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All Blacks vs Ireland

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Rugby Matches
allblacksireland
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  • ChrisC Chris

    @canefan said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @canefan said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @No-Quarter said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @Windows97 I have this terrible feeling that Blackadder will be brought straight back into the starting lineup at 6 once fit again. I believe he has started every game he's been fit for this season...

    No I don't reckon that will happen now,Maybe on the bench.

    Great. Let's weaken the impact of our bench, which has suddenly become a strength without EB, and Jacobsen

    I don’t think it will it will weaken it,Cane is gone next year do there is a gap in that 23.
    But people have their particular dislikes of players no matter what.

    If he plays well and justifies his selection I will be more than happy. But I see higher ceiling with Lakai off the bench. EB might be able to play Cane's role though

    I like Lakai as well I can see him adding some real impact at 7.

    African MonkeyA Offline
    African MonkeyA Offline
    African Monkey
    wrote on last edited by
    #1473

    @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @canefan said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @canefan said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @No-Quarter said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

    @Windows97 I have this terrible feeling that Blackadder will be brought straight back into the starting lineup at 6 once fit again. I believe he has started every game he's been fit for this season...

    No I don't reckon that will happen now,Maybe on the bench.

    Great. Let's weaken the impact of our bench, which has suddenly become a strength without EB, and Jacobsen

    I don’t think it will it will weaken it,Cane is gone next year do there is a gap in that 23.
    But people have their particular dislikes of players no matter what.

    If he plays well and justifies his selection I will be more than happy. But I see higher ceiling with Lakai off the bench. EB might be able to play Cane's role though

    I like Lakai as well I can see him adding some real impact at 7.

    I think he's our future there personally. I hope he gets a decent crack there next season. Huge fan of what Papali'i has done at the Blues but at international level he, Blackadder and Jacobsen are just placeholders.

    canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • African MonkeyA African Monkey

      @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @canefan said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @canefan said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @No-Quarter said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @Windows97 I have this terrible feeling that Blackadder will be brought straight back into the starting lineup at 6 once fit again. I believe he has started every game he's been fit for this season...

      No I don't reckon that will happen now,Maybe on the bench.

      Great. Let's weaken the impact of our bench, which has suddenly become a strength without EB, and Jacobsen

      I don’t think it will it will weaken it,Cane is gone next year do there is a gap in that 23.
      But people have their particular dislikes of players no matter what.

      If he plays well and justifies his selection I will be more than happy. But I see higher ceiling with Lakai off the bench. EB might be able to play Cane's role though

      I like Lakai as well I can see him adding some real impact at 7.

      I think he's our future there personally. I hope he gets a decent crack there next season. Huge fan of what Papali'i has done at the Blues but at international level he, Blackadder and Jacobsen are just placeholders.

      canefanC Offline
      canefanC Offline
      canefan
      wrote on last edited by canefan
      #1474

      @African-Monkey said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @canefan said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @canefan said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @Chris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @No-Quarter said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

      @Windows97 I have this terrible feeling that Blackadder will be brought straight back into the starting lineup at 6 once fit again. I believe he has started every game he's been fit for this season...

      No I don't reckon that will happen now,Maybe on the bench.

      Great. Let's weaken the impact of our bench, which has suddenly become a strength without EB, and Jacobsen

      I don’t think it will it will weaken it,Cane is gone next year do there is a gap in that 23.
      But people have their particular dislikes of players no matter what.

      If he plays well and justifies his selection I will be more than happy. But I see higher ceiling with Lakai off the bench. EB might be able to play Cane's role though

      I like Lakai as well I can see him adding some real impact at 7.

      I think he's our future there personally. I hope he gets a decent crack there next season. Huge fan of what Papali'i has done at the Blues but at international level he, Blackadder and Jacobsen are just placeholders.

      Oh yeah, forgot about Papaaili. Amazing the difference Wallace has made. I salivate thinking how our back row might go with Lakai and Wallace back together again.

      1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • S Steven Harris

        @Chris 💯 shows theres some work going on from the forwards coach which is pleasing to see
        Loved how they dictated where Ireland had to throw its bit like setting a trap

        BonesB Offline
        BonesB Offline
        Bones
        wrote on last edited by
        #1475

        @Steven-Harris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

        they dictated where Ireland had to throw

        I'm not sure I buy that. You reckon Ireland are only calling the lineout once they're set or changing the call when they see where the defenders go? Can't say I've ever seen any team with that system.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • KruseK Kruse

          @kiwiinmelb said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          @Bones said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          @kiwiinmelb said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          @kiwiinmelb said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          @chchfanatic said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          Shit I like this new coaching group. They seem to know what they’re doing after all.
          Some of you guys should read back what you write during the games.

