Semi Final - South Africa
Moderator: Sandydragon
-
- Posts: 195
- Joined: Sat Feb 13, 2016 7:33 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Such a disappointing game. I thought after the try we’d really go for it but unfortunately we went back into iur shell & just played for penalties.
Horrible game with two sides afraid to play.
Horrible game with two sides afraid to play.
- Lizard
- Posts: 3810
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 11:41 pm
- Location: Dominating the SHMB
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
The main upside of that game is that the 100th Am Blacks v Springboks match will be a competitive match, rather than a pointless 3/4 playoff.
______________________
Dominating the SHMB
======================
Dominating the SHMB
======================
-
- Posts: 319
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 10:15 am
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
No one else seems to have noticed the forward pass for this one. Hmm.Galfon wrote:16 - 16
Adams try, con.. H'penny 66 mins.
- Son of Mathonwy
- Posts: 4990
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 4:50 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Damn, that was painful. Nothing between the teams. Great achievement, getting to the semis. Shame they only wanted to kick the ball.
Well done to Gatland, getting us this far, but I'm looking forward to a coach who likes positive rugby. Not long now.
Well done to Gatland, getting us this far, but I'm looking forward to a coach who likes positive rugby. Not long now.
- Puja
- Posts: 17528
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 9:16 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Bad luck guys - you fought well and were unlucky with injuries. I won't mind admitting that I'm not unhappy to have avoided playing you.
Now go pump the ABs in the 3rd/4th game!
Puja
Now go pump the ABs in the 3rd/4th game!
Puja
Backist Monk
- Sourdust
- Posts: 817
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 5:03 pm
- Contact:
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Maybe just me, but I'd like a coach who plays positive rugby AND can build a physically and mentally rock-hard unit out of basically nothing. Greedy?Son of Mathonwy wrote:Damn, that was painful. Nothing between the teams. Great achievement, getting to the semis. Shame they only wanted to kick the ball.
Well done to Gatland, getting us this far, but I'm looking forward to a coach who likes positive rugby. Not long now.
Pivac seemed the obvious choice 2 years ago, much less so now. Absolutely no point in playing the pretty stuff if we just become soft touches again. Been there, and don't want to go back.
- Son of Mathonwy
- Posts: 4990
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 4:50 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Not greedy, but I share your hunger!Sourdust wrote:Maybe just me, but I'd like a coach who plays positive rugby AND can build a physically and mentally rock-hard unit out of basically nothing. Greedy?Son of Mathonwy wrote:Damn, that was painful. Nothing between the teams. Great achievement, getting to the semis. Shame they only wanted to kick the ball.
Well done to Gatland, getting us this far, but I'm looking forward to a coach who likes positive rugby. Not long now.
Pivac seemed the obvious choice 2 years ago, much less so now. Absolutely no point in playing the pretty stuff if we just become soft touches again. Been there, and don't want to go back.
I'm not sure if any of the regions can really compete with the top Irish, English or French clubs consistently any more, no matter the coach. The resources just aren't there. I'm not sure any coach could do more than Pivac did with the Scarlets.
That said, of course it's a huge step up for him - the fear is that he will be another Townsend. That's why it's great that Jones has got into the Wales setup early, and a shame Edwards is going. I'm hopeful, but only time will tell for Pivac.
-
- Posts: 13436
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:17 am
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Christ you could have an attack as basic as England did when they fluked a run to the final in '07, but you've got to have an attack that's more than kick the ball away and hope the other side drops it or concedes a penalty at the breakdown waiting for you to kick the ball away. It can't all be palmed off to losing Anscombe
- Son of Mathonwy
- Posts: 4990
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 4:50 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Damn, you've cracked that Gatland code!Digby wrote:Christ you could have an attack as basic as England did when they fluked a run to the final in '07, but you've got to have an attack that's more than kick the ball away and hope the other side drops it or concedes a penalty at the breakdown waiting for you to kick the ball away. It can't all be palmed off to losing Anscombe
-
- Posts: 13436
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:17 am
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
There is it has won a number of games, allowed the side to build a base of consistency (albeit consistently doing sod all in attack) and it nearly worked again today.Son of Mathonwy wrote:Damn, you've cracked that Gatland code!Digby wrote:Christ you could have an attack as basic as England did when they fluked a run to the final in '07, but you've got to have an attack that's more than kick the ball away and hope the other side drops it or concedes a penalty at the breakdown waiting for you to kick the ball away. It can't all be palmed off to losing Anscombe
- Son of Mathonwy
- Posts: 4990
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 4:50 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Gatland keeps rolling the dice. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.Digby wrote:There is it has won a number of games, allowed the side to build a base of consistency (albeit consistently doing sod all in attack) and it nearly worked again today.Son of Mathonwy wrote:Damn, you've cracked that Gatland code!Digby wrote:Christ you could have an attack as basic as England did when they fluked a run to the final in '07, but you've got to have an attack that's more than kick the ball away and hope the other side drops it or concedes a penalty at the breakdown waiting for you to kick the ball away. It can't all be palmed off to losing Anscombe
Wales can do better.
