It's interesting reading all of the comments and thoughts. I've reflected on this over the course of this week and it's fair to say being an international (Tier 1) coach is a bloody tough job! But on the flip side, there are also some things you definitely can't get away with... so if you remove the non-starters, what you're left with on the table represent the only viable options. I would have thought:
- Tactical coherence is key - design the way(s) you want your team to play and make sure you have the cattle selected to deliver
- Selection is about trades: consistency vs form vs tactical approach (for that one game) vs experience (historical and incremental gained in this match) - there is rarely a perfect answer
- International tactics do need to be different or at least tailored vs club - speed of game, ferocity of defence and accuracy are all higher. Exploiting deficiencies is a less reliable approach at the top level
- Rock, paper, scissors - no one approach is best, but you can deploy tactics to better your opponent's if you predict correctly how they'll play. Assuming you have the cattle, again
- Adaptability is an asset! Being able to deviate from the plan (and know when to), without breaking things is a big bonus and players/captains who can muster this are worth their weight in gold, rather than waiting for water carriers, half time talks etc.
- Culture is crucial, especially long-term. That extra 1-2% that can separate W vs L is discretionary effort: belief in what you're working towards, why and overall cohesion as a group.
- Media will always blow things out of proportion (as will we). You're not as good as they say and not as bad either. However, they'll be more understanding if you explain your plan (without giving opposition coaches too much)
- Platitudes are worse than meaningless. They erode goodwill and can even be disingenuous. Brutal honesty (and owning it) will get far more from everyone
Simply Blundering is failing, IMO, on many of the above. And in particular, doesn't seem to have a plan to help our players deal with the increased intensity of international level, versus club. Our ruck performance, centres effectiveness and over reliance on Magic Marcus just feels like we're not respecting the step up at this level.
The lack of apparent internal consistency with what he actually wants us to achieve in a game is inexplicable. Why does he insist on contrasting styles of player that interact in their roles (SH, FH for example)? If he could explain why he's doing this shit, might get him more latitude!
Stuttering Blowhard cannot convey (to me) the grand strategy and why we should believe the next games after this one will be better. For me, that's why I'm becoming less interested in watching as each game goes by.