There is still that horrible vulnerability upfront that enables teams to manage Australia of a game, but Dean's non-selection of a back-up to Pocock hurt. Its probably irrelevant to point out that Ireland too had no 7 in the side tonight, yet still found a way to dominate the breakdown. I genuinely believe that doesn't happen with Pocock in the team.
I doubt if a fetcher replacement or even Pocock himself would have made much of a difference. Ireland just flooded the contact area with players and pushed any Aussies out of the way - much how we did to the All Blacks and Boks for long periods in the last two 3N games we played. One guy could not have withstood it.
The All Blacks found it very hard in the 1st half in Brisbane to compete with us and just had to wait to the scary part finished. Last night Ireland played like we did then, and we played passively, much how they played in their 4 trial games, all of which they lost.
In case folks have not read several posts in the last two years in this forum: good fetchers will always have value but the since the law crackdown before the 2010 Super14 the role of the pure fetcher has been marginalised, and the pre-RWC guidelines to RWC referees has not helped them either. Counter rucking by defenders has greater currency now than fetching and those teams that don't have a specialist fetcher, and scarcely ever had one, now find their way of winning, or defending, ruck ball is as good as having an ace poacher.
The trick is to be quick to the breakdown in numbers to get the ruck hit, just like getting the hit in the scrum - and if the other team doesn't do that you have won their ruck ball or slowed it down at least, or defended yours against them.
That's what happen last night. Rugby history will not tell us that Ireland did not have a fetcher playing against the Wallabies in the 2011 RWC. Even if David Wallace, the usual Ireland 7, had not injured himself in the last trial, it still wouldn't have been the case because Wally is not a fetcher either.
What it will show is that the Ireland forwards and especially their backrowers were quicker to the physical contests, better man for man when there and even better at working with team mates in them.
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