Skip to content
  • Categories
Collapse

The Silver Fern

  • Tipping
  • Team Sheets
  • Highlights
  • Results
    • All Blacks

      Search every All Blacks Test. Filter results by year, opposition, location, venue, city and RWC stage

    • Super Rugby

      Search every Super Rugby since match 1996

    • NPC

      Search NPC results. Only first division matches from 1976-2005. All results from the 14 team competition (2006-present) are included

Six Nations 2017

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Sports Talk
778 Posts 59 Posters 152.4k Views 2 Watching
  • 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.
  • CrucialC Crucial

    The other advantage to playing this way is the need to train a quick transfer from attack to defence and regular practice of it. Teams like the Canes and Chiefs will take chances in attack yet if a ball is spilled or turned over will cover quickly on Defence.
    The risk averse methods of play in the NH mean that when turnovers occur they are often slow to regroup and leave holes and mismatches to be exploited by a good attack. As they often don't play against good attacks then the get away with it.

    rotatedR Offline
    rotatedR Offline
    rotated
    wrote on last edited by
    #757

    @Crucial said in Six Nations 2017:

    The other advantage to playing this way is the need to train a quick transfer from attack to defence and regular practice of it. Teams like the Canes and Chiefs will take chances in attack yet if a ball is spilled or turned over will cover quickly on Defence.
    The risk averse methods of play in the NH mean that when turnovers occur they are often slow to regroup and leave holes and mismatches to be exploited by a good attack. As they often don't play against good attacks then the get away with it.

    This area has been exploited massively in the post-Henry era. Don't get me wrong the 2009-2013 ABs and NZ Super Rugby teams were good counter attacking teams, but the last 5 years have been next level. And only so much of that can be done in the AB set up, especially given the assembly generally a week before their first fixture. The bulk of the work is done at lower levels, so even if Schmidt and Cotter or Jones are keen to play that way they don't have enough of the cattle to do it.

    I think the cohesion between the AB set up and the 5 SR teams (and to a lesser extent M10 Cup teams) is huge here. There is a lot more knowledge sharing and resource borrowing that goes on elsewhere. It does help having a concentrated playing base, but it can work the other way when you get a Lam/Kirwan/Hammett/Nuciforia-at-the-end scenario where one rogue coach can take 1/5th of the playing populous offline.

    But once you get enough of the franchises on side it does kind of become a survival of the fittest type thing and to keep up you have to adapt.

    Also so many resources and such a focus is being put into the transition game. It seems Smith's role is pretty much exclusively this with the ABs and they were desperate to keep him. I've seen tutorials with Rennie that hint that it is his core focus with the Chiefs.

    A lot of the northern unions and clubs I think still delegate the role of a defensive coach as primarily tackling skills and setting the defensive pattern etc.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • F Offline
      F Offline
      Frye
      wrote on last edited by
      #758

      That article is something else.

      Spiro has well and truly lost it.

      D jeggaJ 2 Replies Last reply
      1
      • F Frye

        That article is something else.

        Spiro has well and truly lost it.

        D Offline
        D Offline
        Derm McCrum
        wrote on last edited by
        #759

        @Frye said in Six Nations 2017:

        That article is something else.

        Spiro has well and truly lost it.

        Agreed - he uses his bully pulpit to be as much of a twat as Jones is.

        It's kinda funny watching the two of them go at each other over the last few years. Although Spiro does tend to rage a lot more about Jones than the other way round.

        1 Reply Last reply
        1
        • gollumG gollum

          @profitius said in Six Nations 2017:

          Connacht won the pro12 last season by playing the NZ way. They've far less playing resources than Leinster (just one player in the Ireland squad at the weekend) but they ripped Leinster apart in that final.

          Connacht played that way by bringing in a stack of kiwis in key positions. If they tried playing "NZ rugby" with the basic Connacht team it would have been the same result as any other club team doing so.

          The "NZ way" relies on guys trained from childhood to look to avoid contact & look to pass from contact, players with fast hands who run support lines. Teams without that base cannot just switch to playing that way. Its not like going from rush to slide defence.

          England have moved on a lot by picking a 1st five / 2nd five combo - something NZ has done forever, and picking ball playing forwards - Mako Vunipola in particular, but also Jamie George, Launchbury, Robshaw & Itoje. They are all the type of ball playing forwards that are produced continously in NZ. But you can only pick the players you have.

          It's not a case of picking a hooker with Dane Coles pace - if you don't have any hookers with his pace. Equally you can't take a slow hooker & go "we'd like to play like Coles"

          Scotland got round it by just picking Glasgow. If you have the talent base you pick guys who will run great lines & know guys will be there, if you don't have the base you pick combinations who know what line to run because they practice with that combo every week.

