• Categories
Collapse

The Silver Fern

All Blacks v Argentina II

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Rugby Matches
allblacksargentina
1.3k Posts 84 Posters 14.7k Views
All Blacks v Argentina II
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    wrote last edited by
    #1185

    Yeah, the springboks best wings are midgets. Love is certainly no smaller than Carter and the likes of Jane.

    It's pretty bizarre to suggest Love is too small even if you don't consider most other teams have very similar sized players.

    1 Reply Last reply
    8
  • MN5M Offline
    MN5M Offline
    MN5
    replied to No Quarter last edited by
    #1186

    @No-Quarter said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @Chris said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    A few people have been impressed by Parkers debut I for one was disappointed and I am a fan of his.He tackled well but did miss a couple, but clearing rucks hitting over the advantage line and just hitting bodies hard I felt he was a bit passive.
    I hope it is just First test nerves.
    Siti came on and hit the line hard in my mind he needs to start at 8 against the Boks.

    I don't think Parker would have gotten much of a mention if everyone else didn't shit the bed so hard. I tend to agree with you, but also think he was one of our better players out there. Agree re: Sititi he definitely starts now he is fit and has had a run from the bench. I see him as a future AB captain, the kid is all class and will make a difference against SA. Who wouldn't follow William Wallace into battle?

    Out of the current squad I’d say everyone except Finlay Christie if I’m being honest

    1 Reply Last reply
    4
  • ToddyT Offline
    ToddyT Offline
    Toddy
    wrote last edited by
    #1187

    Love spilled a decent amount of high ball this year for the Canes

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • sparkyS Offline
    sparkyS Offline
    sparky
    wrote last edited by sparky
    #1188

    It would be a good one for the statisticians. Which players in NZ Rugby are best statistically under the high ball?

    Based on the subjective eye test, I'd nominate Caleb Clarke, Jordie Barrett and Ruben Love as possible members of a bomb disposal squad.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • sparkyS Offline
    sparkyS Offline
    sparky
    wrote last edited by
    #1189

    I took this seriously until the Welsh Anthem bit. 🤣

    nostrildamusN 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamus
    replied to reprobate last edited by
    #1190

    @reprobate said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    Love is athletic, but he's little.

    If hurricane stats are realistic, he's 1.84 m, 92kg when last weighed.

    Hurricanes: Player

    Bigger than DMac, taller than Dan Carter, and probably about the same weight now. He isn't a towering fullback but he's not that little.

    R 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamus
    replied to sparky last edited by
    #1191

    @sparky said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    I took this seriously until the Welsh Anthem bit. 🤣

    "I used to be the norm. It is not good enough."
    That would be right, no one is 'supposed' to be best in the world. It's not a given. Teams have to fight for it.
    It doesn't matter if their club teams are amateur if their national side has international experience and their coaches (cough cough) are better than ours.
    Not impressed with his manchild rant.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    wrote last edited by
    #1192

    Had a little re-watch this evening. A few things that spring to mind.

    We made far too many largely unforced errors. Early on dropping cold a couple of catchable passes, Jordie's skewed chip, giving away dumb penalties and towards the end a couple of lineout malfunctions. You could easily find ten errors from poor skills or foolishness that stopped momentum cold.

    Three yellow cards to nil - again handing momentum to Argentina - and points. A killer, but still not terminal even for this side - though Sevu's probably gets close.

    Kicking. The Argentine's seemed to largely be kicking with momentum behind them - so their kicks were attacking kicks, while most of ours were defensive. They mainly kicked off shorter than we did and got arms up into the receptions to contest (and win), while we mainly kicked off deeper. Similarly, with box kicks - especially later in th game - almost all of theirs were contestible and they were rolling the dice by getting an arm up to disrupt the catcher - sometimes knocking on, but other times causing us to spill the ball loose. Ours were mainly too deep to contest. Sometimes to touch. Maybe we were backing our lineout?

    These things are fixable.

    What I wonder about our backline, though is - do we have to go back to the lesson of RWC 1991.

    That day, we fielded Bachop, Fox, Timu, McCahill, Innes, Kirwan and Crowley.

    Afterwards Simon Poidevin (the Wallaby openside) said the game was pretty easy for him because he knew neither Fox nor McCahill would run - so he just headed straight for Innes. Crowley also wasn't much of an offensive threat and Timu a bit mediocre. So Innes and Kirwan - can't remember if Bachop ran or not. Late in the game Foxy dummied and broke clear, but the cover mopped him up because he had no real pace.

    The lesson was - almost everyone in your backline needs to offer offensive threat. Otherwise it's too easy to mark the threats and shut them down. We need size, speed, outrageous skills.

