The_Brown_Hornet
John Eales (66)
For me the back row encompasses three distinct roles:
- The fetcher. Their primary job is to be first to the breakdown, secure possession on our ball and try to pilfer some of theirs. The rules have changed this a bit, but a good fetcher is still worth having. However a traditional openside needs to have more to their game than this alone these days. They must also be able to link with the backs, support the ball carrier, tackle like a mad man and run the ball a bit themselves.
- The enforcer. This position requires a real bruiser most of the time. That is, a guy who can consistently make dominant tackles, carry the ball up in the tight-loose, clean blokes out effectively and generally put the hurt on (legally of course). It also helps if they are a nuisance on defensive rucks too.
- The ball runner. This is your traditional eight. They carry the pill up multiple times in the loose, run back in support of the back three on kick returns and in multiple phase play and gets through a lot of defence.
Two of these blokes also need to be line out options as well. You can't just have the two locks jumping these days. I think Pocock could fulfil the enforcer role. He's certainly strong enough. In fact he's one of the toughest loose forwards we've produced in many years. Not mongrel type tough, just a rock. He'll be competing against Fardy and Higgers though.
- The fetcher. Their primary job is to be first to the breakdown, secure possession on our ball and try to pilfer some of theirs. The rules have changed this a bit, but a good fetcher is still worth having. However a traditional openside needs to have more to their game than this alone these days. They must also be able to link with the backs, support the ball carrier, tackle like a mad man and run the ball a bit themselves.
- The enforcer. This position requires a real bruiser most of the time. That is, a guy who can consistently make dominant tackles, carry the ball up in the tight-loose, clean blokes out effectively and generally put the hurt on (legally of course). It also helps if they are a nuisance on defensive rucks too.
- The ball runner. This is your traditional eight. They carry the pill up multiple times in the loose, run back in support of the back three on kick returns and in multiple phase play and gets through a lot of defence.
Two of these blokes also need to be line out options as well. You can't just have the two locks jumping these days. I think Pocock could fulfil the enforcer role. He's certainly strong enough. In fact he's one of the toughest loose forwards we've produced in many years. Not mongrel type tough, just a rock. He'll be competing against Fardy and Higgers though.