RoffsChoice
Jim Lenehan (48)
Individual brilliance can really make the difference (Pocock v South Africa in the 2011 RWC, Barnes in all three Wales games in 2012, Foley v England in the 2015 RWC), but it's dominance and control that wins you a rugby game.
If you have an impenetrable defence, a breakdown presence that secures your own ball and slows down or steals the opponent's, and a set-piece that wins all its own ball and steals half the opponent's, then chances are you'll win the game. And most, if not all, of that comes from having the better forward pack. Teach your backs to position themselves defensively, make sure they can tackle, and then beef up the forward pack.
Not saying that's the only way to win. Obviously we have a bit of a history of winning games when we turn them into a shootout, and the effect of shock-and-awe has kept us in plenty of games. But the list of tier one sides that don't prioritise a good defence, set piece, and forward pack are us, Scotland, and Italy, and that's not the best list to be on.
If you have an impenetrable defence, a breakdown presence that secures your own ball and slows down or steals the opponent's, and a set-piece that wins all its own ball and steals half the opponent's, then chances are you'll win the game. And most, if not all, of that comes from having the better forward pack. Teach your backs to position themselves defensively, make sure they can tackle, and then beef up the forward pack.
Not saying that's the only way to win. Obviously we have a bit of a history of winning games when we turn them into a shootout, and the effect of shock-and-awe has kept us in plenty of games. But the list of tier one sides that don't prioritise a good defence, set piece, and forward pack are us, Scotland, and Italy, and that's not the best list to be on.