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All Blacks vs. B&I Lions test #1

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Rugby Matches
allblacksbritishlions
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  • No QuarterN Offline
    No QuarterN Offline
    No Quarter
    wrote on last edited by
    #925

    It's not so much that our players are fitter, it's that they make better decisions when they are tired. They've talked at length about keeping a clear mind when the lungs are burning and the body is aching at the back end of the game. It's all about the top two inches, which I'm sure factors into the equation when players we like at Super level don't get selected for the ABs.

    taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • KiwiMurphK Online
      KiwiMurphK Online
      KiwiMurph
      wrote on last edited by
      #926

      I also think a huge part of it comes down to how the ABs prepare and train during the week.

      The ABs harp on and on about how the weekend is a result of the work done during the week.

      I heard Hansen after the game reference the intense training they had on Thursday, which sounded like an opposed session conducted at test intensity.

      Therefore as the ABs train at this intensity and aim their whole weak to peak for game day, so when the intensity occurs on gameday - they expect it/can go with it.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • No QuarterN No Quarter

        It's not so much that our players are fitter, it's that they make better decisions when they are tired. They've talked at length about keeping a clear mind when the lungs are burning and the body is aching at the back end of the game. It's all about the top two inches, which I'm sure factors into the equation when players we like at Super level don't get selected for the ABs.

        taniwharugbyT Offline
        taniwharugbyT Offline
        taniwharugby
        wrote on last edited by taniwharugby
        #927

        @No-Quarter although being fitter helps with your ability to make better decisions while fatigued, can be the smartest person in the world, but if you aint getting the blood and oxygen round the body to the brain, you will make poor decisions.

        @KiwiMurph yeah I think it's smarter training, thnk they alluded to it in the RWC as well where the sessions varied form day to day in intensity, allowing the right amount of time to recover adequately to ensure at peak for game day.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • taniwharugbyT taniwharugby

          It's started for round 2...

          http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby/international/94064916/lions-tour-hamilton-star-jack-nowell-switches-to-fullback-to-face-hurricanes-on-tuesday

          P Offline
          P Offline
          PecoTrain
          wrote on last edited by
          #928

          @taniwharugby

          I think Gatland's just being consistent.

          After the near death of BoD and all his family during the last Lions tour, pointing out the dangers of Te'os tackle was important.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • taniwharugbyT Offline
            taniwharugbyT Offline
            taniwharugby
            wrote on last edited by
            #929

            Sumos take on the game

            https://www.rugbypass.com/article/difference-blacks-lions-one-word

            1 Reply Last reply
            3
            • JCJ JC

              @Crucial said in All Blacks vs. B&I Lions test #1:

              Edit: credit where it is due to a good article by Stuart Barnes. If anyone has cut and paste abilities for the Times others here may wish to read it

              Barnes's column:
              "The Lions are on the horns of a dilemma. If they play with as much attacking fluency as they did for much of yesterday’s match they open the way for New Zealand to cut them to pieces. If they strip back their game and attempt to take all tempo out of the match they will be criticised on all sides, unless they win. And the chances of that are pretty remote. Remote but not out of the question.

              For all the brave talk in defeat, for all the majesty of what was one of the great Test match tries, the Lions are doomed if they see that score as the template for how to win in Wellington. That try was exceptional. British and Irish rugby is not. It may well be that last night was as good as it gets in attack.

              There is constant talk of chances being created, not finished. It echoes through the press conferences of this tour. The failure is so repetitive because it takes a higher quality player to turn most chances into tries. Lions make breaks but, most of the time, the support isn’t close enough, the final pass isn’t good enough.

              When the Lions get turned over my eyes immediately scan the New Zealanders ready to counterattack. It makes a match into a magnificent spectacle as much of yesterday’s game was. It is also a style of rugby with only one possible ­outcome.

              The Lions say they can fix the fault lines from Auckland. The tries not being finished is not easy to fix. Otherwise the squad would have fixed them three weeks ago. Another awful problem that keeps popping up is the lack of discipline and the number of errors. “Discipline wasn’t where it was at,” said Peter O’Mahony. “Discipline and errors cost us,” said Jonathan Davies. The Lions talk about these issues. They do not resolve them. When they play at a pace to which they are accustomed, the penalty count drops to acceptably low levels. However, when the game spins out of control, as it did against the Blues, Highlanders and again yesterday, the penalty count rises into the teens. They haven’t worked out (or maybe acknowledged) that the quicker the tempo of the game, the more mistakes — penalties and errors alike — are made. Things are happening at a level outside their comfort zone. This is when the fixable (yet still unfixed) penalties and errors are made.