          Coaching the ABs is a results based business,

          Win you will be a hero , lose you will be the opposite,

          And It’s never been any different

          There was similar negativity with Henry and Hansen at times and they took us through our most successful era .

          It was a long time ago, but the difference being I don't recall injury being their best selector.

          Yeah fair , I guess I’m just saying not everyone was onboard with their appointments

          I don't think ANYBODY has ever been "against" Razor's appointment.
          The only thing anybody has ever been against was the wank-hype. And then the early results. (and selections)

          canefanC Offline
          canefanC Offline
          canefan
          wrote on last edited by
          #1476

          @Kruse said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          @kiwiinmelb said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          @Bones said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          @kiwiinmelb said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          @kiwiinmelb said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          @chchfanatic said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

          Shit I like this new coaching group. They seem to know what they’re doing after all.
          Some of you guys should read back what you write during the games.

          Coaching the ABs is a results based business,

          Win you will be a hero , lose you will be the opposite,

          And It’s never been any different

          There was similar negativity with Henry and Hansen at times and they took us through our most successful era .

          It was a long time ago, but the difference being I don't recall injury being their best selector.

          Yeah fair , I guess I’m just saying not everyone was onboard with their appointments

          I don't think ANYBODY has ever been "against" Razor's appointment.
          The only thing anybody has ever been against was the wank-hype. And then the early results. (and selections)

          Totally this. IIRC the general opinion was positive about him taking over. It was just when he did his best low mark Fozzie impersonation and picked a bunch of undeserving no marks that I turned on him

          1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • S Steven Harris

            @Chris 💯 shows theres some work going on from the forwards coach which is pleasing to see
            Loved how they dictated where Ireland had to throw its bit like setting a trap

            ChrisC Offline
            ChrisC Offline
            Chris
            wrote on last edited by
            #1477

            @Steven-Harris said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

            @Chris 💯 shows theres some work going on from the forwards coach which is pleasing to see
            Loved how they dictated where Ireland had to throw its bit like setting a trap

            Yep it was really good tactics,then they split the lifter away from the jumper so they couldn’t get any momentum.

            1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • M Offline
              M Offline
              Mattasaurus
              wrote on last edited by
              #1478

              Gawd Jeff Wilson is a punishing listen on the Breakdown ( i know I am a day late but still..)

              D 1 Reply Last reply
              2
              • L Offline
                L Offline
                Lancaster Park
                wrote on last edited by
                #1479

                I dont recall the ref giving any penalties (maybe one but that was williams) for not rolling away, all the rest where for not releasing.
                I thought Ratima played really well under the circumstances at the ruck but ne needed to learn how to communicate with ref when there are irishmen just lying about at the back of the ruck impeding his access to the ball.

                1 Reply Last reply
                1
                • L Offline
                  L Offline
                  Lancaster Park
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #1480

                  Also whats the new ruling about defending a high ball chase? The commentators seemed to suggest its a new tweak but could understand why we got pinged when no one obviously changed their line. Was I just blind?

                  antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • M Mattasaurus

                    Gawd Jeff Wilson is a punishing listen on the Breakdown ( i know I am a day late but still..)

                    D Offline
                    D Offline
                    DMX
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #1481

                    @Mattasaurus said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

                    Gawd Jeff Wilson is a punishing listen on the Breakdown ( i know I am a day late but still..)

                    Agree completely, what absolute nonsense from him.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • MaussM Offline
                      MaussM Offline
                      Mauss
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #1482

                      I would argue that the biggest area of potential improvement for the ABs, going from the Rugby Championship to the Autumn Internationals, was the defence. While there was plenty of stuff happening in attack, on the defensive side the team gave up plenty of easy scores against their opponents, whether it was through an all-too easily penetrable goal-line defence (South Africa 2), clever set-piece attack from lineout (Australia 1) or complex phase play patterns (Argentina 1).

                      In Ireland, they had an opponent which could exploit all three areas, so it was a big tick in the box of defence coach Tamati Ellison that the Irish were only limited to 13 points in Dublin. So what changed between the RC and November? Well, it turns out that quite a lot can change in the space of a few months. As an example, I’ve tried to compare the Irish game with the defeat to Argentina in Wellington, as both Ireland and Argentina play with the Leinster blueprint of phase-attack, with Argentina more or less adopting this system after Contepomi has come in. While the defence wasn’t the main reason the ABs lost in Wellington – before the Savea brain explosion in the 68th minute, they were still in an excellent position to win the test – it played a big role in the consistent loss of momentum. In contrast, against Ireland, the defence put consistent pressure on the Irish attack, creating the conditions for McKenzie to kick them to victory in Dublin.