    When you're running around with Christie, Beaudy, Rieko, Jordie, Billy, Sevu and Will - who will, apart from Will?

    It's pretty bland offensively.

    NepiaN His BobnessH D 3 Replies Last reply
    10
  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    replied to Chris B. last edited by
    #1193

    @Chris-B said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    Timu a bit mediocre.

    That's utter bollocks, also he should have been at fullback instead of Crowley then we could have brought in another threat on the wing.

    Chris B.C 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    replied to Nepia last edited by
    #1194

    @Nepia He's not from Hawkes Bay is he? 🙂

    Seven tries in 26 tests - he's not really in the conversation for great AB wings. Kirwan, Wright and Inga all rate higher from his tenure.

    But, way to distract from the point.

    NepiaN 1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • His BobnessH Offline
    His BobnessH Offline
    His Bobness
    replied to Chris B. last edited by His Bobness
    #1195

    @Chris-B Yes, there is a predictability on attack. By attempting to play it safe and minimise mistakes they actually magnify their errors. Mils Muliana also made a good point on the breakdown on the critical nature of the 8-9-10 axis as decision-makers. We’re not seeing that right now. Parker obviously was on debut in this test. Christie and BB, while knowing each other from the Blues, weren’t up for experimentation as Christie is a fourth choice selection. The difference maker in the AB backline is Roigard and his absence, along with the of Hotham, I think has been fatal for the attack. Roigard keeps the opposition guessing. He has a deeper and more accurate box kick than the rest of the candidates, but also a superior running and passing game.

    When you add the dysfunction in the back three under the high ball, this is an easy backline to decode. In fact, there is nothing there to decipher whatsoever. There is not a functioning brain in the backline. Yes, Jordan, but he was trying to do the job of three people and I firmly believe his cynical play that led to the yellow card reflected the fact that neither Reece nor Rieko were stepping up;

    The issue for the team overall is a lack of confidence - in the gameplan (assuming there is one), in each other and in themselves.

    Is it fixable? You would hope so. But it is going to take coaches with clear, calm communication skills and a cool eye for strategy to turn this around. And I don’t see that at all right now

    Chris B.C 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    replied to Chris B. last edited by
    #1196

    @Chris-B said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @Nepia He's not from Hawkes Bay is he? 🙂

    Seven tries in 26 tests - he's not really in the conversation for great AB wings. Kirwan, Wright and Inga all rate higher from his tenure.

    But, way to distract from the point.

    He went to Lindersfarne which is essentially the equivalent of being from Ta$man/Crusaders.

    Inga was in that same team (he's the guy who should come in when Timu goes to fullback) and he only scored 5 test tries - it wasn't a try glut era. Those two, and JK would have bucketloads in the modern era.

    No one said he was in the conversation for greatest AB wings at any rate, but he was far from mediocre. Your comments on him suggests you didn't actually watch rugby in that era ....

    Also, I'm not trying to distract from your point, I'm just pointing out a statement you made is wrong.

    Chris B.C 1 Reply Last reply
    4
  • G Offline
    G Offline
    Gunner
    wrote last edited by Gunner
    #1197

    It’s always entertaining reading these threads after the fact, especially after a loss.

    Shit performance, and I hate losing as much as the next man, but…

    1. We are currently number one in the world, some of the doomsayers on here need to get a grip.

    2. Argentina are a good side, played to their strengths and did it bloody well.

    3. We played shit, which really sucks. Happens sometimes.

    4. Our forwards are shit hot, with growing depth in all positions.

    5. Backs are a bloody worry, no rhythm, no timing, when was the last time we saw a sharp backline move in some space with the good front foot ball our forwards are providing.

    6. We need to ditch our god awful, kicking game. Specifically shitty box kicks, or chip kicks.

    7. Pick D Mac at 10, then pick the backs around him that will make the most of his excellent passing game.

    All doable, but will Razor open his eyes to what we can all see.

    1 Reply Last reply
    7
  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    replied to His Bobness last edited by
    #1198

    @His-Bobness Yes - Roigard can hopefully make a difference - even Hotham and Ratima at his best. In fact, I agree with those whgo said Christie was one of our best in this test - but, he's more glue guy than game-breaker - and I think we've got too many glue guys.

    Roigard should help. If Clarke can recapture his form from last year, he will. Tangitau looks very promising.

    Throwing babies out with bathwater at this point won't be helpful, though. A couple of subtle changes.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • R Offline
    R Offline
    reprobate
    replied to nostrildamus last edited by
    #1199

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @reprobate said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    Love is athletic, but he's little.

    If hurricane stats are realistic, he's 1.84 m, 92kg when last weighed.

    Hurricanes: Player

    Bigger than DMac, taller than Dan Carter, and probably about the same weight now. He isn't a towering fullback but he's not that little.

