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  • F Offline
    F Offline
    Frank
    replied to rotated on last edited by
    #82

    @rotated said in England & Eddie:
    England... I mean they've made more RWC finals in the pro era than we have? Can't really stick the boot in.

    I'd say winning the finals is much more important.
    Unless you want to give out participation awards.

    rotatedR NTAN 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • rotatedR Offline
    rotatedR Offline
    rotated
    replied to Frank on last edited by
    #83

    @Frank said in England & Eddie:

    @rotated said in England & Eddie:
    England... I mean they've made more RWC finals in the pro era than we have? Can't really stick the boot in.

    I'd say winning the finals is much more important.
    Unless you want to give out participation awards.

    No doubt - but it's all a bit binary to say win the RWC or everything is a failure.

    England have put together more good RWC campaigns than NZ in the pro era, and some absolute shockers as well.

    J 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • NTAN Offline
    NTAN Offline
    NTA
    replied to Frank on last edited by NTA
    #84

    @Frank said in England & Eddie:

    @rotated said in England & Eddie:
    England... I mean they've made more RWC finals in the pro era than we have? Can't really stick the boot in.

    I'd say winning the finals is much more important.
    Unless you want to give out participation awards.

    Like silver medals 😉

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • NTAN Offline
    NTAN Offline
    NTA
    wrote on last edited by
    #85

    alt text

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    replied to rotated on last edited by Chris B.
    #86

    @rotated said in England & Eddie:

    England... I mean they've made more RWC finals in the pro era than we have? Can't really stick the boot in.

    I guess if you look at the Big Five (with a nod especially to Wales who've upset the apple cart on several occasions) in nine World Cups, par is probably something pretty close to:

    2 x World Cups
    2 x Beaten Finalists
    3 x Beaten Semifinalists
    2 x Beaten Quarterfinalists
    9 x Made it out of pool play

    Obviously with a bit of adjustment for SA missing the first couple.

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  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    wrote on last edited by
    #87

    @NTA I know you are likely being contrary just to find some excitement in the RWC after the Wobblies produced their predicted shite tournament 😉

    But seriously, if your boy won a silver medal at big event and refused to even have it put around his neck I would like to think you'd have words with him about how he handled losing.

    Throw the thing in the bin or off a bridge afterwards, give it away or even just take it off a little later but refusing to accept it properly at presentation or ripping it off while still with the officials? Just poor manners really.

    NTAN 1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • NTAN Offline
    NTAN Offline
    NTA
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #88

    @Crucial said in England & Eddie:

    @NTA I know you are likely being contrary just to find some excitement in the RWC after the Wobblies produced their predicted shite tournament 😉

    I'm at peace with it. Have been since early October 😉

    But seriously, if your boy won a silver medal at big event and refused to even have it put around his neck I would like to think you'd have words with him about how he handled losing.

    Yes. However, that is talking to him about it afterwards.

    We're having a discussion about how whether the professional rugby players should have behaved that way in the first place.

    So, in your scenario, my credentials as a parent are under serious question if we're saying the England team culture is shit. 😉

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  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    wrote on last edited by canefan
    #89

    Eddie is staying with England

    https://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=12282366

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  • SiamS Offline
    SiamS Offline
    Siam
    wrote on last edited by
    #90

    The medals thing:

    Small stuff that we sweat on too much these days.

    I can definitely get myself riled up about such things and found an involuntary head nodding at all the reasonable admonishments posted here.

    It wasn't ideal behaviour. But not especially representative of anything other than 20 something year olds behaviour being over ridden by emotions for a time in their life spanning less than 60 seconds.

    Fast forward anytime from now and you meet one and he acknowledges that it was a pretty spack thing to do, and he was a bit het up at the time. Some degree of contrition and acceptance of the yucky optics.

    Well, the whole outrage fire inside just fizzles out from that point.

    Cory's right. Save your outrage for non hand shaking or public denigration of the winners.

    In other words,, keep your outrage powder dry 😉

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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    wrote on last edited by
    #91

    Eddie Jones has vowed to stay on as England head coach after Saturday's humiliating World Cup final defeat to South Africa

    Why was it humiliating? Saw plenty of media that labelled our loss humiliating too.

    canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by
    #92

    @taniwharugby said in England & Eddie:

    Eddie Jones has vowed to stay on as England head coach after Saturday's humiliating World Cup final defeat to South Africa

    Why was it humiliating? Saw plenty of media that labelled our loss humiliating too.

