Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th
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@mariner4life the Wallabies are world class at disappointing. fluffybunnies just squirt disappointment juice on any person who comes in any kind of contact with em.
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@Stargazer said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
All square on match points.
Had Argies won that their record of two wins and a draw would have been the best. Ditto for Oz.
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@Stargazer said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
@KiwiMurph said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
Aboriginal verse with the players singing - awesome.
That is, quite frankly, awesome!
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Rennie tried things. Most failed, but he is at least armed with some idea where he can build and where he can't. I reckon he will go away and come back next year a lot stronger. If nothing else, he will have some strategy to break the Pumas defence.
Foster tried nothing this year. So next year he will be exactly where he is now -- with no plan and uncertain about who to pick.
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@Chester-Draws said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
Rennie tried things. Most failed, but he is at least armed with some idea where he can build and where he can't. I reckon he will go away and come back next year a lot stronger. If nothing else, he will have some strategy to break the Pumas defence.
Foster tried nothing this year. So next year he will be exactly where he is now -- with no plan and uncertain about who to pick.
He did try some things. I'm not saying he's been a disaster. But the Wallabies have put out 2 pretty turgid performances against Argentina in a row, and they finished last in the Rugby Championship. I dont know that he learned a whole lot more about his side, maybe he did.
But its certainly not worth of the praise they were dishing out last night
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@Chester-Draws said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
Rennie tried things. Most failed, but he is at least armed with some idea where he can build and where he can't. I reckon he will go away and come back next year a lot stronger. If nothing else, he will have some strategy to break the Pumas defence.
Foster tried nothing this year. So next year he will be exactly where he is now -- with no plan and uncertain about who to pick.
I know it’s fashionable to knock Foster, but from my armchair he tried a number of new things and blooded new players that now have test experience. In a compressed schedule that was very different to anything in the last 20 years, I think there were quite a few things that became far more certain.
Rennie has a lot of question marks over his squad I reckon with many young players and a few guys ‘hanging on’.
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Incredible rain but even more alarming was the lack of any tactical wet weather rugby.
Argies could have held there league by simply kicking for territory.
Neither team consistently put the ball behind the opposition, but rather we watched a game of running rugby with a big bar of soap. Thought it was all a bit strange, but quite a compelling game never the less -
@ACT-Crusader said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
I know it’s fashionable to knock Foster, but from my armchair he tried a number of new things and blooded new players that now have test experience. In a compressed schedule that was very different to anything in the last 20 years, I think there were quite a few things that became far more certain.
Rennie has a lot of question marks over his squad I reckon with many young players and a few guys ‘hanging on’.
Really? How many ABs are currently lock-in certainties: Cane, Sam Whitelock, Aaron Smith. Plus some others but we can't say which position they will be in: Ardie Savea, Beauden Barrett, Caleb Clarke, ALB and Goodhue or which one will start and which will be reserve: props and hookers, Jordie Barrett. I reckon things have got way less certain, and not in a good way.
I'd be intrigued for you to tell me what our offensive strategies are, because carting it up or hoofing it seem to be about all we have.
Foster has this ability to exude confidence, while completely out of his depth. How quickly we forget how rabble like we were in the middle of the season: those two turnover tries went the other way in the last Argentinian game and he was out of a job. Gone burger.
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@Chester-Draws those two Jordan tries were the result of scoreboard pressure forcing the Argentinians to play. Besides - ABs were up 17-0 before the first one so your maths doesn't add up.
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@KiwiMurph said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
@Chester-Draws those two Jordan tries were the result of scoreboard pressure forcing the Argentinians to play. Besides - ABs were up 17-0 before the first one so your maths doesn't add up.
A scoreboard that should have had 20 more points on it given the amount of possession and territory the ABs had up to that point.
Don’t underestimate the ability of this ABs team to shit itself and lose the game if the Argies had cut that lead down to 3.I don’t think Foster should be given any credit for those Jordan tries that sealed the game. They should be seen as an indictment on his selection policy through the season which meant Jordan was barely on the field until the very end.
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@Stargazer said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
looking at that table in hindsight it really looks like a toilet squabble behind the disableds (insert appropriate Simon Pegg-World's End quote here).
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@Chester-Draws said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
@ACT-Crusader said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
I know it’s fashionable to knock Foster, but from my armchair he tried a number of new things and blooded new players that now have test experience. In a compressed schedule that was very different to anything in the last 20 years, I think there were quite a few things that became far more certain.
Rennie has a lot of question marks over his squad I reckon with many young players and a few guys ‘hanging on’.
Really? How many ABs are currently lock-in certainties: Cane, Sam Whitelock, Aaron Smith. Plus some others but we can't say which position they will be in: Ardie Savea, Beauden Barrett, Caleb Clarke, ALB and Goodhue or which one will start and which will be reserve: props and hookers, Jordie Barrett. I reckon things have got way less certain, and not in a good way.
I'd be intrigued for you to tell me what our offensive strategies are, because carting it up or hoofing it seem to be about all we have.
Foster has this ability to exude confidence, while completely out of his depth. How quickly we forget how rabble like we were in the middle of the season: those two turnover tries went the other way in the last Argentinian game and he was out of a job. Gone burger.
Saved by the Slither of Jordan.
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@KiwiMurph "those two Jordan tries were the result of scoreboard pressure forcing the Argentinians to play"
yes completely calculated. That is why they have JB on the wing there. No tin-arsed opportunistic luck at all. Totally planned. Wait until the last minute when the Argies actually pass the ball in reach of our flukiest player (sorry BB) who just came off the bench for a bit of a warmup. Sheer tactical genius. -
@ACT-Crusader said in Wallabies v Argentina Take 2, Dec 5th:
@pukunui heading into the tests I certainly didn’t think Jordan was the answer for the right wing. He was exposed defensively on the wing for the Saders. He’s got time to keep developing though.
It’s not about him being “the answer” from the start. It is about giving the best outside back in Super rugby a decent opportunity earlier in the series. Having Jordie as the undroppable/unrotatable selection at 14 meant Jordan never got the chance to show that maybe he WAS “the answer”.
Im yet to see any evidence of the whole getting exposed on the wing thing. Especially when compared to any other option for the outside back. They all had defensive lapses in Super rugby. BB probably the worst.
Wrong thread for this discussion really.