    Yes, he compares fine in size to people playing 10 - where he should play too.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    replied to Nepia last edited by
    #1200

    @Nepia I wasn't really meaning to dismiss him - but, he';s a mediocre talent in terms of overall AB wings - and he was basically a kid at that world cup.

    As I recall, Wright was supposed to play fullback.

    And then like a few other HB greats he fucked off to league! 🙂

    M 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • D Offline
    D Offline
    DaGrubster
    replied to nzzp last edited by
    #1201

    @nzzp said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @Chris said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    I can only think he is the person setting this way of playing.

    This is what you said that's probably not exactly what you intended. It reads like you are sheeting home responsibility to Smith.

    No doubt Wayne may be pushing for a fast brand of rugby, but he should not be setting the direction of the team.
    That must come from Razor and his assistants.

    It would be incredibly weak of the AN head coach to not set out the way his teams play.

    I don't think Smith has that amount of power

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • M Offline
    M Offline
    mohikamo
    replied to Chris B. last edited by
    #1202

    @Chris-B

    Timu was much more of a threat with ball in hand than wright. Wright was a great finisher; but Kirwan and Inga were all round threats.
    If you played Fox, why would you have Crowley at the back; Timu Kirwan Innes Inga as outsides - way more threatening. Especially if you've got Fox and who? inside who are zero threat to run the ball.
    Yeah would have been easy for Poidevin.
    I think your memory is no good - Fox breaking the line! I sure as hell cant remember ever seeing that!
    Search for that and even AI will just give you an lol!

    Chris B.C 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • D Offline
    D Offline
    DaGrubster
    replied to Chris B. last edited by
    #1203

    @Chris-B said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    Had a little re-watch this evening. A few things that spring to mind.

    We made far too many largely unforced errors. Early on dropping cold a couple of catchable passes, Jordie's skewed chip, giving away dumb penalties and towards the end a couple of lineout malfunctions. You could easily find ten errors from poor skills or foolishness that stopped momentum cold.

    Three yellow cards to nil - again handing momentum to Argentina - and points. A killer, but still not terminal even for this side - though Sevu's probably gets close.

    Kicking. The Argentine's seemed to largely be kicking with momentum behind them - so their kicks were attacking kicks, while most of ours were defensive. They mainly kicked off shorter than we did and got arms up into the receptions to contest (and win), while we mainly kicked off deeper. Similarly, with box kicks - especially later in th game - almost all of theirs were contestible and they were rolling the dice by getting an arm up to disrupt the catcher - sometimes knocking on, but other times causing us to spill the ball loose. Ours were mainly too deep to contest. Sometimes to touch. Maybe we were backing our lineout?

    These things are fixable.

    What I wonder about our backline, though is - do we have to go back to the lesson of RWC 1991.

    That day, we fielded Bachop, Fox, Timu, McCahill, Innes, Kirwan and Crowley.

    Afterwards Simon Poidevin (the Wallaby openside) said the game was pretty easy for him because he knew neither Fox nor McCahill would run - so he just headed straight for Innes. Crowley also wasn't much of an offensive threat and Timu a bit mediocre. So Innes and Kirwan - can't remember if Bachop ran or not. Late in the game Foxy dummied and broke clear, but the cover mopped him up because he had no real pace.

    The lesson was - almost everyone in your backline needs to offer offensive threat. Otherwise it's too easy to mark the threats and shut them down. We need size, speed, outrageous skills.

    When you're running around with Christie, Beaudy, Rieko, Jordie, Billy, Sevu and Will - who will, apart from Will?

    It's pretty bland offensively.

    DMac had the backline playing pretty well last ywar for the most part.

    He also made far more line breaks than any player in world rugby and was named at 10 in the world xv.

    Now our backline has ground to a halt.

    1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    replied to mohikamo last edited by
    #1204

    @mohikamo I have a completely precise memory of Fox breaking clear in that match. It was one of the few moments that gave us hope that we might win - and reinforced Poidevin's comment.

    They ignored him, so there was space to run. He dummied and ran 25 metres - but the break was easily contained.

    Nepia is somewhat correct as I recall - the post-match analyisis was that picking Crowley was a disaster (they called him up from outside the squad, I think) - we should have put Timu at the back and Inga on the wing - for the reasons I've outline above.

    I daresay Grizz wanted to, but Harty countermanded him! 🙂

    gt12G 1 Reply Last reply
    0

All Blacks v Argentina II
Rugby Matches
allblacksargentina
  • Login

  • Don't have an account? Register

  • Login or register to search.
  • First post
    Last post
0
  • Categories
  • Login

  • Don't have an account? Register

  • Login or register to search.