When should Foster go?
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@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
@Crucial said in When should Foster go?:
@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
@Crucial said in When should Foster go?:
I haven't even bothered reading the match thread.
I had been giving him a bit of rope and he has gone and tied the noose.
The whole point behind appointing Foster was that he was at the coalface and was close to observing what was going wrong and therefore how to fix it without throwing out everything and starting again. The continuity concept worked with Ted2 and with Shag.
The thinking had validity.What we have seen though is that he has worked to change one aspect (and we are showing a bit more physicality) but hasn't fixed the issue that our style relies on the other team making errors. Yes, that is a major strength of our game and will work a good portion of the time. However, others have seen that if they can cut down the errors and put huge effort and accuracy into tackling we simply don't know what to do.
It is up to the coaches to provide that 'what to do' when another team plays like England did last year or Argentina just did.
Mounga hasn't been given any tools. We rely on him pulling off a flukey bit of skill.Unless Foster and co can show that they have a clear path to building these gameplans and that they are working through them (and copping some losses along the way) then he should stand down.
At the moment it looks like exactly the same team but with Frizell told to hit people harder.
Where were the set piece moves to manipulate a hole in a rushing defence?Like kicking what should have been a routine touch finder for an attacking lineout over the deadball line? Or letting the forwards go a dozen phases then kick the ball straight at an Argie when just outside the 22?
Exactly. Those are the bits that when they don't come off, hurt you.
Those kicks are difficult and he will often get them but they should be also practising a lower risk option for that situation where we desperately needed to score. A safer kick to 10 metres out and a planned set piece from there.
Sorry, his fückups are the fault of the coach? There is plenty of ammunition to rain on Foster, but absolute brain farts from experienced players shouldn't be one of them.
And since when is a kick for the line like that difficult for a professional, test flyhalf?
Kicking for the line is fine. Pushing it to the corner has a risk especially on a shallow angle. He took a risk and didn't execute well enough.
What I am saying is that he shouldn't have to take the risk. They should be coached with a lower risk option to use in that situation. i.e. play safe and if it goes closer then fine but here's the play from 10 metres out.
To flip your theory around a good team shouldn't find things that much more difficult to run a play from 10 metres as 5. In fact the 5m play is obvious and you get a defence only 5m away.
Coaches should be providing the ammo and thought processes to make the best decisions. The players should have the skills to execute. -
@Crucial said in When should Foster go?:
@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
@Crucial said in When should Foster go?:
@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
@Crucial said in When should Foster go?:
I haven't even bothered reading the match thread.
I had been giving him a bit of rope and he has gone and tied the noose.
The whole point behind appointing Foster was that he was at the coalface and was close to observing what was going wrong and therefore how to fix it without throwing out everything and starting again. The continuity concept worked with Ted2 and with Shag.
The thinking had validity.What we have seen though is that he has worked to change one aspect (and we are showing a bit more physicality) but hasn't fixed the issue that our style relies on the other team making errors. Yes, that is a major strength of our game and will work a good portion of the time. However, others have seen that if they can cut down the errors and put huge effort and accuracy into tackling we simply don't know what to do.
It is up to the coaches to provide that 'what to do' when another team plays like England did last year or Argentina just did.
Mounga hasn't been given any tools. We rely on him pulling off a flukey bit of skill.Unless Foster and co can show that they have a clear path to building these gameplans and that they are working through them (and copping some losses along the way) then he should stand down.
At the moment it looks like exactly the same team but with Frizell told to hit people harder.
Where were the set piece moves to manipulate a hole in a rushing defence?Like kicking what should have been a routine touch finder for an attacking lineout over the deadball line? Or letting the forwards go a dozen phases then kick the ball straight at an Argie when just outside the 22?
Exactly. Those are the bits that when they don't come off, hurt you.
Those kicks are difficult and he will often get them but they should be also practising a lower risk option for that situation where we desperately needed to score. A safer kick to 10 metres out and a planned set piece from there.
Sorry, his fückups are the fault of the coach? There is plenty of ammunition to rain on Foster, but absolute brain farts from experienced players shouldn't be one of them.
And since when is a kick for the line like that difficult for a professional, test flyhalf?
Kicking for the line is fine. Pushing it to the corner has a risk especially on a shallow angle. He took a risk and didn't execute well enough.
