Six Nations 2017
-
Because there's no separate thread for the divisions below the 6 Nations, I'm posting this here.
After 6 years, Romania has snatched the Rugby Europe Championship title from Georgia, after beating them 8 to 7 on the weekend! Must have been a tough match with such a score. Both countries finished at the same competition points total, so this one-point win earned Romania the title. (If points differential had been the tie breaker, Georgia would have won.)
Story: http://www.planetrugby.com/news/rugby-europe-wrap-romania-defeat-georgia/
Final ranking:
As Belgium has finished last in this division, they'll have to play a promotion/relegation game on 20 May against the winners of the next division, the Rugby Europe Trophy division. That competition hasn't finished yet.
-
@Nepia said in Six Nations 2017:
Sheesh PH - do you think maybe you need to find a more NH focused forum? With this and the Lions thread you're going to give yourself a hernia if you keep this up. (I'm not saying you should go as I like your contributions, but you seem to be in man the barricades mode at the moment).
As for Sexton coping it, DC used to cop it all the time and we were told to stop whinging, so stop your whinging.
That's the first sensible post I've read on this forum in years. Maybe there's hope for ye all yet.
I can sleep easy now.
-
It's okay, Sexton didn't get mad. He got even....
Joking aside, well deserved win for Ireland. Always tough to beat in Dublin and we didn't have it on the day. It's certainly a lot easier to take than the 2013 Cardiff debacle
-
@Margin_Walker said in Six Nations 2017:
It's okay, Sexton didn't get mad. He got even....
Joking aside, well deserved win for Ireland. Always tough to beat in Dublin and we didn't have it on the day. It's certainly a lot easier to take than the 2013 Cardiff debacle
Lol. I hadn't seen that. Pretty timid effort.
It was a tough match. I'm pissed at the soft start to the Scotland game and not being able to close it out when they eventually got ahead. Wales is Wales. They've become our bete noire alongside Argentina in RWCs. -
@Stargazer said in Six Nations 2017:
Because there's no separate thread for the divisions below the 6 Nations, I'm posting this here.
After 6 years, Romania has snatched the Rugby Europe Championship title from Georgia, after beating them 8 to 7 on the weekend! Must have been a tough match with such a score. Both countries finished at the same competition points total, so this one-point win earned Romania the title. (If points differential had been the tie breaker, Georgia would have won.)
Story: http://www.planetrugby.com/news/rugby-europe-wrap-romania-defeat-georgia/
Final ranking:
As Belgium has finished last in this division, they'll have to play a promotion/relegation game on 20 May against the winners of the next division, the Rugby Europe Trophy division. That competition hasn't finished yet.
Italy would be thrilled if one of those teams got promoted to the Seven Nations
-
-
Was Jones the only child left in an orphanage?
-
@Catogrande said in Six Nations 2017:
Well, bugger. Just bugger. England were dogshite, Ireland were click or two above in the intensity and even more so in the thought processes. Deserved winners. Congratulations @Pot-Hale and @profitius and any other Irish posters.
Disappointed with the result but much more disappointed with the performance.
Bugger
The important part is how you bounce back ,
( Not trying to make it about us but I guess we have been the benchmark )
We usually have one disappointing loss a year on average , and most of the time respond by playing better than ever -
@kiwiinmelb said in Six Nations 2017:
@Catogrande said in Six Nations 2017:
Well, bugger. Just bugger. England were dogshite, Ireland were click or two above in the intensity and even more so in the thought processes. Deserved winners. Congratulations @Pot-Hale and @profitius and any other Irish posters.
Disappointed with the result but much more disappointed with the performance.
Bugger
The important part is how you bounce back ,
( Not trying to make it about us but I guess we have been the benchmark )
We usually have one disappointing loss a year on average , and most of the time respond by playing better than everIt's tough trying to bounceback against the Argies with all core players on Lions duty. Once reunited the loss will be just a distant memory.
If England are aiming to be a legitimate contender for best team in the world I hope when they assess the tournament they fall more on the side of being a team that probably played more shit halves than good ones - rather than the team a try away from a world record streak.
They definitely have developed some mental edge or ability to grind out wins and that is huge - but the fact they have had to pull that out almost every game (sans Scotland) is something that hopefully Eddie Jones is reminding the players. Not quite sure they have separated themselves from the rest of the 6N yet.
-
-
@jegga said in Six Nations 2017:
Spiro vents a little bit here
Good article. Nice to see someone of standing in the game call the Walrus out for the antiquated, dinosaur fuckstick that he is.
