Mate, I won't chase all of these items but pick up on Rodda.
Against Scotland he was:
5 runs for 3 m; 8 tackles for 1 miss.
So he is in the engine room, multiple runs for little gain is fine as long as there is gain. So that is adequate. Not very busy but adequate. Not substantial though. Hope for something more emphatic on the next game.
Against England:
1 run for nothing; 3 tackles with success, 2 misses and also 2 turnovers conceded.
If this is our best lock we are really in trouble. It is sadly, a superior performance to Arnold and Skelton. I'd be thinking again about the role of LSL (Lukhan Salakaia-Loto), Swinton, and Philip. Rodda needs to be in another space entirely for me to get enthusiastic. I don't know what his "time away" has achieved but imo he is not a shadow of his previous self.
As the engine room to the pack, all our locks were poor. Including Rodda.
Dru - just to follow up on this point, watch the game again and watch how many times Rodda & Arnold clean out or seal. How many times they work around the corner to be an option in attack. How quickly they both react when there is a mistake. How much work they both do in stopping the driving maul. Watch them run an extra 10 metres to be the guy next to the ruck to put pressure on the box kick.
They still need to improve the detail in their work. Rodda is one of the two players who missed the clean out when Hooper steals the ball at the back of the England lineout. But then he & Hooper are also the two who counter ruck to win the penalty that led to our second goal.
Tackle & Run stats are fine - but there are a couple of times when Rodda sprints around the corner to be the third forward in the middle of the field but White either goes to the first player or goes the other way. So he is actually the forward doing the most work, but not picking up a stat for it. But if he doesn’t put the effort in, England’s defence is much easier.
Watch the work of Rodda & Arnold before the Nic White try saver. White and Hooper very rightly get the accolades for their excellent work. But George only breaks away because Rodda and Arnold drove England’s maul backwards - a theme common throughout the game.
My point is simple - stats never tell the full story and, in this case I’ll maintain you’re drawing a completely false conclusion from them.