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Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2

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Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2
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  • B Offline
    B Offline
    brodean
    replied to reprobate last edited by
    #1248

    @reprobate said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @brodean said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @reprobate said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @booboo said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

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

    So again, upright and driving up? Ball or no ball he put himself into that position.

    He wasn't driving up at all.

    I thought that initially but on some angles it looks like he's driving up and into it.

    Look at about 9s here on the second angle.

    https://www.reddit.com/r/rugbyunion/comments/1olyafz/tadhg_beirne_yellow_upgraded_to_red_card/

    In the second angle his leading leg goes from bent to fully extended upwards on contact which is not a good look because his full bodyweight is leading into it when he connects.

    To me, he's just taken a step, which I guess means his trajectory is marginally upwards? The 2nd angle is from below which makes it look worse, just as the first angle is from above and it doesn't look like that at all.
    I don't think you can watch it at full speed and tell me that he's deliberately driving up - he's genuinely surprised by the ball being thrown forward to BB in a ridiculous position.

    Angus Ta'avao was probably genuinely surprised too when he got smashed in the face and knocked out followed by a red card.

    R 1 Reply Last reply
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  • R Offline
    R Offline
    reprobate
    replied to brodean last edited by
    #1249

    @brodean said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @reprobate said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @brodean said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @reprobate said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @booboo said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

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

    So again, upright and driving up? Ball or no ball he put himself into that position.

    He wasn't driving up at all.

    I thought that initially but on some angles it looks like he's driving up and into it.

    Look at about 9s here on the second angle.

    https://www.reddit.com/r/rugbyunion/comments/1olyafz/tadhg_beirne_yellow_upgraded_to_red_card/

    In the second angle his leading leg goes from bent to fully extended upwards on contact which is not a good look because his full bodyweight is leading into it when he connects.

    To me, he's just taken a step, which I guess means his trajectory is marginally upwards? The 2nd angle is from below which makes it look worse, just as the first angle is from above and it doesn't look like that at all.
    I don't think you can watch it at full speed and tell me that he's deliberately driving up - he's genuinely surprised by the ball being thrown forward to BB in a ridiculous position.

    Angus Ta'avao was probably genuinely surprised too when he got smashed in the face and knocked out followed by a red card.

    Absolutely, and again in that instance I think the game is worse for that being a red card.

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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to Jet last edited by
    #1250

    @Jet said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @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.

    Sheehan asked.

    My bad, yes Sheehan

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • nostrildamusN Online
    nostrildamusN Online
    nostrildamus
    replied to Jet last edited by
    #1251

    @Jet said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    Im already fucking disgusted with next Saturdays performance against Scotland.

    Well at least you are consistent Dr Gloom.
    And to think we actually won the last game!

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • H Offline
    H Offline
    hikastags
    wrote last edited by
    #1252

    Leicester needs to be starting every game in the midfield through to 2027.

    The opposition spam the blitz D with huge success against us since Fozzie took over. Think it's because we moved to more playmakers in the midfield instead of proper ball-carriers. It's much harder to use blitz D when you have a tank charging at you instead of a lanky Jordie B, ALB, Rieko, Proctor coming at you.

    Big ball-carrying backs with skill are part of NZs DNA... and we've moved from it to our own detriment. It'll straighten our attack, hesitate the defensive line, give our forwards extra time to clean, and take a ton of pressure off the playmakers.

    taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
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  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to mohikamo last edited by
    #1253

    @mohikamo said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @Bones said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @MiketheSnow Gareth really is struggling desparately to find any sort of angle on this one.

    I feel misquoted.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to booboo last edited by
    #1254

    @booboo said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    Ball or no ball he put himself into that position.

    This! I go against the grain on the "accidental so ok" bollocks.

    As Joey Swoll says, you need to do better.

    9 times out of 10, foul play is simply players putting themselves in a poor position and/or trying to do something they shouldn't, being reckless and sometimes wilfully ignorant. This is the same argument that gives players a free pass to wipe out players in the air with "but sir, he was only watching the ball the whole time". Yeah numpty, that's the fucking issue.

    Be aware, act consciously, take responsibility. These are well paid professional players and coaches.

    R 1 Reply Last reply
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  • R Offline
    R Offline
    reprobate
    replied to Bones last edited by
    #1255

    @Bones said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @booboo said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    Ball or no ball he put himself into that position.

    This! I go against the grain on the "accidental so ok" bollocks.

    As Joey Swoll says, you need to do better.

    9 times out of 10, foul play is simply players putting themselves in a poor position and/or trying to do something they shouldn't, being reckless and sometimes wilfully ignorant. This is the same argument that gives players a free pass to wipe out players in the air with "but sir, he was only watching the ball the whole time". Yeah numpty, that's the fucking issue.

    Be aware, act consciously, take responsibility. These are well paid professional players and coaches.

    I agree with this sentiment most of the time when a tackler doesn't get low (and all the time when the tackler has time to get low), but in this instance he had no time and wasn't even looking to tackle - I get you don't think that makes a difference, but to me it kinda does. It's not realistic for the game to be played by 15 blokes crouching, and he's being penalised for a dangerous tackle when he hasn't actually even attempted a tackle. Yes I see the argument that he's part of the defensive line so of course he's there to make a tackle - but in practical terms I think he's just taking the space to prevent anyone trying to go through there - which is why neither he or BB expected the pass.
    That's why the argument from the Irish about the pass being forward - because at that point BB wasn't a realistic recipient, so the tackler wasn't prepared. It's a shit argument of course, because it's immaterial to the current interpretations, but personally I do see it as mitigating and I'd expect it to get him off any further sanctions

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
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  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to reprobate last edited by
    #1256

    @reprobate you can't see the fault in that argument I take it?

