Team for Scotland
Moderator: Puja
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Re: Team for Scotland
As long as he doesn't go on to have a coaching career that reminds of Warren Gatland
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Re: Team for Scotland
I’d take Genge’s ramblings over Guscott’s analysis all day long
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Re: Team for Scotland
well yes, ditto Jonny. Low bar though.p/d wrote:I’d take Genge’s ramblings over Guscott’s analysis all day long
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Re: Team for Scotland
He sure isn't- doubled down on his twitter accountDigby wrote:I'd like to think in an age where the Department for Health and Social Care have refused to talk to the media about Coronavirus, or the Government have refused to talk to the BBC it'd be given scant coverage. But it's the sort of thing which will be looked at if/when England lose and Genge contributes to that loss. But I don't imagine Genge is going to back downBanquo wrote:Not judging especially, it’s just naive, and even if he doesn’t like it, playing the press is part of the job. Hopefully they won’t turn on him as it’s good copy.Epaminondas Pules wrote:
That just how Genge is. The sausage comment is a common one for him and to be fair he’s right. And made I giggle too
That said, the gobbledygook coming out of Wilkinson yesterday needs a bit of mockery. It’s like a walking self help book.


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Re: Team for Scotland
Nice to read, and I'll recalibrate a bit on Faz.twitchy wrote:https://www.walesonline.co.uk/sport/rug ... l-17702027
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Re: Team for Scotland
Jesus that was a lot of words in order to find out he gave him a shirt.
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Re: Team for Scotland
Some of the comments on here a bit absurd. Go out today, with 60mph winds all the rage, and imagine trying to play rugby in those conditions. Deserved win cos we dominated setpiece and were physically on top in defence. Good character from the team and excellent defence a few times on our own goal line.
2 weeks will be the real test obviously, but totally unfair to criticise anyone for yesterday imo.
2 weeks will be the real test obviously, but totally unfair to criticise anyone for yesterday imo.
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Re: Team for Scotland
Yeah I totally agree. The whole game was basically a dice roll. It also makes the idea of bonus points a bit meaningless. The whole game should have been moved to cardiff and we could played with a roof on.Timbo wrote:Some of the comments on here a bit absurd. Go out today, with 60mph winds all the rage, and imagine trying to play rugby in those conditions. Deserved win cos we dominated setpiece and were physically on top in defence. Good character from the team and excellent defence a few times on our own goal line.
2 weeks will be the real test obviously, but totally unfair to criticise anyone for yesterday imo.

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Re: Team for Scotland
Whilst I agree on the criticism of tactics being misplaced, I think your comment about 'totally unfair to criticise anyone' is wide of the mark. The kicking execution was poor on too many occasions- as they said on commentary, don't go for very precise, give yourself a wider margin for error. Generally I think the pack gets a very decent mark, less so those with kicking duties, whilst accepting that some plays were very tricky.Timbo wrote:Some of the comments on here a bit absurd. Go out today, with 60mph winds all the rage, and imagine trying to play rugby in those conditions. Deserved win cos we dominated setpiece and were physically on top in defence. Good character from the team and excellent defence a few times on our own goal line.
2 weeks will be the real test obviously, but totally unfair to criticise anyone for yesterday imo.
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Re: Team for Scotland
The wind seemed to be swirling and gusting though. Even giving yourself a wider margin of error it seemed completely un predictable.
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Re: Team for Scotland
Heinz kicked two in a row identically within 5 minutes, both went into touch. Youngs came on and kicked it 20 yards further infield, not impossible. We put 11 kicks straight into touch. That's poor, even accounting for the conditions. Keeping it low, keeping it infield seemed to be the order of the daytwitchy wrote:The wind seemed to be swirling and gusting though. Even giving yourself a wider margin of error it seemed completely un predictable.

