scaraby
Ron Walden (29)
Waratah backs must first learn to catch and pass and hold the ball in contact. Got a good forward pack that will give them plenty of first phase but if they constantly drop it or kick it away like last season then you negate the impact Cliffy and Hooper in particular can have. Riffs job will be to fix that first then get fancy after thats done. Remember Tahs under Ewen could put together 10+ phases together at will. Last season we would be lucky to get to 2.
couple of quotes from an interview he did in 2008 from the independent. ...............
As a player and later a coach at the famous Randwick club in Sydney, Gaffney developed a penchant for attacking rugby at an early stage of his career. But there is no great psychological secret to his success - he teaches players how to do things on a physical level but makes no concerted effort to get inside their heads.
"I'm not one who is big on psychology," Gaffney admits. "I like to have a good relationship with my players and I respect them. If they have some degree of respect for you, you're off to a good start.
"I'm more focused on skills and I like everyone in my teams to have the ability and confidence to play with ball in hand. We will kick it when have to - but I like attacking rugby and believe that's the way the game should be played."
Gaffney shares the same philosophy as the head coaches he serves with in Ireland - Declan Kidney at the national team and Michael Cheika at Leinster.
Sounds like a unified, attacking coaching set up that we know already has the support of senior players. If they get the basics right in the preseason we will be solid...
couple of quotes from an interview he did in 2008 from the independent. ...............
As a player and later a coach at the famous Randwick club in Sydney, Gaffney developed a penchant for attacking rugby at an early stage of his career. But there is no great psychological secret to his success - he teaches players how to do things on a physical level but makes no concerted effort to get inside their heads.
"I'm not one who is big on psychology," Gaffney admits. "I like to have a good relationship with my players and I respect them. If they have some degree of respect for you, you're off to a good start.
"I'm more focused on skills and I like everyone in my teams to have the ability and confidence to play with ball in hand. We will kick it when have to - but I like attacking rugby and believe that's the way the game should be played."
Gaffney shares the same philosophy as the head coaches he serves with in Ireland - Declan Kidney at the national team and Michael Cheika at Leinster.
Sounds like a unified, attacking coaching set up that we know already has the support of senior players. If they get the basics right in the preseason we will be solid...