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Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2

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Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2
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  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    wrote last edited by
    #1167

    Better connection between carriers and cleaners in 2nd half, and Ireland were gassed by 60 due to the red card.

    Subs made a difference. Hopefully Williams is fully match fit soon. Would be great to have him on for 50 or 60 mins.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    wrote last edited by
    #1168

    Aki should have retired, and the Irish starting first 5 was gash.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • SmutsS Offline
    SmutsS Offline
    Smuts
    replied to Bones last edited by
    #1169

    @Bones our long-suffering Welsh mate’s head was fair bitten off for a pretty middle of the road take on the red.

    And that was from normally sensible handles. First time in ages that I’ve chosen not to participate in a thread because I didn’t want to deal with the whinging and abuse that looked sure to follow.

    But maybe I was missing some subtle irony.

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • E Offline
    E Offline
    ExiledHalfback
    wrote last edited by ExiledHalfback
    #1170

    For Saveas try, did I see De Groot skip onto the ball, draw a player and then fire a pass out to that invisible blindside?

    De Groot at 10 for the next game.

    I thought the ABs won the set piece battle. Line out could have been better with a couple of wayward throws but for the most past I thought it was good.

    I thought the red was 100% deserved and tbh I'm disappointed it wasn't for the whole game. We drew a series, lost a series and a RWC final off the back of red cards. When it's our turn to capitalise we get 20 minutes. Great.

    TimT 1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    replied to ExiledHalfback last edited by
    #1171

    @ExiledHalfback said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    I thought the red was 100% deserved and tbh I'm disappointed it wasn't for the whole game. We drew a series, lost a series and a RWC final off the back of red cards. When it's our turn to capitalise we get 20 minutes. Great.

    It was certainly clear that there were zero mitigating factors. He went in completely upright and straight on to the ball carrier, there was no change of direction, no dip, and direct contact with the head. You could argue the force maybe, but we have been on the receiving end of much worse. Was not in the mood for NH posters to suddenly have a completely different approach to high tackle red cards ...

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to Smuts last edited by Bones
    #1172

    @Smuts said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @Bones our long-suffering Welsh mate’s head was fair bitten off for a pretty middle of the road take on the red.

    And that was from normally sensible handles. First time in ages that I’ve chosen not to participate in a thread because I didn’t want to deal with the whinging and abuse that looked sure to follow.

    But maybe I was missing some subtle irony.

    As intimated by @Tim, said chap is a big proponent against foul play, often supported by yours truly. For there to be a complete about face was a very notable instance in a seemingly recent trend against black.

    MiketheSnowM 1 Reply Last reply
    4
  • MaussM Offline
    MaussM Offline
    Mauss
    replied to Tim last edited by
    #1173

    @Tim said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    Rewatched the 1st half. We really get very little out of our loose forwards. Despite being a man up for 20 mins, they were hardly hitting rucks. Let alone making aggressive tackles. It looks like Tupaea, Faingaʻanuku, and even Clarke had better breakdown technique. Savea is absolutely not a 7.

    The Savea-at-openside discussion is interesting. To be honest, I don’t think it makes a whole lot of difference what number Savea is wearing on his back, he pretty much plays his game whether he’s wearing 7 or 8 (or 6 or 12...). If you’d look at the table here, who’d you reckon the openside would be and who’d be the 8?

    396fbc4c-a2c6-4462-b73c-8d964519d2cd-image.png
    Guess the player: carries, post-contact metres, tackles completed, attacking rucks attended, defensive rucks attended and turnovers won

    Player B has all the hallmarks of your classic number 8: double figures in carries and tackles, significant post-contact metres and multiple defenders beaten. Player A, on the other hand, fits more the profile of an openside: more rucks attended than carries, with less impact made per carry.

    In case you’re still wondering: these are the numbers of Savea and Lakai against the Irish in Chicago, with Savea being player B and Lakai being player A. So while Savea is ‘technically’ wearing the openside-jersey, he is very much playing like a 7/8-hybrid right now (his 17 rucks attended and 2 pilfers being a solid contribution at the breakdown, as well).

    And let me get ahead of critiques of Lakai’s “low numbers”: Lakai was effectively acting as the defensive ‘key’ throughout the game, connecting the ruck defence with the defensive line as third defender out from the ruck, shutting down opposition backline moves (his charge down of Gibson-Park is a good example of this, as defensive work that doesn’t show up on the stat sheet). As a result, he was continuously all over the pitch, making reads and shutting down potential gaps in the line. It’s typically one of the roles given to a mobile openside.