    Standard media histrionics

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  • Billy WebbB Offline
    Billy WebbB Offline
    Billy Webb
    replied to rotated on last edited by
    #93

    @rotated said in England & Eddie:

    Eddie...What isn't to like about Eddie? He seems to have the right attitude, is able to develop players, can coax epic performances out of teams with semi-regularity.

    I actually really like Eddie Jones. Sure, he can say some things to rile people up, but for the most part I find him both insightful and entertaining. And he is clearly a bloody good coach.

    Oh - and did I mention that Eddie has now been involved in both SA's last 2 RWC victories? 🙂

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  • J Offline
    J Offline
    junior
    replied to mofitzy_ on last edited by
    #94

    @mofitzy_ said in England & Eddie:

    @junior said in England & Eddie:

    @MiketheSnow said in England & Eddie:

    @hydro11 said in England & Eddie:

    @MiketheSnow said in England & Eddie:

    @hydro11 said in England & Eddie:

    Is this a troll post? No English here to troll....

    Last night showed how tough it is to win a World Cup. If you look at the three tournaments South Africa have won, they haven't been very good in any of them.

    • 1995 they beat Samoa, France and New Zealand.
    • 2007 it was Fiji, Argentina and France.
    • 2019 it was Japan, Wales and England.

    Relatively speaking those are very easy runs. In the two most recent cups we won we had off performances in the knock outs. 2011, it was the final. 2015, it was the semi. We could have lost either game.

    Before this game people clearly discounted the effect that England's tougher run had had. It's exceptionally tough to win a World Cup having had three tough knock out games. In 2015, we beat Australia in the final who had a much easier draw. However, Australia were much worse than us. England and South Africa are generally closely matched so the tough run was always going to be a factor.

    People also discounted how South Africa were a much different team to us. We didn't try to take England on up front; South Africa were always going to. If Sinckler doesn't get injured, England could have won. Maybe if the first couple of minutes of how semi had happened differently, we could have won as well.

    Eddie Jones is a great coach who has achieved great things with England over the last four years. I would still have him as coach of the year.

    Not sure about this and commented on it earlier.

    England's schedule was tough on paper - and I wrote before the tournament started that England wouldn't win the WC because they had Argentina, France, Wales/Australia, SA/NZ, SA/NZ on the trot - but the reality was very different.

    They comfortably beat a 14-man Argentina; the France match was cancelled; and they comfortably beat an average Australia side who'd already lost to Wales.

    They produced one of the performances of the decade by dismantling NZ in the SF but really that was their only serious challenge prior to the Final.

    Conversely SA had to play NZ first up; then a very good Japanese side who were unbeaten with wins over Ireland and Scotland, in the QF; then Wales who were also unbeaten, in the SF.

    For me, SA had the harder path - admittedly losing to NZ didn't derail their progress.

    Eddie has done wonders with England but he made some fatal flaws this tournament and in the years leading up to it.

    1. Sinckler.
      Great tournament. But if his best back up is Dan Coles then you're always going to struggle if Sinckler gets a YC or an early injury.

    2. Youngs
      Great going forward. Shithouse going backwards. I would have yanked him at half-time. Spencer couldn't have been any worse.

    3. Daly
      Great athlete, average full-back. Exposed badly today. Willie looked like Cullen in comparison.

    4. May
      He was carrying an injury. Barrett caught him ffs. No way Barrett was catching Watson.

    5. Slade
      Not match fit and made significant mistakes in the games he played in

    6. Ford
      This was not the match to start Ford

    7. No nasty fluffybunny in the forwards
      England have great, technical athletes in all positions but no real hard bastard in the Martin Johnson mould who can bollock them.
      Lawes was stuffed twice by Kolbe ffs

    How's that for starters?

    Strongly disagree with this. Pool play is a bit of an irrelevancy unless you have a tough pool. The New Zealand vs South Africa game happened a long time ago and both teams were going to beat Wales. Japan had had two very good victories but were unlikely to have the physicality to beat South Africa in that game. Japan had already played their final. Wales may have been unbeaten but they were exceptionally poor in the semi final and couldn't threaten the South African line.

