Golf Man wrote:In other news we have the lowest no of tries, the joint lowest no of offloads (3 with Wales) and the second lowest number of linebreaks (7 just ahead of Wales on 5)
Stander has the ost carries of any player so far (42) just ahead of Vunipola (who has far more metres 113 v 51)
Faletau has the most tackles with 33 , ahead of Heaslip 31 (notable that Stander is 3rd here with 27)
Backs not considered dur to being backs
Wales, England and France have all played one of Scotland and/or Italy which makes such comparisons absolutely useless until the end of the tournament.
I really really wouldn't be lumping Scotland in with Italy atm - that a huge potentiabana skin for us imo
Surely makes Standers numbers in particular more impressive?
The team ones - entirely justifaiable to compare after two rounds
Does anyone know when the deadline passes for citings for Six Nations matches? I can't find anything on the interweb. I'll be a bit sickened if Guirado doesn't get a call.
Does anyone know when the deadline passes for citings for Six Nations matches? I can't find anything on the interweb. I'll be a bit sickened if Guirado doesn't get a call.
may as well paint a target on Sexton now
Guirado will probably skate
my paranoia sense is tingling
Retired from babbling. Can be found on twittter @okeeffesimon
They said the hit on Sexton "fell just short" of a red card. And it was short of a red card but, in my opinion, it could well have been a yellow and saying it was just short of red would seem to indicate they thought so too.
I didn't think the hit on DK was marginal though, I really think he was very lucky not to get a card for that.
There was also a suspicious lack of replays on the hit that took Sexton out,
We should have won, we did not put enough points on the board when we were dominant so we are to blame for that we were in control of that but I did think the ref missed a lot there was also one incident in the first half around half way which was never replayed where a French player led with the shoulder at a ruck that I think it was CJ was about to turn over, it was as clear as day he just dropped sideways into it. No replay so no hulabaloo. On the pitch we decided to let the ref deal with the incidents of foul play which he did by doing nothing.
Instead of Nige getting involved after a TMO has ruled correctly he maybe should have intervened on incidents that were actually missed.
"Horrocks went one way, Taylor the other and I was left holding the bloody hyphen!"
Sometimes a less diplomatic approach achieves results.
While POM is often slagged off for his "Mr Angry" displays, you can be sure if any of our players reacted likewise to the tackle on Kearney that the tackle would have been reviewed and would have drawn a red/yellow card. If the ref (law) isn't going to protect you .......
All Blacks nil wrote:Sometimes a less diplomatic approach achieves results.
While POM is often slagged off for his "Mr Angry" displays, you can be sure if any of our players reacted likewise to the tackle on Kearney that the tackle would have been reviewed and would have drawn a red/yellow card. If the ref (law) isn't going to protect you .......
Kind of agree with you here. A bit of collar grabbing and angry face would've brought more attention to it. I thought during the game that Best needed to get in the refs ear a bit more too.
SaS wrote:But the same best ref in the world saw the challenges on Sexton and Kearney and didn't feel the need to intervene...
Peyper saw the Maestri hit as it was two yards away and went to TMO
IIRC DK hit was far side of play from Owens
All Blacks nil wrote:Sometimes a less diplomatic approach achieves results.
While POM is often slagged off for his "Mr Angry" displays, you can be sure if any of our players reacted likewise to the tackle on Kearney that the tackle would have been reviewed and would have drawn a red/yellow card. If the ref (law) isn't going to protect you .......
play moved on though but you could be righ
not that you want this in rugby but part of the problem was DK got up and played on whereas if he had have stayed down on the spot it was more likely to be checked
Retired from babbling. Can be found on twittter @okeeffesimon
jimbobjoe wrote:
Kind of agree with you here. A bit of collar grabbing and angry face would've brought more attention to it. I thought during the game that Best needed to get in the refs ear a bit more too.
I saw Heaslip talking to the ref more than Best in the second half. I thought Best was too quiet in the Wales game too.
...a beautiful weighted pass...it is 3 on 2...it is 3 on 1...Hickie!...Magnificent!
the game of rugby is on a knife edge. If refs refuse to deal with assaults on the pitch as in the French match, then there is little future for the game. The outcome of so many appeals is a joke also - there needs to be no mitigation rather a good chance that the sentence for any foul play can be increased.
simonokeeffe wrote:hyperbole aside Guirado has escaped hasnt he?
More surprised with that one that the Maestri one. I don't think that Maestri's was a straight red card offense in any circumstance - a yellow all day long, but not a red.
You could make a strong argument that Guirado's high tackle should have been a straight red: a high and dangerous tackle that injured a player to the point where he had to leave the game and will miss multiple matches. When you consider the yellow card given against Peter Claffey in the U20s game against Wales, the mind absolutely boggles.
World Rugby hates Dave Kearney - hes been torpedoed, dropped on his head and kicked in the head for a grand total of three weeks suspension to the culprits