, let alone the championship.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Well, that was gratifying! 2 tries within the first ten minutes and a final score of 34-7.

I'll admit I was worried because of our injury list but the side Wales put on the field played a blinder.

Meanwhile, the match in Paris was shocking - not helped by appalling weather. Johnny Sexton's drop-goal in injury time was epic, but the French must be wondering where they go now.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
There are times when England are the most frustrating team on earth. After scoring from the first opportunity in such a way that few teams could have prevented they conceded so many penalties that cost them possibly three more tries before half-time. Then again, Italy conceded a shedload too, particularly their hooker who had a bad day all round.

You could say that these things even themselves out, but better side don't conceded so many penalties. Just as well we've got them at Twickenham this year.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Eddie Jones is now trying to psych-out the Welsh team, suggesting that Patchell isn't up to the task of wearing the number 10 shirt, going so far as to say his team-mates doubt he can perform at Twickenham.

Then, just in case anyone was in any doubt what he was up to, he claims that our captain, Alun Wyn Jones, interfered with the taking of the Scots' conversion of their try last Saturday, saying he has reported the so-called "incident" to World Rugby. Mr Jones should watch last Saturday's Wales-Scotland match properly, rather than from behind the sofa: then he'd see that AWJ was not interfering with Finn Russell but was still bent double and trying to catch his breath after chasing back up the pitch.

The message we can all take from this West of Offa's Dyke is that Jones and his men are less than confident about tomorrow's encounter at Twickenham - memories of 2015 maybe? [Killing me]
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
I've seen those comments too and can only suggest that EJ has been opening his mouth and letting the wind blow his tongue around (as my mother used to say).

Patchell and Alan Wyn Jones were probably Wales outstanding players last week. This should fire them up nicely for Saturday's game!
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
You know you've been robbed when Clive Woodward and Jonny Wilkinson both agree that Jerome Garces and the TMO got it wrong and should have given a try. Disgraceful.
 
Posted by Zappa (# 8433) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Well, that was gratifying! 2 tries within the first ten minutes and a final score of 34-7.

Sadly I only saw the highlights. But what highlights they were!
 
Posted by alienfromzog (# 5327) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
You know you've been robbed when Clive Woodward and Jonny Wilkinson both agree that Jerome Garces and the TMO got it wrong and should have given a try. Disgraceful.

Absolutely it was a grounding. But it was also a knock on just before so right decision for completely the wrong reason.

Disappointing from the officials but Wales weren't robbed.

If you Don't believe me, check the replay; finger tips on to knee...

AFZ
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
You know you've been robbed when Clive Woodward and Jonny Wilkinson both agree that Jerome Garces and the TMO got it wrong and should have given a try.

Robbed of 5 points quite possibly, not necessarily the match without Halfpenny to claim the extra 2.
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Actually AFZ the rule states that if the ball comes off the knee then it is NOT deemed to be knocked forward. A ball that is touched, even if just by fingertips, before striking the same player's knee and then going on to hit the ground is therefore not a knock-on.

Watch again and listen to the TMO - he explicitly states that it wasn't a knock-on.
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
The Scotland game was a bit of a cracker in the end - well worth leaving DIY duties for.

AG
 
Posted by alienfromzog (# 5327) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Actually AFZ the rule states that if the ball comes off the knee then it is NOT deemed to be knocked forward. A ball that is touched, even if just by fingertips, before striking the same player's knee and then going on to hit the ground is therefore not a knock-on.

Watch again and listen to the TMO - he explicitly states that it wasn't a knock-on.

Hi L'organist. I my be wrong but according to World Rugby the law doesn't state that at all. The TMO also explicitly stated that the ball wasn't grounded so I don't quite see your point.

Ultimately the officials decision is final, and we can see that on the scoreboard but I stand by what I said, I think the TMO got both bits wrong. In terms of Evans - it was only looked at once, whilst the grounding was looked at several times. Having watched the replay a few times, I can see that the ball came off Evan's hand as well as his knee...

[Paranoid]

AFZ
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Even if you accept that Steff Evans' fingertips touched the ball (which is unclear unless we can have access to film from the other side) it is irrelevant since the ball went backwards from him, not forwards: so no knock-on.
 
Posted by alienfromzog (# 5327) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Even if you accept that Steff Evans' fingertips touched the ball (which is unclear unless we can have access to film from the other side) it is irrelevant since the ball went backwards from him, not forwards: so no knock-on.

It's really not unclear. If you look at the video (BBC Website); there is no doubt it came off his fingers. Fingers, knee or knee, fingers is less clear.

Either way, you seem to want it both ways; the TMO either was wrong about the grounding and NOT looking at the potential Knock-on or he wasn't. You can't have it that the grounding was a wrong call without looking at the Evans part as well. I fully accept that I may be wrong, but having looked at the video really closely, to me, it looks like a grounding AND a knock-on...

OTOH, most England fans still think England scored a try in the 2007 World Cup Final...

