I see other people have noticed the issue with our tall timber and its immobility, general slowness and low impact. The reality is we can't run the combination of Fardy, Carter and Arnold (we saw this in the NRC). We struggle with a lack of support in both attack and defence and this "slowness" compounds the obsessive over-structured setup up that lead to being short most of the time. The Tahs were the opposite with good numbers in support in both attack and defence. (compare the breakdowns). Sadly out of the tall timber Carter provides the least - but he is captain so that locks it in an issue. The Tominatior provides more both in attack and defence atm.
I think this really nails the problems the Brumbies face in the pack (and perhaps the entire team) as you seem to stock a lot of very, very similar players in terms their skill sets and what they offer.
Who in the Brumbies pack is going to do this?
Who provides the go forward? The big shots in defence? The dynamism?
Instead you've got a forward pack that is composed entirely of hard workers with minimum impact, and there isn't much relief within your wider playing roster, which, to be brutally honest, I think isn't great.
Fardy // Carter // Arnold just doesn't have the right balance, and I don't think Staniforth is much better. He's not big enough to have the mobility and speed that he has. When you add Alcock, Smiler, Enever and Butler to the equation you really don't have too many options. Fakaosilea has to step up.
The backline has a similar problem - you have a bunch of utility backs (Ah Wong, Fainga'a, Dargaville, Godwin, Smith) who are solid players, but they are certainly lacking in x-factor and are very far from world-beaters.
They're also not the type of player to grab a game by the horns, dominate it and lead the team around much like a Folau, Foley, Hodge, DHP, Lance, Kerevi, Hunt, Cooper etc. could.
Cubelli added some much needed attacking spark last year, but he's likely to be gone for a while now, and I'm worried that the lack of dynamic and exciting players will lead the Brumbies to continue to play Jake-ball with a game plan thats dominated by territory and rolling mauls.
Fans won't sit in the Canberra cold for that.
Personally, I think 2017 will be a long year for the Brumbies and I worry about them moving forward.
With such a small market surely a poor 2017, on and off the field (crowd numbers and Super success), could cause them to be brought into the conversation about the Australian Super franchise that might be axed moving forward?
I'm hearing all the right things from the Force at the moment, and I can't say the same about the Brumbies.
They have history on their side but not much else.