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Re: Team for Scotland
For certain values, I do agree with you, but I'm amazed at how much we kicked. We had a big tight five, with another tight five on the bench, and instead of keeping the ball, we belted it up in the air and turned it into a dice roll. Fine, it wasn't the day for flinging wide passes, but wouldn't it have been the day for forwards running onto short passes and little offloads in contact? We actually did that for a bit of the first half and it got us into position for our first two penalties. Then we got ahead and gave up having the ball for the day. Why pick Mako and Sinckler and never use them?Timbo wrote:Some of the comments on here a bit absurd. Go out today, with 60mph winds all the rage, and imagine trying to play rugby in those conditions. Deserved win cos we dominated setpiece and were physically on top in defence. Good character from the team and excellent defence a few times on our own goal line.
2 weeks will be the real test obviously, but totally unfair to criticise anyone for yesterday imo.
Puja
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Re: Team for Scotland
11? Wow, that’s more than I thought.Banquo wrote:Heinz kicked two in a row identically within 5 minutes, both went into touch. Youngs came on and kicked it 20 yards further infield, not impossible. We put 11 kicks straight into touch. That's poor, even accounting for the conditions. Keeping it low, keeping it infield seemed to be the order of the daytwitchy wrote:The wind seemed to be swirling and gusting though. Even giving yourself a wider margin of error it seemed completely un predictable.. I do accept it was bloody difficult, hence not baying for blood on the tactics.
Just do not understand why we didn’t opt for Sally Gunnell’s or chip over (worked well a couple of times for Hastings). Looked to me as if we just didn’t want the ball however our pack could have worked far more phases. Certainly we had the 14 of them for it.
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Re: Team for Scotland
Mako and Sinckler touched the ball more than any other forwards bar CurryPuja wrote:For certain values, I do agree with you, but I'm amazed at how much we kicked. We had a big tight five, with another tight five on the bench, and instead of keeping the ball, we belted it up in the air and turned it into a dice roll. Fine, it wasn't the day for flinging wide passes, but wouldn't it have been the day for forwards running onto short passes and little offloads in contact? We actually did that for a bit of the first half and it got us into position for our first two penalties. Then we got ahead and gave up having the ball for the day. Why pick Mako and Sinckler and never use them?Timbo wrote:Some of the comments on here a bit absurd. Go out today, with 60mph winds all the rage, and imagine trying to play rugby in those conditions. Deserved win cos we dominated setpiece and were physically on top in defence. Good character from the team and excellent defence a few times on our own goal line.
2 weeks will be the real test obviously, but totally unfair to criticise anyone for yesterday imo.
Puja

In general, keeping the ball playing into the wind is a good plan, and more so in such extreme conditions; early on though, Faz showed the way with nice slides through, and attacking their line out was pretty productive.
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Re: Team for Scotland
If you get a penalty kick for touch and the ball hits the ground first (or you grubber it) do you still get the throw in? Or does it just become like any other kick in open play? There may be an obvious reason that’s not a valid tactic.
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Re: Team for Scotland
You do still get the throw in but, as always, the bounce of a rugby ball always hates you, so it's a greater risk than kicking on the full. Also, any half-decent team will have people covering the lines.Mikey Brown wrote:If you get a penalty kick for touch and the ball hits the ground first (or you grubber it) do you still get the throw in? Or does it just become like any other kick in open play? There may be an obvious reason that’s not a valid tactic.
Puja
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Re: Team for Scotland
Yes, the weather was a huge factor but when was the last match that we did NOT kick too much. Kicking is an essential part of the game obviously but it's effectiveness needs constant judgement and its use constant adjustment. We have a game where 9, 10 and 12 all kick by default. It is predictable and boring.
