WALLABIES V SPRINGBOKS – Perth, 9 Sep 2017
BREAKDOWN & OTHER MATTERS
I can enjoy a close game but don’t consider a draw as a good result.
The Wallabies should never have lost this game after the score line was Wallabies 20:10 Springboks at 48 minutes.
However, the Wallabies looked pedestrian in attack and showed no urgency in defence. Too often the Wallabies were too slow in support of their own ball carriers and provided too few effective cleanouts.
In contrast the Springboks showed the benefit of competing strongly in defensive rucks and and preventing any clean ball to the Wallabies’ playmakers. As Cheika admitted: “we were under pressure and unable to create any shape in our game”.
Although the Wallabies still won, what most coaches would consider, an acceptable number of their own rucks (84 from 89 – 94%) the Springboks were almost faultless (56 from 57 – 98%).
The Wallabies had most of the Possession (58%) and Territory (58%).
The Wallabies dominated the ball carrying stats with 596m from 120 runs (5m/carry) against the Springboks 307m from 74 runs (4.1m/carry) yet the Springboks were more effective with 17 Clean Breaks (Wallabies 7) and 21 Defenders Beaten (Wallabies 17).
Not unusually the Springboks kicked more with 27 kicks against the Wallabies 23.
Penalties were close (W 9:8 S) and the Springboks conceded more Turn Overs – 15 v W 12.
Again the Wallabies tackled badly with another 21 missed tackles (59 from 80 @ 74%). The Springboks missed 17 tackles but had a much higher success rate (126 from 143 @ 88%).
Referees have been penalising pilferers with hands on ground (for not supporting their weight) in all competitions since the last RWC. Glen Jackson obviously didn’t get the memo.
At key times during the match the Wallabies were let down by their normally reliable set piece. The Wallabies scrum struggled after bench replacements and won only 63% of line outs on their own throw (7 from 11) while stealing only the single Springbok line out (12 from 13).
INDIVIDUAL RUCK INVOLVEMENTS
Ruck Involvements (RIs) tabulated for the Forwards who make about 75%-80% of each team’s Total Ruck Involvements (TRIs). IMO RIs are a good measure of work rate – particularly for a Forward.
Remember:
- Early means 1st or 2nd AFTER the ball carrier has been tackled and brought to ground.
- Impact means active engagement: strong physical contact, changed shape of ruck, clean-out, protecting ball etc. (more than hand on someone’s bum or arriving after the hard work has been done). Yes it’s subjective - but as I collect all data at least it’s consistent.
- Impact DOES NOT equate to Effectiveness. I’ve concluded that coming up with an effectiveness measure is just too hard in the time that I have available – but open to suggestions.
(Other than Ruck Involvements stats from ESPN)
Relatively slow arrivals from Coleman, Uelese, McMahon, Arnold, Sio but particularly Dempsey.
Relatively low impact from Hanigan, Uelese, Kepu but particularly Sio.
Hopper's numbers very close to his Super Rugby 2017 average.
Relatively slow arrivals from Kolisi, Marx, Oosthuizen, Casseim, but particularly Mtawariri & du Preez.
Relatively low impact from Kolisi, Oosthuizen, Mtawariri, du Preez and particularly Casseim.
RUCK INVOLVEMENTS OVER TIME