- Sandydragon
- Posts: 10474
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 7:13 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
We looked more dangerous with Tomos Williams on the field. Davies spent a lot of time looking at the floor today. Not his fault entirely due to how slow the ball oftne was, but there were opportunities to move the ball kn a bit quicker in times and generate some momentum which were missed.
-
- Posts: 195
- Joined: Sat Feb 13, 2016 7:33 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
I thought after we scored the try we’d see at least 15 mins of us playing rugby but we immediately went back into our shells trying to play for penalties. I personally can’t wait for a change of coaching direction. Today was just awful to watch.Sandydragon wrote:We looked more dangerous with Tomos Williams on the field. Davies spent a lot of time looking at the floor today. Not his fault entirely due to how slow the ball oftne was, but there were opportunities to move the ball kn a bit quicker in times and generate some momentum which were missed.
- Sourdust
- Posts: 817
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 5:03 pm
- Contact:
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
All fair.Digby wrote:Christ you could have an attack as basic as England did when they fluked a run to the final in '07, but you've got to have an attack that's more than kick the ball away and hope the other side drops it or concedes a penalty at the breakdown waiting for you to kick the ball away. It can't all be palmed off to losing Anscombe
I did note that there were still some Welsh fans madly clinging to the belief that we were somehow keeping something back; even after we still failed to deploy it with only 10 minutes to rescue the game against France. Like we were waiting for the perfect moment to unleash the SuperNinjaWales that would amaze everyone.
It was clear quite early on that there was nothing else. We're superbly good at our style but - especially when we miss a few players - we have to stay within those limits and hope it's enough. It has been many times. Today, it very nearly was again. I don't blame anyone in particular; the on-field tactics were a bit awry today but the strategy was sound enough. There's no point in trying to play a game we simply don't have the tools to play. It may have appeared for a few heady months last year that we had solved or depth crisis, but it seems now that the reality was that injuries weren't biting as deeply as they could. In a crunch, we're still completely screwed if we have more than one or two first-choice players unavailable at any one time. That may never change. We've got a bit more depth at the "Competent International" level perhaps, but that's been balanced with fewer World-class players than before.
I'm not saying we don't (or can't) have exciting, free-running players in Wales; but fucknose we've learned the hard way that losing gets you nowhere. Until someone solves the conundrum of how utilize Wales' meagre resources to play an attractive, attacking style AND actually win test matches, we're always going to chose the latter and we'd be bloody stupid not to.
-
- Posts: 13436
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:17 am
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
I'm not saying you have to play attractive rugby, merely that you need some functional attack even if it's very limited. I have been quietly impressed for the last 2 years or so with your 1 out plays, you've done them in such a fashion the play the ball tempo is good and they've had low errors rates, but with dropping Evans you're down to just AWJ as a carrier, and your 9 is a running threat rather than any sort of link player so it's been tricky in the WC to make that work often enough
- Son of Mathonwy
- Posts: 4990
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 4:50 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
It was no surprise to me that there was no plan B - I'm with you on that. But it was a particularly one-dimensional performance, even for Gatland's Wales. We did seem to be a little more willing to pass the ball around in the Australia match, for instance. Today, I think Gatland was petrified that someone was going to throw an interception so he just instructed Biggar to kick everything.Sourdust wrote:All fair.Digby wrote:Christ you could have an attack as basic as England did when they fluked a run to the final in '07, but you've got to have an attack that's more than kick the ball away and hope the other side drops it or concedes a penalty at the breakdown waiting for you to kick the ball away. It can't all be palmed off to losing Anscombe
I did note that there were still some Welsh fans madly clinging to the belief that we were somehow keeping something back; even after we still failed to deploy it with only 10 minutes to rescue the game against France. Like we were waiting for the perfect moment to unleash the SuperNinjaWales that would amaze everyone.
It was clear quite early on that there was nothing else. We're superbly good at our style but - especially when we miss a few players - we have to stay within those limits and hope it's enough. It has been many times. Today, it very nearly was again. I don't blame anyone in particular; the on-field tactics were a bit awry today but the strategy was sound enough. There's no point in trying to play a game we simply don't have the tools to play. It may have appeared for a few heady months last year that we had solved or depth crisis, but it seems now that the reality was that injuries weren't biting as deeply as they could. In a crunch, we're still completely screwed if we have more than one or two first-choice players unavailable at any one time. That may never change. We've got a bit more depth at the "Competent International" level perhaps, but that's been balanced with fewer World-class players than before.
