All Black backs' passing
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It was a piss poor display against Argentina, but a bit hysterical to claim Beale (and Foley of all people) are better. They've had their share of shockers as well. The ABs stand very flat on attack, and while there are advantages from doing that, there are also restrictions. Just look at DMacs pass to Folau.
As mentioned further above, the big difference is the midfield. Nonu had a brilliant pass, while being a beast with ball in hand and nobody was better than Conrad at straightening the line. The midfielders on Saturday have some very positive qualities but they aren't in the same league as those two. It places extra pressure on BB having to create magic all the time.
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@rancid-schnitzel said in All Black backs' passing:
As mentioned further above, the big difference is the midfield. Nonu had a brilliant pass, while being a beast with ball in hand and nobody was better than Conrad at straightening the line. The midfielders on Saturday have some very positive qualities but they aren't in the same league as those two. It places extra pressure on BB having to create magic all the time.
Nonu developed his passing game, and it became excellent.
Also very few midfields breath the rarified air of Ma'a and Conrad. They were in the conversation for our best ever from probably 2010-2015
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@kiwimurph said in All Black backs' passing:
Mick Byrne is with Australia now - perhaps a factor.
If New Zealanders need to learn how to pass a rugby ball from an ex-AFL player, things are dreadfully bad.
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@cgrant said in All Black backs' passing:
I'd like to see a Crotty - Goodhue midfield combo at the EOYT or against the Wallabies in Brisbane. Goodhue is the most Conradsmithuesque centre in NZ IMO.
Like your thinking
- Crockett
- Taylor
- Laulala
- Romano
- Whitelock
- Barrett
- Todd
- Read
- T. Lander
- T. Cane
- T. Blue
- Crotty
- Goodhue
- Dagg
- Havili
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Keep up @ACT-Crusader your 3 is a Chief
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@pakman said in All Black backs' passing:
Once again a disappointing effort on Saturday. Nugget possesses the best 9 pass in rugby, but from there it goes pear shaped. BB just doesn't seem to have the tempo and weight on his pass to enable his outsides naturally to build momentum. in contrast, Sopoaga seems to get AB backs humming.
Best pass I recall against Pumas was a beautifully weighted cutout pass, I think from Ofa T of all people!
Contrast with Wobblies, where Foley is generally good and Beale often sublime. One wide pass against Boks was so good it created an easy try for the winger, when none looked to be on.I seem to recall quite a few very good passes. It was the catching and decisions that were more shocking.
I am thinking that this current hot and cold spell we are seeing is down to a new approach settling in. Remember how awful things looked back when implementing the flat backline years ago?
This current system seems to me to be a relentless press. No pausing once moving forward but trying to find the next player that can keep going. That and some sevens like stuff flinging the ball around back and forth looking for a half gap to get the forward press started.
I know teams always look to go forward but the difference here is the mindset of not resetting unless absolutely necessary.
I think it was in Reads try on the wing where you could see a 15 man wave up field eating up ground and keeping the ball alive constantly moving forward.
When it clicks it is awesome. Takes some skill though. -
@cgrant said in All Black backs' passing:
Standing flat is OK when you have Brodie R in midfield as first receiver. He's asking questions to the opposition's defence. Ioane was never used near Barrett, not even as a decoy runner.
Brodie's decision-making and execution in that regard are excellent. Most locks I play/ed against would give up an intercept most of the time.
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No doubt the flat backline does cause some of the problems. It seems to require very good timing to build momentum. SBW outside Crudes worked exceptionally because they had timing nailed (amongst other things). But when opposition has an organised rush, the flat line can become a case of shovelling on.
Need some big units straightening the line, or running decoy, to keep rush guessing. Savea used to be very effective at that, and expect Ioane will become so. Was hoping for it when Laumape came on, but didn't seem to gel.
Crucial is spot on that from broken play the sevens style approach, but with a fifteen man wave is awesome, and almost unstoppable when clicking.
But nonetheless, I do think that from set piece wide passing needs improvement. Perhaps it was more noticeable to me having watched the Boks/Wobblies sister kissing fest. No need to watch preamble, but Foley pass at 4.05 in link is a peach: -
@rancid-schnitzel said in All Black backs' passing:
It was a piss poor display against Argentina, but a bit hysterical to claim Beale (and Foley of all people) are better.
I'm thinking short memories? Fucking easy to pick out examples of Barrett being as good or better - NMS' try Vs the Springboks being a perfect example.
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@crucial said in All Black backs' passing:
Keep up @ACT-Crusader your 3 is a Chief
He’s a Cantab through and through. He’s just had a crisis of faith....
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@antipodean Couldn't agree more. Even Michael Lynagh said the same at half time (mind you he's always struck me as straight shooter).
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@act-crusader said in All Black backs' passing:
@crucial said in All Black backs' passing:
Keep up @ACT-Crusader your 3 is a Chief
He’s a Cantab through and through. He’s just had a crisis of faith....
His crisis of faith was when he forgot about the white stripe on his jersey of choice. The Laulalas are all Wesley boys from Pukekohe despite the best efforts of the inbreds from the southern plains to claim them.