    So why the numbers?
    So why not just put Lakai in the openside-jersey and Savea in the number 8? This is just my own speculation but if I were to hazard a guess, it’s an attempt at turning both Savea and Lakai into more complete players. The ABs are trying to implement a very fluid structure, where everyone can fill into another’s role, whether it’s as a cleaner, as a carrier or as a playmaker (the Savea-try, with de Groot and Lord in the attacking line being a good example of this).

    Savea, if put at 8, does have a tendency to abandon some of his other responsibilities. By putting him at openside, you could argue that he’s forced to play closer to the breakdown, balancing out his natural tendency to drift to the edge.

    Funnily enough, Lakai has the opposite tendency: when playing at openside, the Hurricanes loose forward can become too focused on his support role, foregoing his own carrying ability. He's often been rather anonymous when playing at 7 for the Hurricanes, unable to complement his openside-role with his excellent carrying ability. By putting him at 8, he’s being forced to balance the two (Sidenote: Papali’i has a similar issue, where he can find it difficult to involve himself beyond the team's structures; his low contribution of 3 carries for the AB XV against the Barbarians would be another example of this).

    Those are just my own observations and speculations on why Savea and Lakai are wearing their current jersey numbers, I could be totally off. But it (kind of) makes sense to me. Either way, in reality, Savea is certainly fulfilling the role of a number 8.

    And finally, the loose forwards as a whole
    I’ll agree that the AB loose forward-mix is a work in progress but I don’t agree with this idea that they’re consistently being outplayed. Against Ireland, the AB loose forward group thoroughly outplayed their counterparts on attack, carrying more, making more metres, beating more defenders, and winning the turnover battle.

    0c1976e4-293d-480e-aa97-ca20e2606c25-image.png
    Irish and AB loose forward involvements: carries, post-contact metres, defenders beaten, offloads, turnovers won/lost, tackles completed/missed, and dominant tackling

    It is only on the defensive side that the Irish loose forwards were more involved, putting in double the tackles while only missing two. But that is also the result of the Irish inability to win the possession-battle, especially in the 2nd half. They were unable to force the ABs into turnovers, allowing the latter to build rucks and pressure in their own half.

    This ties in with another often-heard claim about the AB loose forwards losing the breakdown battle. Throughout the Rugby Championship and now this Test against Ireland, the ABs have typically come out on top when it comes to turnovers won (+1.3 on average), lost (-3.3 on average) and rucks lost (-0.6).

    76f882a2-25df-4817-b598-078990744467-image.png
    Possession and breakdown stats: turnovers won, turnovers lost, rucks won, and rucks lost

    That means that the ABs win the ball more often, lose it less than their opponents and lose less rucks than their opponents on average.

    By far the biggest stumbling block throughout the Rugby Championship is that the ABs have not built enough rucks to accumulate pressure on their opponents. They’ve averaged around 10 rucks less formed than their opponents, which has given them insufficient opportunities to score. That means that they’ve kicked away too much possession that they haven’t been able to regather. This doesn't mean that the ABs have to kick less; it simply means that they have to kick better.

    The balance was better against the Irish, with 23 more rucks formed than their opponent. The ball-carrying and -retention from the bench is a huge factor in this regard as well, with Sititi (8 carries, 45 post-contact metres), Taukei’aho (3 carries, 14 post-contact metres) and McKenzie (8 passes, no kicks) providing lots of impetus in this regard. It’s a template that Robertson will want to expand on during the tour. But that means keeping the scores close for the first 60 minutes, before overwhelming your opponent in the final quarter through set piece- and carrying-dominance.

    The loose forward-duo of Savea and Lakai - with their breakdown disruption (8 defensive rucks attended) and defensive mobility (18 tackles with zero misses) - seem set to continue in this regard.

    TimT M B R 5 Replies Last reply
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  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    replied to Mauss last edited by
    #1174

    @Mauss Are stats available for speed of ruck ball?

    MaussM 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    replied to Mauss last edited by
    #1175

    @Mauss said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    That means that they’ve kicked away too much possession that they haven’t been able to regather. This doesn't mean that the ABs have to kick less; it simply means that they have to kick better.

    One comment here, I would imagine that the quality of ruck ball can help determine the quality of kicking. If you're going nowhere and have slow recycling, then defense has a lot more time and freedom to reset.

    MaussM 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • MaussM Offline
    MaussM Offline
    Mauss
    replied to Tim last edited by
    #1176

    @Tim said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @Mauss Are stats available for speed of ruck ball?

