All Blacks 2022
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Probably a good replacement. I've always rated Fox.
Personally think Schmidt is an arsehole, but that's a personal opinion developed as a 13 yo.
He's probably quite good at rugby though.
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@booboo said in All Blacks 2021:
Probably a good replacement. I've always rated Fox.
Personally think Schmidt is an arsehole, but that's a personal opinion developed as a 13 yo.
He's probably quite good at rugby though.
How did you know him as a 13yr old? I ask because that's almost exactly when I came to know him!
Edit - I think you're a little older than me - my 13yr+ old experience started c. 1990
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Great work securing Schmidty, is it just as selector?
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@voodoo said in All Blacks 2021:
@booboo said in All Blacks 2021:
Probably a good replacement. I've always rated Fox.
Personally think Schmidt is an arsehole, but that's a personal opinion developed as a 13 yo.
He's probably quite good at rugby though.
How did you know him as a 13yr old? I ask because that's almost exactly when I came to know him!
Edit - I think you're a little older than me - my 13yr+ old experience started c. 1990
Attended 1981 Scout Jamboree in Hastings. He was patrol leader. (Patrols were mixed up from across 'Tararua' (essentially 'Bush' Woodville, Pahiatua, Eketahuna) and Southern Hawkes Bay ( Dannevirke etc.))
(As an aside I recall playing cricket with his brother Andrew who was a nice chap.)
I was was the youngest in patrol (i.e. tent), barely old enough to attend, and therefore the butt of everybody's jokes.
Which was fun.
So he shall always be a piston wristed gibbon for not stopping that.
Not that I hold a grudge...
Mind you he would have been 16, so just a kid himself. Seemed like an adult to me at the time.
Jamboree was awesome though.
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Fuck me drunk.
In the third quarter of the French test, the All Blacks ran a set-piece play that involved Sam Cane peeling off the lineout maul and looking for options inside and out. He opted to carry and set up the first ruck. The supporting All Blacks pack then proceeded to pick-and-go relentlessly at the fringes of the ruck phase-after-phase. They finally found the gain line. They finally found continuity and control. They finally went forward, would you believe it. They worked down to the French goal line before Aaron Smith played two passes, the second of which found Jordie Barrett, who tucked his way over for a try in the left corner. The hints and clues from Sam Cane and Ian Foster in the media following their forensic review suggest that this style of rugby is going to be adopted by the All Blacks going forward. “We are still up there with the best in the world when we get front-foot ball," Cane said of the All Blacks play in Europe. "It only needs to be two or three quick phases and we have got guys who can exploit that." “We almost surprised ourselves how well we went with our pick-and-goes, considering it is not traditionally how we play."
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@antipodean said in All Blacks 2021:
Fuck me drunk.
In the third quarter of the French test, the All Blacks ran a set-piece play that involved Sam Cane peeling off the lineout maul and looking for options inside and out. He opted to carry and set up the first ruck. The supporting All Blacks pack then proceeded to pick-and-go relentlessly at the fringes of the ruck phase-after-phase. They finally found the gain line. They finally found continuity and control. They finally went forward, would you believe it. They worked down to the French goal line before Aaron Smith played two passes, the second of which found Jordie Barrett, who tucked his way over for a try in the left corner. The hints and clues from Sam Cane and Ian Foster in the media following their forensic review suggest that this style of rugby is going to be adopted by the All Blacks going forward. “We are still up there with the best in the world when we get front-foot ball," Cane said of the All Blacks play in Europe. "It only needs to be two or three quick phases and we have got guys who can exploit that." “We almost surprised ourselves how well we went with our pick-and-goes, considering it is not traditionally how we play."
And we didn't notice this?
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@booboo said in All Blacks 2021:
@antipodean said in All Blacks 2021:
Fuck me drunk.
In the third quarter of the French test, the All Blacks ran a set-piece play that involved Sam Cane peeling off the lineout maul and looking for options inside and out. He opted to carry and set up the first ruck. The supporting All Blacks pack then proceeded to pick-and-go relentlessly at the fringes of the ruck phase-after-phase. They finally found the gain line. They finally found continuity and control. They finally went forward, would you believe it. They worked down to the French goal line before Aaron Smith played two passes, the second of which found Jordie Barrett, who tucked his way over for a try in the left corner. The hints and clues from Sam Cane and Ian Foster in the media following their forensic review suggest that this style of rugby is going to be adopted by the All Blacks going forward. “We are still up there with the best in the world when we get front-foot ball," Cane said of the All Blacks play in Europe. "It only needs to be two or three quick phases and we have got guys who can exploit that." “We almost surprised ourselves how well we went with our pick-and-goes, considering it is not traditionally how we play."
And we didn't notice this?
I'm sure I noticed it in the first lions test, is only taken Hansen, foster, and co 4 more years...
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@machpants said in All Blacks 2021:
@booboo said in All Blacks 2021:
@antipodean said in All Blacks 2021:
Fuck me drunk.