              The breakdown has been an area of strength, especially against the Crusaders and Maori, where the Lions pack dictated the pace of the game. Not last night, not against the All Blacks. Suddenly the players were puffing, oxygen levels low as they struggled to think straight at the point of contact. New Zealanders, playing at a more familiar lick, bossed the breakdown.

              If you lose the breakdown against the All Blacks you lose the match. So it transpired. The stark reality is that no matter how much the Lions finishing, discipline, error count and breakdown improves, only a quantum leap will see them beat a home team happy with a fast game. New Zealand too will improve.

              The more committed the attacking intent, the greater the opportunities available for each side. There was something noble about the Lions performance, something truly admirable, but a winning formula it was not. I can envisage a scenario where the Lions play even faster and better and score, say, four tries instead of two. If that happens the All Blacks will probably double their own tally and score six. 60-30 to New Zealand.

              The greater the ambition the more the outcome is settled by players and not strategy. Look through the two squads and it is hard not to notice the marked superiority of the Kiwis. Man for man they are more skilled; which is why they tend to take their chances and we Europeans do not. The inability not to link missed opportunities with skill deficits is truly mind-boggling but we are intent on pretending New Zealand are not that much better than the rest of us when the results scream otherwise, year after year.

              Play the same game and go down in flames. Play a game with more box kicking, as we saw in the first 30 minutes in Auckland, more kick, more chase — all done well of course — and they might box the Blacks in, in the right parts of the field. Close enough to the line to turn last night’s many excellent line breaks into tries.

              An ugly plan will win no friends outside the UK and Ireland. Maybe a few within would prefer their rugby as wondrous as the one try to which we were treated at Eden Park. Such a game will lead to penalties and errors, which ends in defeat. It has happened three times already this tour. Bet your last Kiwi dollar that New Zealand will be praising the Lions attacking game and luring them towards the rocks."

              antipodeanA Offline
              antipodeanA Offline
              antipodean
              wrote on last edited by
              #930

              @JC quoted Barnes in All Blacks vs. B&I Lions test #1:

              Bet your last Kiwi dollar that New Zealand will be praising the Lions attacking game and luring them towards the rocks.

              He might be horrible to listen to, but his analysis here is spot on.

              An attacking game is by its nature open and fast, which is the last thing the Lions should do. What they'll be acutely aware of now, is handing over possession by box kicks is a recipe for disaster.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • FrankF Frank

                I wish they'd bought Nanai into the squad instead of McKenzie.

                broughieB Offline
                broughieB Offline
                broughie
                wrote on last edited by
                #931

                @Frank Nanai has a bit to learn but I am not sure about McKenzie. Under pressure he did not perform well and he does well when he has some space which is less at an international level.

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • StargazerS Offline
                  StargazerS Offline
                  Stargazer
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #932

                  Now watching a replay. Within 9 minutes, there were three line-outs. The first one close to our try line after Dagg's magnificent try-saving tackle.

                  Just before the first line-out (AB throw), Peyper tells the Lions to "stop talking" and when they creep closer to the ABs lining up, he just shouts "move" with an arm movement away from the ABs to widen the gap.

                  Just before the 2nd throw (ABs), he points at one or more Lions players and tells them to "be quiet".

                  During the 3rd (Lions throw), he warns them there will be sanctions if they keep trying to close the gap with the lined-up ABs.

                  M taniwharugbyT 2 Replies Last reply
                  0
                  • StargazerS Stargazer

                    Now watching a replay. Within 9 minutes, there were three line-outs. The first one close to our try line after Dagg's magnificent try-saving tackle.

                    Just before the first line-out (AB throw), Peyper tells the Lions to "stop talking" and when they creep closer to the ABs lining up, he just shouts "move" with an arm movement away from the ABs to widen the gap.

                    Just before the 2nd throw (ABs), he points at one or more Lions players and tells them to "be quiet".

                    During the 3rd (Lions throw), he warns them there will be sanctions if they keep trying to close the gap with the lined-up ABs.