                      The first thing that stands out when comparing these two games is the AB exit kick strategy. Whereas the ABs kicked long off 9 for their first exit play against Argentina, against Ireland they went with a short contestable kick off 9. Both strategies led to wildly different defensive lines and set-ups at the point where the opposition receivers where able to set up their attack:

                      eae045e2-41dd-4873-8d4d-7ac0d52929c5-image.png

                      10ed9dfe-26e1-4a41-853b-ca10cd0c4ae6-image.png

                      In the first example, Perenara doesn’t look for or fails to find touch going long and the Argentine backfield is immediately able to launch an attack against a very fractured and disorganized Kiwi chase. The Argentinean forwards are positioned well as blockers and in the subsequent phases, the AB defenders are consistently on the back foot, with multiple Argentine switches off 10 able to outflank the AB defence, which isn’t effectively numbering up. After another gain-line carry off Carreras, the Argentine first five is able to get an offload away, with the only thing preventing a certain Argentina try being Beauden Barrett blocking the passing lane for the final pass. Throughout this game, the ABs consistently kicked long without a solid idea behind the defensive purpose of their chase, inviting pressure onto themselves and giving plenty of opportunities for the Argentinean phase attack.

                      Contrast this to the Irish scenario, where the AB defence is perfectly aligned at the start of the Irish phase attack, as a result of the contestable kick. The Irish try several passes out the back which are well read by the AB defenders, which leaves the Irish attack with little space and few numbers, and a mistake by Aki leads to a positive outcome for the All Black defence. When New Zealand did kick long after the restart, off of McKenzie, they presented a coherent defensive chase (a single hard chaser to put pressure on the opposition kick receiver followed by a set defensive line), making sure they go up together rather than at individual speeds as they did in Wellington.

                      Back in the Wellington test, time and time again, the New Zealand defence found itself badly outnumbered against the Argentine attack, who have the typical Leinster tendency to overload one side of the field so as to overwhelm the defence with carriers, blockers and backdoor options:

                      9570078e-3fec-4c85-8898-92bcb06690ad-image.png

                      In this particular phase of play, Mallia, the fullback, is allowed to make a line-break and a huge amount of metres, simply because the Argentina numbers are able to fix their opposite defenders, creating options for the attack and doubts for the defence.

                      In contrast, the Irish were very rarely able to fabricate such scenario’s, as the AB defenders were often effectively able to move into the Irish passing lines. A good example can be found around the 18 minute mark, when Tele’a is stripped off the ball in contact by Beirne, who passes out the back. Normally, this presents an ideal counter-attacking opportunity, only Sititi has immediately sprinted off the line as soon as the turnover happened in order to make this option much more difficult:

                      dd9d95d5-123c-45a9-8a35-903c6ce471b7-image.png

                      Another example occurred early in the game after the first Irish set-piece attack, with Tele’a simply moving into the passing space of the Irish attack, not so much with the intent of making an early defensive read as spooking the Irish passers and putting doubts into their mind. Again it worked, as Aki hesitates for a moment before throwing a pass that wasn’t on, leading to a Doris knock-on:

                      33b7a7d1-e5fa-49da-9501-7ef725c4b1c5-image.png

                      It’s not like the system fundamentally changed between these two tests, as Lienert-Brown also shot up out of the line after turnover ball in the Wellington test for example. The only problem was his execution of the principle. The idea is (1) to get in-between opposition players, and (2) to do this close to where the ball is in order to shut down the movement at its point of origin. Here, Lienert-Brown shoots up (1) into no man’s land instead of getting into the opposition passing space, (2) and, more importantly, far away from the ball:

                      82f11361-07ef-42f2-8826-1ef5140a71d6-image.png

                      The result is fairly predictable: the Argentineans can use their afforded time and space in order to exploit the non-existent connection between ALB and his inside defender, producing an easy line-break and eventual try to Cinti. If anyone was going to shoot up in-between the Argentina players, it needed to be Savea or Darry close to the ball, in order to shut down the attack before it could get started. Now, the attack was neither impeded, with the added downside of Lienert-Brown opening the door for the Argentina attack.

