wamberal99
Jim Clark (26)
How good are the Woodies!!!
What is the extent of the injury? Leg again?thats all the Tahs need - Jorgo injured again - but the whole squad needs to be playing rugby all the time I reckon.
Not sure that is an issue with his current form - might not make it into JWBs.Shame. Was hoping with Tom Wright and Kellaway playing well he may get let go for the Junior World Cup
the whole squad needs to be playing rugby all the time I reckon.
Have to think it's a consequence of rugby being late to professionalism compared to other sports. More money in the game would mean a greater incentive to develop juniors through the club system.The term "battle-hardened" is instructional - players in Europe play more games, and while they have squads to rotate, there's no fitness like match fitness. Gym work and training pitch is fine, but it isn't going to deliver game hardness.
Kids at rugby schools, who aren't allowed to play for their junior club, are getting less than a dozen competitive games per year.
In league it is at least twice that.
No wonder so many of them quit once they look for post-school rugby.
Hence why the tahs smashed the club sides???The best part of 100 kids get to play 20-25 games a year through the school and rep games. Two Gen Blue sides and then the NSW schools sides along with Aus 18s and Aus Schools.
We produce talent who are fit and ready to go but we don’t have the environment for them to level up. Club is there but it’s not close to professional standard. The leaps in what’s required are too big.
Don’t think that’s an indication of elite Club sides and more an indictment on the depth of the wider Tahs squad.Hence why the tahs smashed the club sides???
The best part of 100 kids get to play 20-25 games a year through the school and rep games. Two Gen Blue sides and then the NSW schools sides along with Aus 18s and Aus Schools.
You're bang on about not creating a pool of kids who participate longer but are there many sports really maintaining a top lower tier anymore? It feels as though society sadly is moving away from it all together.That's only the pointy end of identified talent tho, right? And some of those 20 games are going to be cakewalks due to the variability of schools rugby quality year to year.
League put the emphasis on club footy, grading their teams appropriately, for a level of competitiveness our junior club system - deprived of the best talent - can't muster.
The vast majority of our Rugby kids aren't getting near 20 games in the schools system, so beyond the chasm of continuity created by schools rugby itself, we're all behind other sports.
We don't create a pool of kids who are still in the game and loving it post-school, and maybe are late bloomers who are ready to improve the quality of club and/or professional Rugby.
You're bang on about not creating a pool of kids who participate longer but are there many sports really maintaining a top lower tier anymore? It feels as though society sadly is moving away from it all together.
The Sydney Uni 2nd grade team largely consisted of 5-7 boys who are a year out of school, which just isn't right. Keep them together in Colts programs, grow the competitiveness of the competition as a whole while also congruently influencing boys to stay in rugby after a school/club level. Take this with a grain of salt though, just a spectator's viewpoint.
Fine in theory but they cant because they breach the points system and cant play them at the same time. Uni's "dirty little secret" that is NEVER discussed in recruitment presentations. The proposition of playing at Uni is very attractive for these young players. The facilities,accomodation assistance and access to study support BUT it comes at a cost. They either get limited time in Colts or are moved into grade. No one is going to turn down the opportunity as a player but whether it is in their best interests and the interests of the competition is the issue. Imagine if all the best young players were allocated by NSW Rugby to various Colts Clubs to spread the talent and for these kids to all play in First Grade Colts...... Wouldnt that be a better model?
Not throwing any shade as I know you're involved across your Club and Subbies but there are a lot people that love being on their committees and front centre table at the lunches too much and the Rugby part of it is secondary.You make a good point. I hold league up as an example but they're also seeing erosion in the lower ranks.
My ongoing frustration with Rugby is that we seem to actively fight against anything that looks like alignment.
We used to call them the Blazer Brigade!Not throwing any shade as I know you're involved across your Club and Subbies but there are a lot people that love being on their committees and front centre table at the lunches too much and the Rugby part of it is secondary.
This is at all levels of the game.
This is the older version of the player who will always be "injured" and never attend games or training but religiously indulges in club nights, tours, and the club merch shop.Not throwing any shade as I know you're involved across your Club and Subbies but there are a lot people that love being on their committees and front centre table at the lunches too much and the Rugby part of it is secondary.
This is at all levels of the game.
I'm involved with a volunteer organisation (not sport related) but there's people like that in my organisation - more interested in the "power" than actually meaningfully participating.Not throwing any shade as I know you're involved across your Club and Subbies but there are a lot people that love being on their committees and front centre table at the lunches too much and the Rugby part of it is secondary.
This is at all levels of the game.