The sage
Vay Wilson (31)
If it's a genuine question then the answer is a long one. They are extremely professional and don't accept anything below their very high standards. They base a lot of what they do on a whole of country approach sharing a lot of information amongst all their coaches and players. what you see in a game is the product of hundreds of hours and often years of work developing players and support systems. They are as far from the old fashioned way of playing rugby as you could get. They plan almost every detail for months before every game and rarely run the same thing twice. I've seen them flag a wallaby player was being weak on the left foot and had forward runners switch to his inside shoulder to exploit it, I've seen them measure their own players fitness down to the tiniest detail and pull them each week exactly when they hit the threshold. The organisation and planning is unebelievable.
The sharing of information etc that you talk about whilst important, imo, is secondary to how you play in the game.
Going back to my point "they keep the ball up". That is they have superior fitness, ball skills and in general play use pressure to force mistakes. They don't make passes unless 1) they have the clear ability to do so & 2) unless the recipient is in a good position to take that pass. They keep the movement going forward by keeping the ball up, not putting it in the risk zone of a ruck, where superior break down specialists can cause an eventual turn-over. By being of superior fitness the pressure of moving the ball forward, keeping it up, makes holes in the defence or causes illegal play and therefore a penalty.
Whilst rugby has changed over the years, with rules, speed and the like, you may be surprise that the great teams over time have the same attributes as the ab's have at the moment. And superior fitness, skills and keeping the ball moving or up is probably the key attributes over time.
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