Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11
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@chimoaus said in Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11:
...when it goes over, Brooke, Larkham, Stransky, even Hunt have got a lot of reply time out of it .
And that’s what really counts 😉
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@African-Monkey said in Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11:
@Gunner No, not at all. I'd rather he tried and missed then not go at all.
Why is that different to trying and missing to score a try?
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@Gunner He would have been about 15 out directly in front of the sticks. Yeah, it may have gone wide or got charged down but Australia's defence was rather settled at that point and the conditions towards the end were horrendous for handling. As I said the droppie may have missed but the try was a lower percentage play out of the two. Just my two cents.
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@African-Monkey fair point.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not against the droppie, I just don’t think it’s the magic bullet some on here think it is...
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Go home rugby pass, you’re drunk, of all time?
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@Kiwiwomble It was a fantastic overtime period, except one side needed to win to truly make it epic, like with a drop goal or something
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Important to note that the next game isn't at Eden Park. It's at some joint called ASB stadium. Advantage wobblies
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@Gunner said in Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11:
Been thinking, Foster must be working on some genius midfield innovation to beat the rush defence.
Probably sounds a bit obvious and simple, nor am I sure how it’s supposed to exactly work or look, but he must be looking for Goodhue to bring the accuracy of how he plays at centre in a spot, and for Reiko to use his step and gas to get on the outside his rushing opposite?
Who bloody knows, I’m probably just clutching at straws.
Nonu-lite (aka Laumape) could be the key here, he runs hard and straight, often getting over the gain-line and always taking a couple defenders to at least commit to him, this opens gaps for Ioane to boost through. The AB's did manage to put Ioane into a couple holes today for some good gained metres.
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@Gunner said in Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11:
Saw something on Facebook, the ABs haven’t won their last 5 games in Wellington?
Is this true?
If so, we need to stop playing there immediately.
Burn the stadium.
That yellow is an abomination to
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@westcoastie said in Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11:
@Gunner said in Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11:
Been thinking, Foster must be working on some genius midfield innovation to beat the rush defence.
Probably sounds a bit obvious and simple, nor am I sure how it’s supposed to exactly work or look, but he must be looking for Goodhue to bring the accuracy of how he plays at centre in a spot, and for Reiko to use his step and gas to get on the outside his rushing opposite?
Who bloody knows, I’m probably just clutching at straws.
Nonu-lite (aka Laumape) could be the key here, he runs hard and straight, often getting over the gain-line and always taking a couple defenders to at least commit to him, this opens gaps for Ioane to boost through. The AB's did manage to put Ioane into a couple holes today for some good gained metres.
Those gaps were pretty wide though. Take the play that lead to the try, it happened with Ioane out on the line (literally) and with Bridge infield.
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@mariner4life said in Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11:
Important to note that the next game isn't at Eden Park. It's at some joint called ASB stadium. Advantage wobblies
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@mariner4life said in Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11:
Important to note that the next game isn't at Eden Park. It's at some joint called ASB stadium. Advantage wobblies
I believe it's going to be the "Hush Hush Bar Stadium", with ASB donating the naming to a deserving local business.
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It appears coaches think if a player is world class in their main position, they can easily transfer those skills to another position. But is it that easy? We always consider 2, 9, and 10 to be specialist but could you not argue that 1-15 are all specialist spots that take many many hours of game time to learn and master? Why do we think we can simply change a player at test level and expect it to work?
Experts in any field are experts because they don't think about why they do something; they just do it instinctively. How long does it take a player to become a specialist?
I wonder in the case of Savea, is he worse off for having to play all 3 positions instead of becoming an expert at 1?
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@chimoaus said in Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11:
I wonder in the case of Savea, is he worse off for having to play all 3 positions instead of becoming an expert at 1?
Certainly. His game and skills suit playing at
128, but there are better 8s in the country. -
@chimoaus said in Bledisloe One: Wellington, October 11:
It appears coaches think if a player is world class in their main position, they can easily transfer those skills to another position. But is it that easy? We always consider 2, 9, and 10 to be specialist but could you not argue that 1-15 are all specialist spots that take many many hours of game time to learn and master? Why do we think we can simply change a player at test level and expect it to work?
Experts in any field are experts because they don't think about why they do something; they just do it instinctively. How long does it take a player to become a specialist?
I wonder in the case of Savea, is he worse off for having to play all 3 positions instead of becoming an expert at 1?
I agree, shuffling players around is almost always detrimental to their development. We've seen it so many times before and there's little doubt it has hindered the likes of Jordie and DMac really finding their feet at test level.
Jordie has played plenty of 15 now and has come of age in that position. He either plays 15 or he doesn't start.
Same for Savea at 7. Same for Goodhue at 13.
I also think it's too soon for Rieko as a centre. He needs more time to learn the craft. We know he's electric on attack but that's only one aspect of playing centre. He has the potential to be world class in that position but it's going to take some time.