All Blacks 2023
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@Chester-Draws said in All Blacks 2023:
I have very little memory of Nonu taking exit plays, kicking for distance etc. He might have taken the ball up, but that's pure centre play.
First receiver doesn't just do that.
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I kinda get the distinction you are drawing between a 2nd 5/8 (playmaker) and an inside centre but Nonu turned into both an outstanding 2nd 5/8 and Inside centre
And some of his kicking was Carter-esque
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@Victor-Meldrew thats fair but i dont think we got to see that much of it in the AB's jersey, we those AB's clips from the same season? felt like a real late development to his game...a welcome one nonetheless
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I don't agree with it all, but certainly do with this bit
Wayne Smith, Steve Hansen and Graham Henry changed the game, but it’s moved on and it feels like we are playing the same system and doing the same things that weren’t good enough to win the World Cup in 2019.
In schoolboy rugby you find everyone has got the same pod system, the same terminology etc. We have a bit of group think with the style that started with Wayne Smith and Steve Hansen. It did fantastically but we’ve been overtaken.
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@Machpants yep, Mike Cron used to run scrum clinics all round the country, getting everyone on the same page, which is Good until it isn't.
You need variety and different ideas that challenge the norm (this is where Razor shows promise) but seems for years now we have simply rested on our laurels of success and NZR have not realised we have drifted from the fast lane into the slow lane.
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@taniwharugby NZR staff were up on their travelling budget by 2.2 million dollars last year in 2022, that’s a lot of first class tickets when some of that putia could of been used to keep Mike Cron in the game ..True Story on the travel 🤦🏻♂️
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@taniwharugby said in All Blacks 2023:
@Machpants yep, Mike Cron used to run scrum clinics all round the country, getting everyone on the same page, which is Good until it isn't.
You need variety and different ideas that challenge the norm (this is where Razor shows promise) but seems for years now we have simply rested on our laurels of success and NZR have not realised we have drifted from the fast lane into the slow lane.
I agree on using skills coaches that go all round country, to a point, as you rightly point out it can become dated as other work out how to cancel out your type of game. The thing I think we miss the most in NZ ,that we used to have, is ball skills. When you see a DMac (or RMo)25m left to right at full pace you go shit that's good, we used to have a lot could do things like that. I think NZ teams have slipped on their ability for quick short passing we used to excell at!
The other thing is look at our U20s since probably 2016-17 we have loast our dominance because I think we loosing those skills, as well as for some reason the big boys are not really coming through, perhaps they going to basketball etc? -
@Machpants said in All Blacks 2023:
Wayne Smith, Steve Hansen and Graham Henry changed the game, but it’s moved on and it feels like we are playing the same system and doing the same things that weren’t good enough to win the World Cup in 2019.
In schoolboy rugby you find everyone has got the same pod system, the same terminology etc. We have a bit of group think with the style that started with Wayne Smith and Steve Hansen. It did fantastically but we’ve been overtaken.
I agree, and I think what's happened is the people who actually are coaching kids at young level too. I have wandered past a few kids training sessions, and worries me that coaches(who all do their best etc) are trying to get kids to play like they see on tv. Telling them to do this or that in certain parts of field. I think kids up to about 15-16 should be more coached on how to do things and not what to do. Just teach kids to pass, tackle, kick etc and let them find their own way of playing. I know one of problems is finding coaches who want to coach kids for sake of coaching and not to make their own son look like a pro etc for future (which a few seem to). I was watching local 1st xv play a couple of weeks back and was almightily disappointed they had a 9 that couldn't pass properly, a forward pack that never hit a breakdown bound etc. And I heard the caoch call to the 10 to stand further away to give himself more room, and the 9 couldn't get the f***en ball to him fast enough to make anything work. etc, was coaching a team on watching super rugby on tv I thought. Was chatting to man who had coached a good part of the team a few years before he was and asked him what was happening , he was gutted, had offered to perhaps help the coaches with a few things if they wanted, and was told well we like having a couple of us teachers doing it as we can have meetings during week!!
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Eddie Jones did say on the Breakdown in an interview.
The Crusaders revert to NH style finals Rugby the rest of NZ teams stay in their SR patterns come finals time.
He implied Australia were going to a more NH style direct approach to Rugby similar to the Crusaders. -
@Chris I think that's the key, being able to adapt and adjust.
In years gone by, more often we were able to control the play and tempo, and even when we didn't we had superior fitness to outrun teams...
