Ireland vs All Blacks (2018)
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@rapido said in Ireland Vs All Blacks:
So, was Sam Whitelock sitting on the ground, offside, slapping an Irish pass forward not something we're keeping dry for next year?
Pleased about that. Small mercies.
You can take the boy out of the Crusaders, but you can't take the Crusader out of the boy?
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@snowy said in Ireland Vs All Blacks:
Maybe Ireland are just better than they were when D'Arcy played for them.
He must be a hoot at functions: "Congrats boys, well done but you're lucky you didn't play good All Black teams like I had to."
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Has anyone linked through to the 1014 breakdown of the game?
It's pretty interesting, and the highlight some of our problems really well, such as how we heavily rely on metres by 10/11/14/15. Even though those players contributed about half of our metres in this game, it was less than usual, indicating that Ireland still shut us down by comparison, which I found fascinating. It really suggests that we are over-reliant on systems to get Barrett, Ioane, Smith, and Dmac space, which seems pretty dangerous.
They also picked up on the fact that this game is the first in ages where we had a better tackle percentage (only just) and still lost, essentially showing that we have real problems ons attack.
They also highlight the absolute non contribution of Squire at 6, suggesting that position is a problem. So, the good news is that we all on here on the fern are not as far away as we thought.
One thing no one has mentioned is that A. Smith did not run. At all. No metres. This is huge because we average 6 metres per carry when our halfback runs, but he never sniped nor got in a support position to get metres. For those pushing TJP, this could be some support. Alternatively, it could mean we were trying some new things.
They also highlight that we didn't get any metres out of Karl, which I think I also wrote about in my review - we need those from LH because we aren't getting them from TH (btw, with about .25 metres per carry, Owen Franks was above the season average for the 3 jersey!).
They also do a good job of breaking down how the Irish defense appears to offer the kick in behind as an option, but due to systems (and players) it isn't half as much of an opportunity as it appears. This is seems a bit vital, because the ABs kept trying it, even after it wasn't working. They do suggest that it can be broken down (the space is there) just that we couldn't manipulate it accordingly. It's one thing that gives me hope, if we can devise plays for it.
Anyway, it's worth a watch:
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@rapido said in Ireland Vs All Blacks:
So, was Sam Whitelock sitting on the ground, offside, slapping an Irish pass forward not something we're keeping dry for next year?
Pleased about that. Small mercies.
I hear Sam was surprised that anyone saw that as he thought just for a few seconds he had McCaw’s cloak of invisibility on.
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@gt12 said in Ireland Vs All Blacks:
They also do a good job of breaking down how the Irish defense appears to offer the kick in behind as an option, but due to systems (and players) it isn't half as much of an opportunity as it appears. This is seems a bit vital, because the ABs kept trying it, even after it wasn't working. They do suggest that it can be broken down (the space is there) just that we couldn't manipulate it accordingly. It's one thing that gives me hope, if we can devise plays for it.
I havent watched it yet, but would an accurate kicking game have helped, as that seems to have been the issue with our kicks of late, too long/short/wide and as such, the chasing pressure hasnt been where it should have been (although even our chases havent been that great)
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@gt12 said in Ireland Vs All Blacks:
Has anyone linked through to the 1014 breakdown of the game?
It's pretty interesting, and the highlight some of our problems really well, such as how we heavily rely on metres by 10/11/14/15. Even though those players contributed about half of our metres in this game, it was less than usual, indicating that Ireland still shut us down by comparison, which I found fascinating. It really suggests that we are over-reliant on systems to get Barrett, Ioane, Smith, and Dmac space, which seems pretty dangerous.
They also picked up on the fact that this game is the first in ages where we had a better tackle percentage (only just) and still lost, essentially showing that we have real problems ons attack.
They also highlight the absolute non contribution of Squire at 6, suggesting that position is a problem. So, the good news is that we all on here on the fern are not as far away as we thought.
One thing no one has mentioned is that A. Smith did not run. At all. No metres. This is huge because we average 6 metres per carry when our halfback runs, but he never sniped nor got in a support position to get metres. For those pushing TJP, this could be some support. Alternatively, it could mean we were trying some new things.
They also highlight that we didn't get any metres out of Karl, which I think I also wrote about in my review - we need those from LH because we aren't getting them from TH (btw, with about .25 metres per carry, Owen Franks was above the season average for the 3 jersey!).
They also do a good job of breaking down how the Irish defense appears to offer the kick in behind as an option, but due to systems (and players) it isn't half as much of an opportunity as it appears. This is seems a bit vital, because the ABs kept trying it, even after it wasn't working. They do suggest that it can be broken down (the space is there) just that we couldn't manipulate it accordingly. It's one thing that gives me hope, if we can devise plays for it.
Anyway, it's worth a watch:
I know these guys seem like flavour of the month, but I thought some of their conclusions were over reaching a tad.
