Results-wise that's our worst year since 2009 when we lost four (France & SA x3) & the first time since 2000 we've lost to three different opponents (Australia, SA, France) in one year.
Like you I can accept defeat when the team's done everything they could to win but man there was some awful stuff on show this morning & last week. As Jeffrey & others have noted, we're still running with the 2010's game plan & it's not been good enough v England, Australia, Argentina, SA, Ireland & now France in the last 23 matches played (plus the draw v Australia), that's sub-70% for a team that historically wins 80% of the time. Something needs to change.
Absolutely.
We might have won 12 out of 15 - but let's not forget:
6 of those wins came against Tonga B, Fiji X 2, USA without European players, Italy, and Wales (missing a dozen players).
We beat the Argies twice - but everyone beat the Argies this year. Don't forget the Argies didn't even play at home. They started the RC in South Africa. We had 2 very nervy matches against the Boks, winning one and losing one to last minute penalties. South Africa looked like that tour to Australia was one tour too far after a brutal series with the Lions, losing twice to Australia.
And as usual, the wins are jacked up by the Bledisloe games.
This just follows the previous year, when we lost to Argentina for the first time, after we had lost to Ireland for the first time in 2016.
Finally, fatigue is a convenient excuse. The French players play in 14 team league, 26 domestic games a season. Most take part in European leagues, which adds in another 8 games. Then, like all international teams, they play a 13 or 14 game season. On average, a european player plays 1.5x the game of an AB, often in more attritional circumstances.
It's hard to really use travelling as an excuse either. When the Lions travel every 4 years, they bootcamp for a couple of weeks after a long season. They then play a warm-up, 5-6 provincial games, 1 vs an "A" team, and 3 official test matches, stretching slightly over 2 months. I haven't heard the Lions complaining they were too tired at the end of a long season.
It's not the losses (or indeed the wins). It's the performances, how we have stagnated in learning and improvement, and how we are self-satisfied with "we are always so harsh on the ABs" "we still won 12 games", or Moody's "we matched them up front". As if our teams don't face criticsm when they lose. Losses are no longer as painful, except for the likes of Coles who have been around when the old guard were still about. There's no problem with any of these views. It just makes RWC 2023 far more unlikely.