RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks
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@chimoaus said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
Not sure if its been mentioned but we had 49% of our rucks in our own half. France was 29%. The French also kicked a lot more metres. It's pretty clear the French did well exiting their half, whereas we were fucken awful.
and we dont seem to care, we play like we think we have 15 world beaters who can switch it one rather than the most basic of tasks like getting into the opposition half before fucking around to much
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@MiketheSnow Not sure about "far", but definitely "tougher".
The Jaapies couldn't afford to lose their opening pool game, so they've had to go hard from the start. That may come back to bite them.
Ireland might be able to wait and see how things unfold, a bit. If they beat SA and have a decent points advantage they might be able to take things a bit easy against Scotland and ship a close loss if necessary.
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@antipodean said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@Kiwiwomble said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@antipodean you're right but they are responsible for coming up with a gameplan to suit the players we have rather than just selecting people...telling them to be Kaino and then just wondering if they cant
@Joans-Town-Jones said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
Explain the game plan? Gary Owens from your own 22? Hope is not a game plan.
of course it is....very much in the playbook as a viable option if we dont break out within a couple of phases
I remain astonished people don't grasp we aren't the only nation that does contestable kicks when we aren't moving forward. There's plenty of commentary around the internet why teams do it too.
The difference compared to say South Africa is that we are shit at them - our kicks are either too long or too shallow or our kick chase just isn’t good enough, both individually and collectively. We looked so much better last week when we just hoofed it because it was obvious the Frogs had no desire to play any footy their side of halfway. Chances we will not play anyone who wants to play their side of halfway this whole tournament, so if we hoof it they will hoof it back to us and we just have to wait until they hoof it back to a position on the field we don’t mind playing from (which should be anywhere from our 10m line, not from our 22m)
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@antipodean said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@Joans-Town-Jones said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@antipodean said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@Kiwiwomble said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@antipodean said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@Joans-Town-Jones said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
This RWC cycle is a result of the late 2016 Hansen side. 8 years later, we still don't now our best 6,
Clearly Frizell based on this year.
pretty damning that 1.5 really good games in 28 tests over 5 years make someone a clear fav
Sure. He's hit the form we're after and I remain mystified that it's somehow the fault of the selectors no one up until this point has played well enough.
Wot? You don't think it's the selectors who are the coaches that are responsible?
No, I'm not stupid enough to think that coaches can magically turn players into Jerome Kaino. As our current forward's coach readily admits.
Fozzy has had 4 years, well, 7 if you include his time as an ass.coach under Hansen. What the phuck has he been doing in that time to replace Kaino? If they're not responsible, who the phuck is???
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@Joans-Town-Jones In fairness, he's had 3 full years. 2020 was a washout.
Again, in fairness, he's been lucky to have had 3 years given what happened in 2021/2022.
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@Joans-Town-Jones He has tried Akira Ioane. Didn't work.
He tried Sowakula. Didn't work - poor selection in hindsight.
He's played Scott Barrett there. Barrett has the engine and the power game to play 6. If NZ had better locking stocks, I think he and Frizell more than cover 6 to not make it a weakness in the squad. Look at Tadhg Beirne for Ireland who is both one of the best second rows and blindsiders in the game currently. Barrett is capable of this too.
Frizell finally delivered on his potential this year.
So the real issue is lock. Nobody has come through in 4 years to put pressure on Whitelock and Retallick (apart from Barrett). Time wasted on the likes of Tuipolotu early on. Injury to Josh Lord didn't help. Vaa'i hasn't kicked on.
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@Dan54 said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
Up to a point I agree, but no way do I think ABs lost because they were keeping powder dry, just beaten by better team. As I say , at times we have to instead of just saying ABs weren't good, we should give opposition credit for being good, much as it seems a lot of us as AB fans can't do it.
Game is so structured how we play at top level add into fact that late changes seem to stuff up a little how teams play, and at top level against very good teams, off by 2% is enough to lose tests.This.
It’s bloody difficult being direct when you’re under the pump and not running at space/soft shoulders.
The ABs haven’t been able to do that at least as far back as RWC 2019.
Instead, you’ve stretched meaner packs with your outside running game and the dinky cross field kicks everyone’s moaning about now.
When that works like the 2019 QF or when the opposition have dicks for fingers (like the 2019 AB Bok RWC game or the first 20 of mt Smart) your forwards have “been direct”, running at the space against unsettled defensive lines.
But when a better pack is backed up by a backline that can deal with your backs and especially field the cross kicks, like England in the 2019 semi or the Irish in last year’s series, you don’t have the cattle to “be direct.”
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@stodders Barrett played 6 against Ireland in 2022 in the first test, didn't he? He played lock in test 2 and then was missing through injury in test 3. NZ missed him.
I don't think it was a surprise that the ABs looked better with Barrett alongside Cane and Savea in test 1. He has the work rate to play 6 well, the lineout prowess to be a bonafide option at the tail, and the power to add ballast to the scrum.
If Retallick can get back to full fitness and Whitelock can be managed through the pool, I would not be surprised to see Barrett playing 6 in the crunch games. And if he doesn't, he will be the backup to Frizell at 6 (even if starting the game in the second row).
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@Smuts Not sure I agree with that.
ABs haven't done it consistently, but they have been successful since 2019 against 2 of the best packs in world rugby - Ireland and South Africa. Not consistently successful, but if you can manage it once, it is inherently possible that you can manage to do it again.
