NTA said:
Thomond78 said:
Direct comparison made by "All-Man Al", the Iron Man of world rugby, that the nice, dry, warm conditions were better.
Dry and warm (like about 15oC IMHO) is much better than pissing rain and sub-zero in my opinion. I don't mind a wet track, but I prefer my opposition prop to be able to keep his feet so I can smash him good and proper. Refs get nervous when the pitch is slippery and it pisses me off.
That's bloody summer, here!
Wet is gooooood. Windy is goooooood. It means you can stay warm, and have fun, while the skinny runts freeze to death.
For all that I'm calling you a load of whinging soft-cocks (presumably because you're not Victorians, if you believe Bill, or because you are, if you believe Alan Border), there is a serious point here. Teams from here are used to wet, wind and rain, fair enough (and if you want examples, look up the Munster-Wasps and Llanelli-Munster games from the 2007-08 season). My own club's pitch is 150m up, 0.5 km from the open Atlantic, and one of the windiest and wettest places I've ever been - nice drainage, because everywhere is down from there. Training in that in the middle of December, you get used to it. Now, our touring teams still have to go to hot, dry tracks, like our guys are playing on in SA at the moment. Even in SA, the Highvelders have to go to the Cape, which is much more like here.
Yet, by and large, they don't complain about the changes in conditions; they just get on with it.
It's a state of mind. For some reason, Australian teams, above all others, seem spooked by wet, wind and rain. Well, sorry, lads, but that's the default state of the NH rugby world for most of the NH rugby season. It's not the end of the world; the contrary. If you can play decent attacking rugby in those conditions, it's a piece of piss on hard, dry ground (which, by the bye, I hate, as it's fucking hard on the feet). So, get the mental attitude right, you'll play well in the ghastly shit and still play well in the nice stuff.
And that's not what All-Man Al is doing here. His head's just not right for it, and that's why I suspect he's not going to do that well in horrible conditions.