Pleeeze.I guess there's a difference between visiting schools and having a fully fledged training session somewhere.
No one would be too happy if they had a training session on an average field somewhere and a player injured themselves because of it.
I can certainly expect the proper training sessions to be held in places with good facilities and unfortunately that probably limits it to mostly exclusive private schools.
Things like this do nothing to dispel the impression that rugby is an elitist sport.
From Payto and Panda 8 March 2013:
I saw that and was disappointed. Go out to bloody Campbelltown or Penrith or even bloody Concord before Newington.
Yes, why not use Concord Oval? (it was good enough for a RWC)
Because it doesn't have a school attached to it?
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That's a bloody good point! I retract that thought.
I saw that and was disappointed. Go out to bloody Campbelltown or Penrith or even bloody Concord before Newington.
I have a solution. They can train at my old school. Has a brand new state of the art gym, manicured and well maintained fields and even a pool if they feel inclined. Perfect. To add to that, it also happens to be in Western Sydney.
When was Campbelltown (assume it is St Gregs you attended) in Western Sydney?
However you do make a good point. St Gregs has excellent facilities, and for Moore Park workers, it is very easy to get to - Turn Right at Southern Cross Drive/East Distributor and hit Cruse Control for 40 minutes. Take the Campbelltown exit. Left over the Bridge, then Left again in about 2km. While you are in cruse control southbound, check out all the Wage Slaves on the M5 heading towards the City at 20 km/hr.
A Tahs Training Session in Campbelltown would make a good statement about the inclusiveness of Rugby.
^ if you bring in a marque player who is SA Super Rugby player of the year you build your back line play around him and his strengths. He was killing it in the trials until Foley brought in his 'kick it to regain it' game plan.
He was pushed to the bench because Barnes was injured and McKibben could kick goals. Goal kicking was the only way the Tahs could score under M. Foley. 'Coincidentally' McKibben started getting more game time when he expressed interest in heading overseas and playing for Scotland.
We'll have disagree on all those points then.That may be so but McKibben was also playing just as well as Sarel was. And alleging that they only put McKibben there to keep him in Aus is a bit much. Unfounded and a bit silly.
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So why recruit him? Why bring him over from SA when you're going to play a game plan that doesn't suit him? That's why I think the way the Tahs treated him was atrocious.The Cheetahs play completely different to the Tahs. He didn't fit in.
His pass looks better this year.How were they suppose to know he can't adapt to different styles? They probably paid him a lot more than he was getting in SA to bring him over - what's the poor treatment about?
Pretorius has a shit pass which is bad for structured play which Aus teams play. The Cheetahs are very unstructured and thrive off broken play.