                      While the New Zealand defence is by no means the finished product yet, at the very least there are clear signs that both the coaches are getting better at strategically implementing its principles (through kick strategy) and the players are getting better at putting the system into play (by choosing when and where to shoot up, for example). There are more examples of defensive cohesion in the Ireland test – the solid execution of double tackles, the effective pairing of low tacklers and jackal threats, both signs of good defensive communication – but this is already long enough as it is, so I’ll leave it at that.

                      The French attack will pose a different sort of threat to the Irish (speedy counter-attack, snipes off 9, overloading the spaces around the ruck with big carriers), so it will be intriguing to see whether Ellison is able to prep his defence accordingly. If he does, important steps will have been taken by this coaching team towards both an improved attack and defence.

                      Mr FishM nzzpN KruseK canefanC mariner4lifeM 5 Replies Last reply
                      21
                      • MaussM Mauss

                        I would argue that the biggest area of potential improvement for the ABs, going from the Rugby Championship to the Autumn Internationals, was the defence. While there was plenty of stuff happening in attack, on the defensive side the team gave up plenty of easy scores against their opponents, whether it was through an all-too easily penetrable goal-line defence (South Africa 2), clever set-piece attack from lineout (Australia 1) or complex phase play patterns (Argentina 1).

                        In Ireland, they had an opponent which could exploit all three areas, so it was a big tick in the box of defence coach Tamati Ellison that the Irish were only limited to 13 points in Dublin. So what changed between the RC and November? Well, it turns out that quite a lot can change in the space of a few months. As an example, I’ve tried to compare the Irish game with the defeat to Argentina in Wellington, as both Ireland and Argentina play with the Leinster blueprint of phase-attack, with Argentina more or less adopting this system after Contepomi has come in. While the defence wasn’t the main reason the ABs lost in Wellington – before the Savea brain explosion in the 68th minute, they were still in an excellent position to win the test – it played a big role in the consistent loss of momentum. In contrast, against Ireland, the defence put consistent pressure on the Irish attack, creating the conditions for McKenzie to kick them to victory in Dublin.

                        The first thing that stands out when comparing these two games is the AB exit kick strategy. Whereas the ABs kicked long off 9 for their first exit play against Argentina, against Ireland they went with a short contestable kick off 9. Both strategies led to wildly different defensive lines and set-ups at the point where the opposition receivers where able to set up their attack:

                        eae045e2-41dd-4873-8d4d-7ac0d52929c5-image.png

                        10ed9dfe-26e1-4a41-853b-ca10cd0c4ae6-image.png

                        In the first example, Perenara doesn’t look for or fails to find touch going long and the Argentine backfield is immediately able to launch an attack against a very fractured and disorganized Kiwi chase. The Argentinean forwards are positioned well as blockers and in the subsequent phases, the AB defenders are consistently on the back foot, with multiple Argentine switches off 10 able to outflank the AB defence, which isn’t effectively numbering up. After another gain-line carry off Carreras, the Argentine first five is able to get an offload away, with the only thing preventing a certain Argentina try being Beauden Barrett blocking the passing lane for the final pass. Throughout this game, the ABs consistently kicked long without a solid idea behind the defensive purpose of their chase, inviting pressure onto themselves and giving plenty of opportunities for the Argentinean phase attack.

                        Contrast this to the Irish scenario, where the AB defence is perfectly aligned at the start of the Irish phase attack, as a result of the contestable kick. The Irish try several passes out the back which are well read by the AB defenders, which leaves the Irish attack with little space and few numbers, and a mistake by Aki leads to a positive outcome for the All Black defence. When New Zealand did kick long after the restart, off of McKenzie, they presented a coherent defensive chase (a single hard chaser to put pressure on the opposition kick receiver followed by a set defensive line), making sure they go up together rather than at individual speeds as they did in Wellington.

                        Back in the Wellington test, time and time again, the New Zealand defence found itself badly outnumbered against the Argentine attack, who have the typical Leinster tendency to overload one side of the field so as to overwhelm the defence with carriers, blockers and backdoor options:

                        9570078e-3fec-4c85-8898-92bcb06690ad-image.png

                        In this particular phase of play, Mallia, the fullback, is allowed to make a line-break and a huge amount of metres, simply because the Argentina numbers are able to fix their opposite defenders, creating options for the attack and doubts for the defence.