                    M Offline
                    M Offline
                    mooshld
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #933

                    @Stargazer said in All Blacks vs. B&I Lions test #1:

                    Now watching a replay. Within 9 minutes, there were three line-outs. The first one close to our try line after Dagg's magnificent try-saving tackle.

                    Just before the first line-out (AB throw), Peyper tells the Lions to "stop talking" and when they creep closer to the ABs lining up, he just shouts "move" with an arm movement away from the ABs to widen the gap.

                    Just before the 2nd throw (ABs), he points at one or more Lions players and tells them to "be quiet".

                    During the 3rd (Lions throw), he warns them there will be sanctions if they keep trying to close the gap with the lined-up ABs.

                    Yeah this was my point. He needed to start dishing free kicks. It was tedious.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • StargazerS Offline
                      StargazerS Offline
                      Stargazer
                      wrote on last edited by Stargazer
                      #934

                      Does anyone know whether Kaino's shoulder problem was at the left or right?

                      One thing I've noticed about our scrums is that when Kaino was still on the field, Kaino was positioned at the right side of the scrum and Cane at the left. After Kaino left the field, Cane moved back to the right side of the scrum, with Ardie on the left.

                      Is Kaino always pushing at right side of the scrum or is this a possible left-over from his shoulder injury?

                      Edit: not sure why, but now (54th min), Cane is back at the left side of the scrum with Ardie on the right.

                      boobooB 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • StargazerS Stargazer

                        Now watching a replay. Within 9 minutes, there were three line-outs. The first one close to our try line after Dagg's magnificent try-saving tackle.

                        Just before the first line-out (AB throw), Peyper tells the Lions to "stop talking" and when they creep closer to the ABs lining up, he just shouts "move" with an arm movement away from the ABs to widen the gap.

                        Just before the 2nd throw (ABs), he points at one or more Lions players and tells them to "be quiet".

                        During the 3rd (Lions throw), he warns them there will be sanctions if they keep trying to close the gap with the lined-up ABs.

                        taniwharugbyT Offline
                        taniwharugbyT Offline
                        taniwharugby
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #935

                        @Stargazer and yet he did little when either team closed the gap later in the game.

                        Didnt realise there was a streaker...although it was at the end of the game

                        https://www.facebook.com/calebrexmarshall/videos/10154426401840216/

                        BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
                        2
                        • StargazerS Stargazer

                          Does anyone know whether Kaino's shoulder problem was at the left or right?

                          One thing I've noticed about our scrums is that when Kaino was still on the field, Kaino was positioned at the right side of the scrum and Cane at the left. After Kaino left the field, Cane moved back to the right side of the scrum, with Ardie on the left.

                          Is Kaino always pushing at right side of the scrum or is this a possible left-over from his shoulder injury?

                          Edit: not sure why, but now (54th min), Cane is back at the left side of the scrum with Ardie on the right.

                          boobooB Online
                          boobooB Online
                          booboo
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #936

                          @Stargazer said in All Blacks vs. B&I Lions test #1:

                          Does anyone know whether Kaino's shoulder problem was at the left or right?

                          One thing I've noticed about our scrums is that when Kaino was still on the field, Kaino was positioned at the right side of the scrum and Cane at the left. After Kaino left the field, Cane moved back to the right side of the scrum, with Ardie on the left.

                          Is Kaino always pushing at right side of the scrum or is this a possible left-over from his shoulder injury?

                          Edit: not sure why, but now (54th min), Cane is back at the left side of the scrum with Ardie on the right.

                          Errr ... i thought they were open and blindside. Did they stick to a left/right? That's a bit odd.

                          Unless they were planning a backrow move, or they had identified a defensive pattern to be used against their attacking set up.

                          ?

                          mimicM 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • boobooB booboo

                            @Stargazer said in All Blacks vs. B&I Lions test #1:

                            Does anyone know whether Kaino's shoulder problem was at the left or right?

                            One thing I've noticed about our scrums is that when Kaino was still on the field, Kaino was positioned at the right side of the scrum and Cane at the left. After Kaino left the field, Cane moved back to the right side of the scrum, with Ardie on the left.

                            Is Kaino always pushing at right side of the scrum or is this a possible left-over from his shoulder injury?

                            Edit: not sure why, but now (54th min), Cane is back at the left side of the scrum with Ardie on the right.

                            Errr ... i thought they were open and blindside. Did they stick to a left/right? That's a bit odd.