    Yep, at the match-page on RugbyPass:

    Ireland vs New Zealand | New Zealand vs Ireland | Internationals Live

    Ireland vs New Zealand | New Zealand vs Ireland | Internationals Live

    Looking for Ireland vs New Zealand? We got you covered. We have the most up to date scores, game stats & results here.

    You can find it via the ‘Latest’ header (rather than stats), near the bottom of the page. These are the numbers for the Irish Test:

    d7b4a5b7-2489-46eb-b420-99611382619a-image.png

    TimT 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    replied to Mauss last edited by
    #1177

    @Mauss Cheers!

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • MaussM Offline
    MaussM Offline
    Mauss
    replied to Tim last edited by Mauss
    #1178

    @Tim said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    One comment here, I would imagine that the quality of ruck ball can help determine the quality of kicking. If you're going nowhere and have slow recycling, then defense has a lot more time and freedom to reset.

    I'd agree with that, although the ability to kick (effectively) under pressure is a very valuable trait at Test level.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • M Offline
    M Offline
    mohikamo
    replied to Mauss last edited by
    #1179

    @Mauss said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    This doesn't mean that the ABs have to kick less; it simply means that they have to kick better.

    A vicious circle.
    If you kick better, you will end up kicking less.
    And vice versa, if you do a shit kick, you'll quickly be back where you started from, and have to kick again.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to Bones last edited by
    #1180

    @Bones said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @Smuts said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @Bones our long-suffering Welsh mate’s head was fair bitten off for a pretty middle of the road take on the red.

    And that was from normally sensible handles. First time in ages that I’ve chosen not to participate in a thread because I didn’t want to deal with the whinging and abuse that looked sure to follow.

    But maybe I was missing some subtle irony.

    As intimated by @Tim, said chap is a big proponent against foul play, often supported by yours truly. For there to be a complete about face was a very notable instance in a seemingly recent trend against black.

    There wasn’t an about face

    I said it was a penalty worthy of a YC

    The mitigation was it was a forward pass which neither BB nor Beirne were expecting to come

    There was head contact

    It was upgraded to a RC

    As long as all these incidents are reffed the same way I have no problem with it

    BonesB TimT 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • P Offline
    P Offline
    pakman
    replied to nostrildamus last edited by pakman
    #1181

    @nostrildamus said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @ACT-Crusader said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @Frank said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    Our scrum is strong against everyone bar the Boks. Unless we come up with a strategy to negate Wilco Louw, they'll win scrum penalties at will.

    Lomax and EDG struggled against the Bok scrum, but things were far better with Newell on.

    I'm not convinced 2025 Lomax is as good as 2024 Lomax, whether injury, fitness, or confidence, something has changed.

    That something is injury and lack of match fitness. And Angus Gardner not pinging Boks LH for going unto knee.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • E Offline
    E Offline
    ExiledHalfback
    replied to antipodean last edited by
    #1182

    @antipodean Ireland are a team which intentionally go out and hunt cards.

    They can absolutely 100% fully and utterly get f**ked.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to MiketheSnow last edited by
    #1183

    @MiketheSnow fingers crossed all deliberate shoulders to the head are reffed the same way. Special type of player that has the wherewithal to tuck the elbow when in the D line but not expect to tackle.

    1 Reply Last reply
    6
  • D Offline
    D Offline
    delicatessen
    replied to Chris B. last edited by
    #1184

    @Chris-B said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @sparky said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @Chris-B In the 2008 Grand Slam tour, the All Blacks only conceded 24 points and not a single try.

    Of course, that 2008 team had the fabulous Crusaders McCaw and Carter wearing the 7 and 10 jerseys, while this outfit has to make do with the ex-Hurricanes Savea and Barrett.

    I presume that "absolutely, positively" slogan is long gone from the capital? 🙂

    Finally we've found the answer. Tom Christie and Mo'unga, obviously.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    replied to MiketheSnow last edited by
    #1185

    @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    The mitigation was it was a forward pass

    That is a unique excuse. No one else saw it, nor did would it have impacted the tackle situation.

    Come on ...

    MiketheSnowM 1 Reply Last reply
    7
  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to Tim last edited by
    #1186

    @Tim said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    The mitigation was it was a forward pass

    That is a unique excuse. No one else saw it, nor did would it have impacted the tackle situation.

    Come on ...

    Kelleher asked the ref to look at the pass. Ref didn't.

    Beirne wasn't set up to tackle. He was set up to brace for impact from a dummy runner.

    Then it changed in an instant and he made head contact in the collision.

    It certainly wasn't a tackle.

    canefanC taniwharugbyT BonesB J boobooB 6 Replies Last reply
    1

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