    Not for the first time today I've questioned whether posters watched the SA v Wales SF.

    We scored a try. A good one. England couldn't today, despite 20 odd stabs at it in one passage of play.

    It was 16-16 going in to the last 10 minutes.

    We had two opportunities to take the lead and blew both.

    SA had one chance in the last 5 minutes and took it.

    So if we were exceptionally poor, then SA were just poor.

    SA didn't do much different tonight, so England lost to a poor team.

    Not buying it.

    Well, Mike, I get your point, but where does that leave England's performance against us, given that we beat RSA and then spanked Wales? Perhaps England weren't that great after all and, in fact, we were just really shit...?

    They were very good on the day, but we were also really shit. Some pundits seem to think that if a team plays shit, then it's 100% because they were forced to play shit but obviously that isn't true. Likewise its possible to play well when the opponent also plays well.

    Yeah, look, I never really bought the "no one would have beaten England that day" view of things. True, that they got it spot on tactically and mentally. But, there's no doubt that we were tactically stupid and got some selections way wrong.

    Even so, we still had some opportunities to swing the match back into our favour, which we again cocked up through poor options (A Smith's attacking box kick, Jordie's running it and getting smashed by Underhill), poor handling (Brodie's awful pass on the break) and ill-discipline (Whitelock's palm to Farrell's face).

    canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    replied to junior on last edited by
    #95

    @junior said in England & Eddie:

    @mofitzy_ said in England & Eddie:

    @junior said in England & Eddie:

    @MiketheSnow said in England & Eddie:

    @hydro11 said in England & Eddie:

    @MiketheSnow said in England & Eddie:

    @hydro11 said in England & Eddie:

    Is this a troll post? No English here to troll....

    Last night showed how tough it is to win a World Cup. If you look at the three tournaments South Africa have won, they haven't been very good in any of them.

    • 1995 they beat Samoa, France and New Zealand.
    • 2007 it was Fiji, Argentina and France.
    • 2019 it was Japan, Wales and England.

    Relatively speaking those are very easy runs. In the two most recent cups we won we had off performances in the knock outs. 2011, it was the final. 2015, it was the semi. We could have lost either game.

    Before this game people clearly discounted the effect that England's tougher run had had. It's exceptionally tough to win a World Cup having had three tough knock out games. In 2015, we beat Australia in the final who had a much easier draw. However, Australia were much worse than us. England and South Africa are generally closely matched so the tough run was always going to be a factor.

    People also discounted how South Africa were a much different team to us. We didn't try to take England on up front; South Africa were always going to. If Sinckler doesn't get injured, England could have won. Maybe if the first couple of minutes of how semi had happened differently, we could have won as well.

    Eddie Jones is a great coach who has achieved great things with England over the last four years. I would still have him as coach of the year.

    Not sure about this and commented on it earlier.

    England's schedule was tough on paper - and I wrote before the tournament started that England wouldn't win the WC because they had Argentina, France, Wales/Australia, SA/NZ, SA/NZ on the trot - but the reality was very different.

    They comfortably beat a 14-man Argentina; the France match was cancelled; and they comfortably beat an average Australia side who'd already lost to Wales.

    They produced one of the performances of the decade by dismantling NZ in the SF but really that was their only serious challenge prior to the Final.

    Conversely SA had to play NZ first up; then a very good Japanese side who were unbeaten with wins over Ireland and Scotland, in the QF; then Wales who were also unbeaten, in the SF.

    For me, SA had the harder path - admittedly losing to NZ didn't derail their progress.

    Eddie has done wonders with England but he made some fatal flaws this tournament and in the years leading up to it.

    1. Sinckler.
      Great tournament. But if his best back up is Dan Coles then you're always going to struggle if Sinckler gets a YC or an early injury.

    2. Youngs
      Great going forward. Shithouse going backwards. I would have yanked him at half-time. Spencer couldn't have been any worse.

    3. Daly
      Great athlete, average full-back. Exposed badly today. Willie looked like Cullen in comparison.

    4. May
      He was carrying an injury. Barrett caught him ffs. No way Barrett was catching Watson.

    5. Slade
      Not match fit and made significant mistakes in the games he played in

    6. Ford
      This was not the match to start Ford

    7. No nasty fluffybunny in the forwards
      England have great, technical athletes in all positions but no real hard bastard in the Martin Johnson mould who can bollock them.
      Lawes was stuffed twice by Kolbe ffs

    How's that for starters?

