. . . TPN is a show pony going for the starry stuff all the time. . . . he seems mentally all over the shop. . . . I'm not criticising him personally . . .
The Brumbies were bashed by the Tahs tonight.
Interesting 2:49 AM contribution.
This complete bullshit about strength and conditioning is laughable. How did the Waratahs players manage to last 80 minutes in the Wallaby jersey? What the hell is in the Waratah jersey? Kryptonite.
Someone else has already made the point that most of the Waratahs players in the Tests didn't "manage to last 80 minutes in the Wallaby jersey". They were subbed off during the games. But we need to take this issue a little further.
I have been the person most responsible for "this complete bullshit about strength and conditioning" so I suppose it falls to me to attempt to rebut numbertwo's devastating and cogently argued middle-of-the-night attack. For the past couple of years I have argued that the Wallabies have been losing games, particularly against the All Blacks, because of inadequate physical preparation. The strongest evidence for this proposition was the fact that in 9 successive Trans-Tasman Tests the Wallabies lost after being outscored in the second half. They were not conditioned to compete for the full 80 minutes.
Recently I have made a similar criticism of the 2012 Waratahs' performance, focussing on the fact that they have scored more than their opponents in the second half just twice this season. So how did the poorly performing Waratahs players suddenly become key figures in a superbly conditioned Wallabies team?
There were only two Waratahs players in the squad for the mid-weeker against Scotland so presumably numbertwo is not referring to that game. So let's take a look at just how superbly conditioned the Wallabies were for the three Tests against Wales. In the first of these the visitors, having come half way around the world and experiencing extreme jet lag, might have been expected to really suffer fatigue toward the end of the match. So what happened? The Wallabies led by 7 points at half-time (10-3), then won the second half by just 1 point (17-16) to win the game 27-19.
In the Second Test we led by 6 points in the first half (13-7), then
lost the second half by 4 points (12-16) to win the game 25-23. Similarly, in the Third Test we led by 3 points in the first half (12-9), then
lost the second half by 2 points (8-10) to win the game 20-19. In both games we barely fell over the line because of our inability to sustain intensity for 80 minutes, and if the results had been measured on second half scores we would have lost the series 1-2.
There is one point on which I think number two and I can find common ground - one of us knows nothing about strength and conditioning.
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