                        In contrast, the Irish were very rarely able to fabricate such scenario’s, as the AB defenders were often effectively able to move into the Irish passing lines. A good example can be found around the 18 minute mark, when Tele’a is stripped off the ball in contact by Beirne, who passes out the back. Normally, this presents an ideal counter-attacking opportunity, only Sititi has immediately sprinted off the line as soon as the turnover happened in order to make this option much more difficult:

                        dd9d95d5-123c-45a9-8a35-903c6ce471b7-image.png

                        Another example occurred early in the game after the first Irish set-piece attack, with Tele’a simply moving into the passing space of the Irish attack, not so much with the intent of making an early defensive read as spooking the Irish passers and putting doubts into their mind. Again it worked, as Aki hesitates for a moment before throwing a pass that wasn’t on, leading to a Doris knock-on:

                        33b7a7d1-e5fa-49da-9501-7ef725c4b1c5-image.png

                        It’s not like the system fundamentally changed between these two tests, as Lienert-Brown also shot up out of the line after turnover ball in the Wellington test for example. The only problem was his execution of the principle. The idea is (1) to get in-between opposition players, and (2) to do this close to where the ball is in order to shut down the movement at its point of origin. Here, Lienert-Brown shoots up (1) into no man’s land instead of getting into the opposition passing space, (2) and, more importantly, far away from the ball:

                        82f11361-07ef-42f2-8826-1ef5140a71d6-image.png

                        The result is fairly predictable: the Argentineans can use their afforded time and space in order to exploit the non-existent connection between ALB and his inside defender, producing an easy line-break and eventual try to Cinti. If anyone was going to shoot up in-between the Argentina players, it needed to be Savea or Darry close to the ball, in order to shut down the attack before it could get started. Now, the attack was neither impeded, with the added downside of Lienert-Brown opening the door for the Argentina attack.

                        While the New Zealand defence is by no means the finished product yet, at the very least there are clear signs that both the coaches are getting better at strategically implementing its principles (through kick strategy) and the players are getting better at putting the system into play (by choosing when and where to shoot up, for example). There are more examples of defensive cohesion in the Ireland test – the solid execution of double tackles, the effective pairing of low tacklers and jackal threats, both signs of good defensive communication – but this is already long enough as it is, so I’ll leave it at that.

                        The French attack will pose a different sort of threat to the Irish (speedy counter-attack, snipes off 9, overloading the spaces around the ruck with big carriers), so it will be intriguing to see whether Ellison is able to prep his defence accordingly. If he does, important steps will have been taken by this coaching team towards both an improved attack and defence.

                        Mr FishM Offline
                        Mr FishM Offline
                        Mr Fish
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #1483
                        This post is deleted!
                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • MaussM Mauss

                          I would argue that the biggest area of potential improvement for the ABs, going from the Rugby Championship to the Autumn Internationals, was the defence. While there was plenty of stuff happening in attack, on the defensive side the team gave up plenty of easy scores against their opponents, whether it was through an all-too easily penetrable goal-line defence (South Africa 2), clever set-piece attack from lineout (Australia 1) or complex phase play patterns (Argentina 1).

                          In Ireland, they had an opponent which could exploit all three areas, so it was a big tick in the box of defence coach Tamati Ellison that the Irish were only limited to 13 points in Dublin. So what changed between the RC and November? Well, it turns out that quite a lot can change in the space of a few months. As an example, I’ve tried to compare the Irish game with the defeat to Argentina in Wellington, as both Ireland and Argentina play with the Leinster blueprint of phase-attack, with Argentina more or less adopting this system after Contepomi has come in. While the defence wasn’t the main reason the ABs lost in Wellington – before the Savea brain explosion in the 68th minute, they were still in an excellent position to win the test – it played a big role in the consistent loss of momentum. In contrast, against Ireland, the defence put consistent pressure on the Irish attack, creating the conditions for McKenzie to kick them to victory in Dublin.

                          The first thing that stands out when comparing these two games is the AB exit kick strategy. Whereas the ABs kicked long off 9 for their first exit play against Argentina, against Ireland they went with a short contestable kick off 9. Both strategies led to wildly different defensive lines and set-ups at the point where the opposition receivers where able to set up their attack:

                          eae045e2-41dd-4873-8d4d-7ac0d52929c5-image.png

                          10ed9dfe-26e1-4a41-853b-ca10cd0c4ae6-image.png

                          In the first example, Perenara doesn’t look for or fails to find touch going long and the Argentine backfield is immediately able to launch an attack against a very fractured and disorganized Kiwi chase. The Argentinean forwards are positioned well as blockers and in the subsequent phases, the AB defenders are consistently on the back foot, with multiple Argentine switches off 10 able to outflank the AB defence, which isn’t effectively numbering up. After another gain-line carry off Carreras, the Argentine first five is able to get an offload away, with the only thing preventing a certain Argentina try being Beauden Barrett blocking the passing lane for the final pass. Throughout this game, the ABs consistently kicked long without a solid idea behind the defensive purpose of their chase, inviting pressure onto themselves and giving plenty of opportunities for the Argentinean phase attack.