I'm not saying we don't (or can't) have exciting, free-running players in Wales; but fucknose we've learned the hard way that losing gets you nowhere. Until someone solves the conundrum of how utilize Wales' meagre resources to play an attractive, attacking style AND actually win test matches, we're always going to chose the latter and we'd be bloody stupid not to.
The strategy is sound - it turns matches into a lottery - won or lost on a moment's fortune - which is, I agree, infinitely better than being slaughtered, but surely we can keep the solid defensive structure AND have a little more variety in attack? I do think we have the tools to play a more interesting attacking game, it just that Gatland discourages it and makes selections which reflect that.
We certainly have struggled for depth, but in the last couple of years we seem to have found enough players to be able to field 23 decent internationals at a time (including a handful of world-class players), and this does make a difference (hence the grand slam and high ranking). So I don't think it's really true any more, that we're in trouble if we lose one or two first choice players. I think Wales now has the players to play a more ambitious game.
- Sandydragon
- Posts: 10474
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 7:13 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
I believe that we were expecting a tight and edgy game and played tactics to match. True we struggled to get any tempo due to the Bokke defence but neither did we take any risks. The tactics seemed to be to try and milk penalties.
Yet when both sides tired to play a bit of rugby it worked.
Yet when both sides tired to play a bit of rugby it worked.
- Sandydragon
- Posts: 10474
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 7:13 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Interesting view from Rob Debney (former ref) in the Times
These things happen in a match (although I do think the contact with Moriarty in the air could have been more), but we got away with stuff too.
Yet for both teams to play particular tactics because they were so worried at a refs interpretation of the breakdown is a bit concerning.
He points out that the penalty against AWJ for holding on should have been a Welsh penalty as Dee was prevented from clearing out Louw due to another offside Bokke player.It wasn’t a great game of rugby, there was a lot of kicking. But you have to wonder if that was because they knew what they were getting with Jerome Garces, who makes it a lottery at the contact area.
These things happen in a match (although I do think the contact with Moriarty in the air could have been more), but we got away with stuff too.
Yet for both teams to play particular tactics because they were so worried at a refs interpretation of the breakdown is a bit concerning.
- Numbers
- Posts: 2487
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:13 am
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Digby wrote:Christ you could have an attack as basic as England did when they fluked a run to the final in '07, but you've got to have an attack that's more than kick the ball away and hope the other side drops it or concedes a penalty at the breakdown waiting for you to kick the ball away. It can't all be palmed off to losing Anscombe
Yesterday we made no progress over the gainline, what we lack are ball carriers, SA just soaked us up and we had no answer than to box kick, it's pointless giving the backs the ball behind the gainline with no go forward, we were simply outmuscled by them.
-
- Posts: 12038
- Joined: Sat Feb 13, 2016 5:10 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
Trying to put a positive spin on it, you almost made a RWC final with virtually no attacking game. That surely bodes well as a starting to point to bring in some of the Scarlets philosophy.Numbers wrote:Digby wrote:Christ you could have an attack as basic as England did when they fluked a run to the final in '07, but you've got to have an attack that's more than kick the ball away and hope the other side drops it or concedes a penalty at the breakdown waiting for you to kick the ball away. It can't all be palmed off to losing Anscombe
Yesterday we made no progress over the gainline, what we lack are ball carriers, SA just soaked us up and we had no answer than to box kick, it's pointless giving the backs the ball behind the gainline with no go forward, we were simply outmuscled by them.
I did feel for Stephen Jones. I wonder how much freedom he really had with so little time to put any of his ideas in place.
-
- Posts: 13436
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:17 am
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
I'm not saying you have to give the ball to the backs, though actually it would make things easier if done properly. But you need an attack system even if you only use 8 and 9.Numbers wrote:Digby wrote:Christ you could have an attack as basic as England did when they fluked a run to the final in '07, but you've got to have an attack that's more than kick the ball away and hope the other side drops it or concedes a penalty at the breakdown waiting for you to kick the ball away. It can't all be palmed off to losing Anscombe
Yesterday we made no progress over the gainline, what we lack are ball carriers, SA just soaked us up and we had no answer than to box kick, it's pointless giving the backs the ball behind the gainline with no go forward, we were simply outmuscled by them.