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Re: Team for Scotland
No, I don’t think there was any value in playing rugby outside of the oppo 22 or so. Little offloads in contact is, to my mind, just marking time until someone drops the ball in those conditions.Puja wrote:For certain values, I do agree with you, but I'm amazed at how much we kicked. We had a big tight five, with another tight five on the bench, and instead of keeping the ball, we belted it up in the air and turned it into a dice roll. Fine, it wasn't the day for flinging wide passes, but wouldn't it have been the day for forwards running onto short passes and little offloads in contact? We actually did that for a bit of the first half and it got us into position for our first two penalties. Then we got ahead and gave up having the ball for the day. Why pick Mako and Sinckler and never use them?Timbo wrote:Some of the comments on here a bit absurd. Go out today, with 60mph winds all the rage, and imagine trying to play rugby in those conditions. Deserved win cos we dominated setpiece and were physically on top in defence. Good character from the team and excellent defence a few times on our own goal line.
2 weeks will be the real test obviously, but totally unfair to criticise anyone for yesterday imo.
Puja
Banquo, yes there are individual moments that can be critiqued, but the fact so many normally very good kickers struggled on both sides just highlights the difficulty of executing in the conditions.
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Re: Team for Scotland
Don't you bring facts into this debate! They contradict my feelings and thus are disbarred.Banquo wrote:Mako and Sinckler touched the ball more than any other forwards bar CurryPuja wrote:For certain values, I do agree with you, but I'm amazed at how much we kicked. We had a big tight five, with another tight five on the bench, and instead of keeping the ball, we belted it up in the air and turned it into a dice roll. Fine, it wasn't the day for flinging wide passes, but wouldn't it have been the day for forwards running onto short passes and little offloads in contact? We actually did that for a bit of the first half and it got us into position for our first two penalties. Then we got ahead and gave up having the ball for the day. Why pick Mako and Sinckler and never use them?Timbo wrote:Some of the comments on here a bit absurd. Go out today, with 60mph winds all the rage, and imagine trying to play rugby in those conditions. Deserved win cos we dominated setpiece and were physically on top in defence. Good character from the team and excellent defence a few times on our own goal line.
2 weeks will be the real test obviously, but totally unfair to criticise anyone for yesterday imo.
Puja.
So your argument is that keeping the ball and playing close, tight rugby with short runners would have eventually led to a knock-on, so better to belt the ball away and take a 50-50 shot that the wind either blew it back towards us or to took it straight into touch? I'd argue a well drilled team should do better running into that wind than they should attempting to kick into it.Timbo wrote:No, I don’t think there was any value in playing rugby outside of the oppo 22 or so. Little offloads in contact is, to my mind, just marking time until someone drops the ball in those conditions.
Banquo, yes there are individual moments that can be critiqued, but the fact so many normally very good kickers struggled on both sides just highlights the difficulty of executing in the conditions.
Puja
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Re: Team for Scotland
Those ones out on the full were nearly killers in the second half. One could see the plan to pin them in their 22 for the second half was sound considering how the enventual try did get scored.
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Re: Team for Scotland
There were some pretty obviously egregious examples on our side- I actually thought Scotland kicked pretty well, bar two awful ones from Price who was knackered and a poor high ball from Hastings (they executed lots of nice little chips, and just kicked long and down the middle with the wind). Heinz's making the same mistake twice was daft- he hit them well, he just didn't think; Daly didn't have much excuse either, and 11 out on the full was ludicrously bad- as I said, if you are going to put any height on the ball, just keep it well infield.Timbo wrote:No, I don’t think there was any value in playing rugby outside of the oppo 22 or so. Little offloads in contact is, to my mind, just marking time until someone drops the ball in those conditions.Puja wrote:For certain values, I do agree with you, but I'm amazed at how much we kicked. We had a big tight five, with another tight five on the bench, and instead of keeping the ball, we belted it up in the air and turned it into a dice roll. Fine, it wasn't the day for flinging wide passes, but wouldn't it have been the day for forwards running onto short passes and little offloads in contact? We actually did that for a bit of the first half and it got us into position for our first two penalties. Then we got ahead and gave up having the ball for the day. Why pick Mako and Sinckler and never use them?Timbo wrote:Some of the comments on here a bit absurd. Go out today, with 60mph winds all the rage, and imagine trying to play rugby in those conditions. Deserved win cos we dominated setpiece and were physically on top in defence. Good character from the team and excellent defence a few times on our own goal line.
