Yes it does matter. I don't find scoring tries through piss poor defence entertaining, if I did I'd watch the Holden Cup.
The first 20 was good and generally the first half too but the first 20 in the 2nd half was rubbish. Players running straight through and no commitment in defence once the line was broken once. It tidied up a bit in the last 20 however.
Holden cup, is that the league one?
We are all after more rugby broadcast, hopefully with an eye one day to more FTA exposure. For that to be a success it MUST be entertaining. We don't get too many bites at that cherry.
I get a purist such as yourself might sniff a little at what you saw. That's completely fine and acceptable.
Personally I loved it, which is neither better or worse than your view. It 'just is what it is'.
BUT, I put myself in (what I think might be) the POV of a casual, non rugby guy who just happened to surf the remote and stumbled upon it.
I could not help but think he had no choice but to enjoy the speed and pace of the game. Further, if he were a leaguie who 'KNOWS' that rugby is slow, won only by penalties, dominated by constantly collapsing scrums....well he would have to challenge his preconceptions wouldn't he?
He might even watch a game later in the Holden cup and start to see how long it takes to wriggle on the ground after each and every boring three man wrestle..oops, I meant tackle.
And hopefully when he does he has this lingering memory of what he had seen earlier.
For all we know, this could be the best way to convert the casual viewer rather than (say) the RWC that is soon upon us. They too will have some large scorelines (NZ v Namibia as an example..dunno if they play) OR will have a scoreline that totals under fifteen between the two teams (made up mostly of penalties) with plenty of scrums loved by the NH.
Which is most likely to convert viewers to this great game of ours? (which when you know and love it has as part of it's richness
the very fact that each game can be so wildly different from each other, as opposed to competing bland, homogenised, non varying shoddy substitute codes)