Now we seem to rely on an old game plan that is proven to be ineffective in tight battles with top teams, we are no longer fitter than everyone else, we have lost our cutting edge, relying on a once tried and true formula...are we too arrogant to see the successes of others and learn from them, then improve them.
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Yes you have nailed it,100% agree.
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@taniwharugby said in All Blacks 2023:
@Chris I think that's the key, being able to adapt and adjust.
In years gone by, more often we were able to control the play and tempo, and even when we didn't we had superior fitness to outrun teams...
Now we seem to rely on an old game plan that is proven to be ineffective in tight battles with top teams, we are no longer fitter than everyone else, we have lost our cutting edge, relying on a once tried and true formula...are we too arrogant to see the successes of others and learn from them, then improve them.
Yep I think it's what I mentioned we no longer seem to coach skills at NPC or super level. When we were at our best we had a team of WC players who could beat teams with skill, we don't have the same anymore, and as Jason Ryan says they they were picking players to go same direct style that Edie Jones talked of.
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@Dan54 said in All Blacks 2023:
@taniwharugby said in All Blacks 2023:
@Chris I think that's the key, being able to adapt and adjust.
In years gone by, more often we were able to control the play and tempo, and even when we didn't we had superior fitness to outrun teams...
Now we seem to rely on an old game plan that is proven to be ineffective in tight battles with top teams, we are no longer fitter than everyone else, we have lost our cutting edge, relying on a once tried and true formula...are we too arrogant to see the successes of others and learn from them, then improve them.
Yep I think it's what I mentioned we no longer seem to coach skills at NPC or super level. When we were at our best we had a team of WC players who could beat teams with skill, we don't have the same anymore, and as Jason Ryan says they they were picking players to go same direct style that Edie Jones talked of.
I don't think it's as simple as no longer having the skill, or being coached the skill. I think the Lions series showed how to stifle the ABs and defences have evolved from there. The highly skilled fast pace game the ABs try to play struggles against such defences because it is a very big ask for players to execute the required skills game after game under immense pressure. Doubly so in WC knockout games.
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@Crazy-Horse and the fact we have struggled to break that defensive structure since, and rather than adopt it or evolve with it we have maintained one that has struggled as other teams have evolved.
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@taniwharugby said in All Blacks 2023:
You need variety and different ideas that challenge the norm (this is where Razor shows promise) but seems for years now we have simply rested on our laurels of success and NZR have not realised we have drifted from the fast lane into the slow lane.
Think it's going to take some challenging-the-norm thinking at a lot more levels than just the AB Head Coach.
IMHO, we've taken our eye off the ball by putting too much emphasis on top team performance (and complacency when we're putting 50 points on the Boks) when there seems to be real problems with player development one or two levels down. A roof will look great until the rafters start rotting.
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@Crazy-Horse said in All Blacks 2023:
@Dan54 said in All Blacks 2023:
@taniwharugby said in All Blacks 2023:
@Chris I think that's the key, being able to adapt and adjust.
In years gone by, more often we were able to control the play and tempo, and even when we didn't we had superior fitness to outrun teams...
Now we seem to rely on an old game plan that is proven to be ineffective in tight battles with top teams, we are no longer fitter than everyone else, we have lost our cutting edge, relying on a once tried and true formula...are we too arrogant to see the successes of others and learn from them, then improve them.
Yep I think it's what I mentioned we no longer seem to coach skills at NPC or super level. When we were at our best we had a team of WC players who could beat teams with skill, we don't have the same anymore, and as Jason Ryan says they they were picking players to go same direct style that Edie Jones talked of.
I don't think it's as simple as no longer having the skill, or being coached the skill. I think the Lions series showed how to stifle the ABs and defences have evolved from there. The highly skilled fast pace game the ABs try to play struggles against such defences because it is a very big ask for players to execute the required skills game after game under immense pressure. Doubly so in WC knockout games.
The offside line was pretty poor applied in that series IMO, but generally agree with the sentiment that the rush defenses got better and combined with a lack of strong (often world class) center combos (Nonu Smith and SBW) the ABs have never looked the same since... (not blaming just the centers - just that from set plays they are where the pressure is primarily directed)
The other comment I would make, is that I feel a lot of players have been elevated through school boy and NPC rugby and simply have not developed from the flat track bully days of their youth, which to my mind is a coaching development issue.
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I'd add in mental skills - individual and collective. The lack of focus at key times is evident in the AB's but we seem to be seeing it at U20 level as well.
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I don’t think there is a lack of skill in NZ. There is definitely a lack of brains deciding when to use those skills though.
So often hard earned pressure on the opposition is released by trying to score off a miracle play as soon as we get a turnover.