    Strongly disagree with this. Pool play is a bit of an irrelevancy unless you have a tough pool. The New Zealand vs South Africa game happened a long time ago and both teams were going to beat Wales. Japan had had two very good victories but were unlikely to have the physicality to beat South Africa in that game. Japan had already played their final. Wales may have been unbeaten but they were exceptionally poor in the semi final and couldn't threaten the South African line.

    Not for the first time today I've questioned whether posters watched the SA v Wales SF.

    We scored a try. A good one. England couldn't today, despite 20 odd stabs at it in one passage of play.

    It was 16-16 going in to the last 10 minutes.

    We had two opportunities to take the lead and blew both.

    SA had one chance in the last 5 minutes and took it.

    So if we were exceptionally poor, then SA were just poor.

    SA didn't do much different tonight, so England lost to a poor team.

    Not buying it.

    Well, Mike, I get your point, but where does that leave England's performance against us, given that we beat RSA and then spanked Wales? Perhaps England weren't that great after all and, in fact, we were just really shit...?

    They were very good on the day, but we were also really shit. Some pundits seem to think that if a team plays shit, then it's 100% because they were forced to play shit but obviously that isn't true. Likewise its possible to play well when the opponent also plays well.

    Yeah, look, I never really bought the "no one would have beaten England that day" view of things. True, that they got it spot on tactically and mentally. But, there's no doubt that we were tactically stupid and got some selections way wrong.

    Even so, we still had some opportunities to swing the match back into our favour, which we again cocked up through poor options (A Smith's attacking box kick, Jordie's running it and getting smashed by Underhill), poor handling (Brodie's awful pass on the break) and ill-discipline (Whitelock's palm to Farrell's face).

    They dominated the collisions, however I always thought we could turn it around with a change of mindset and tactics. I was sure that Hansen would apply the hairdryer and we would come out and rumble it up the guts. But nothing changed, and that was probably the most disappointing thing of all for me

    J 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • J Offline
    J Offline
    junior
    replied to rotated on last edited by
    #96

    @rotated said in England & Eddie:

    @Frank said in England & Eddie:

    @rotated said in England & Eddie:
    England... I mean they've made more RWC finals in the pro era than we have? Can't really stick the boot in.

    I'd say winning the finals is much more important.
    Unless you want to give out participation awards.

    No doubt - but it's all a bit binary to say win the RWC or everything is a failure.

    England have put together more good RWC campaigns than NZ in the pro era, and some absolute shockers as well.

    But this is exactly what Eddie has banked on - his whole reputation has been built upon a few epic World Cup performances from "underrated" teams. In truth, he's shown little regard for rugby outside of the RWC by taking an all-conquering team in 2016 and accepting muddling performances for the next 3 years in the hope / expectation that it would be rewarded with a RWC victory.

    Sure, the Boks have been largely shit since 2015 and, so, it would be inaccurate to say that they haven't sacrificed all the rugby in between in order to win this tournament. But, their shitness has largely been due to political machinations. As soon as they got a decent coach who has able to rise above it (or wasn't constrained by it), they started and were able to play to win, understanding that you actually need to build off a winning base to win the RWC.

    nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • Victor MeldrewV Offline
    Victor MeldrewV Offline
    Victor Meldrew
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #97

    @Crucial said in England & Eddie:

    I do agree with your post but would also point out that those very cliched tropes do have a basis to feed off and that actions like those the other night will keep stoking the fires.

    I find the whole attitude to Rugby in England quite weird.

    On one hand you have the genuine fans who are the same as everywhere else, are great to have beer with and think the likes of Stephen Jones an even bigger dickhead than we do. Then you have the band-wagon/occasional watchers...

    It's the later which outnumber the genuine supporters which seem to be the problem, believing every poaching/cheating/ban-the-haka/arrogant opposition coach clickbait story they can find. The media feeds the frenzy which drives the media and around we go.

