Wales 27-6 France

21 02 2014

Thoughts…

  1. Wales generally defended superbly, particularly in the second half, when France dominated possession (apart from the Picamoles sin bin period). Rhys Priestland twice made excellent covering tackles after initial line breaks, and at other times France threw away try-scoring chance. But Dan “Chopper” Lydiate, replicating his 2012 form, Sam Warburton and Gethin Jenkins put in brilliant shifts in the loose

    Wales: still just about in with a chance of a third successive Six Nations title

  2. Rhys Webb gave Wales a real boost, supplying much quicker ball than the backs have been used to. Mike Phillips’s steps before passing are really frustrating when you want to see Wales pick up the pace
  3. Wales had a bit of luck with both tries – George North’s (to get into that position was thanks to the sort of back interplay that was totally non-existent last week, but it was reliant on a bad French mistake) and Sam Warburton’s (not convinced it was over the line before he rolled it forward. Still, the captain deserved it)
  4. France weren’t great. To say the least. They weren’t quite headless chickens, but didn’t see much more clued-up than that. Rivalled Wales’s performance against Ireland in the fluffed lines stakes
  5. But it ended up with Wales’s joint-biggest win over the French since 1931 (the other time was a 21-0 win in 1950). Les Bleus have now failed to score in four consecutive games against Wales, dating back to THAT World Cup quarterfinal
  6. It’s a massive uphill task, but Wales are back in the hunt for the championship. From that point of view, an English win over Ireland tomorrow would be ideal…

 





Australia v Lions: my team

17 06 2013

Aside from the excitement over the arrival Down Under of Shane Williams, there is a serious business for the Lions: beating Australia.

Lions australiaA number of injuries have hit Warren Gatland’s squad, and the team I’d pick has taken those into consideration (I’ve left out those who are seen as doubtful). It means, for example, that neither winger would be starting were it not for injuries to others.

Backs (five Welsh, two Irish):

15: Leigh Halfpenny
14: Alex Cuthbert
13: Brian O’Driscoll
12: Jonathan Davies
11: George North
10: Jonathan Sexton
9: Mike Phillips Read the rest of this entry »





Lions squad verdict: the forwards

2 05 2013

See also Lions squad verdict: the backs

Dan Cole

What a unit – one of the best scrummagers in world rugby, even if the English pack did get schooled in the Six Nations against Wales

Cian Healy

Another prop whose name had been pencilled into the Lions squad list for some time, although he blotted his copybook somewhat with a stupid stamp on Cole in the Six Nations

Gethin Jenkins

A wonderfully mobile front rower (and I’ll take any excuse to repost a video of him humiliating Ronan O’Gara) whose Six Nations performances demonstrated his relative weakness, the scrum, was not really anything of the sort

Adam Jones Read the rest of this entry »





An English perspective on their Six Nations mauling by Wales

20 03 2013

By Andrew Curry

I’d just like to say congratulations to Wales for winning the tournament. Superb display against England, Leigh Halfpenny was just phenomenal.

But do you think it throws up more questions than it answers? I should probably admit here and now that I am an Englishman and a die-hard England supporter through thick and thin, but I don’t think this was as good news for Wales as it has been made out to be.

Wales celebrate retaining their Six Nations title after beating England 30-3 at the Millennium Stadium on March 16, 2013

Wales still have to prove themselves against southern hemisphere opposition

 

So the things you said in that post, I thought I’d reply from an England point of view (and nowhere near an expert one!!) Adam Jones as player of the tournament? No. Your scrum was OK in 4 of the 5 games. It was decent against Italy when Castro struggled and they didn’t have Parisse adding some shunt. But it was average against Ireland and went down like a cheap hooker against Scotland. Yes, yes cue Brian Moore and everyone else chirping away about how ‘streetwise’ and ‘canny’ AJ and GJ are but if you think that’ll work everytime you’re having a laugh.

JPR Williams suggests that Dan Cole has been banished to the midweek team. I doubt it. He scrummages very well and often legally (which isn’t very common) and is ferocious in the loose… I make only the suggestion that had we had Corbisiero fit and a different ref then the scrum would have been even. The result would not have changed (Wales were on a different level) but at least Dan Cole would not have his reputation unfairly attacked by parochial bandwagon jumpers.

Tuilagi and Barrit are not the answer. We didn’t need a 30 point mauling to tell us this.

Tipuric was very good. Warburton was excellent. Robshaw was superb. If you want an answer as to how Warburton and Tipuric respond to playing on the back foot, go back and watch any of Wales’ games since 2011. Invisible to a man. Watch Robshaw against South Africa (a game we lost by one point due to his ‘poor captaincy’) and you’ll agree he was the best player on the pitch by a country mile. Scavengers are like scrum halves. The great ones are great when your pack is going backwards.

Wales were unbelievably good from 1-15 but any Welsh fan who realistically saw that result or that performance coming is as big a liar, as short of sight and with as many screws loose as the Kearney selectors you mention. Wales have been pretty mediocre since this fixture last year. Escaping Twickenham with a win was impressive and we all know about the 8 defeats on the bounce. Needless to remind you that they were to a light Australian team, an out of sorts Argentina and Samoa. Plus the embarrasing capitulation to New Zealand. Why is it that Wales play to their strengths ONLY when everyone writes them off OR when they play England?

Don’t give me the same rubbish that idiot JPR Williams (greatest player to grace the game but shocking pundit, almost as bad as Clive) spouts about the nationalities. IF that’s truly the reason then you’ll never be more than bit part players. sneaking as many England defeats as you can and failing on the great stage. I read once that ‘Wales play on confidence, they desperately need momentum whereas England think they can win even when they’re crap.’ When are the Welsh going to realise that they are good enough to beat the best? England aren’t the best, nowhere near and, for once, we don’t actually think we are. That win against NZ was a freak. a one off from a team that flatters to deceive. This result, in the cold light of day, should make Welsh fans LIVID. You’ve got the bloody players! You’ve got one of, if not, THE best tight fives. you’ve got THE best full back IN THE WORLD, you’ve got a terrific openside in Sam Warburton, Justin Tipuric would get edged out by Dan Lydiate in my opinion but talk about top class problems! Mike Phillips can be unbelievably good when he wants to be and with front foot ball and the type of stand off that the Welsh valleys can muster you could cut teams to shreds on a whim BUT YOU DON’T.

Wales-France this year was a travesty. Coming from an England fan who watched England under Andy Robinson you know when we find a game boring it must be of glacial pace but that was utterly dire. Where was your Welsh flair? Where was your passion for the game then? Oh look, you’re playing the ‘arrogant English’ with nothing to lose in your own back yard. Now you play amazingly well. Please don’t take this as sour grapes, I don’t mind that we lost. I can think of few teams in world rugby who would have stood up to THAT onslaught at scrum and breakdown. but i can think of even fewer teams in world rugby that would have elicited such a performance.

String a few games with that type of performance together and I will admit that this Welsh team is the greatest your country has mustered (as all your stats suggest). Fail to do so and Wales will always be the plucky underdog, tussling for scraps off the southern hemisphere’s table…