          The big difference between north & south is not style, its basic skills.

          D Offline
          D Offline
          Derm McCrum
          wrote on last edited by
          #760

          @gollum said in Six Nations 2017:

          @profitius said in Six Nations 2017:

          Connacht won the pro12 last season by playing the NZ way. They've far less playing resources than Leinster (just one player in the Ireland squad at the weekend) but they ripped Leinster apart in that final.

          Connacht played that way by bringing in a stack of kiwis in key positions. If they tried playing "NZ rugby" with the basic Connacht team it would have been the same result as any other club team doing so.

          Hmmm. Nibble, nibble. Does that stand up?

          Who are these "stack of Kiwis" that Connacht brought in to key positions that had them playing like they did last season?

          Let's assume that you're going to say Bundee Aki and Tom McCartney. Who else? Heenan - who was injured for half the season?

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • F Offline
            F Offline
            Frye
            wrote on last edited by
            #761

            Appears to be at least four Kiwis in the management team. I'd imagine they might have an influence about how a team is drilled.

            D 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • boobooB Offline
              boobooB Offline
              booboo
              wrote on last edited by booboo
              #762

              Seems Jonesy is in full on deflection mode:

              http://www.newshub.co.nz/home/sport/2017/03/england-coach-eddie-jones-compares-ireland-loss-to-all-blacks-world-cup-drought.html

              Dragging up results by another team from 14, 10 and 6 years ago, and repeating and outright and utter lie, thus:

              "They lost the semi-final against Australia in 2003 and they lost the quarter- final in 2007. They got to the final in 2011 and they had to have a very kind referee to get them home."

              canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • boobooB booboo

                Seems Jonesy is in full on deflection mode:

                http://www.newshub.co.nz/home/sport/2017/03/england-coach-eddie-jones-compares-ireland-loss-to-all-blacks-world-cup-drought.html

                Dragging up results by another team from 14, 10 and 6 years ago, and repeating and outright and utter lie, thus:

                "They lost the semi-final against Australia in 2003 and they lost the quarter- final in 2007. They got to the final in 2011 and they had to have a very kind referee to get them home."

                canefanC Online
                canefanC Online
                canefan
                wrote on last edited by
                #763

                @booboo said in Six Nations 2017:

                Seems Jonesy is in full on deflection mode:

                http://www.newshub.co.nz/home/sport/2017/03/england-coach-eddie-jones-compares-ireland-loss-to-all-blacks-world-cup-drought.html

                Dragging up results by another team from 14, 10 and 6 years ago, and repeating and outright and utter lie, thus:

                "They lost the semi-final against Australia in 2003 and they lost the quarter- final in 2007. They got to the final in 2011 and they had to have a very kind referee to get them home."

                He's going full gobshite now. I preferred him as affable coach of plucky Japan

                1 Reply Last reply
                1
                • canefanC Online
                  canefanC Online
                  canefan
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #764

                  How long before Eddie's head explodes and he loses the dressing room?

                  nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • canefanC canefan

                    How long before Eddie's head explodes and he loses the dressing room?

                    nzzpN Offline
                    nzzpN Offline
                    nzzp
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #765

                    @canefan said in Six Nations 2017:

                    How long before Eddie's head explodes and he loses the dressing room?

                    That's never happened before!

                    Oh, wait ....

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • F Frye

                      That article is something else.

                      Spiro has well and truly lost it.

                      jeggaJ Offline
                      jeggaJ Offline
                      jegga
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #766

                      @Frye said in Six Nations 2017:

                      That article is something else.

                      Spiro has well and truly lost it.

                      This is not a recent thing " it" disappeared over the horizon quite a while ago and search efforts were in vain . Aussie Spiro really isn't a whole lot better than the manatee

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • mariner4lifeM Offline
                        mariner4lifeM Offline
                        mariner4life
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #767

                        Just on the style of play thing, it was quite apparent that Ireland on the weekend didn't really know what to do with all that ball. They played a lot of slow ball, one-off runners, but there didn't seem to be a purpose to it. And by purposely initiating contact, they slowed their own ball down, and required a number of their own players to make sure they kept it, meaning they weren't generating much out of it other than tired defenders, and good stats. Their two best attacks came from the one loop play that actually worked; and Payne being the recipient of a nice bit of lenient reffing with respect to the "held in the tackle" law.

                        They weren't creating space, they weren't sucking in defenders, and if they did go quick to the backs, the midfielders hit it up anyway. At one point Sexton resorted to a bomb for a winger that didn't even know it was coming.

                        England looked the "better" side throughout, but their error rate was appalling, and their energy rate was low. But, they looked dangerous with the ball (for the little they had it) and their defense re-organised really well. Ireland had the ball and the field position, but didn't know what to do with it.