I did have to look up what 'expunged' meant though.
-
@MN5 said in Six Nations 2017:
@jegga said in Six Nations 2017:
Spiro vents a little bit here
Good article. Nice to see someone of standing in the game call the Walrus out for the antiquated, dinosaur fuckstick that he is.
I did have to look up what 'expunged' meant though.
He didnt miss did he ?
-
Some interesting analysis on the difference Payne made to the Ireland game on Saturday
The analysis is accurate but also highlights the difference between some of the NH play and that of SH teams. WE find this way of playing an expectation rather than something 'unusual'. If you watched a Chiefs game without jersey numbers you would probably struggle to know who is playing in which position in the backline a lot of the time. You'd certainly struggle to know if Cruden or DMac was playing 10.
-
@canefan said in Six Nations 2017:
@Crucial Total rugby
Yep. It's a concept that hasn't taken hold up north yet. The teams up here tend to prefer to play very positionally which results in very structured attack. If the expected players aren't in the expected positions you see hesitation..
That's not to say one way is vastly superior to another, it is different styles of playing the game and makes it very interesting.
As NH teams have shown in the past a committed and organised defence that can keep its concentration for 82 minutes can frustrate a creative attack.
-
@Crucial said in Six Nations 2017:
@canefan said in Six Nations 2017:
@Crucial Total rugby
Yep. It's a concept that hasn't taken hold up north yet. The teams up here tend to prefer to play very positionally which results in very structured attack. If the expected players aren't in the expected positions you see hesitation..
That's not to say one way is vastly superior to another, it is different styles of playing the game and makes it very interesting.
As NH teams have shown in the past a committed and organised defence that can keep its concentration for 82 minutes can frustrate a creative attack.
Crucial, i would argue that the NZ way of playing is far superior. The results are there for all to see. For the sake of argument, let's ignore NZ teams and look at a different examples.
Connacht won the pro12 last season by playing the NZ way. They've far less playing resources than Leinster (just one player in the Ireland squad at the weekend) but they ripped Leinster apart in that final. They wanted another Kiwi coach to continue that way of playing so they signed Kieran Keane.
The Scots have also moved in that direction and had their best 6 nations in 11 years. Glasgow layed the groundwork for that. They won the pro12 two seasons ago playing some very good rugby.
I think teams are starting to change but in the NH once winter comes and the ball gets slippy, the coaches go back to their comfort blanket of bosh rugby. In Ireland, Leinster are playing a more unstructured way this season ( brought in Graham Henry for a few weeks over the summer) and they've already beaten the pro12 try scoring record with 5 games to go. Munster play a kick chase game and Ulster try to play ball but look badly coached. Joe Schmidt is starting to get criticism now for Ireland's lack of tries.
In Wales, the Scarlets and Ospreys play a nice brand of rugby that's more SH in style. Wales though pick the most defensive side possible. As with Ireland, fear of losing overrules attacking rugby. I'd say too that it would help to move the 6 nations back a few weeks. It's over just as the weather is just starting to change for the better.
I was impressed by the U20 teams. Compared to the past, most teams are trying to play good attacking rugby.
-
@profitius said in Six Nations 2017:
Connacht won the pro12 last season by playing the NZ way. They've far less playing resources than Leinster (just one player in the Ireland squad at the weekend) but they ripped Leinster apart in that final.
Connacht played that way by bringing in a stack of kiwis in key positions. If they tried playing "NZ rugby" with the basic Connacht team it would have been the same result as any other club team doing so.
The "NZ way" relies on guys trained from childhood to look to avoid contact & look to pass from contact, players with fast hands who run support lines. Teams without that base cannot just switch to playing that way. Its not like going from rush to slide defence.
England have moved on a lot by picking a 1st five / 2nd five combo - something NZ has done forever, and picking ball playing forwards - Mako Vunipola in particular, but also Jamie George, Launchbury, Robshaw & Itoje. They are all the type of ball playing forwards that are produced continously in NZ. But you can only pick the players you have.
It's not a case of picking a hooker with Dane Coles pace - if you don't have any hookers with his pace. Equally you can't take a slow hooker & go "we'd like to play like Coles"
Scotland got round it by just picking Glasgow. If you have the talent base you pick guys who will run great lines & know guys will be there, if you don't have the base you pick combinations who know what line to run because they practice with that combo every week.
The big difference between north & south is not style, its basic skills.