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All Blacks v Argentina II

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All Blacks v Argentina II
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  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    wrote on last edited by
    #1344

    Who was the player that scrambled across and shut Argies down when they spun it wide in their 22 and Jordan was a million miles away?

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamus
    replied to ACT Crusader on last edited by
    #1345

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @sparky said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax

    1. It was high.
    2. There was some head contact.

    How is a tackle in the ribs high? There’s head contact when the ball carrier hinges horizontal into contact. If that is yellow, then you have to PK every time a bloke drops his head running at the line.

    I think you have to look at the way the tackle is ruled these days to see your argument is false. Aumua was too upright, and there is head to head contact along with the impact from the tackle to the body. You can't get away with that most of the time, as a general rule this is nothing new for the last couple of years. Of course there have been the odd incident that has been let go (Kolisi on Ardie, Porter on BBBR) for reasons I can't understand.

    Completely disagree. He smacks him fair in the ribs. The head clash was purely accidental.

    That is rarely a consideration in rugby these days. In league it definitely comes into play more.

    This is all split second stuff, but Aumua entered that tackle on an angle that he needed to have a lower body height.

    The below is right before impact. His shoulder needed to be lower to get him in the ribs and then not run the risk of head contact.

    30c74d94-66fd-495f-bcda-33b179353968-image.jpeg

    Aumua is crouching and lower than the Argie.

    That’s because he’s Gimli…

    His lead shoulder is too high still hence why the head contact occurred.

    I can understand this and the automatic yellow but it also seems to me the Argie ran into him-what rule protects the tackler from unnecessary injury?

    canefanC ACT CrusaderA LatsToTheMaxL 3 Replies Last reply
    1
  • canefanC Online
    canefanC Online
    canefan
    replied to nostrildamus on last edited by
    #1346

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @sparky said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax

    1. It was high.
    2. There was some head contact.

    How is a tackle in the ribs high? There’s head contact when the ball carrier hinges horizontal into contact. If that is yellow, then you have to PK every time a bloke drops his head running at the line.

    I think you have to look at the way the tackle is ruled these days to see your argument is false. Aumua was too upright, and there is head to head contact along with the impact from the tackle to the body. You can't get away with that most of the time, as a general rule this is nothing new for the last couple of years. Of course there have been the odd incident that has been let go (Kolisi on Ardie, Porter on BBBR) for reasons I can't understand.

    Completely disagree. He smacks him fair in the ribs. The head clash was purely accidental.

    That is rarely a consideration in rugby these days. In league it definitely comes into play more.

    This is all split second stuff, but Aumua entered that tackle on an angle that he needed to have a lower body height.

    The below is right before impact. His shoulder needed to be lower to get him in the ribs and then not run the risk of head contact.

    30c74d94-66fd-495f-bcda-33b179353968-image.jpeg

    Aumua is crouching and lower than the Argie.

    That’s because he’s Gimli…

    His lead shoulder is too high still hence why the head contact occurred.

    I can understand this and the automatic yellow but it also seems to me the Argie ran into him-what rule protects the tackler from unnecessary injury?

    It's an attacker's game. The defender is almost always in the wrong. Remember Ethan getting rag dolled in the last test and getting penalised for a high shoulder?

    nostrildamusN 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • ACT CrusaderA Offline
    ACT CrusaderA Offline
    ACT Crusader
    replied to nostrildamus on last edited by
    #1347

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @sparky said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax

    1. It was high.
    2. There was some head contact.

    How is a tackle in the ribs high? There’s head contact when the ball carrier hinges horizontal into contact. If that is yellow, then you have to PK every time a bloke drops his head running at the line.

    I think you have to look at the way the tackle is ruled these days to see your argument is false. Aumua was too upright, and there is head to head contact along with the impact from the tackle to the body. You can't get away with that most of the time, as a general rule this is nothing new for the last couple of years. Of course there have been the odd incident that has been let go (Kolisi on Ardie, Porter on BBBR) for reasons I can't understand.