                        D 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • mariner4lifeM mariner4life

                          Just on the style of play thing, it was quite apparent that Ireland on the weekend didn't really know what to do with all that ball. They played a lot of slow ball, one-off runners, but there didn't seem to be a purpose to it. And by purposely initiating contact, they slowed their own ball down, and required a number of their own players to make sure they kept it, meaning they weren't generating much out of it other than tired defenders, and good stats. Their two best attacks came from the one loop play that actually worked; and Payne being the recipient of a nice bit of lenient reffing with respect to the "held in the tackle" law.

                          They weren't creating space, they weren't sucking in defenders, and if they did go quick to the backs, the midfielders hit it up anyway. At one point Sexton resorted to a bomb for a winger that didn't even know it was coming.

                          England looked the "better" side throughout, but their error rate was appalling, and their energy rate was low. But, they looked dangerous with the ball (for the little they had it) and their defense re-organised really well. Ireland had the ball and the field position, but didn't know what to do with it.

                          D Offline
                          D Offline
                          Derm McCrum
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #768

                          @mariner4life said in Six Nations 2017:

                          Just on the style of play thing, it was quite apparent that Ireland on the weekend didn't really know what to do with all that ball. They played a lot of slow ball, one-off runners, but there didn't seem to be a purpose to it. And by purposely initiating contact, they slowed their own ball down, and required a number of their own players to make sure they kept it, meaning they weren't generating much out of it other than tired defenders, and good stats. Their two best attacks came from the one loop play that actually worked; and Payne being the recipient of a nice bit of lenient reffing with respect to the "held in the tackle" law.

                          They weren't creating space, they weren't sucking in defenders, and if they did go quick to the backs, the midfielders hit it up anyway. At one point Sexton resorted to a bomb for a winger that didn't even know it was coming.

                          England looked the "better" side throughout, but their error rate was appalling, and their energy rate was low. But, they looked dangerous with the ball (for the little they had it) and their defense re-organised really well. Ireland had the ball and the field position, but didn't know what to do with it.

                          I thought it was a quite deliberate rope a dope by Ireland/Schmidt. England didn't know quite what to do with so little possession and were hammered at the breakdown. As a couple of them said afterwards, they were stunned by Ireland's ferocity over the ball. An echo of what Ireland did to NZ in 2013 in the first half of that match that I never discuss.

                          They deliberately stayed away from lineouts and decided to go up through the middle a lot of the time. I would have moved Farrell to 10 a lot sooner as he would have controlled the game a lot better than Ford when England did get the ball.

                          mariner4lifeM 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • F Frye

                            Appears to be at least four Kiwis in the management team. I'd imagine they might have an influence about how a team is drilled.

                            D Offline
                            D Offline
                            Derm McCrum
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #769

                            @Frye said in Six Nations 2017:

                            Appears to be at least four Kiwis in the management team. I'd imagine they might have an influence about how a team is drilled.

                            Absolutely - big influence. And why they sought out another Kiwi to replace Lam.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • D Derm McCrum

                              @mariner4life said in Six Nations 2017:

                              Just on the style of play thing, it was quite apparent that Ireland on the weekend didn't really know what to do with all that ball. They played a lot of slow ball, one-off runners, but there didn't seem to be a purpose to it. And by purposely initiating contact, they slowed their own ball down, and required a number of their own players to make sure they kept it, meaning they weren't generating much out of it other than tired defenders, and good stats. Their two best attacks came from the one loop play that actually worked; and Payne being the recipient of a nice bit of lenient reffing with respect to the "held in the tackle" law.

                              They weren't creating space, they weren't sucking in defenders, and if they did go quick to the backs, the midfielders hit it up anyway. At one point Sexton resorted to a bomb for a winger that didn't even know it was coming.

                              England looked the "better" side throughout, but their error rate was appalling, and their energy rate was low. But, they looked dangerous with the ball (for the little they had it) and their defense re-organised really well. Ireland had the ball and the field position, but didn't know what to do with it.

                              I thought it was a quite deliberate rope a dope by Ireland/Schmidt. England didn't know quite what to do with so little possession and were hammered at the breakdown. As a couple of them said afterwards, they were stunned by Ireland's ferocity over the ball. An echo of what Ireland did to NZ in 2013 in the first half of that match that I never discuss.

                              They deliberately stayed away from lineouts and decided to go up through the middle a lot of the time. I would have moved Farrell to 10 a lot sooner as he would have controlled the game a lot better than Ford when England did get the ball.

                              mariner4lifeM Offline
                              mariner4lifeM Offline
                              mariner4life
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #770

                              @Pot-Hale that could be a fair assessment, but it very nearly came unstuck because Ireland weren't generating points. In the end, that lineout steal by O'Mahoney was huge, because if that turns in to another English maul, it was probably going to be another English penalty. The entire momentum of the game swung on that, England never got another sniff.