    Right, so he's lined up in defence, advanced then had time to note the pass would be forward so adjusted in that very short amount of time to not attempt a tackle, but brace himself to a shoulder charge with decent force and a tucked elbow.

    So he was either prepared to make a tackle and readjusted in the time we're saying people can't make decisions, or he was reckless and wasn't prepared to make a legal tackle.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to hikastags last edited by
    #1257

    @hikastags although when we had Reiko at his peak pace, we tried to use him as the crash runner, same as when we had Laumape (who i wasn't a fan of) we didnt pick him but asked Goodhue to fill that role.

    Certainly not getting the best players in the right positions and then utilising thier skillset, instead, getting best player in, and change thier game to suit the gameplan, to the detriment of the players skillset.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    MacDazzler
    wrote last edited by
    #1258

    Ireland are definitely heading on the downslide with a aging roster and uncertainty at 10.

    On the last weekend's game, Faingaanuku was brilliant and thought he was one of our best along with De Groot and Clarke.

    I've got the feeling Scotland might be a tougher challenge than what Ireland was.

    ACT CrusaderA 1 Reply Last reply
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  • MaussM Offline
    MaussM Offline
    Mauss
    replied to reprobate last edited by
    #1259

    @reprobate said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @Mauss re the loose forward comparison vs Ireland - the red card has to make a big difference there. The Irish were buggered late in the game, they had to make a lot of tackles as you point out. Also the fact that it was Beirne, who is an extra loose forward for them, and one of their best.
    Sititi came on and dominated late - looks like if you take out his carry metres, the Irish had more? So are we really doing the right thing with our starting loosies?

    That, to me, just comes across as letting the Irish loose forwards off the hook rather easily. Aren’t Jack Conan and Josh Van der Flier both 50-cappers while also being British and Irish Lions? They should be able to lift for 20 minutes with Beirne off the field, after which he could be replaced. That’s not even mentioning another 50-capper on the bench in Caelan Doris.

    Again, my intention wasn't to claim that the AB back row is particularly settled: blindside remains an issue while Savea’s eclectic positioning makes any loose forward combination a complex exercise. But, for now at least, there are a few things which are working, and that’s including Sititi’s performances off the bench. After a difficult start it would’ve been easy for a player like Sititi to spiral so the fact that he’s once again putting in performances – even in shorter bursts – is good to see.

    It's far from perfect but it's also not quite a disaster either.

    R 1 Reply Last reply
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  • D Offline
    D Offline
    DaGrubster
    replied to MiketheSnow last edited by
    #1260

    @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @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.

    It also certainly wasnt a forward pass. Was Beirne offside?

    BonesB R 2 Replies Last reply
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  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to DaGrubster last edited by
    #1261

    @DaGrubster said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @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.

    It also certainly wasnt a forward pass. Was Beirne offside?

    I'm not sure on the logic there?

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • Victor MeldrewV Offline
    Victor MeldrewV Offline
    Victor Meldrew
    replied to No Quarter last edited by
    #1262

    @No-Quarter

    The big plus is we kept our cool when under pressure. That's been a bit wayward in some games recently but looks to heading back in the right direction. Not quite up to the standard of the 2023 RWC KO stage, but getting there.

    TimT 1 Reply Last reply
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  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    replied to Victor Meldrew last edited by
    #1263

    @Victor-Meldrew said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    The big plus is we kept our cool when under pressure.

    Roigard's presence seems to help there.

    Victor MeldrewV 1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • Victor MeldrewV Offline
    Victor MeldrewV Offline
    Victor Meldrew
    replied to Tim last edited by
    #1264

    @Tim said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    @Victor-Meldrew said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    The big plus is we kept our cool when under pressure.

    Roigard's presence seems to help there.

    He helps (as does Jordie) but it's more a team, cultural thing.

    Also think Ardie as captain helped on Saturday

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • D Offline
    D Offline
    Dodge
    wrote last edited by
    #1265

    didn't see it live, don't have a dog in this fight, but for me re the red card, it certainly was a few years ago, ref teams much quicker to apply mitigation these days. I'm not as familiar with how things are reffed under the 20 min red card.

    IMO he braced for impact rather than tucked and drove a shoulder, to that end i'm a bit surprised in the current game that he wasn't seen as passive in the contact as he absorbed the impact and went backwards as much as JB did. I've no real issue with it given recent years but am surprised at the vigor with which are some are claiming its the clearest red you'll see, think could easily have stayed yellow.

    I blame world rugby for this lack of clarity, before the last world cup, and in some games in it (particularly in the early rounds) the interpretations were way stricter and mitigations far less regularly applied than we saw in later stages and since.

    BonesB taniwharugbyT 2 Replies Last reply
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  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to Dodge last edited by
    #1266

    @Dodge you made me watch it again, as we apparently have different versions of backwards. Can't say it looks the same to me.

    What is most apparent though is how laughable it is to suggest the guy one out from the ruck isn't expecting to make a tackle when the halfback picks and drifts to his side.

    https://www.reddit.com/r/rugbyunion/s/B76agEozbj

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • D Offline
    D Offline
    Dodge
    wrote last edited by
    #1267

    genuine question - are you saying that in the first shot in that clip you don't see Beirne bounce backwards after the contact? The clip you posted shows pretty clearly from the first angle that Beirne takes three steps back immediately after the contact takes place, it actually also shows that BB actually keeps travelling forwards and spins slightly to the side line. I would argue that's passive in contact, which these days usually provides enough mitigation.

    I understand it was upgraded to a 20 min red because of the level of danger, which with a shoulder to the head I can follow the logic, it just seems to fly slightly in the face of what I've seen more recently. Just my twopenneth

    BonesB nostrildamusN 2 Replies Last reply
    2

Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2
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