    Completely disagree. He smacks him fair in the ribs. The head clash was purely accidental.

    That is rarely a consideration in rugby these days. In league it definitely comes into play more.

    This is all split second stuff, but Aumua entered that tackle on an angle that he needed to have a lower body height.

    The below is right before impact. His shoulder needed to be lower to get him in the ribs and then not run the risk of head contact.

    30c74d94-66fd-495f-bcda-33b179353968-image.jpeg

    Aumua is crouching and lower than the Argie.

    That’s because he’s Gimli…

    His lead shoulder is too high still hence why the head contact occurred.

    I can understand this and the automatic yellow but it also seems to me the Argie ran into him-what rule protects the tackler from unnecessary injury?

    Aumua was running from a point where the ball had been shifted from and he was now behind the line of play. As mentioned, the angle that he made the tackle from was not front on. The Argie player somewhat slowed, but was still going forwards.

    If there was head contact it’s YC. I’m also in the camp that says some of the criteria that determines the threshold that TMOs/refs have to abide by provides very little room.

    From 3:46 on.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamus
    replied to canefan on last edited by
    #1348

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @sparky said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax

    1. It was high.
    2. There was some head contact.

    How is a tackle in the ribs high? There’s head contact when the ball carrier hinges horizontal into contact. If that is yellow, then you have to PK every time a bloke drops his head running at the line.

    I think you have to look at the way the tackle is ruled these days to see your argument is false. Aumua was too upright, and there is head to head contact along with the impact from the tackle to the body. You can't get away with that most of the time, as a general rule this is nothing new for the last couple of years. Of course there have been the odd incident that has been let go (Kolisi on Ardie, Porter on BBBR) for reasons I can't understand.

    Completely disagree. He smacks him fair in the ribs. The head clash was purely accidental.

    That is rarely a consideration in rugby these days. In league it definitely comes into play more.

    This is all split second stuff, but Aumua entered that tackle on an angle that he needed to have a lower body height.

    The below is right before impact. His shoulder needed to be lower to get him in the ribs and then not run the risk of head contact.

    30c74d94-66fd-495f-bcda-33b179353968-image.jpeg

    Aumua is crouching and lower than the Argie.

    That’s because he’s Gimli…

    His lead shoulder is too high still hence why the head contact occurred.

    I can understand this and the automatic yellow but it also seems to me the Argie ran into him-what rule protects the tackler from unnecessary injury?

    It's an attacker's game. The defender is almost always in the wrong. Remember Ethan getting rag dolled in the last test and getting penalised for a high shoulder?

    I get that. But, and I go back to Retallick's fractured cheekbone, sometimes the tackler runs into them and all they can do is react. But no, I don't have a solution.

    nzzpN canefanC LatsToTheMaxL 3 Replies Last reply
    2
  • nzzpN Online
    nzzpN Online
    nzzp
    replied to nostrildamus on last edited by
    #1349

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @sparky said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax

    1. It was high.
    2. There was some head contact.

    How is a tackle in the ribs high? There’s head contact when the ball carrier hinges horizontal into contact. If that is yellow, then you have to PK every time a bloke drops his head running at the line.

    I think you have to look at the way the tackle is ruled these days to see your argument is false. Aumua was too upright, and there is head to head contact along with the impact from the tackle to the body. You can't get away with that most of the time, as a general rule this is nothing new for the last couple of years. Of course there have been the odd incident that has been let go (Kolisi on Ardie, Porter on BBBR) for reasons I can't understand.

    Completely disagree. He smacks him fair in the ribs. The head clash was purely accidental.

    That is rarely a consideration in rugby these days. In league it definitely comes into play more.

    This is all split second stuff, but Aumua entered that tackle on an angle that he needed to have a lower body height.

    The below is right before impact. His shoulder needed to be lower to get him in the ribs and then not run the risk of head contact.

    30c74d94-66fd-495f-bcda-33b179353968-image.jpeg

    Aumua is crouching and lower than the Argie.

    That’s because he’s Gimli…

    His lead shoulder is too high still hence why the head contact occurred.

