All Blacks v BI Lions Test #3
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@taniwharugby said in All Blacks v BI Lions Test #3:
@Marty yeah will be interesting, with it all on the line will the Lions go to a more conservative game plan and try and shut us down up front?
We've hardly been the Harlem Globetrotters
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@MiketheSnow said in All Blacks v BI Lions Test #3:
@taniwharugby said in All Blacks v BI Lions Test #3:
@Marty yeah will be interesting, with it all on the line will the Lions go to a more conservative game plan and try and shut us down up front?
We've hardly been the Harlem Globetrotters
Yeah I reckon the Lions have played fairly similar in both tests and mixed it up during the 80 minutes quite well. I can't see the Lions back 3 "shutting up shop". They're not that sort of players. Likewise with the two 1st 5s starting (presumably), they will look to play with width.
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@Crucial said in All Blacks v BI Lions Test #3:
The way the Lions are doing the rush D is to be so on the edge and anticipate as a line that usually no one looks obviously 'the guy'. Most times they are certainly moving before the ball is lifted but are also not planting the first step until right on the lift. It is well coached and usually executed well.
They are often getting it wrong though and the ref is telling them to get back which they do and avoid the penalty (but have affected the play by slowing it down).It's boundary pushing for sure but that's what good teams do.
I stated earlier in the series that I thought the game needs tidying to avoid this 'style' shutting down a game. Laws have been implemented with 5m back from scrums and 10m back from line outs to create space so it's not like this is a radical concept. You can't have a 1 or 2 metre back law at tackle/rucks, it would be to hard to rule on, but you can put the onus of teams to show they are clearly onside rather than clearly offside. Make doubt go in favour of the attacking side and the game would be 'cleaner'
Just going to quote myself here because I've thought about this a little more.
What if the laws were to state that non-participants in a ruck (i.e. not bound or not halfback) had to retire to 5 metres back like a scrum? Apart from creating space for a backline it would also create space for the ref team and potentially stop players blowing past the ruck and creating a further mess.
The drawback would be that some rucks would become very light in numbers and resemble a league situation where the defending team simply concedes the possession then fans out with a stronger wall.
I'd be interested in other views on this. -
For those lauding the Sexton- Farrell axis, take a look at this vid.
In 8 and change minutes, the better passing and space creation came from Farrell, often as first receiver.
Defensively they were adequate.
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A facebook post popped on my feed and it asked "What happens to Hansen if the Ab's lose saturday?"
I wanted to answer "He will be literally thrown under a bus after the game, his remains will be fed to baby seals which Andrew Hore will then club into oblivion and Warren Gatland will be made Ab coach effective immediately", but fuck I don't want to engage in to a discussion on Facebook.
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@MiketheSnow said in All Blacks v BI Lions Test #3:
For those lauding the Sexton- Farrell axis, take a look at this vid.
In 8 and change minutes, the better passing and space creation came from Farrell, often as first receiver.
Defensively they were adequate.
I'm sure the ABs went into the game with a plan to make these guys tackle a lot. We just didn't get to see it. Dull their attacking thinking by fatiguing them with tackles.
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@Crucial Be wary of the law of unintended consequences. Not actually on this specific point but a little while ago I went to a dinner where the speaker was Rob Baxter (Exeter Chiefs coach) and he fielded a few questions, there were a couple that were asking about/moaning about various contentious issues such as the scrum battle leading to constant re-sets. Baxter was very thoughtful on the subject and pointed out the possible problems in de-powering the scrum with the main one being more blokes in the defensive line. As a consequence I'm very wary of anything that reduces the contest for the ball in any given situation. But I agree that the offside line at ruck and maul is becoming very difficult to police.
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THe Lions are very smart with thier defensive line, keeping it straight is key to gaining that extra half a metre or so, which can make a huge difference, except Itoje, I think he wants to be an AB!
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@Catogrande said in All Blacks v BI Lions Test #3:
@Crucial Be wary of the law of unintended consequences. Not actually on this specific point but a little while ago I went to a dinner where the speaker was Rob Baxter (Exeter Chiefs coach) and he fielded a few questions, there were a couple that were asking about/moaning about various contentious issues such as the scrum battle leading to constant re-sets. Baxter was very thoughtful on the subject and pointed out the possible problems in de-powering the scrum with the main one being more blokes in the defensive line. As a consequence I'm very wary of anything that reduces the contest for the ball in any given situation. But I agree that the offside line at ruck and maul is becoming very difficult to police.