                              The breakdowns were a ferocious shitfight, green jerseys were diving at everything at terrific speeds.

                              Your final point its probably the biggest stick to beat the English with over the course of the whole tournament, they are slow to adjust on the track. The weekend's game, and the Italy game required changes in thinking and execution, but they couldn't do anything. Italy lacked the quality to do anything about it, Ireland just kept at them the whole game.

                              CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • mariner4lifeM mariner4life

                                @Pot-Hale that could be a fair assessment, but it very nearly came unstuck because Ireland weren't generating points. In the end, that lineout steal by O'Mahoney was huge, because if that turns in to another English maul, it was probably going to be another English penalty. The entire momentum of the game swung on that, England never got another sniff.

                                The breakdowns were a ferocious shitfight, green jerseys were diving at everything at terrific speeds.

                                Your final point its probably the biggest stick to beat the English with over the course of the whole tournament, they are slow to adjust on the track. The weekend's game, and the Italy game required changes in thinking and execution, but they couldn't do anything. Italy lacked the quality to do anything about it, Ireland just kept at them the whole game.

                                CrucialC Offline
                                CrucialC Offline
                                Crucial
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #771

                                @mariner4life said in Six Nations 2017:

                                @Pot-Hale that could be a fair assessment, but it very nearly came unstuck because Ireland weren't generating points. In the end, that lineout steal by O'Mahoney was huge, because if that turns in to another English maul, it was probably going to be another English penalty. The entire momentum of the game swung on that, England never got another sniff.

                                The breakdowns were a ferocious shitfight, green jerseys were diving at everything at terrific speeds.

                                Your final point its probably the biggest stick to beat the English with over the course of the whole tournament, they are slow to adjust on the track. The weekend's game, and the Italy game required changes in thinking and execution, but they couldn't do anything. Italy lacked the quality to do anything about it, Ireland just kept at them the whole game.

                                A lot of that must surely come down to captaincy. Hartley appears as thick as pig shit and needs a week of dwelling on something to work it out. Farrell may look the part as a captain but doesn't seem to be a great analyst of the overall game situation and what should be done.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • TimT Offline
                                  TimT Offline
                                  Tim
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #772

                                  http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby/international/91002481/french-vicecaptain-fined-45000-for-criticising-referee-wayne-barnes

                                  antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • TimT Tim

                                    http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby/international/91002481/french-vicecaptain-fined-45000-for-criticising-referee-wayne-barnes

                                    antipodeanA Offline
                                    antipodeanA Offline
                                    antipodean
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #773

                                    @Tim Although I share his frustration with Barnes, governing bodies need to be strict about players criticising officials. Players and coaches need to follow internal processes and leave the public excoriation to commentators and fans.

                                    TimT 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • antipodeanA antipodean

                                      @Tim Although I share his frustration with Barnes, governing bodies need to be strict about players criticising officials. Players and coaches need to follow internal processes and leave the public excoriation to commentators and fans.

                                      TimT Offline
                                      TimT Offline
                                      Tim
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #774

                                      @antipodean His comments were very over the top, and rather unpleasantly anti-English, so I agree that he deserved the fine.

                                      There's a nasty, and frankly pathetic, anti-anglo sentiment in much of French society, so fuck that guy.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • StargazerS Offline
                                        StargazerS Offline
                                        Stargazer
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #775

                                        I didn't agree with Maestri's Anglo-Saxon comment, but the French had every right to be frustrated about the officiating. It just wasn't very smart from Maestri to express his frustration the way he did. But IMO it's the fine that is very over the top, especially if you consider that the comment was made right after the game before the dust had settled.

                                        What fine does Barnes have to pay for an absolutely woeful performance? Oh wait ...

                                        antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
                                        3
                                        • StargazerS Stargazer

                                          I didn't agree with Maestri's Anglo-Saxon comment, but the French had every right to be frustrated about the officiating. It just wasn't very smart from Maestri to express his frustration the way he did. But IMO it's the fine that is very over the top, especially if you consider that the comment was made right after the game before the dust had settled.

                                          What fine does Barnes have to pay for an absolutely woeful performance? Oh wait ...

                                          antipodeanA Offline
                                          antipodeanA Offline
                                          antipodean
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #776

                                          @Stargazer said in Six Nations 2017:

                                          What fine does Barnes have to pay for an absolutely woeful performance? Oh wait ...

                                          alt text

                                          1 Reply Last reply
                                          1
                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes


                                          • Login

                                          • Don't have an account? Register

                                          • Search
                                          • First post
                                            Last post
                                          0
                                          • Categories
                                          • Search