Against Scotland Timani competed at 3 defensive rucks and 6 against Wales.
Are you really saying that he would have made all the difference in the first half against Ireland at the breakdown?
I think he would have had minimal defensive ruck involvement because we were on the back foot constantly, scrambling to defend and the only player we were at all willing to commit to defensive rucks was Pocock who had very limited success because there were few good opportunities to compete for the reasons already stated.
I don't think team selections in the backrow would have had any real impact in that first half against Ireland because we were comprehensively beaten across the park.
Surely Timani's ruck cleanouts have and will always be most beneficial when we have the ball which is not the situation in that first half against Ireland.
The minutes received by bench players during Cheika's coaching tenure seem to correlate pretty well to the quality of the bench.
At the RWC we had a far stronger bench and they got substantially more game time as a result.
Sounds like Chek not doing his job then. It's difficult to win test matches. Makes it more difficult to play 15 against 23 (except for a few minutes), particularly against the better teams - and now there are a few teams playing better than us
Big bags of money perhaps? Because, there is no other logical explanation
Sounds like Chek not doing his job then. It's difficult to win test matches. Makes it more difficult to play 15 against 23 (except for a few minutes), particularly against the better teams - and now there are a few teams playing better than us
Most of mumm's run metres are out wide, Timani's are all in tight getting front foot ball.
Despite being low in locks, Kruis & Lawes are streets ahead of we have to put out
Is that correct though? At the moment with our structures both of these guys play in the inner pod in attack. Distance made is within the same game area.
Mumm might not be as "effective", and I know what you mean even if the term is somewhat subjective. But we gain in the line out. I realise that you are not in favour of the Pooper, but while it is there, the remaining loose forward must be a creditable jumper when we face a decent line out opposition.
Hoping we get away with it against England, there is a chance of it, but only because they a low on second row stocks.
Despite being low in locks, Kruis & Lawes are streets ahead of we have to put out
Are you sure?
There are a couple of different shapes the Wallabies run. Mumm works in the middle in some of them, however in the primary one there's 2 pods of 3 in the middle, one of the locks/8 and one of the front row, then the flankers play wide.
Yeah clearly there is this set of experienced, game changing test players who are available at the moment to make major impact off the bench at home doing the gardening just waiting for the call up
Is that correct though? At the moment with our structures both of these guys play in the inner pod in attack. Distance made is within the same game area.
Mumm might not be as "effective", and I know what you mean even if the term is somewhat subjective. But we gain in the line out. I realise that you are not in favour of the Pooper, but while it is there, the remaining loose forward must be a creditable jumper when we face a decent line out opposition.
Hoping we get away with it against England, there is a chance of it, but only because they a low on second row stocks.
Is that correct though? At the moment with our structures both of these guys play in the inner pod in attack. Distance made is within the same game area.
Mumm might not be as "effective", and I know what you mean even if the term is somewhat subjective. But we gain in the line out. I realise that you are not in favour of the Pooper, but while it is there, the remaining loose forward must be a creditable jumper when we face a decent line out opposition.
Hoping we get away with it against England, there is a chance of it, but only because they a low on second row stocks.
Yes there are a couple of detail changes which changes how tight in members of that inner pod are. I'm not sure it's sufficiently material to change the nature of the stats though.
What i see in attack is the Pooper being wide. If they are flankers then we agree. But I think its the same structure when Pocock wears no 8.
Am I missing something?
Scrubber, it's probably because our bench is turd. As i said originally.