    But I also think Jones needs to look at player attitude a bit. He could learn a lot from the way Southgate has made England one of the more likable and success soccer teams

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • J Offline
    J Offline
    junior
    replied to canefan on last edited by
    #98

    @canefan said in England & Eddie:

    @junior said in England & Eddie:

    @mofitzy_ said in England & Eddie:

    @junior said in England & Eddie:

    @MiketheSnow said in England & Eddie:

    @hydro11 said in England & Eddie:

    @MiketheSnow said in England & Eddie:

    @hydro11 said in England & Eddie:

    Is this a troll post? No English here to troll....

    Last night showed how tough it is to win a World Cup. If you look at the three tournaments South Africa have won, they haven't been very good in any of them.

    • 1995 they beat Samoa, France and New Zealand.
    • 2007 it was Fiji, Argentina and France.
    • 2019 it was Japan, Wales and England.

    Relatively speaking those are very easy runs. In the two most recent cups we won we had off performances in the knock outs. 2011, it was the final. 2015, it was the semi. We could have lost either game.

    Before this game people clearly discounted the effect that England's tougher run had had. It's exceptionally tough to win a World Cup having had three tough knock out games. In 2015, we beat Australia in the final who had a much easier draw. However, Australia were much worse than us. England and South Africa are generally closely matched so the tough run was always going to be a factor.

    People also discounted how South Africa were a much different team to us. We didn't try to take England on up front; South Africa were always going to. If Sinckler doesn't get injured, England could have won. Maybe if the first couple of minutes of how semi had happened differently, we could have won as well.

    Eddie Jones is a great coach who has achieved great things with England over the last four years. I would still have him as coach of the year.

    Not sure about this and commented on it earlier.

    England's schedule was tough on paper - and I wrote before the tournament started that England wouldn't win the WC because they had Argentina, France, Wales/Australia, SA/NZ, SA/NZ on the trot - but the reality was very different.

    They comfortably beat a 14-man Argentina; the France match was cancelled; and they comfortably beat an average Australia side who'd already lost to Wales.

    They produced one of the performances of the decade by dismantling NZ in the SF but really that was their only serious challenge prior to the Final.

    Conversely SA had to play NZ first up; then a very good Japanese side who were unbeaten with wins over Ireland and Scotland, in the QF; then Wales who were also unbeaten, in the SF.

    For me, SA had the harder path - admittedly losing to NZ didn't derail their progress.

    Eddie has done wonders with England but he made some fatal flaws this tournament and in the years leading up to it.

    1. Sinckler.
      Great tournament. But if his best back up is Dan Coles then you're always going to struggle if Sinckler gets a YC or an early injury.

    2. Youngs
      Great going forward. Shithouse going backwards. I would have yanked him at half-time. Spencer couldn't have been any worse.

    3. Daly
      Great athlete, average full-back. Exposed badly today. Willie looked like Cullen in comparison.

    4. May
      He was carrying an injury. Barrett caught him ffs. No way Barrett was catching Watson.

    5. Slade
      Not match fit and made significant mistakes in the games he played in

    6. Ford
      This was not the match to start Ford

    7. No nasty fluffybunny in the forwards
      England have great, technical athletes in all positions but no real hard bastard in the Martin Johnson mould who can bollock them.
      Lawes was stuffed twice by Kolbe ffs

    How's that for starters?

    Strongly disagree with this. Pool play is a bit of an irrelevancy unless you have a tough pool. The New Zealand vs South Africa game happened a long time ago and both teams were going to beat Wales. Japan had had two very good victories but were unlikely to have the physicality to beat South Africa in that game. Japan had already played their final. Wales may have been unbeaten but they were exceptionally poor in the semi final and couldn't threaten the South African line.

    Not for the first time today I've questioned whether posters watched the SA v Wales SF.

    We scored a try. A good one. England couldn't today, despite 20 odd stabs at it in one passage of play.

    It was 16-16 going in to the last 10 minutes.

    We had two opportunities to take the lead and blew both.

    SA had one chance in the last 5 minutes and took it.

    So if we were exceptionally poor, then SA were just poor.

    SA didn't do much different tonight, so England lost to a poor team.

    Not buying it.

    Well, Mike, I get your point, but where does that leave England's performance against us, given that we beat RSA and then spanked Wales? Perhaps England weren't that great after all and, in fact, we were just really shit...?