What I am saying is that he shouldn't have to take the risk. They should be coached with a lower risk option to use in that situation. i.e. play safe and if it goes closer then fine but here's the play from 10 metres out.
To flip your theory around a good team shouldn't find things that much more difficult to run a play from 10 metres as 5. In fact the 5m play is obvious and you get a defence only 5m away.
Coaches should be providing the ammo and thought processes to make the best decisions. The players should have the skills to execute.I can agree to some of that but I'm pretty darn sure there are certain other players that wouldn't get your benefit of the doubt in that situation. Sometimes there are basics that should be obvious to professional rugby players. If coaches need to remind them of that then God help us.
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@Rancid-Schnitzel special coaching to ensure you kick a penalty out in the field of play?
Jesus, that's a low bar. No wonder we're shit
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@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
If coaches need to remind them of that then God help us.
not sure it's about reminding them, probably more situational awareness and playing to a structure rather than allowing everyone a bit of rope to do with as they choose, whenever, where ever on the park.
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@Siam said in When should Foster go?:
@Rancid-Schnitzel special coaching to ensure you kick a penalty out in the field of play?
Jesus, that's a low bar. No wonder we're shit
You are right. At that level you would expect each player to be responsible for their individual skills and decisions within a team "plan"
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@taniwharugby said in When should Foster go?:
@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
If coaches need to remind them of that then God help us.
not sure it's about reminding them, probably more situational awareness and playing to a structure rather than allowing everyone a bit of rope to do with as they choose, whenever, where ever on the park.
Seriously though. Coaches have to remind 10s not to kick it too hard? RM must have kicked hundreds of those during his relatively young career. Micromanaging is one thing, but that's taking the piss surely?
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@Rancid-Schnitzel think you are reading far more than what i said.
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@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
@Crucial said in When should Foster go?:
I haven't even bothered reading the match thread.
I had been giving him a bit of rope and he has gone and tied the noose.
The whole point behind appointing Foster was that he was at the coalface and was close to observing what was going wrong and therefore how to fix it without throwing out everything and starting again. The continuity concept worked with Ted2 and with Shag.
The thinking had validity.What we have seen though is that he has worked to change one aspect (and we are showing a bit more physicality) but hasn't fixed the issue that our style relies on the other team making errors. Yes, that is a major strength of our game and will work a good portion of the time. However, others have seen that if they can cut down the errors and put huge effort and accuracy into tackling we simply don't know what to do.
It is up to the coaches to provide that 'what to do' when another team plays like England did last year or Argentina just did.
Mounga hasn't been given any tools. We rely on him pulling off a flukey bit of skill.Unless Foster and co can show that they have a clear path to building these gameplans and that they are working through them (and copping some losses along the way) then he should stand down.
At the moment it looks like exactly the same team but with Frizell told to hit people harder.
Where were the set piece moves to manipulate a hole in a rushing defence?Like kicking what should have been a routine touch finder for an attacking lineout over the deadball line? Or letting the forwards go a dozen phases then kick the ball straight at an Argie when just outside the 22?
He is not the first 1st 5 to do either of those things and won't be the last. Even Carter was prone to missing touch at penalty time.
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RM is still a relative newbie in that team. Maybe one of the more experienced heads, or maybe the captain, needed to tell him to play it safe? Who knows, he may have been told to get it as close to the try line as possible?
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@Donsteppa - remember when the Mafia had Ian "Ferret" Foster at the top of our "know your enemy" list - circa 2004, for continual disservice to BOP players during chiefs selection?
We were well ahead of our time...
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@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
@taniwharugby said in When should Foster go?:
@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
If coaches need to remind them of that then God help us.
not sure it's about reminding them, probably more situational awareness and playing to a structure rather than allowing everyone a bit of rope to do with as they choose, whenever, where ever on the park.
Seriously though. Coaches have to remind 10s not to kick it too hard? RM must have kicked hundreds of those during his relatively young career. Micromanaging is one thing, but that's taking the piss surely?
I do wonder if you have ever kicked a rugby ball. Or at least kicked one after 40 minutes of being smashed by forwards.
