Nobody is disputing that such video analysis is insightful, interesting and helpful in highlighting tactics, team strengths, weaknesses and tendencies and also how refs call games. It is fascinating. Here is an example of what I object to: when Bob Dwyer's excellent coaching credentials so selectively highlight NZ's egregious transgression of the laws when there is ample evidence to highlight similar Wallaby transgressions should he so choose. It strikes me as mere hyperbolic bile that loses so much of its merit because it is so biased.
I don't have the time to go through every line of your previous post (I didn't think you were a Kiwi btw, that's why I used a comma)
But it comes down to this - I don't personally, nor for this site, feel some obligation to be completely unbiased (in whoever's viewpoint 'unbiased' would be). This site has never promised that, and I'm not sure it ever could, without becoming pretty uninteresting, and divorced from the reality of passionate rugby support.
A couple of examples of how I don't see this as workable.
1) Bob writes a great article (like he did last weekend - glowing on New Zealand, scathing on Australia) writes about something in the final paragraph that, as a passionate Wallabies supporter, pisses him off. It's also an interesting point of play that had an impact in the game. I, and plenty of others find it interesting, but such 'bile' might offend souls like yourself. Are you saying I should censor Bob for the sake of "balance"? Or get him to write about an Australian transgression to 'balance' it up?
2) We see the All Blacks employing a dubious tactic that we find interesting and want to explore it with video analysis. According to you we can't do this as its 'unbalanced'. How many Wallaby transgressions do I need to pull out to be 'balanced'? Is it 1:1? Is that what balanced is, because maybe the Wallabies didn't actually commit as many (according to you we need to get better at it), or shit, maybe we committed
more and I'd be under-representing it with 1:1?
With exception to what Austin did last week, and is looking to do this week, in putting the few videos together that we have (a handfull over 4 years?) we haven't even tried to be numerically balanced in them because that's not the point. They aren't quantitative analysis, just as when we look at elements of the Wallaby play (which we do more than anything else) isn't meant to be.
Finally, we're very open as to who uses the site from a viewpoint perspective - more than many others you'll find (or so I'm told). I think this is a good thing. Feel free to say you don't agree with analysis or viewpoints put forward. However, if you're going to find what you've seen so far hard to stomach, then I guess this isn't the site for you.
Since you now "suck up" to Link on Twitter, maybe you can ask him a little more about that.
Cheap shot. The quotation marks and smiley face don't make it better.