I completely agree. Nearly every law change throws up another problem while 'fixing' the original one.
That's why I was throwing that idea out to the collective wisdom of the fern to let others pick it apart.
As I said, I think the consequence may be that if you cleanup those extra players clogging the area by incentivising them to stay back it only increases the numbers in defence. However there will be an incentive to group numbers in narrow as any pick and go will have a head of steam up.
That also makes me think you would get a lot more big straight runners winding up from 5 back to take a flat ball and smash it up. -
@Baron-Silas-Greenback I'm not inherently negative but I'm sympathetic to @Crazy-Horse 's points. I've noticed some of those same trends.
I can't remember a time ... well maybe early 00s v Aus (and even then ...) ... when I wasn't convinced that if both teams played at their full capacity thst the ABs wouldn't win because we were just better. Especially the forwards.
In recent years there have been games when we've started badly but I've been convinced with possession and persistence we'd roll over the top. And we usually have.
It's just i think we're at parity with these guys. I don't see the dominance I expected or usually expect. So I'm nervous on a 50:50 level. Haven't been this uncertain about a game since gee I don't know. (Maybe France in France in 1990 ... and we ended up smoking them in those two tests).
I was nervous about the 2011 semifinal (utterly overconfident about the final ) but convinced we just had to play to our potential. This one ... eeek.
Having said that I think we got our tactics wrong in Wellington. When we were using the inside ball in Auckland we were making ground and looking good. And we had moments in Wellington when we stretched them ... then kicked the ball away. Perhaps we had developed a belief that the only way to beat the rush defence is to kick? Pick the right tactics, keep the ball in hand on attack and maybe my fears are baseless. Hopefully.
Convince me why we're going to win people. And don't give historical bullshit about Eden Park's record. That's been a consequence of us being better not a reason for winning. Tell me why we're better on Saturdsy.
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i remain worried that our forwards will be a couple of % off after the last 2 weeks efforts, particularly the 7 man game. efforts like those from cane, read, retallick, whitelock take it out of you. mentally they'll be up for it i'm sure, and usually that is enough for us to prove very hard to beat following a defeat - but the margins here are small and i think those guys may be a bit more fatigued than their opposites.
lineout as mentioned has looked far less secure without coles. will cost us at some point in a tight game.
backs will have to wait and see who we go with. davies and williams have been the 2 guys giving us problems really. would feel more secure with ben smith and crotty back. the biggest tactical thing is just for us to stop kicking the damn ball away and be content to build pressure rather than try hail marys. -
@ACT-Crusader I feel a can of whoopass being readied to be opened this Saturday
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@reprobate said in All Blacks v BI Lions Test #3:
@Crucial ugh, league.
Yep, that's the conclusion I'm heading to as well.
I know that most rugby laws are applied on a 'clearly transgressing' basis but the key thing when using judgement especially with the TMO is 'clear and obvious'.
all I am suggesting is that the question is turned around and you must be clearly onside rather than clearly offside. Just as a tackler must clearly release the ball carrier before contesting or you must clearly move away from the wrong side.
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@Crucial said in All Blacks v BI Lions Test #3:
Angry Jerome and angry BBBR.
Could get interesting.
I think TJP may need some Prozac pre game though or he may fly into the distance.
Angry forwards = good (no make decision. Leave brain stuff to backs. Run forward. Lots)
Angry backs = overstressed midgets prone to bad decisions -
@reprobate The Lions forwards have had a tougher schedule than ours. They have effectively had to play four Test match standard games in a row and are coming off a long and grueling season. Some of our guys have hardly played at all this year. I wouldn't be too worried, they will be fine.
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@Tim said in All Blacks v BI Lions Test #3:
“There’s been a bit of edge there,” said Kaino, who is so worked up that he had to be told to cool it in the team’s training session on Tuesday morning.
Assume SBW was on the receiveing end of a lot of Kaino's "anger".