All Blacks v France Test #1
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@chris-b when SBW was declared unfit, it was always going to be a Crotty/ALB combo to start. They have experience on their side.
Laumape the preferred bench option given he’s played 2nd 5 for the ABs and the TAB are refusing to take bets on whether Crotty will finish the test....
I am genuinely surprised with Jordie starting at fullback.
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@crucial said in All Blacks v France Test #1:
@machpants said in All Blacks v France Test #1:
And that old school mo!
He has been to Mo Repairs.
Cheers, that's the rest of my afternoon watching Billy T on the youtube.
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All Blacks on twitter:
UPDATE: The wee boy hurt at Auckland Airport yesterday was the son of All Black Vaea Fifita, the All Blacks have confirmed. The boy, Paula, who turns two this month, was at the airport with family and was hurt on a conveyor belt. He is recovering in Middlemore Hospital. 1/2
2/2 Vaea Fifita said: “He had an operation on his arm and is doing okay. My partner and I would like to thank airport, emergency services and hospital staff for all their support.”
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He he. The NZ rugby conveyor belt eh.
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@tim said in All Blacks v France Test #1:
How has this not made the 'Good Rugby Reads' thread before.
I don't always agree with the analysis but it makes for really interesting reading and is a notch above the G&GR stuff which drifts way too eagerly into finger pointing. -
Exactly why Hansen and Co are changing it up for this year until the world cup. Teams will still be trying to beat last years ABs, and they'll have moved on. And none of the teams, esp England, seem to be capable of thinking on their feet, which is what's needed
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@tim said in All Blacks v France Test #1:
Interesting that this defensive pattern has been retained so long. Joe Schmidt figured it out as far back as 2013 in Dublin. That said, there are always compromises, so fix this and a weakness appears elsewhere?
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@crucial said in All Blacks v France Test #1:
@tim said in All Blacks v France Test #1:
How has this not made the 'Good Rugby Reads' thread before.
I don't always agree with the analysis but it makes for really interesting reading and is a notch above the G&GR stuff which drifts way too eagerly into finger pointing.If only it were that easy
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@pakman said in All Blacks v France Test #1:
@tim said in All Blacks v France Test #1:
Interesting that this defensive pattern has been retained so long. Joe Schmidt figured it out as far back as 2013 in Dublin. That said, there are always compromises, so fix this and a weakness appears elsewhere?
I think we saw against Argentina last year (in NP?) that they tried this and it took us too long to adjust. The flipside to the tactic is that turnovers are extremely good opportunities and the ABs are the best in the world at switching from D to A.
You simply have to execute this well or you find that all of your effort produces the wrong scoreboard.
We do have to be sharper at picking times to stop the tactic though. Doing it on the tryline (as shown in the examples) is dumb as is continuing to do it one a team is eating up metres. You get no chance at turnovers running backwards. -
@mikethesnow that's the thing...having a plan to do something is one thing, effectively implementing it and see it actually work and having the human element to it as well makes it harder.
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I think iits fair to say the Allblacks have led the world in coming up with fresh ideas , and a continual evolving gameplan ,
So while you may spot something you think you can exploit , doesnt always mean it will still be there as much when it comes time to play them, if you are planning for down the track