    They were very good on the day, but we were also really shit. Some pundits seem to think that if a team plays shit, then it's 100% because they were forced to play shit but obviously that isn't true. Likewise its possible to play well when the opponent also plays well.

    Yeah, look, I never really bought the "no one would have beaten England that day" view of things. True, that they got it spot on tactically and mentally. But, there's no doubt that we were tactically stupid and got some selections way wrong.

    Even so, we still had some opportunities to swing the match back into our favour, which we again cocked up through poor options (A Smith's attacking box kick, Jordie's running it and getting smashed by Underhill), poor handling (Brodie's awful pass on the break) and ill-discipline (Whitelock's palm to Farrell's face).

    They dominated the collisions, however I always thought we could turn it around with a change of mindset and tactics. I was sure that Hansen would apply the hairdryer and we would come out and rumble it up the guts. But nothing changed, and that was probably the most disappointing thing of all for me

    No shit, but a contributing factor in that were our tactics and selections. As I've said elsewhere (and so has @Bones), we ran forward pods close into the ruck once all game, which resulted in Reece getting enough space to perhaps have a chance to touch down in the corner. We then scored from the ensuing lineout.

    We did that all match against the Irish and nearly brought up a half ton. We did that once all all match against the English and it proved to be fruitful (sure not as easy or as fruitful as against Ireland, but still fruitful). So, I don't really buy "England didn't allow us to play" tripe that's been trotted out a lot since.

    canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    replied to junior on last edited by
    #99

    @junior said in England & Eddie:

    @canefan said in England & Eddie:

    @junior said in England & Eddie:

    @mofitzy_ said in England & Eddie:

    @junior said in England & Eddie:

    @MiketheSnow said in England & Eddie:

    @hydro11 said in England & Eddie:

    @MiketheSnow said in England & Eddie:

    @hydro11 said in England & Eddie:

    Is this a troll post? No English here to troll....

    Last night showed how tough it is to win a World Cup. If you look at the three tournaments South Africa have won, they haven't been very good in any of them.

    • 1995 they beat Samoa, France and New Zealand.
    • 2007 it was Fiji, Argentina and France.
    • 2019 it was Japan, Wales and England.

    Relatively speaking those are very easy runs. In the two most recent cups we won we had off performances in the knock outs. 2011, it was the final. 2015, it was the semi. We could have lost either game.

    Before this game people clearly discounted the effect that England's tougher run had had. It's exceptionally tough to win a World Cup having had three tough knock out games. In 2015, we beat Australia in the final who had a much easier draw. However, Australia were much worse than us. England and South Africa are generally closely matched so the tough run was always going to be a factor.

    People also discounted how South Africa were a much different team to us. We didn't try to take England on up front; South Africa were always going to. If Sinckler doesn't get injured, England could have won. Maybe if the first couple of minutes of how semi had happened differently, we could have won as well.

    Eddie Jones is a great coach who has achieved great things with England over the last four years. I would still have him as coach of the year.

    Not sure about this and commented on it earlier.

    England's schedule was tough on paper - and I wrote before the tournament started that England wouldn't win the WC because they had Argentina, France, Wales/Australia, SA/NZ, SA/NZ on the trot - but the reality was very different.

    They comfortably beat a 14-man Argentina; the France match was cancelled; and they comfortably beat an average Australia side who'd already lost to Wales.

    They produced one of the performances of the decade by dismantling NZ in the SF but really that was their only serious challenge prior to the Final.

    Conversely SA had to play NZ first up; then a very good Japanese side who were unbeaten with wins over Ireland and Scotland, in the QF; then Wales who were also unbeaten, in the SF.

    For me, SA had the harder path - admittedly losing to NZ didn't derail their progress.

    Eddie has done wonders with England but he made some fatal flaws this tournament and in the years leading up to it.

    1. Sinckler.
      Great tournament. But if his best back up is Dan Coles then you're always going to struggle if Sinckler gets a YC or an early injury.

    2. Youngs
      Great going forward. Shithouse going backwards. I would have yanked him at half-time. Spencer couldn't have been any worse.

