Tomikin
David Codey (61)
I agree, we have a pack of who will front up to any team..We'd probably have beaten Wales if we'd spent the first half not trying to get the ball wide when we shouldn't have.
I agree, we have a pack of who will front up to any team..We'd probably have beaten Wales if we'd spent the first half not trying to get the ball wide when we shouldn't have.
Pretty sure I also remember him playing 10 at the Brumbies and being ordinary for periods as well - but maybe I’m wrong.Forgetting that for years and years Matt was a 10 for the Brumbies, and played extremely well there with the only reason Lilo getting a shot at 10 was his knee injury.. The only thing that makes him a 12 is that he loves contact in attack or defense meaning he hit like a mac truck. But his got all the skills of a 10.
His a very skillful player, and has found form coming off the bench, and that's probably the most important thing to get into our team at the moment
We'd probably have beaten Wales if we'd spent the first half not trying to get the ball wide when we shouldn't have.
Forgetting that for years and years Matt was a 10 for the Brumbies, and played extremely well there with the only reason Lilo getting a shot at 10 was his knee injury.. The only thing that makes him a 12 is that he loves contact in attack or defense meaning he hit like a mac truck. But his got all the skills of a 10.
His a very skillful player, and has found form coming off the bench, and that's probably the most important thing to get into our team at the moment
We'd probably have beaten Wales if we'd spent the first half not trying to get the ball wide when we shouldn't have.
You have to ask, at what point does it become insanity to persist with the width strategy with the out the back passing? I don't recall it working, ever. It seems that opposition are so aware of it, they embarrass us in their defense of it. The only two possibilities where it doesn't seem insane is (1) if we are trying to wear them out and beat opposition for fitness, or (2) if we are about to suddenly completely change our approach to games such that teams expect us to go wide but with screw them in close and through the middle. Sadly, I don't think either of those are true.
We'd probably have beaten Wales if we'd spent the first half not trying to get the ball wide when we shouldn't have.
Pretty sure I also remember him playing 10 at the Brumbies and being ordinary for periods as well - but maybe I’m wrong.
I can’t remember him being successful at all as a starting 10 for the Wallabies and, if he has been, it has been for occasional games rather than over a prolonged period. Beale, JOC (James O'Connor) & Hodge all possess the skills require to play 10, but that doesn’t mean it is their best position or that we should pick them there. To me, To'omua’s skill set and instincts as a player are better suited at 12 - but he is capable of handling 10 (and I would rate his ability to do so higher then the three I mentioned).
If he gets picked as starting 10, so be it. Out of him, Foley and Lealiifano he does have the best form - but there is ample evidence that form off the bench does not equate to great performances as a starter.
maybe would fit a similar mould to a Pollard - hard running, good hands, great vision, low error rate.
Yes, sorry, I should have clarified that I meant from static ball.I think it is absolutely the option when we've punched a couple of holes up the middle and have front foot ball and a disorganised defensive line.
The problem is that it's very easy to counter for a defence that is a) set and b) expecting you to do it.
Totally wrong, To'omua was already done with a knee, that's why Lealiifano went to 10, and at Brumbies and Wallabies Level Pat McCabe moved to 12 and kicked off one of the greatest attack we have seen for a while. Then that dirty AAC (Adam Ashley-Cooper) broke Lealiifano's ankle and we play with To'omua at 10 and Lealiifano at 12 in 2013To'omua wasn't a bad 10 at the Brumbies, but he was a very limited 10. His style of play (direct, hard running and accurate, punishing defence) was complemented well by White/Prior at 9 and Lealiifano at 12. When he didn't have a creative 12 and a quick, cut-out passing 9 alongside him, the whole backline struggled.
His switch to 12 (precipitated by the decision being made at Wallabies level IIRC) sparked an attacking revival for the Brumbies, that lasted until Lealiifano's ankle exploded. After that, the Brumbies always looked unimaginative in attack with To'omua at 10.
Dont let facts get in the way of a good storyAlso, To'omua didn't play at 12 for the Brumbies until 2015... two years after Link played him there.
He was first choice 10 under White, and then Bernie from 2012 - 2014.
What a team. Not one uncapped player in the first 15.Totally wrong, To'omua was already done with a knee, that's why Lealiifano went to 10, and at Brumbies and Wallabies Level Pat McCabe moved to 12 and kicked off one of the greatest attack we have seen for a while. Then that dirty AAC (Adam Ashley-Cooper) broke Lealiifano's ankle and we play with To'omua at 10 and Lealiifano at 12 in 2013
Check out the starting team from the 2013 final vs the Chiefs
BRUMBIES:
FB 15 Jesse Mogg
RW 14 Henry Speight
OC 13 Tevita Kuridrani
IC 12 Christian Lealiifano
LW 11 Clyde Rathbone
FH 10 Matt To'omua
SH 9 Nic White
N8 8 Ben Mowen (c)
OF 7 George Smith
BF 6 Peter Kimlin
RL 5 Sam Carter
LL 4 Scott Fardy
TP 3 Ben Alexander
HK 2 Stephen Moore
LP 1 Scott Sio
What a team. Not one uncapped player in the first 15.