2 weeks will be the real test obviously, but totally unfair to criticise anyone for yesterday imo.
Puja
Banquo, yes there are individual moments that can be critiqued, but the fact so many normally very good kickers struggled on both sides just highlights the difficulty of executing in the conditions.
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Re: Team for Scotland
Most of our kicks were in our own half or around the half way line. I’d question the point of playing rugby in those areas in those conditions. Without the credible threat of going wide you’re just asking your pack to fight like mad for very small gains against a set defence 50-60 metres from their posts. To what end?Puja wrote:Don't you bring facts into this debate! They contradict my feelings and thus are disbarred.Banquo wrote:Mako and Sinckler touched the ball more than any other forwards bar CurryPuja wrote:
For certain values, I do agree with you, but I'm amazed at how much we kicked. We had a big tight five, with another tight five on the bench, and instead of keeping the ball, we belted it up in the air and turned it into a dice roll. Fine, it wasn't the day for flinging wide passes, but wouldn't it have been the day for forwards running onto short passes and little offloads in contact? We actually did that for a bit of the first half and it got us into position for our first two penalties. Then we got ahead and gave up having the ball for the day. Why pick Mako and Sinckler and never use them?
Puja.
So your argument is that keeping the ball and playing close, tight rugby with short runners would have eventually led to a knock-on, so better to belt the ball away and take a 50-50 shot that the wind either blew it back towards us or to took it straight into touch? I'd argue a well drilled team should do better running into that wind than they should attempting to kick into it.Timbo wrote:No, I don’t think there was any value in playing rugby outside of the oppo 22 or so. Little offloads in contact is, to my mind, just marking time until someone drops the ball in those conditions.
Banquo, yes there are individual moments that can be critiqued, but the fact so many normally very good kickers struggled on both sides just highlights the difficulty of executing in the conditions.
Puja
Also, can’t really describe a kicking strategy of putting them under pressure through kicking and giving them the ball as a lottery when we had a big edge in the setpiece.
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Re: Team for Scotland
Keeping the ball. Applying pressure. Wearing them down, considering we had an edge in forwards replacements. Trying to apply our quality over theirs, instead of punting the ball high and reducing the game to a coin toss. Encouraging them to bring players up to defend and thus creating space for kicks behind, instead of doing two carries then a caterpillar to give them ample time to drop four players back to cover every blade of grass.Timbo wrote:Most of our kicks were in our own half or around the half way line. I’d question the point of playing rugby in those areas in those conditions. Without the credible threat of going wide you’re just asking your pack to fight like mad for very small gains against a set defence 50-60 metres from their posts. To what end?Puja wrote:Don't you bring facts into this debate! They contradict my feelings and thus are disbarred.Banquo wrote: Mako and Sinckler touched the ball more than any other forwards bar Curry.
So your argument is that keeping the ball and playing close, tight rugby with short runners would have eventually led to a knock-on, so better to belt the ball away and take a 50-50 shot that the wind either blew it back towards us or to took it straight into touch? I'd argue a well drilled team should do better running into that wind than they should attempting to kick into it.Timbo wrote:No, I don’t think there was any value in playing rugby outside of the oppo 22 or so. Little offloads in contact is, to my mind, just marking time until someone drops the ball in those conditions.
Banquo, yes there are individual moments that can be critiqued, but the fact so many normally very good kickers struggled on both sides just highlights the difficulty of executing in the conditions.
Puja
Also, can’t really describe a kicking strategy of putting them under pressure through kicking and giving them the ball as a lottery when we had a big edge in the setpiece.
I'll agree that we did have an edge in the set piece, but most of our kicks didn't lead to a set piece. Well, excepting the ones that went out on the full, but I'm assuming they weren't part of the plan.
Puja
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Re: Team for Scotland
Given how much Scotland lineout we spoiled, it was a pretty credible planPuja wrote: I'm assuming they weren't part of the plan.
Puja