In the third quarter of the French test, the All Blacks ran a set-piece play that involved Sam Cane peeling off the lineout maul and looking for options inside and out. He opted to carry and set up the first ruck. The supporting All Blacks pack then proceeded to pick-and-go relentlessly at the fringes of the ruck phase-after-phase. They finally found the gain line. They finally found continuity and control. They finally went forward, would you believe it. They worked down to the French goal line before Aaron Smith played two passes, the second of which found Jordie Barrett, who tucked his way over for a try in the left corner. The hints and clues from Sam Cane and Ian Foster in the media following their forensic review suggest that this style of rugby is going to be adopted by the All Blacks going forward. “We are still up there with the best in the world when we get front-foot ball," Cane said of the All Blacks play in Europe. "It only needs to be two or three quick phases and we have got guys who can exploit that." “We almost surprised ourselves how well we went with our pick-and-goes, considering it is not traditionally how we play."
And we didn't notice this?
I'm sure I noticed it in the first lions test, is only taken Hansen, foster, and co 4 more years...
it's almost like the basics of rugby at any level is true, and you have to earn the right to go wide by sucking in defenders closer.
Pick me for next AB coach!
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@booboo said in All Blacks 2021:
“We are still up there with the best in the world when we get front-foot ball," Cane said of the All Blacks play in Europe.
nothing like aiming high!
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@antipodean said in All Blacks 2021:
Fuck me drunk.
That RugbyPass article is such a bloody shit show. Talking about pick and goes as 'brain dead rugby'. Ben Smith and I fundamentally disagree on this. Imposing forward dominance around the ruck creates space outside. It's exactly the opposite of brain dead rugby - trying to spin it wide early is the kind of brain dead play we've seen too much of from the ABs this year.
The comments from Foster and Cane don't suggest that they are going to go 'full monty' towards braindead rugby, and that only 'two or three phases' of the tight stuff might solve the gain line issue, but given the inability of this side to run a decent attacking shape it won't make a difference unless fundamental details are addressed.
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@booboo said in All Blacks 2021:
@voodoo said in All Blacks 2021:
@booboo said in All Blacks 2021:
Probably a good replacement. I've always rated Fox.
Personally think Schmidt is an arsehole, but that's a personal opinion developed as a 13 yo.
He's probably quite good at rugby though.
How did you know him as a 13yr old? I ask because that's almost exactly when I came to know him!
Edit - I think you're a little older than me - my 13yr+ old experience started c. 1990
Attended 1981 Scout Jamboree in Hastings. He was patrol leader. (Patrols were mixed up from across 'Tararua' (essentially 'Bush' Woodville, Pahiatua, Eketahuna) and Southern Hawkes Bay ( Dannevirke etc.))
(As an aside I recall playing cricket with his brother Andrew who was a nice chap.)
I was was the youngest in patrol (i.e. tent), barely old enough to attend, and therefore the butt of everybody's jokes.
Which was fun.
So he shall always be a piston wristed gibbon for not stopping that.
Not that I hold a grudge...
Mind you he would have been 16, so just a kid himself. Seemed like an adult to me at the time.
Jamboree was awesome though.
Good story! I can see that streak in him. I had him as a Bball coach and can totally imagine your situation. Quite a cold demeanour mostly.
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More info on Schmidt here:
Schmidts role:
It is thought his role will likely see him help head coach Ian Foster analyse opposition sides and develop strategic plans to help the All Blacks build the tactical blueprints they will need to succeed against teams who stylistically present a different challenge to the ruck and run rugby preferred throughout Australasia.
Review could have an impact on assistant coaches
The All Blacks are in the midst of a review of the 2021 season, one which may result in further changes if the New Zealand Rugby board is not convinced that all of Foster's existing coaching group have performed well enough to justify two-year contract extensions. .... The findings of the review are unlikely to be finalised until January next year,
Schmidt & the Blues
He agreed in October to join the Blues next season as a support coach on a one-year deal and will see that out before joining the All Blacks. He was, however, already in advanced negotiations with the All Blacks, when he struck that arrangement with the Blues as Foster has long planned to involve Schmidt in his set-up. When Foster was initially given the job in late 2019 he tried to persuade Schmidt to be part of the team – as a third selector.
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Another article about which props and locks could force their way into contention.
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@nzzp said in All Blacks 2022:
@antipodean said in All Blacks 2021:
Fuck me drunk.
That RugbyPass article is such a bloody shit show. Talking about pick and goes as 'brain dead rugby'. Ben Smith and I fundamentally disagree on this. Imposing forward dominance around the ruck creates space outside. It's exactly the opposite of brain dead rugby - trying to spin it wide early is the kind of brain dead play we've seen too much of from the ABs
this year.for the last 3-4 years.Fixed it for you.
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@mikedogz said in All Blacks 2022:
Could Schmidt be this coaching teams Professor? I have a bit more hope now.
I am just happy to have someone from outside our bubble, I really hope Schmidt tells it like it is and isn't drawn into the Foster Group Think Tank that clearly is very shit.
I also wonder how you can be a selector but still be heavily involved with the Blues, you can't help but think that would bias him in some way.