RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks
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@nzzp said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
@ARHS said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
Hmm. Two big turn points cost us.
no mention of WJ's brain explosion?
That was a real costly9and poor), and I thought we never recovered, as soon as he went on French started attacking that side of field. Just didn't get it right in second half, I felt a bit for Papali'i , he tries hard, but struggles to make an impact at this level. We certainly struggles to get cleaners to rucks etc, Telea was left exposed on ground a few times after tackle.
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I think the coaching box deserve some of the criticism, the subs were awfual, particularly taking Smith off, or was that simply a concession?
Was daft sending Jordan back on, already on a YC and had already been pinged twice for touching the man in the air, instead you sub off our most dangerous back.
Brain dead tactics on field, dumb off too.
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@Billy-Tell said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
The ABs remind me of Scotland these days. Mostly loose against the good sides but capable of the odd upset.
Now THAT is how you insult a team !
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@Steve said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
TV analysis here saying New Zealand have no gain line breakers.
We gained just fine in the first half. A combination of tactics and poor performance saw us hand that win to the French who profited off our mistakes and grew in confidence
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@gt12 The tactic seemed to be to use Vaa'i as a passer in the midifeld. The only time he had the ball as a runner he dropped it. Whitelock made the least tackles of any of the starting pack (4 and 1 miss).
But yes, Finau should have been selected.
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@sparky said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
@Bull-Dusta said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
Be sure to beat Italy in the pool,
Really? I’m anything but sure about that game now.
I predict they’ll hammer Italy and paper over a few cracks
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I dont think we tried in that2nd half. They were diving and trying it on all over the place.
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@MN5 said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
@sparky said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
@Bull-Dusta said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
Be sure to beat Italy in the pool,
Really? I’m anything but sure about that game now.
I predict they’ll hammer Italy and paper over a few cracks
You're assuming that Foster won't select the C team from the squad...
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@Dan54 said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
@nzzp said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
@ARHS said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
Hmm. Two big turn points cost us.
no mention of WJ's brain explosion?
That was a real costly9and poor), and I thought we never recovered, as soon as he went on French started attacking that side of field. Just didn't get it right in second half, I felt a bit for Papali'i , he tries hard, but struggles to make an impact at this level. We certainly struggles to get cleaners to rucks etc, Telea was left exposed on ground a few times after tackle.
Yeah, but we should have the on-field smarts to deal with that. We haven't since 2016 and Foster isn't the man to bring them back.
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@MN5 said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
@sparky said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
@Bull-Dusta said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
Be sure to beat Italy in the pool,
Really? I’m anything but sure about that game now.
I predict they’ll hammer Italy and paper over a few cracks
Course we will. Our backs will be too good for them. We are too good for the majority of the teams in the world, but we can't take France and South Africa when push comes to shove. I think it is entirely possible we take Ireland and Australia and make the final, because that is how tournament sport works.
Heck, if we get everyone back fit, in a one off game we are good enough to win this tournament. It is tournament sport at the end of the day, the best side won't always win the tournament.
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@No-Quarter said in RWC: France v All Blacks:
It was a weird game in the heat. Fozzie said "the hotter the better" for us, so I suspect we felt the French would run out of steam. And that absolutely was the case in the first 40, we were excellent and both Beauden and Mo'unga win multiple kicking duals with them, and by the final 10 minutes the French were out on their feet. We really needed to capitalise here but we failed to put in enough points.
I'd say the French would have been unhappy at how much Beauden and Mo'unga were allowed to dictate play in the first half, so came out in the 2nd 40 with a very clear plan to return to basics and pin us in our own half as much as possible. We didn't adapt to this, and got suffocated out of the game - that's the biggest concern, as SA and Ireland will try and do exactly the same thing, so we have to figure out a way to counter it.
However, if we can get some key players fit by the quarter we are every chance. We've always said our depth was thin coming into this, so the number of injuries has obviously hurt.
Felt we chocked ourselves out rather being suffocated - just didn't even look to clear from our own half ..... France simply didn't want to play in their own half and didn't - this was further enabled by our deep uncontestable restarts and persistence in CHOOSING not to exit from our own territory.
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The Long, Sad Retreat
At half-time in that game, NZ looked to be well-positioned. They had had plenty of opportunities and were showing more on attack than the French. But in the second, they opened the door to their opposition through poor exits and an appalling strategy of mid-field bombs. Credit must go to the French, but it didn’t take much.
Indeed, we could see it all unravelling in slow motion. Worse, this was a movie we had viewed countless times before these past four years, or more. That it never changes can leave one doubting one’s own sanity. But the culprits are easy enough to spot.
Ever since the glory days up to 2015, NZ rugby has been keeping players (and coaches) well past their use-by dates. When he was gifted the succession by virtue of it being his turn, it quickly became apparent that Foster was not up to it. His ‘strategies’ were worked out by the other top teams years ago, but like a dog returning to its vomit he kept at it.
The corralling of new assistants in Schmidt and Ryan last year papered over the cracks for a while, but it has remained clear since that this remains Foster’s team and his vision. Knowing his contract is over after this tournament, he has clearly decided to go out playing his greatest hits to an audience that moved on years ago.
Of course, the responsibility ultimately lies with a week NZR which has repeatedly accepted Fozzy’s assurances that all was on track - against the evidence to the contrary. That allowed Foster to keep selecting people like BB, who has been on the world’s longest farewell tour.
The players, understandably, have declared their allegiance to Foster and have been repaid in turn with his fidelity, but that seems to have resulted in a lack of candour or willingness to suggest the emperor has no clothes. One wonders at what Ryan and Schmidt think.
On the field, the players look to some of the tiring old officers like Whitelock, Smith and BB to rally around the flag. But it’s hard to fight for a general whom you don’t ultimately respect and who you know is due to be decommissioned after this latest and last and bloody campaign.
Like Napoleon’s march home from Moscow, it’s a long and sad retreat and one you would hopehope would not destroy too many younger souls along the way. But I fear the damage will be too great. Unfortunately, that hope, on this grim evidence, may be forlorn.