AFZ
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by alienfromzog:
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Even if you accept that Steff Evans' fingertips touched the ball (which is unclear unless we can have access to film from the other side) it is irrelevant since the ball went backwards from him, not forwards: so no knock-on.

It's really not unclear. If you look at the video (BBC Website); there is no doubt it came off his fingers. Fingers, knee or knee, fingers is less clear.

Either way, you seem to want it both ways; the TMO either was wrong about the grounding and NOT looking at the potential Knock-on or he wasn't. You can't have it that the grounding was a wrong call without looking at the Evans part as well. I fully accept that I may be wrong, but having looked at the video really closely, to me, it looks like a grounding AND a knock-on...

OTOH, most England fans still think England scored a try in the 2007 World Cup Final...

AFZ

And England should have had a penalty try in the 1991 final, but a Welsh referee gave a penalty instead for a deliberate knock-on! England kicked the penalty, but that made it 12-6,instead of 12-9.

Worse still, the knockdown was by an Australian.
 
Posted by alienfromzog (# 5327) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Sioni Sais:
quote:
Originally posted by alienfromzog:
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Even if you accept that Steff Evans' fingertips touched the ball (which is unclear unless we can have access to film from the other side) it is irrelevant since the ball went backwards from him, not forwards: so no knock-on.

It's really not unclear. If you look at the video (BBC Website); there is no doubt it came off his fingers. Fingers, knee or knee, fingers is less clear.

Either way, you seem to want it both ways; the TMO either was wrong about the grounding and NOT looking at the potential Knock-on or he wasn't. You can't have it that the grounding was a wrong call without looking at the Evans part as well. I fully accept that I may be wrong, but having looked at the video really closely, to me, it looks like a grounding AND a knock-on...

OTOH, most England fans still think England scored a try in the 2007 World Cup Final...

AFZ

And England should have had a penalty try in the 1991 final, but a Welsh referee gave a penalty instead for a deliberate knock-on! England kicked the penalty, but that made it 12-6,instead of 12-9.

Worse still, the knockdown was by an Australian.

Yep, I remember it well. David Campese...
[Mad]

AFZ
[Biased]
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
World Rugby have looked at what happened on Saturday; they have confirmed that the TMO made a mistake and that Garces should have been told he could award try.

Of course it doesn't mean Wales would have won the game but ... it leaves a bitter taste in the mouth.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
World Rugby have looked at what happened on Saturday; they have confirmed that the TMO made a mistake and that Garces should have been told he could award try.

Of course it doesn't mean Wales would have won the game but ... it leaves a bitter taste in the mouth.

Makes me wonder. How often have World Rugby carried out post-mortems of this nature? The game could be facing a shortage of referees if this becomes the done thing. A number of respected cricket umpires have quit since video replays were introduced and those who have taken their place haven't been half as good.
 
Posted by Firenze (# 619) on :
 
Well, there’ll be a high time in the old town tonight (and the New Town, Corstorphine, Niddrie Mains, Morningside, Leith...)
 
Posted by Sandemaniac (# 12829) on :
 
There'll be plenty of human flotsam drifting in the gutters in the morn!

That was not what anyone expected - least of all the England team, by the looks of them. The Scotland who almost beat the ABs turned up again, and Finn Russell in particular was electric.

I've had to chain the Knotweed to an anvil to stop her floating off, she may not sleep for days.

It was a bloody good watch, too. Perhaps not quite as gripping as the finish of Wales-Ireland, but I can't see there'll be many complaints north of Berwick.

AG
 
Posted by L'organist (# 17338) on :
 
Well, this Welsh household was a little down after the result from Dublin but greatly cheered at the result from Edinburgh. Well done Scotland!

A visiting friend of the children (a rugby-playing Kiwi they met on their travels) has watched the previous matches as well as todays, and we found his comments about the Murrayfield match interesting: first he noted how fit Nigel Owens must be - evidenced by his keeping up with the action better than most other referees - and then he remarked that, in his opinion, the difference between the previous matches and today's Scotland-England tie was that the refereeing was tighter, better and fairer. Interesting?

Anyway, a few drams of the Scottish nectar have been sunk here this evening.
 
Posted by rolyn (# 16840) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by L'organist:
Well, this Welsh household was a little down after the result from Dublin but greatly cheered at the result from Edinburgh. Well done Scotland!.

Rather like England and Germany in soccer tournaments, not always easy to discern between the joy of one winning and the other getting beaten. [Razz]

England were beat fair and square. The way England were being dispossessed at the breakdowns from the start didn't bode well for Jones' squad.
Ireland's Grand Slam hopes will be heightened having watched that performance.
 
Posted by Sioni Sais (# 5713) on :
 
All that puffing and grunting in scrummaging practice against the Georgians did England no favours at all. The Scots were so much better at the breakdown that it wasn't until Sam Underhill came on that England really competed. England's three lock forwards scheme doesn't look so good now and they may want to have Itoje on the bench to come on with 25-30 minutes to go.
 


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