    I can understand this and the automatic yellow but it also seems to me the Argie ran into him-what rule protects the tackler from unnecessary injury?

    It's an attacker's game. The defender is almost always in the wrong. Remember Ethan getting rag dolled in the last test and getting penalised for a high shoulder?

    I get that. But, and I go back to Retallick's fractured cheekbone, sometimes the tackler runs into them and all they can do is react. But no, I don't have a solution.

    There is no solution, but you must apply the laws as consistently as possible. If upright = red, then Porter walks, same as Ta'avao. Same as Cane, same as Kolisi. But that is now how things play out.

    I think cards are a blight on the modern game, particularly for head contact. But WR don't see it like that and think the game is in good health. So what do I know.

    1 Reply Last reply
    6
  • canefanC Online
    canefanC Online
    canefan
    replied to nostrildamus on last edited by
    #1350

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @sparky said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax

    1. It was high.
    2. There was some head contact.

    How is a tackle in the ribs high? There’s head contact when the ball carrier hinges horizontal into contact. If that is yellow, then you have to PK every time a bloke drops his head running at the line.

    I think you have to look at the way the tackle is ruled these days to see your argument is false. Aumua was too upright, and there is head to head contact along with the impact from the tackle to the body. You can't get away with that most of the time, as a general rule this is nothing new for the last couple of years. Of course there have been the odd incident that has been let go (Kolisi on Ardie, Porter on BBBR) for reasons I can't understand.

    Completely disagree. He smacks him fair in the ribs. The head clash was purely accidental.

    That is rarely a consideration in rugby these days. In league it definitely comes into play more.

    This is all split second stuff, but Aumua entered that tackle on an angle that he needed to have a lower body height.

    The below is right before impact. His shoulder needed to be lower to get him in the ribs and then not run the risk of head contact.

    30c74d94-66fd-495f-bcda-33b179353968-image.jpeg

    Aumua is crouching and lower than the Argie.

    That’s because he’s Gimli…

    His lead shoulder is too high still hence why the head contact occurred.

    I can understand this and the automatic yellow but it also seems to me the Argie ran into him-what rule protects the tackler from unnecessary injury?

    It's an attacker's game. The defender is almost always in the wrong. Remember Ethan getting rag dolled in the last test and getting penalised for a high shoulder?

    I get that. But, and I go back to Retallick's fractured cheekbone, sometimes the tackler runs into them and all they can do is react. But no, I don't have a solution.

    I know WR is obliged to protect the players. But it's a dynamic and dangerous game, and the high shot is an easy target

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • K Offline
    K Offline
    kpkanz
    replied to No Quarter on last edited by
    #1351

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

    @kpkanz said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @Bones said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @kpkanz I think it's quite clear I'm not dying on any hill. Keep up the ranting though, I'm so triggered I've come out the other side and finding it hilarious.

    Still haven't provided a single counter.
    All the best 👍

    I will confess to not watching this one as closely as usual as I had other stuff going on, but I would be wary of using stats as the be all and end all for someone's performance. They can be a good indicator, but they can also be very dependent on the role a player is asked to play, and whether play goes their way as a result. I would also hesitate to sing the praises of the subs given we lost our shape when they came on.

    I can also guarantee you opposition players would rather defend against the much slower ALB than Rieko who can burn you in the blink of an eye.

    I agree regarding the use of stats, I did ask if there were other intangible metrics outside of the stats provided but was not given any as I was interested.

    I also don't know if I agree with that last paragraph. As ive posted previously, this year ALB has vastly outperformed Rieko in all offensive stats, and if you just look at comparisons of their carries on the field you can see that.

    I would say defenders are much more worried about ALB on current form.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • K Offline
    K Offline
    kpkanz
    replied to No Quarter on last edited by kpkanz
    #1352

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

    There's also a lot to be said for having multiple genuine try scoring threats on the park, which is why I liked this team as Rieko, Clarke and Jordan can all score tries out of nowhere if the defense is not 100% on their game. For me, Rieko has to be on the field, and he's played well enough at 13 to be the incumbent there, with the added bonus of the constant threat he poses defenses.