                          Contrast this to the Irish scenario, where the AB defence is perfectly aligned at the start of the Irish phase attack, as a result of the contestable kick. The Irish try several passes out the back which are well read by the AB defenders, which leaves the Irish attack with little space and few numbers, and a mistake by Aki leads to a positive outcome for the All Black defence. When New Zealand did kick long after the restart, off of McKenzie, they presented a coherent defensive chase (a single hard chaser to put pressure on the opposition kick receiver followed by a set defensive line), making sure they go up together rather than at individual speeds as they did in Wellington.

                          Back in the Wellington test, time and time again, the New Zealand defence found itself badly outnumbered against the Argentine attack, who have the typical Leinster tendency to overload one side of the field so as to overwhelm the defence with carriers, blockers and backdoor options:

                          9570078e-3fec-4c85-8898-92bcb06690ad-image.png

                          In this particular phase of play, Mallia, the fullback, is allowed to make a line-break and a huge amount of metres, simply because the Argentina numbers are able to fix their opposite defenders, creating options for the attack and doubts for the defence.

                          In contrast, the Irish were very rarely able to fabricate such scenario’s, as the AB defenders were often effectively able to move into the Irish passing lines. A good example can be found around the 18 minute mark, when Tele’a is stripped off the ball in contact by Beirne, who passes out the back. Normally, this presents an ideal counter-attacking opportunity, only Sititi has immediately sprinted off the line as soon as the turnover happened in order to make this option much more difficult:

                          dd9d95d5-123c-45a9-8a35-903c6ce471b7-image.png

                          Another example occurred early in the game after the first Irish set-piece attack, with Tele’a simply moving into the passing space of the Irish attack, not so much with the intent of making an early defensive read as spooking the Irish passers and putting doubts into their mind. Again it worked, as Aki hesitates for a moment before throwing a pass that wasn’t on, leading to a Doris knock-on:

                          33b7a7d1-e5fa-49da-9501-7ef725c4b1c5-image.png

                          It’s not like the system fundamentally changed between these two tests, as Lienert-Brown also shot up out of the line after turnover ball in the Wellington test for example. The only problem was his execution of the principle. The idea is (1) to get in-between opposition players, and (2) to do this close to where the ball is in order to shut down the movement at its point of origin. Here, Lienert-Brown shoots up (1) into no man’s land instead of getting into the opposition passing space, (2) and, more importantly, far away from the ball:

                          82f11361-07ef-42f2-8826-1ef5140a71d6-image.png

                          The result is fairly predictable: the Argentineans can use their afforded time and space in order to exploit the non-existent connection between ALB and his inside defender, producing an easy line-break and eventual try to Cinti. If anyone was going to shoot up in-between the Argentina players, it needed to be Savea or Darry close to the ball, in order to shut down the attack before it could get started. Now, the attack was neither impeded, with the added downside of Lienert-Brown opening the door for the Argentina attack.

                          While the New Zealand defence is by no means the finished product yet, at the very least there are clear signs that both the coaches are getting better at strategically implementing its principles (through kick strategy) and the players are getting better at putting the system into play (by choosing when and where to shoot up, for example). There are more examples of defensive cohesion in the Ireland test – the solid execution of double tackles, the effective pairing of low tacklers and jackal threats, both signs of good defensive communication – but this is already long enough as it is, so I’ll leave it at that.

                          The French attack will pose a different sort of threat to the Irish (speedy counter-attack, snipes off 9, overloading the spaces around the ruck with big carriers), so it will be intriguing to see whether Ellison is able to prep his defence accordingly. If he does, important steps will have been taken by this coaching team towards both an improved attack and defence.

                          nzzpN Offline
                          nzzpN Offline
                          nzzp
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #1484

                          @Mauss welcome to the Fern. You're setting a bloody high bar with your post quality,.keep it up!

                          MaussM 1 Reply Last reply
                          2
                          • MaussM Mauss

                            I would argue that the biggest area of potential improvement for the ABs, going from the Rugby Championship to the Autumn Internationals, was the defence. While there was plenty of stuff happening in attack, on the defensive side the team gave up plenty of easy scores against their opponents, whether it was through an all-too easily penetrable goal-line defence (South Africa 2), clever set-piece attack from lineout (Australia 1) or complex phase play patterns (Argentina 1).

