Inside Shoulder
Nathan Sharpe (72)
It's probably obvious that I have a bit of a thing about the attributes of a good, international no 10.
I have a strong view that as a rule in this country we look for the wrong things in a no. 10 and that, as a result, we weaken other positions in filling the position with players who have the wrong attributes.
In junior rugby the best player is often put into 10. The reasons usually follow one of 2 paths: the kid is so fast/strong/big that he will make lots of breaks; or, the other kids aren't good enough to get the ball to our best player so we need him where he will always get the ball.
These are legitimate grounds on which to make a kid no. 10.
By the time you get to senior rugby they are no longer a proper basis for picking a 10.
A proper Union 10 has to be a facilitator and the better he is as a facilitator the better the team will go.
A fundamental reason for this is that the 10 will get the ball in heavy traffic from set pieces: he wont have the time or opportunity to use naked athletic gifts like speed or a side step more than a couple of times a game.
You cannot build a reliable attack around such a 5/8.
the 5/8 you need, and the hgiher you go the more you need this type of 5/8, is the bloke who can read the game and make decisions about when to kick, when to pass and to whom, whether to have someone crash it etc.
if your 5/8 can get it to the physically gifted athlete who is wide out, when the opportunities present, then that player will have a bit more time and more space in which to weave his magic. His opposition will have to come that much further to tackle him giving him that much more time to beat his opposite player with skill.
Players like JOC (James O'Connor) should be wide not narrow because with room they can beat anyone.
The proof of my theory lies, I think, in looking at the ABs structure.
They dont pick there most physically gifted player at 5/8 - they generally pick him at fullback. Fullback gives a bloke 2 directions to travel: 5/8 gives only one, realistically and generally. Fullback give a bloke time to wind up, to swerve to use his pace. 5/8 does not.
I think that until we start looking for our 5/8s to be in the Lynagh/Ella mould we will be doomed to problems.
I have a strong view that as a rule in this country we look for the wrong things in a no. 10 and that, as a result, we weaken other positions in filling the position with players who have the wrong attributes.
In junior rugby the best player is often put into 10. The reasons usually follow one of 2 paths: the kid is so fast/strong/big that he will make lots of breaks; or, the other kids aren't good enough to get the ball to our best player so we need him where he will always get the ball.
These are legitimate grounds on which to make a kid no. 10.
By the time you get to senior rugby they are no longer a proper basis for picking a 10.
A proper Union 10 has to be a facilitator and the better he is as a facilitator the better the team will go.
A fundamental reason for this is that the 10 will get the ball in heavy traffic from set pieces: he wont have the time or opportunity to use naked athletic gifts like speed or a side step more than a couple of times a game.
You cannot build a reliable attack around such a 5/8.
the 5/8 you need, and the hgiher you go the more you need this type of 5/8, is the bloke who can read the game and make decisions about when to kick, when to pass and to whom, whether to have someone crash it etc.
if your 5/8 can get it to the physically gifted athlete who is wide out, when the opportunities present, then that player will have a bit more time and more space in which to weave his magic. His opposition will have to come that much further to tackle him giving him that much more time to beat his opposite player with skill.
Players like JOC (James O'Connor) should be wide not narrow because with room they can beat anyone.
The proof of my theory lies, I think, in looking at the ABs structure.
They dont pick there most physically gifted player at 5/8 - they generally pick him at fullback. Fullback gives a bloke 2 directions to travel: 5/8 gives only one, realistically and generally. Fullback give a bloke time to wind up, to swerve to use his pace. 5/8 does not.
I think that until we start looking for our 5/8s to be in the Lynagh/Ella mould we will be doomed to problems.