    This is only true if he was posing a constant threat. But right now he's not.

    He has consistently been our most ineffective back on attack this year.

    I genuinely think people may be surprised how quickly Rieko may be usurped as starting center soon. It would not surprise me to see ALB as the starting midfielder in South Africa.

    You only have to look at what Robertson has said and done recently.

    When asked why he brought Rieko back for the last test he commented along the lines "..he gets an opportunity now".

    You don't say that for a first team guaranteed starter. You say that for players currently in direct competition fighting for a spot.

    Even after the game he commented how he was happy they got some time to look at Rieko on the left wing.

    Speculation here, but looks like they want to find a way to keep him in the team or get some performance out of him again. Perhaps are thinking going back to wing may do it as he's not doing enough at center currently.

    No QuarterN B 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • canefanC Online
    canefanC Online
    canefan
    wrote on last edited by
    #1353

    I only have the eye test, but I remain unconvinced that ALB has the wheels or the physicality to foot it with the stronger teams. Rieko has his negatives, but he has X factor has shown he can do most of his core jobs reasonably well at 13

    K ACT CrusaderA 2 Replies Last reply
    3
  • K Offline
    K Offline
    kpkanz
    replied to canefan on last edited by
    #1354

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    I only have the eye test, but I remain unconvinced that ALB has the wheels or the physicality to foot it with the stronger teams. Rieko has his negatives, but he has X factor has shown he can do most of his core jobs reasonably well at 13

    We can agree to disagree as I can't debate the differences in the eye test we are both seeing.

    But as I said, I believe if his current form continues he won't be the starting center much longer with this new coaching team.

    KiwiMurphK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • canefanC Online
    canefanC Online
    canefan
    wrote on last edited by
    #1355

    These games in the republic will be fascinating. Hopefully we will find out what a few of these players are made of by the time they come home

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • canefanC Online
    canefanC Online
    canefan
    wrote on last edited by
    #1356

    We might find out a bit about this coaching group too

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • KiwiMurphK Offline
    KiwiMurphK Offline
    KiwiMurph
    replied to kpkanz on last edited by
    #1357

    @kpkanz said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    I only have the eye test, but I remain unconvinced that ALB has the wheels or the physicality to foot it with the stronger teams. Rieko has his negatives, but he has X factor has shown he can do most of his core jobs reasonably well at 13

    We can agree to disagree as I can't debate the differences in the eye test we are both seeing.

    But as I said, I believe if his current form continues he won't be the starting center much longer with this new coaching team.

    It's Proctor who should be pushing Rieko for his spot not ALB. That's where Razor needs to take a bit of a risk eventually.

    nostrildamusN 1 Reply Last reply
    4
  • nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamus
    replied to KiwiMurph on last edited by
    #1358

    @KiwiMurph said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    But as I said, I believe if his current form continues he won't be the starting center much longer with this new coaching team.

    It's Proctor who should be pushing Rieko for his spot not ALB. That's where Razor needs to take a bit of a risk eventually.

    ALB looked good at 12 for me.

    1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • LatsToTheMaxL Offline
    LatsToTheMaxL Offline
    LatsToTheMax
    replied to nostrildamus on last edited by LatsToTheMax
    #1359

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @sparky said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax

    1. It was high.
    2. There was some head contact.

    How is a tackle in the ribs high? There’s head contact when the ball carrier hinges horizontal into contact. If that is yellow, then you have to PK every time a bloke drops his head running at the line.

    I think you have to look at the way the tackle is ruled these days to see your argument is false. Aumua was too upright, and there is head to head contact along with the impact from the tackle to the body. You can't get away with that most of the time, as a general rule this is nothing new for the last couple of years. Of course there have been the odd incident that has been let go (Kolisi on Ardie, Porter on BBBR) for reasons I can't understand.

    Completely disagree. He smacks him fair in the ribs. The head clash was purely accidental.

    That is rarely a consideration in rugby these days. In league it definitely comes into play more.

