All Blacks v Springboks
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@hooroo said in All Blacks v Springboks:
CAn someone explain to me the shiny strip at the bottom of the AB's shirt? I notice not all AB's have it and wonder what the pros and cons of it are?
In this article you see Naholo with the strip and Read without
Its a rubberised strip that when the shirt is tucked in it will stay tucked in. Naholo chooses to wear his shirt untucked...heathen!
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Hemopo doesn't have any problems in SR so I don't think his lack of height would be an issue as the reserve lock. I remember seeing Savea winning a throw at the front on Sat (height jokes aside). Read is one of the main lineout targets and is similar to Hemopo. I'd be more worried about Harris finding his target.
As a comparison, while Etzebeth and Synman are giants, Mostert isn't that tall by Bok standards (1.98 m).
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I used to get up at 3:30AM to watch the Boks play the ABs in New Zealand every year. It's been about 6 years since then. Now I will DVR it, watch the first half at about 10AM whith the half time score being say 10-3 ABs, then fast forward through the second half when the ABs score 38 unanswered points.
That's what being a Bok fan has become. It's sad.
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@dk said in All Blacks v Springboks:
@hooroo said in All Blacks v Springboks:
CAn someone explain to me the shiny strip at the bottom of the AB's shirt? I notice not all AB's have it and wonder what the pros and cons of it are?
In this article you see Naholo with the strip and Read without
Its a rubberised strip that when the shirt is tucked in it will stay tucked in. Naholo chooses to wear his shirt untucked...heathen!
Thanks mate! Makes sense
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@antipodean said in All Blacks v Springboks:
@hooroo said in All Blacks v Springboks:
@antipodean said in All Blacks v Springboks:
@hooroo That's the go-fast stripe.
Seems to work well...
NMS's shirt didn't have it.
Accidentally put his diving weights on instead
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[link text]https://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=12122553
How many years before the Herald work out that possession statistics are no measure of anything useful?I predict the Boks will win the possession battle again. Little good it will do them though.
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@chester-draws As I mentioned in another thread, blanket stats we get from media are almost all pointless. Kick percentage doesn't take into account kick difficulty, missed tackles are expected with rushing/swarming defensive systems, turnovers doesn't take into account the way the ABs are passing so close to contact, fast and in hard areas... I'm not saying that it's not better to have them on the normal 'good' side (no missed tackles, no missed shots, no dropped ball) but as raw numbers they are not great at judging what the team is trying to achieve. Metres run is another one, if the opposition kicks long a lot, you'll get heaps of metres - so what? Some are still useful as pure numbers (scrums, lineouts) but really there is not enough detail to use them to judge a team or a game.
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@mn5 said in All Blacks v Springboks:
@virgil said in All Blacks v Springboks:
@antipodean said in All Blacks v Springboks:
@hooroo said in All Blacks v Springboks:
@antipodean said in All Blacks v Springboks:
@hooroo That's the go-fast stripe.
Seems to work well...
NMS's shirt didn't have it.
His shirt could be covered completely in that strip and it wouldn’t make any difference
I've heard rumours that Caleb Ralph tweeted how slow he was
What did he tweet "Wow Nehe is even slower than me"???
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@machpants said in All Blacks v Springboks:
@chester-draws As I mentioned in another thread, blanket stats we get from media are almost all pointless.
I agree completely. Wayne Smith used to basically ignore them, was only interested in dominant tackles. The stats are misleading, and I'd be very surprised if the coaches relied heavily on them other than as a informative background
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All stats around possession and territory need to be put into context. For example, time in the opposition's 22 only tells you where you are on the field, not what you are doing with the ball. A clinical attacking team might spend little time in the 22 because they take most of their scoring opportunities, whereas a team devoid of ideas might be camped in the opposition's 22 but never look like scoring a try.
There are plenty of variations of this quote:
Statistics are like mini-skirts .. they give you good ideas but they don't reveal everything.
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@bovidae said in All Blacks v Springboks:
Hemopo doesn't have any problems in SR so I don't think his lack of height would be an issue as the reserve lock. I remember seeing Savea winning a throw at the front on Sat (height jokes aside). Read is one of the main lineout targets and is similar to Hemopo. I'd be more worried about Harris finding his target.
As a comparison, while Etzebeth and Synman are giants, Mostert isn't that tall by Bok standards (1.98 m).
We'd find out if Sam Whitelock went down in the first five minutes and we ended up with Barrett and Hemepo as our locks.
I don't think it's coincidental that our lineout is pretty great with Retallick and Whitelock as our locks and both well past 2 metres.
Read is a fantastic technician though. Probably the best third jumper in the world - a bit of a loose forward version of Matfield.
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@chris-b Chicago vs Ireland showed we do need specialist locks but BBBR won't be there so they'll start with Whitelock and Barrett. The debate is over the reserve lock.
I'll put it another way, who is better as a lineout jumper - Hemopo or Tuipulotu? I'd say Hemopo despite being the shorter of the two. I would have selected Franklin in the original squad myself. Problem solved.
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@taniwharugby said in All Blacks v Springboks:
That's pretty much impossible unless you're standing still
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I don't like BBBR not being there, makes me feel uneasy
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Assistant coach Ian Foster confirmed today multiple players who were overlooked last week are back in contention. "Sonny [Bill Williams] had his scan yesterday and he's all clear, ready to go, but he was sick this morning so he didn't train but the good news is his scan's all clear. "He's in contention to play, it's just some bug or something." Foster said there were other key figures also in contention to play after getting a week off in Nelson. "Sam Cane is in the mix, Ryan Crotty is the same." There was also positive signs coming from hooker Dane Coles, who hasn't played rugby since a season-ending knee injury on last year's end-of-year tour. "Every week he's getting closer and closer so it's exciting and he's starting to believe that now too. "He's got that glint in his eye and he's asking questions and looking for stuff - it's nice to see." However, there's still concern around Brodie Retallick, who is likely to miss up to six weeks of rugby due to a shoulder injury. "Brodie hasn't had his scan yet so I don't know." Ngani Laumape was another casualty of the 46-24 win, suffering a grade one knee ligament injury and is expected to be out for two to three weeks.