Regarding the bolded, firstly I don’t think that is a bad thing at all wanting 4 of your 6 running backs to get space. I don’t think we are over reliant on it, but there are issues when we don’t have our offload in contact game not going. That’s where Moody, Retallick, Read, Savea come into play. That wasn’t there and so when Aaron Smith and Barrett just shovelled ball on we were easily shut down.
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Well, I don’t know how much better they are than many posters here in breaking things down, although they do have opta stats, which is much more than we get, and they are better than most in the media. At times, I wonder about their reliance on metres per carry for one game as this can easily be miles away from the statistical mean but not an outlier.
And, I’m not suggesting that our outsides running is bad, I’m suggesting that we are reliant on it - in an unbalanced way. That’s where we disagree I guess. I think I wrote about this in my review, but I hadn’t realized that these numbers were even that was less than usual.
Basically, and in an oversimplified summary, from the Lions on it seems that if you can make Barrett have a bad day, and make you tackles, we are very beatable. We don’t seem to offer much attack threat through our forwards.
@taniwharugby that certainly contributes, but it could also be related to there not being as much space as there looks. Certainly, if we had been super accurate with the kicking, we’d have got more points, and probably won, so I thats a fair issue to focus on.
I’m wondering about what other plans we have? It could be that with key players missing (Cane, Moody) we haven’t been able to get our forward running game going, or have we been seeing it in patches. I assume that this week, we'll see lots of little things tried.
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@gt12 said in Ireland Vs All Blacks:
Has anyone linked through to the 1014 breakdown of the game?
I watched it on Sky earlier in the week. To be honest the video breakdown of tactics/game plan is usually more interesting to me than some of the metrics they use (e.g. tackle%) to compare teams or games during the season, as in many cases there are minimal differences.
It would be good to see an historical comparison with the 2015 ABs to see if metrics like metres per carry have changed only due to the personnel in the team or due to tactics, the quality of the opposition etc.
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@gt12 listening to RS and a couple of people (inc Miles Davis, so take that how you want) reckon its Mick Byrne we are missing more than Wayne Smith and his kicking skills.
While i agree to an extent, you wonder if he has taught someone (AS for example) how to kick to such a high standard, how can they be good when he is there, but poor when not?
A skill is learned and only forgotten or becomes less honed when not used, what has changed that our execution of this aspect has fallen by the way side so far?
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@taniwharugby said in Ireland Vs All Blacks:
@gt12 listening to RS and a couple of people (inc Miles Davis, so take that how you want) reckon its Mick Byrne we are missing more than Wayne Smith and his kicking skills.
While i agree to an extent, you wonder if he has taught someone (AS for example) how to kick to such a high standard, how can they be good when he is there, but poor when not?
A skill is learned and only forgotten or becomes less honed when not used, what has changed that our execution of this aspect has fallen by the way side so far?
he's doing absolute wonders for the Wallaby skill level...
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@mariner4life said in Ireland Vs All Blacks:
he's doing absolute wonders for the Wallaby skill level...
ha yeah I forgot to add that part too.
Outside of Byrne, the overall point about becoming shit at kicking is valid!
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@mariner4life said in Ireland Vs All Blacks:
he's doing absolute wonders for the Wallaby skill level...
The Wallabies, and Foley in particular, have got the kick off mastered. Plenty of practice you see.
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@taniwharugby Southee and Boult fell off a cliff when Bond stopped coaching them, so I guess skills can be lost or drills not done as often when a particular coach moves on.
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Expertise usually comes from observation and feedback, so maintaining high level skill can be difficult when you no longer have the person there with the knowledge needed to identify the problem. I'd say, for that reason, someone like Mick the kick could be very valuable. My problem with him was that he wanted an assistant coach position (not his expertise), rather than a skills coach position, so he was leaving either way. I feel the same way about Cron, who I think is now an assistant coach working beyond his particular area of expertise (set piece). Personally, I think that these two should have been replaced with specialists, and we should have also found specialist forward coaches.
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@gt12 I guess, I'd have thought kicking, while an important skill is largely a practice makes perfect type skill as opposed to a largely technique driven one like a bowling action or golf swing.
But I think our kicking game is a big part of the problem, wasnt it on the EOYT last year where they were pointing out we kick the ball more than any other team, despite the impression that we preferred to keep ball in hand.
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@taniwharugby said in Ireland Vs All Blacks:
@gt12 I guess, I'd have thought kicking, while an important skill is largely a practice makes perfect type skill as opposed to a largely technique driven one like a bowling action or golf swing.
But I think our kicking game is a big part of the problem, wasnt it on the EOYT last year where they were pointing out we kick the ball more than any other team, despite the impression that we preferred to keep ball in hand.
Our kicking has been absolute rubbish in teh NH. I have been working my way through the England game, and we are absolute crap with distance or quality of kicks. No idea why. Hope to fark we're foxing, and flogging the team at training to lull others into a false sense of security.
I did enjoy the rugbypass article (https://www.rugbypass.com/news/analysis-did-the-all-blacks-bottle-it-and-shadow-box-against-ireland) and thought they made good points. Uncharacteristically crap - but not sure if foxign, or just shite.