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NSW fans will disagree, QLD fans will agree
IF there is a fatal flaw in the NSW Waratahs mindset, it surfaced in the comments of captain Phil Waugh and coach Chris Hickey following their agonising loss to the Queensland Reds at Suncorp Stadium on Saturday night.
The impact of NSW's first Super Rugby loss to the Reds since 2004 was clearly weighing heavily on the pair after the match as they complained - Hickey, admittedly, in far milder fashion - that the Waratahs did not reap the reward from substitute referee Ian Smith for having the superior scrum.
"It's frustrating," said Waugh. "We were clearly the dominant scrum. There is no question at all that we were the dominant scrum. It's not a game of evening up one team to the other. Rugby is a contest and it's about rewarding dominance.
"I just think you speak to any captain, speak to any team, speak to any coach in the competition and all the players want is dominance rewarded. Take out of that what you want!"
Hickey agreed.
"We should have been able to convert that dominance into points whether it was from the scrum or the driving lineout or whatever it happened to be," he said. "But it is a contest, as Phil said, and the dominant team should be rewarded in whatever aspect of play it may be that you are dominant in."
That's not a concept many rugby followers would be familiar with or would endorse. It's rare indeed when two opposing sides have identical strengths. More often one team will be strong in a particular area, the opposition strong somewhere else and victory ordinarily goes to the side that maximises its advantages while limiting the damage caused by its comparative weaknesses.
Simply having an advantage doesn't entitle a team to a reward. As dominant as was their scrum, the Tahs weren't able to use it to bludgeon the Reds into submission, especially after James Hanson, a superior scrummager to Saia Fainga'a, came on at hooker.
Nor was it so dominant as to persuade Smith to finish the job off for them by awarding a penalty try.
Smith twice awarded the Tahs penalties virtually in front of the posts as the Reds collapsed scrums on their own line, with Waugh both times declining to shoot for goal and instead asking for another scrum.
Immediately, Smith called out Queensland captain James Horwill and put him on notice that he would award a penalty try and reach for the yellow card if the Reds infringed again.
The third time, after Tahs hooker Tatafu Polota-Nau was substituted, the Reds forwards dug in and did just enough to disrupt the NSW scrum.
The Waratahs had other chances and destroyed the Reds scrum just on the hour mark as the Queenslanders tried to clear from their own line but the remaining three penalties the Tahs received were for ruck misdemeanours not set piece infringements.
Reds coach Ewen McKenzie declined to buy into the "entitlement" debate but did point out that the Reds' backline was superior to the Waratahs' but received no reward for it during the first half when Queensland dominated possession.
Indeed, McKenzie sent out the message to Horwill to remind the referee that Waugh had twice been penalised for cynically slowing down the ball at the breakdown to prevent the Reds exploiting their advantage in the backs.
Dire as the situation might now be for NSW, who trail Queensland by 11 points in the Australian conference, the Waratahs will play five of their remaining seven matches at home in Sydney and are still very much contenders for a wild card berth in the playoffs.
"It's nice to finish top of the conference but it's also a six-team finals series and we are still well and truly in the hunt for that," said Hickey.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/new...ugh-loss-to-reds/story-e6frg7v6-1226044120505