                            Unless they were planning a backrow move, or they had identified a defensive pattern to be used against their attacking set up.

                            ?

                            mimicM Offline
                            mimicM Offline
                            mimic
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #937

                            @booboo said in All Blacks vs. B&I Lions test #1:

                            @Stargazer said in All Blacks vs. B&I Lions test #1:

                            Does anyone know whether Kaino's shoulder problem was at the left or right?

                            One thing I've noticed about our scrums is that when Kaino was still on the field, Kaino was positioned at the right side of the scrum and Cane at the left. After Kaino left the field, Cane moved back to the right side of the scrum, with Ardie on the left.

                            Is Kaino always pushing at right side of the scrum or is this a possible left-over from his shoulder injury?

                            Edit: not sure why, but now (54th min), Cane is back at the left side of the scrum with Ardie on the right.

                            Errr ... i thought they were open and blindside. Did they stick to a left/right? That's a bit odd.

                            Unless they were planning a backrow move, or they had identified a defensive pattern to be used against their attacking set up.

                            ?

                            Yeah, it's open and blindside. We don't have a left or right. However, if we're wrong, then that's good spotting there @Stargazer

                            StargazerS 1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • taniwharugbyT Offline
                              taniwharugbyT Offline
                              taniwharugby
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #938

                              I'd think it more likely what @booboo has suggested in that it was down to a specific pattern (defence) or move (offence) they were doing if they were doing more left/right, with Ardie being quicker or Cane being more Kaino-like in defence.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • mimicM mimic

                                @booboo said in All Blacks vs. B&I Lions test #1:

                                @Stargazer said in All Blacks vs. B&I Lions test #1:

                                Does anyone know whether Kaino's shoulder problem was at the left or right?

                                One thing I've noticed about our scrums is that when Kaino was still on the field, Kaino was positioned at the right side of the scrum and Cane at the left. After Kaino left the field, Cane moved back to the right side of the scrum, with Ardie on the left.

                                Is Kaino always pushing at right side of the scrum or is this a possible left-over from his shoulder injury?

                                Edit: not sure why, but now (54th min), Cane is back at the left side of the scrum with Ardie on the right.

                                Errr ... i thought they were open and blindside. Did they stick to a left/right? That's a bit odd.

                                Unless they were planning a backrow move, or they had identified a defensive pattern to be used against their attacking set up.

                                ?

                                Yeah, it's open and blindside. We don't have a left or right. However, if we're wrong, then that's good spotting there @Stargazer

                                StargazerS Offline
                                StargazerS Offline
                                Stargazer
                                wrote on last edited by Stargazer
                                #939

                                @mimic Probably not good spotting from me; I didn't look at any pattern/move as referred to by @taniwharugby, but noticed them switching sides. I just don't know anything about scrums. 😆

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • taniwharugbyT taniwharugby

                                  @Stargazer and yet he did little when either team closed the gap later in the game.

                                  Didnt realise there was a streaker...although it was at the end of the game

                                  https://www.facebook.com/calebrexmarshall/videos/10154426401840216/

                                  BonesB Online
                                  BonesB Online
                                  Bones
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #940

                                  @taniwharugby that was slick off the left to beat the first security guard.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • NepiaN Online
                                    NepiaN Online
                                    Nepia
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #941

                                    @taniwharugby Shit, that was a long boring build up to watch a naked guy .... Each to their own I guess. 😉

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    4
                                    • CrucialC Offline
                                      CrucialC Offline
                                      Crucial
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #942

                                      I'd rather get my jollies by watch this over and over.

                                      BBBR turns on the rockets and saves a situation. Give that man a cape and a movie deal.
                                      alt text

                                      SiamS 1 Reply Last reply
                                      2
                                      • CrucialC Offline
                                        CrucialC Offline
                                        Crucial
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #943

                                        And if that one didn't empty your tanks watch this.

                                        Dummy, step, fend, offload!
                                        alt text

                                        TordahT KruseK 2 Replies Last reply
                                        5
                                        • CrucialC Crucial

                                          I'd rather get my jollies by watch this over and over.

                                          BBBR turns on the rockets and saves a situation. Give that man a cape and a movie deal.
                                          alt text

                                          SiamS Offline
                                          SiamS Offline
                                          Siam
                                          wrote on last edited by Siam
                                          #944

                                          @Crucial Kaino and Cane collision there too - Kaino stays down (top vid)

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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