NZ have always used their backline strengths to stretch teams. That ability is still there.
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@stodders said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@Joans-Town-Jones In fairness, he's had 3 full years. 2020 was a washout.
Again, in fairness, he's been lucky to have had 3 years given what happened in 2021/2022.
only 3 years? Sorry but I think that's a cop out. Why didn't AI and PGS work out? Hell, PGS played one test? Fozzie hasn't allowed the team to play out. Case in point. 2022. Finally may have found a decent 12 in JB. Then chopped and changed the team. They've only played 6 tests this year and the last 3 have been over 7 weeks. If Fozzie's time was so limited, why didn't he settle on a team earlier? What are odds he will field 3 completely different sides over the next 4 weeks...
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@Joans-Town-Jones I think NZ coaches overplay the R&R element sometimes. Foster isn't alone here. It used to work when the depth was there and the drop off in quality was limited, but that isn't the case now.
A 90% fit JB is better than a 100% fit ALB for instance.
No point managing players for a QF/SF/Final if you get booted out at the pool stage.
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@stodders said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@Smuts Not sure I agree with that.
ABs haven't done it consistently, but they have been successful since 2019 against 2 of the best packs in world rugby - Ireland and South Africa. Not consistently successful, but if you can manage it once, it is inherently possible that you can manage to do it again.
NZ have always used their backline strengths to stretch teams. That ability is still there.
I don't think anyone is doubting whether they can do it. But it's backing it up the next week which hasn't been done since...can't even remember. Adding to that, putting in an 80min performance hasn't happened in a long time.
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@stodders said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@Joans-Town-Jones I think NZ coaches overplay the R&R element sometimes. Foster isn't alone here. It used to work when the depth was there and the drop off in quality was limited, but that isn't the case now.
A 90% fit JB is better than a 100% fit ALB for instance.
No point managing players for a QF/SF/Final if you get booted out at the pool stage.
The only way NZ lose to Italy is if they have 3 players sent off
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@stodders said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@Joans-Town-Jones I think NZ coaches overplay the R&R element sometimes. Foster isn't alone here. It used to work when the depth was there and the drop off in quality was limited, but that isn't the case now.
A 90% fit JB is better than a 100% fit ALB for instance.
No point managing players for a QF/SF/Final if you get booted out at the pool stage.
100% agree. When we dropped the Ireland series, then that test to SA, Foster had lost any opportunity to R&R his perceived A side save for a little swapsy here and there. Jesus, Hansen started in back in 2016 when RC and ALB who were looking fantastic as a centre pairing weren't allowed to own that area with all the changes presumably because SBW who was playing league was his guy. Phuck, he was still changing the team into the SF in 2019. I often wonder, after all the greats retiring in 2015, why they wouldn't find their team and then back a Super player to come in when needed to do a job rather than just rotate entire combinations.
All of a sudden, Cam Roigard's boot becomes incredibly important if Beaudy, Nugget and Rich are not going to kick long.
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@MiketheSnow entirely plausible. I think even one red card at the moment would pose a problem. Italy aren't easy beats now. They were unlucky not to beat France in the opening 6N game this year.
In nearly all of the games they have lost this year they have been within 2 scores.
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@MiketheSnow said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@stodders said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@Joans-Town-Jones I think NZ coaches overplay the R&R element sometimes. Foster isn't alone here. It used to work when the depth was there and the drop off in quality was limited, but that isn't the case now.
A 90% fit JB is better than a 100% fit ALB for instance.
No point managing players for a QF/SF/Final if you get booted out at the pool stage.
The only way NZ lose to Italy is if they have 3 players sent off
They'll find a way...
Should the ABs get behind on the scoreboard early, they rack up a bunch of penalties and Italy knock over a few, it's not beyond the possibility the ABs shit the bed and its another first and the ABs go home. In the passed the ABs could be down 20 with 15 to go and you'd back them to steamroll home or at least get very close. This team gets 8 behind and they're done.
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@Joans-Town-Jones since July. When they beat Argentina (a) 12-41 (July 8th), beat South African(h) 35-20 (July 15th), beat Australia (a) 7-38 (July 29th).
Fair enough things have derailed a bit since then, but 2 months ago, the ABs put 3 decent performances together in a row.
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@stodders said in RWC Week 1: France v All Blacks:
@Joans-Town-Jones since July. When they beat Argentina (a) 12-41 (July 8th), beat South African(h) 35-20 (July 15th), beat Australia (a) 7-38 (July 29th).
Fair enough things have derailed a bit since then, but 2 months ago, the ABs put 3 decent performances together in a row.
Point of order. Both games 1 and 2 they lost the second half. Still won the game but signs were there. Fozzie then changes pretty much the entire team for game 4 and it took a last min PG to win. Game 5 we got smoke, a man down plus a couple more in the bin, but smoked none the less. So I challenge that 80mins.
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@Joans-Town-Jones Yes. Game 1, they were so far ahead after a near perfect 1st 40 mins that they did not maintain their standards in the 2nd 40 mins.
Game 2 is more nuanced - dominated the 1st 20 mins and took their opportunities. Boks gained ascendancy in 2nd 20 mins and really applied the blowtorch in the 3rd 20 mins, at which point the ABs recalibrated and reasserted control and took their opportunities.
If anything, game 2 shows that the players are capable of thinking on the hoof when things are not working.
In both cases, the ABs had scoreboard pressure on their side that both Arg and SA struggled with (SA less so, but still did to an extent).