                            In Ireland, they had an opponent which could exploit all three areas, so it was a big tick in the box of defence coach Tamati Ellison that the Irish were only limited to 13 points in Dublin. So what changed between the RC and November? Well, it turns out that quite a lot can change in the space of a few months. As an example, I’ve tried to compare the Irish game with the defeat to Argentina in Wellington, as both Ireland and Argentina play with the Leinster blueprint of phase-attack, with Argentina more or less adopting this system after Contepomi has come in. While the defence wasn’t the main reason the ABs lost in Wellington – before the Savea brain explosion in the 68th minute, they were still in an excellent position to win the test – it played a big role in the consistent loss of momentum. In contrast, against Ireland, the defence put consistent pressure on the Irish attack, creating the conditions for McKenzie to kick them to victory in Dublin.

                            The first thing that stands out when comparing these two games is the AB exit kick strategy. Whereas the ABs kicked long off 9 for their first exit play against Argentina, against Ireland they went with a short contestable kick off 9. Both strategies led to wildly different defensive lines and set-ups at the point where the opposition receivers where able to set up their attack:

                            eae045e2-41dd-4873-8d4d-7ac0d52929c5-image.png

                            10ed9dfe-26e1-4a41-853b-ca10cd0c4ae6-image.png

                            In the first example, Perenara doesn’t look for or fails to find touch going long and the Argentine backfield is immediately able to launch an attack against a very fractured and disorganized Kiwi chase. The Argentinean forwards are positioned well as blockers and in the subsequent phases, the AB defenders are consistently on the back foot, with multiple Argentine switches off 10 able to outflank the AB defence, which isn’t effectively numbering up. After another gain-line carry off Carreras, the Argentine first five is able to get an offload away, with the only thing preventing a certain Argentina try being Beauden Barrett blocking the passing lane for the final pass. Throughout this game, the ABs consistently kicked long without a solid idea behind the defensive purpose of their chase, inviting pressure onto themselves and giving plenty of opportunities for the Argentinean phase attack.

                            Contrast this to the Irish scenario, where the AB defence is perfectly aligned at the start of the Irish phase attack, as a result of the contestable kick. The Irish try several passes out the back which are well read by the AB defenders, which leaves the Irish attack with little space and few numbers, and a mistake by Aki leads to a positive outcome for the All Black defence. When New Zealand did kick long after the restart, off of McKenzie, they presented a coherent defensive chase (a single hard chaser to put pressure on the opposition kick receiver followed by a set defensive line), making sure they go up together rather than at individual speeds as they did in Wellington.

                            Back in the Wellington test, time and time again, the New Zealand defence found itself badly outnumbered against the Argentine attack, who have the typical Leinster tendency to overload one side of the field so as to overwhelm the defence with carriers, blockers and backdoor options:

                            9570078e-3fec-4c85-8898-92bcb06690ad-image.png

                            In this particular phase of play, Mallia, the fullback, is allowed to make a line-break and a huge amount of metres, simply because the Argentina numbers are able to fix their opposite defenders, creating options for the attack and doubts for the defence.

                            In contrast, the Irish were very rarely able to fabricate such scenario’s, as the AB defenders were often effectively able to move into the Irish passing lines. A good example can be found around the 18 minute mark, when Tele’a is stripped off the ball in contact by Beirne, who passes out the back. Normally, this presents an ideal counter-attacking opportunity, only Sititi has immediately sprinted off the line as soon as the turnover happened in order to make this option much more difficult:

                            dd9d95d5-123c-45a9-8a35-903c6ce471b7-image.png

                            Another example occurred early in the game after the first Irish set-piece attack, with Tele’a simply moving into the passing space of the Irish attack, not so much with the intent of making an early defensive read as spooking the Irish passers and putting doubts into their mind. Again it worked, as Aki hesitates for a moment before throwing a pass that wasn’t on, leading to a Doris knock-on:

                            33b7a7d1-e5fa-49da-9501-7ef725c4b1c5-image.png

                            It’s not like the system fundamentally changed between these two tests, as Lienert-Brown also shot up out of the line after turnover ball in the Wellington test for example. The only problem was his execution of the principle. The idea is (1) to get in-between opposition players, and (2) to do this close to where the ball is in order to shut down the movement at its point of origin. Here, Lienert-Brown shoots up (1) into no man’s land instead of getting into the opposition passing space, (2) and, more importantly, far away from the ball:

                            82f11361-07ef-42f2-8826-1ef5140a71d6-image.png

                            The result is fairly predictable: the Argentineans can use their afforded time and space in order to exploit the non-existent connection between ALB and his inside defender, producing an easy line-break and eventual try to Cinti. If anyone was going to shoot up in-between the Argentina players, it needed to be Savea or Darry close to the ball, in order to shut down the attack before it could get started. Now, the attack was neither impeded, with the added downside of Lienert-Brown opening the door for the Argentina attack.

