Slim 293
Stirling Mortlock (74)
Only if the up talking doesn't start
Oh, there's going to be plenty of up talking, and I bet they're going to use Hooper to justify it...
Only if the up talking doesn't start
This rings true to me in the sense that until this season I always had a feeling that Tahs could do something in the 2nd half to win the gameI want to focus on the issue of physical conditioning, about which I tend to be somewhat obsessed, largely because almost nobody else acknowledges it as a crucial factor. Just last Saturday I was talking to a Waratahs coach of some decades back and he ridiculed my assertion that the Wallabies' nine straight losses to the All Blacks were in any way attributable to inappropriate physical conditioning. "He'd have known what to do," he said of the strength and conditioning coach concerned, "and anyway the Wallabies won the next two games." That is a reason why I try to avoid arguing with people; often the systems of logic we are using are mutually incomprehensible. And I have particular difficulty with the Argument from Authority - in this case because someone holds a particular position their expertise in that area should not be questioned.
This season the Waratahs have played 13 matches. They led at half time in 7 of them and were behind in 6. In just 2 matches did they win the second half, although they drew it on 3 occasions, and 8 times they lost it. As a result they are now just 4 wins from 13.
Last year, they led at half time in 6 matches, were equal in one, and behind in 7. But they won the second halves 9 to 5, and as a result won 8 out of 14 matches. Not outstanding but fairly reasonable. But this year, winning just 2 of 13 second halves suggests that their training methods and/or personnel need to be changed.
As far as I am aware the S & C coaches at the 'Tahs have been the same for both seasons, but I would hazard a guess that their training has been altered significantly this year with even less emphasis on lifting heavy weights.
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In my next life I pray to land a high paying job reporting to you!We've lost 7 games by 7 points or less.
Maybe there should be an assumption that if the players and the coaches work hard on fixing all the problems, we can be successful.
I don't buy into the argument that scapegoating a coach in his first year as a head coach in Super Rugby is the best way to fix our problems.
In my next life I pray to land a high paying job reporting to you!
How he can be a scapegoat I have no idea, so no one is responsible?
In business, I have never seen an executive promoted or recruited into a role, who perform this poorly in their 1st year and manage to keep their job,ever improve to a level above the minimum.Do you expect someone coming to a job with no experience in the job you are employing for to not have more of a learning curve than someone who has done that job before?
And he put his hand up for the pay to match his better title, whenever you go for a new job you always take on performance risk. In the real world anywayDo you expect someone coming to a job with no experience in the job you are employing for to not have more of a learning curve than someone who has done that job before?
Much as I hate to resort to mungoes: I recall Warren Ryan recounting that he had spoken to Nathan Brown when he was St George 1st grade coach and was going through a bad patch - Brown had said he "was learning a lot as 1st grade coach". Ryan said "1st grade coach is no place to be learning".Do you expect someone coming to a job with no experience in the job you are employing for to not have more of a learning curve than someone who has done that job before?
Amazing logic isn't it, they automatically attain expertise with the printing of a business card!And I have particular difficulty with the Argument from Authority - in this case because someone holds a particular position their expertise in that area should not be questioned.
This season the Waratahs have played 13 matches. They led at half time in 7 of them and were behind in 6. In just 2 matches did they win the second half, although they drew it on 3 occasions, and 8 times they lost it. As a result they are now just 4 wins from 13.
Last year, they led at half time in 6 matches, were equal in one, and behind in 7. But they won the second halves 9 to 5, and as a result won 8 out of 14 matches. Not outstanding but fairly reasonable. But this year, winning just 2 of 13 second halves suggests that their training methods and/or personnel need to be changed.
is there evidence to support the proposition that the current regime has permitted outsider to set the team agenda?. Not someone that will allow other non-coaching big heads to have their say in what happens at the waratahs. is required