Also people talk about kicking to create space forcing the other side to cover the backfield, but passing down the line can also earn you space on later phases if you can pass to the edge, you don't even need to be beating the edge but at least engage the defenders on the edge, and actually with SA so narrow even Wales worked the ball wide into space a number of times. But you need a better system to replicate such efforts, you need better ball presentation even without the better carriers which would I concede make it easier, you need better passing at 9, 10, 12 and 13, and you need a team being allowed to try
And some of that is doable if the team are given licence and instruction to play a little more, but in a number of little areas from ball presentation, clearouts being attacking rather than conservative, to the instructions given to the 9, to the lack of passing options (or at best functional passing) in the front three it's all too risk averse. A change doesn't mean you have to suddenly wang the ball around like Scotland or Australia, merely you need some other intent beyond one out and kicking
- Numbers
- Posts: 2487
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:13 am
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
If you are stood stock still and face a blitz defence then you are not going to be able to use any width, the fact that we couldn't get any go forward was why we kicked, passing the ball along the line in those circumstances is not the answer as you will just end up going backwards. We can gain quick ball against most teams, the SA's stopped that from happening yesterday so fair play to them, very similarly to what England did to stifle NZs play, a very aggressive defensive line and prevention of gainline success.Digby wrote:I'm not saying you have to give the ball to the backs, though actually it would make things easier if done properly. But you need an attack system even if you only use 8 and 9.Numbers wrote:Digby wrote:Christ you could have an attack as basic as England did when they fluked a run to the final in '07, but you've got to have an attack that's more than kick the ball away and hope the other side drops it or concedes a penalty at the breakdown waiting for you to kick the ball away. It can't all be palmed off to losing Anscombe
Yesterday we made no progress over the gainline, what we lack are ball carriers, SA just soaked us up and we had no answer than to box kick, it's pointless giving the backs the ball behind the gainline with no go forward, we were simply outmuscled by them.
Also people talk about kicking to create space forcing the other side to cover the backfield, but passing down the line can also earn you space on later phases if you can pass to the edge, you don't even need to be beating the edge but at least engage the defenders on the edge, and actually with SA so narrow even Wales worked the ball wide into space a number of times. But you need a better system to replicate such efforts, you need better ball presentation even without the better carriers which would I concede make it easier, you need better passing at 9, 10, 12 and 13, and you need a team being allowed to try
And some of that is doable if the team are given licence and instruction to play a little more, but in a number of little areas from ball presentation, clearouts being attacking rather than conservative, to the instructions given to the 9, to the lack of passing options (or at best functional passing) in the front three it's all too risk averse. A change doesn't mean you have to suddenly wang the ball around like Scotland or Australia, merely you need some other intent beyond one out and kicking
- Son of Mathonwy
- Posts: 4990
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 4:50 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
I doubt that Howley had much freedom either, Gatland's system is so rigid.Mikey Brown wrote:I did feel for Stephen Jones. I wonder how much freedom he really had with so little time to put any of his ideas in place.
I just hope Jones is taking notes on how the defensive system works (even if that isn't his area), so we can maintain it.
-
- Posts: 13436
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2016 11:17 am
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
You can't do everything you're currently doing and suddenly spin the ball out, but you can change lots of little things which mean you'd have more options and be giving defences more areas to cover. Not sure England were always that aggressive btw against NZ, we drifted a fair bit more than normalNumbers wrote:If you are stood stock still and face a blitz defence then you are not going to be able to use any width, the fact that we couldn't get any go forward was why we kicked, passing the ball along the line in those circumstances is not the answer as you will just end up going backwards. We can gain quick ball against most teams, the SA's stopped that from happening yesterday so fair play to them, very similarly to what England did to stifle NZs play, a very aggressive defensive line and prevention of gainline success.Digby wrote:I'm not saying you have to give the ball to the backs, though actually it would make things easier if done properly. But you need an attack system even if you only use 8 and 9.Numbers wrote:
Yesterday we made no progress over the gainline, what we lack are ball carriers, SA just soaked us up and we had no answer than to box kick, it's pointless giving the backs the ball behind the gainline with no go forward, we were simply outmuscled by them.
Also people talk about kicking to create space forcing the other side to cover the backfield, but passing down the line can also earn you space on later phases if you can pass to the edge, you don't even need to be beating the edge but at least engage the defenders on the edge, and actually with SA so narrow even Wales worked the ball wide into space a number of times. But you need a better system to replicate such efforts, you need better ball presentation even without the better carriers which would I concede make it easier, you need better passing at 9, 10, 12 and 13, and you need a team being allowed to try
And some of that is doable if the team are given licence and instruction to play a little more, but in a number of little areas from ball presentation, clearouts being attacking rather than conservative, to the instructions given to the 9, to the lack of passing options (or at best functional passing) in the front three it's all too risk averse. A change doesn't mean you have to suddenly wang the ball around like Scotland or Australia, merely you need some other intent beyond one out and kicking
Right now there's very little shape to the Welsh attack, and everything is ,intentionally one assumes, being done slowly with a degree of caution.
- Sandydragon
- Posts: 10474
- Joined: Tue Feb 09, 2016 7:13 pm
Re: Semi Final - South Africa
And that is how we have played for most of the last 12 years. It won’t change overnight.