    This is all split second stuff, but Aumua entered that tackle on an angle that he needed to have a lower body height.

    The below is right before impact. His shoulder needed to be lower to get him in the ribs and then not run the risk of head contact.

    30c74d94-66fd-495f-bcda-33b179353968-image.jpeg

    Aumua is crouching and lower than the Argie.

    That’s because he’s Gimli…

    His lead shoulder is too high still hence why the head contact occurred.

    I can understand this and the automatic yellow but it also seems to me the Argie ran into him-what rule protects the tackler from unnecessary injury?

    So now it's shoulder high tackles? If that's the case then the Springboks should have been down to 2 blokes in the RWC Final.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • LatsToTheMaxL Offline
    LatsToTheMaxL Offline
    LatsToTheMax
    replied to nostrildamus on last edited by
    #1360

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @nostrildamus said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @ACT-Crusader said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @canefan said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @sparky said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax

    1. It was high.
    2. There was some head contact.

    How is a tackle in the ribs high? There’s head contact when the ball carrier hinges horizontal into contact. If that is yellow, then you have to PK every time a bloke drops his head running at the line.

    I think you have to look at the way the tackle is ruled these days to see your argument is false. Aumua was too upright, and there is head to head contact along with the impact from the tackle to the body. You can't get away with that most of the time, as a general rule this is nothing new for the last couple of years. Of course there have been the odd incident that has been let go (Kolisi on Ardie, Porter on BBBR) for reasons I can't understand.

    Completely disagree. He smacks him fair in the ribs. The head clash was purely accidental.

    That is rarely a consideration in rugby these days. In league it definitely comes into play more.

    This is all split second stuff, but Aumua entered that tackle on an angle that he needed to have a lower body height.

    The below is right before impact. His shoulder needed to be lower to get him in the ribs and then not run the risk of head contact.

    30c74d94-66fd-495f-bcda-33b179353968-image.jpeg

    Aumua is crouching and lower than the Argie.

    That’s because he’s Gimli…

    His lead shoulder is too high still hence why the head contact occurred.

    I can understand this and the automatic yellow but it also seems to me the Argie ran into him-what rule protects the tackler from unnecessary injury?

    It's an attacker's game. The defender is almost always in the wrong. Remember Ethan getting rag dolled in the last test and getting penalised for a high shoulder?

    I get that. But, and I go back to Retallick's fractured cheekbone, sometimes the tackler runs into them and all they can do is react. But no, I don't have a solution.

    Actually the solution is quite simple. Head knocks happen. Always has and always will. Deliberately going for a blokes head is a card. No drama. What we have at the moment is mostly accidental and consequential. Foul play is when you run your boots over a prone oaks face or eye gauge or SBW on Teddy Tomas.

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to LatsToTheMax on last edited by
    #1361

    @LatsToTheMax or remain too upright knowing it's likely you're going to get a good shot on the other blokes cheek/chin with the top of your head and make it look "accidental".

    LatsToTheMaxL 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • LatsToTheMaxL Offline
    LatsToTheMaxL Offline
    LatsToTheMax
    replied to Bones on last edited by LatsToTheMax
    #1362

    @Bones said in All Blacks v Argentina II:

    @LatsToTheMax or remain too upright knowing it's likely you're going to get a good shot on the other bloke's cheek/chin with the top of your head and make it look "accidental".

    He's half his effing body height when he hits the bloke in his ribs and shoulder. Do you want Aumua to drop to his knees? There is absolutely nothing wrong with his tackle. The laws are flawed. How in the hell you think he intentionally clobbered him in the head is ridiculous is mind boggling.

    In fact, if you watch the video again, Aumua is shouldered right in the chest.

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to LatsToTheMax on last edited by
    #1363

    @LatsToTheMax I didn't say he intentionally "clobbered" him.

    But yeah, half his body height he is, I never even realised Aumua was close to 3m tall. Fuck knows why he's not being looked at for the second row.

    LatsToTheMaxL 1 Reply Last reply
    1

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