It is nowhere near as simple as 'kicking it too hard' . A few degrees off the foot and it doesn't go where you want.BTW, RM does carry lots of responsibility for that kick execution. I'm not saying that coaches should be giving him skills training. I'm saying that coaches should be getting in the players heads to be situationally aware of risk (credit @taniwharugby ) and to have other planned options trained and ready. Calm head and go to that 10m play we practiced.
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The sad thing is we don't have any regular 10 one could rely on to make that kick safely. Our basic skills are creaky and the team is playing like they are more fluk-ily skilled than perhaps they have a right to rely on.
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@Crucial said in When should Foster go?:
@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
@Crucial said in When should Foster go?:
@Rancid-Schnitzel said in When should Foster go?:
@Crucial said in When should Foster go?:
I haven't even bothered reading the match thread.
I had been giving him a bit of rope and he has gone and tied the noose.
The whole point behind appointing Foster was that he was at the coalface and was close to observing what was going wrong and therefore how to fix it without throwing out everything and starting again. The continuity concept worked with Ted2 and with Shag.
The thinking had validity.What we have seen though is that he has worked to change one aspect (and we are showing a bit more physicality) but hasn't fixed the issue that our style relies on the other team making errors. Yes, that is a major strength of our game and will work a good portion of the time. However, others have seen that if they can cut down the errors and put huge effort and accuracy into tackling we simply don't know what to do.
It is up to the coaches to provide that 'what to do' when another team plays like England did last year or Argentina just did.
Mounga hasn't been given any tools. We rely on him pulling off a flukey bit of skill.Unless Foster and co can show that they have a clear path to building these gameplans and that they are working through them (and copping some losses along the way) then he should stand down.
At the moment it looks like exactly the same team but with Frizell told to hit people harder.
Where were the set piece moves to manipulate a hole in a rushing defence?Like kicking what should have been a routine touch finder for an attacking lineout over the deadball line? Or letting the forwards go a dozen phases then kick the ball straight at an Argie when just outside the 22?
Exactly. Those are the bits that when they don't come off, hurt you.
Those kicks are difficult and he will often get them but they should be also practising a lower risk option for that situation where we desperately needed to score. A safer kick to 10 metres out and a planned set piece from there.
Sorry, his fückups are the fault of the coach? There is plenty of ammunition to rain on Foster, but absolute brain farts from experienced players shouldn't be one of them.
And since when is a kick for the line like that difficult for a professional, test flyhalf?
Kicking for the line is fine. Pushing it to the corner has a risk especially on a shallow angle. He took a risk and didn't execute well enough.
What I am saying is that he shouldn't have to take the risk. They should be coached with a lower risk option to use in that situation. i.e. play safe and if it goes closer then fine but here's the play from 10 metres out.
To flip your theory around a good team shouldn't find things that much more difficult to run a play from 10 metres as 5. In fact the 5m play is obvious and you get a defence only 5m away.
Coaches should be providing the ammo and thought processes to make the best decisions. The players should have the skills to execute.I only agree with this to a certain extent. I think part of Foster's job should be to sit down with Mo'unga after a game and look at important decisions (like that kick) and re-evalutate. The problem is Mo'unga is a first-five eight who is supposed to lead a team around the field. This isn't NFL where there is conference after each play and you can choose what to do. We should expect a first-five who has made the All Blacks to have a good rugby brain.
I would say the errors in coaching have happened far before Foster.
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@aucklandwarlord said in When should Foster go?:
@Donsteppa - remember when the Mafia had Ian "Ferret" Foster at the top of our "know your enemy" list - circa 2004, for continual disservice to BOP players during chiefs selection?
We were well ahead of our time...
"Foster's Flops Except For Four"
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@canefan said in When should Foster go?:
Foster has already lost his first trophy, the Rugby Championship is gone
Don’t you have to be holders of the Rugby Championship to lose it...
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@ACT-Crusader yeah I think Aus hold the last 'Tri-Nations' trophy, but this is a different version anyway
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If we win in two weeks and Oz and Argies split their games, it’s possible we all finish up with 2 wins each and it will come down to bonus points and possibly points diff.
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@ACT-Crusader said in When should Foster go?:
@canefan said in When should Foster go?:
Foster has already lost his first trophy, the Rugby Championship is gone
Don’t you have to be holders of the Rugby Championship to lose it...
Failed to win then....