    3. Daly
      Great athlete, average full-back. Exposed badly today. Willie looked like Cullen in comparison.

    4. May
      He was carrying an injury. Barrett caught him ffs. No way Barrett was catching Watson.

    5. Slade
      Not match fit and made significant mistakes in the games he played in

    6. Ford
      This was not the match to start Ford

    7. No nasty fluffybunny in the forwards
      England have great, technical athletes in all positions but no real hard bastard in the Martin Johnson mould who can bollock them.
      Lawes was stuffed twice by Kolbe ffs

    How's that for starters?

    Strongly disagree with this. Pool play is a bit of an irrelevancy unless you have a tough pool. The New Zealand vs South Africa game happened a long time ago and both teams were going to beat Wales. Japan had had two very good victories but were unlikely to have the physicality to beat South Africa in that game. Japan had already played their final. Wales may have been unbeaten but they were exceptionally poor in the semi final and couldn't threaten the South African line.

    Not for the first time today I've questioned whether posters watched the SA v Wales SF.

    We scored a try. A good one. England couldn't today, despite 20 odd stabs at it in one passage of play.

    It was 16-16 going in to the last 10 minutes.

    We had two opportunities to take the lead and blew both.

    SA had one chance in the last 5 minutes and took it.

    So if we were exceptionally poor, then SA were just poor.

    SA didn't do much different tonight, so England lost to a poor team.

    Not buying it.

    Well, Mike, I get your point, but where does that leave England's performance against us, given that we beat RSA and then spanked Wales? Perhaps England weren't that great after all and, in fact, we were just really shit...?

    They were very good on the day, but we were also really shit. Some pundits seem to think that if a team plays shit, then it's 100% because they were forced to play shit but obviously that isn't true. Likewise its possible to play well when the opponent also plays well.

    Yeah, look, I never really bought the "no one would have beaten England that day" view of things. True, that they got it spot on tactically and mentally. But, there's no doubt that we were tactically stupid and got some selections way wrong.

    Even so, we still had some opportunities to swing the match back into our favour, which we again cocked up through poor options (A Smith's attacking box kick, Jordie's running it and getting smashed by Underhill), poor handling (Brodie's awful pass on the break) and ill-discipline (Whitelock's palm to Farrell's face).

    They dominated the collisions, however I always thought we could turn it around with a change of mindset and tactics. I was sure that Hansen would apply the hairdryer and we would come out and rumble it up the guts. But nothing changed, and that was probably the most disappointing thing of all for me

    No shit, but a contributing factor in that were our tactics and selections. As I've said elsewhere (and so has @Bones), we ran forward pods close into the ruck once all game, which resulted in Reece getting enough space to perhaps have a chance to touch down in the corner. We then scored from the ensuing lineout.

    We did that all match against the Irish and nearly brought up a half ton. We did that once all all match against the English and it proved to be fruitful (sure not as easy or as fruitful as against Ireland, but still fruitful). So, I don't really buy "England didn't allow us to play" tripe that's been trotted out a lot since.

    We agree mate. I have been consistent in saying that we failed to go up the guts. We went too wide too fast, which made it easy for their rush D to isolate us and turn the ball over, or push us out of bounds

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  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to junior on last edited by
    #100

    @junior said in England & Eddie:

    Sure, the Boks have been largely shit since 2015 and, so, it would be inaccurate to say that they haven't sacrificed all the rugby in between in order to win this tournament. But, their shitness has largely been due to political machinations. As soon as they got a decent coach who has able to rise above it (or wasn't constrained by it), they started and were able to play to win, understanding that you actually need to build off a winning base to win the RWC.

    They also got to bring back NH players who were playing (as it turned out) in some very good competitions. Australia too - both teams lifted this year with the introduction of hgih quality players. It's a new thing; in the past, players coming back couldn't handle the pace and intensity of the game. That's changed and it made a difference.

    NTAN 1 Reply Last reply
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  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    wrote on last edited by canefan
    #101

    Junior, we also agree that the game plan for the Ireland test was the one we should have gone for vs England. It is easy to forget that before all the fancy stuff in the QF we spent the first part of the game bludgeoning our way through the heart of the Irish defence. We even gave them an attacking Gary Owen FFS. Why Hansen and Co thought that England, who play a similar type of game to Ireland, would be beaten by loosie goosie all out attacking rugby, beggars belief. The more I think about it the more it upsets me!!!! We could have easily changed plans at half time. It is a total head scratcher and a systemic failure from all concerned that we didn't

    J 1 Reply Last reply
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