                            While the New Zealand defence is by no means the finished product yet, at the very least there are clear signs that both the coaches are getting better at strategically implementing its principles (through kick strategy) and the players are getting better at putting the system into play (by choosing when and where to shoot up, for example). There are more examples of defensive cohesion in the Ireland test – the solid execution of double tackles, the effective pairing of low tacklers and jackal threats, both signs of good defensive communication – but this is already long enough as it is, so I’ll leave it at that.

                            The French attack will pose a different sort of threat to the Irish (speedy counter-attack, snipes off 9, overloading the spaces around the ruck with big carriers), so it will be intriguing to see whether Ellison is able to prep his defence accordingly. If he does, important steps will have been taken by this coaching team towards both an improved attack and defence.

                            KruseK Offline
                            KruseK Offline
                            Kruse
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #1485

                            @Mauss Maybe the Fern isn't for you? We're more about "Player-X is shit!" "No he's not, Player-Y from your region is shit!" "You're both stupid, Player-Z is the shizzle-for-rizzle, and will be an AB GOAT!"
                            Sharpen up mate. Less analysis, more kneejerk reactions.

                            MaussM 1 Reply Last reply
                            10
                            • KruseK Kruse

                              @Mauss Maybe the Fern isn't for you? We're more about "Player-X is shit!" "No he's not, Player-Y from your region is shit!" "You're both stupid, Player-Z is the shizzle-for-rizzle, and will be an AB GOAT!"
                              Sharpen up mate. Less analysis, more kneejerk reactions.

                              MaussM Offline
                              MaussM Offline
                              Mauss
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #1486

                              @Kruse So how 'bout this Cam Roigard, eh?

                              BonesB KruseK 2 Replies Last reply
                              5
                              • MaussM Mauss

                                @Kruse So how 'bout this Cam Roigard, eh?

                                BonesB Offline
                                BonesB Offline
                                Bones
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #1487

                                @Mauss said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

                                @Kruse So how 'bout this Cam Roigard, eh?

                                Poor man's Preston.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                4
                                • nzzpN nzzp

                                  @Mauss welcome to the Fern. You're setting a bloody high bar with your post quality,.keep it up!

                                  MaussM Offline
                                  MaussM Offline
                                  Mauss
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #1488

                                  @nzzp Cheers. Always loved reading the Fern, it's nice to contribute a bit in my own way.

                                  nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • MaussM Mauss

                                    @Kruse So how 'bout this Cam Roigard, eh?

                                    KruseK Offline
                                    KruseK Offline
                                    Kruse
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #1489

                                    @Mauss said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

                                    @Kruse So how 'bout this Cam Roigard, eh?

                                    I KNEW it! One-eyed Hurricanes fan. You people make me sick.

                                    MaussM 1 Reply Last reply
                                    4
                                    • KruseK Kruse

                                      @Mauss said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

                                      @Kruse So how 'bout this Cam Roigard, eh?

                                      I KNEW it! One-eyed Hurricanes fan. You people make me sick.

                                      MaussM Offline
                                      MaussM Offline
                                      Mauss
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #1490

                                      @Kruse said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

                                      Hurricanes fan

                                      Now hold on a minute, let's not start saying things we can't take back.

                                      KruseK 1 Reply Last reply
                                      2
                                      • MaussM Mauss

                                        @Kruse said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

                                        Hurricanes fan

                                        Now hold on a minute, let's not start saying things we can't take back.

                                        KruseK Offline
                                        KruseK Offline
                                        Kruse
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #1491

                                        @Mauss said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

                                        @Kruse said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

                                        Hurricanes fan

                                        Now hold on a minute, let's not start saying things we can't take back.

                                        Fair enough - sorry, that was too far. Banning offence.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        2
                                        • MaussM Mauss

                                          @nzzp Cheers. Always loved reading the Fern, it's nice to contribute a bit in my own way.

                                          nzzpN Offline
                                          nzzpN Offline
                                          nzzp
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #1492

                                          @Mauss said in All Blacks vs Ireland:

                                          @nzzp Cheers. Always loved reading the Fern, it's nice to contribute a bit in my own way.

                                          If you really want to fit in around here, make sure you remember the Fern motto. You're really breaking a few rules at the moment.

                                          Awful analysis, incorrect conclusions, zero insight

                                          Wrong about pretty much everything

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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