
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/51452035
Moderator: OptimisticJock
again, Townsend has not closed the door. Russell has.Chunks Baws wrote:The full Tom English interview with Townsend. It's hard to see Russell every playing for us again while Townsend is in charge![]()
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/51452035
We’re possibly saying the same thing from different perspectives? Russell has to obey the rules just like everyone else. Maybe there’s some debate over why he crossed that line, but he did, and that’s why he was out of the squad. No problem with GT there.hugh_woatmeigh wrote:You've got to be careful not the blur the lines here.
I don't support Gregor continuing as Scotland coach but it's unrelated to this. He's taken the right stance here.
The main thing I think missing from Finn's game is a bit more professionalism, taking all this shit a bit more seriously - so it's not the most surprising outcome in the world.
septic 9 wrote:again, Townsend has not closed the door. Russell has.Chunks Baws wrote:The full Tom English interview with Townsend. It's hard to see Russell every playing for us again while Townsend is in charge![]()
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/51452035
No coach will have him back except under the same terms Townsend is pointing out.
all that Townsend has asked of him is to agree to abide by the player driven conduct agreement. Russell made an issue over it, walked out. Does he have other issues - almost certainly, and almost certainly bigger ones. Which begs the question why he made such an issue over another beer.Mikey Brown wrote:That’s a bit simplistic, no? Yes, Russell is effectively the one putting his international career on hiatus. But it’s clearly not so he can have 3 beers instead of 2.
I am with you on the extra drink but not sure I buy the implications made from there. Russell's inconsistency is exaggerated I'd say and generally he is described as a positive person round the camp (until recently at least).Eugene Wrayburn wrote:If Finn can't make the decision not to have another beer in the teeth of a code of conduct and all the other players telling him not too then he's a fucking liability who shouldn't be anywhere near the squad. It actually makes sense of a lot of what has been wrong with Scotland. the maddening inconsistency and the inability to stick to a plan for a game. The attempts to go for miracle plays rather than press home an advantage. These all smack of a pivot playing for himself rather than the team.
Anyway I'm very surprised to see most of you wanting to see Toonie gone. He's obviously a good coach or he wouldn't have got where he did with Glasgow. It's probable he should have done a bit more learning before Scotland but I personally think you'd be better of sticking than twisting.
I get where you're coming from, but there are quite a few signs of us trying the same tactics over and over again with very little success outside of occasional 'giant-slayings'. I'm not sure 'second guessing' is anyone's issue here? I wouldn't have thought sticking to a game plan is either. It just feels like our tactics are easily undone when things don't go entirely our way. Or we come up against a team like SA where it looks like our players are fully expecting to get blasted off the park, and inevitably do. It's demoralising and the last signs of growth in that area were under Cotter.cashead wrote:If you're going to sack a coach because he second guesses and makes a mistake, you're going to run out of fucking coaches. It's like there's this belief that it's literally impossible for people to reflect on their mistakes, learn from what happened and improve.
And regardless of how good Russell is, and he is a good player, no one is bigger than the team, and if Townsend is sacked to appease Russell, then the team and those that are calling for Townsend's head for this, can enjoy what they've got coming to them.
you have a fertile imagination.Mikey Brown wrote: I get where you're coming from, but there are quite a few signs of us trying the same tactics over and over again with very little success outside of occasional 'giant-slayings'. I'm not sure 'second guessing' is anyone's issue here? I wouldn't have thought sticking to a game plan is either. It just feels like our tactics are easily undone when things don't go entirely our way. Or we come up against a team like SA where it looks like our players are fully expecting to get blasted off the park, and inevitably do. It's demoralising and the last signs of growth in that area were under Cotter.
I feel like Townsend's plan is actually pretty reliant on miracle plays. We repeatedly get ourselves in these incredibly risky situations, not just Russell, where the likely outcome may be 7 points for either side. We may be easing off on this judging on the first two games but it's a bit early to tell.
Of course Russell isn't bigger than the team, but I'd imagine he is involved in about 75% of the tries we score, yet feels Townsend is unable/unwilling to listen to his thoughts on how we could better shape our tactics/attack. You can view that as playing for himself I suppose, and he certainly needs reigning in at times, but I don't think you can expect to get the most out of a player (who happens to be our most skilful attacker) if you completely ignore their opinions on how to play the game.
I accept there's some hearsay among all that, and I've half-responded to Eugene here, but the idea either party is completely blameless doesn't seem right.
There are some promising signs in the 2 games so far, forwards being more direct, defence overall, but a lot of the same issues continuing too. I think we definitely have to see out the 6 nations before we can judge this rearranged coaching setup, but Townsend still looks a bit out of his depth to me. That's not the same as thinking there is actually a viable alternative ready to go.
You posted something a while back about reading things properly to avoid looking dim. You misread/misunderstood on that occasion and seem to have done it again here.septic 9 wrote:you have a fertile imagination.Mikey Brown wrote: I get where you're coming from, but there are quite a few signs of us trying the same tactics over and over again with very little success outside of occasional 'giant-slayings'. I'm not sure 'second guessing' is anyone's issue here? I wouldn't have thought sticking to a game plan is either. It just feels like our tactics are easily undone when things don't go entirely our way. Or we come up against a team like SA where it looks like our players are fully expecting to get blasted off the park, and inevitably do. It's demoralising and the last signs of growth in that area were under Cotter.
I feel like Townsend's plan is actually pretty reliant on miracle plays. We repeatedly get ourselves in these incredibly risky situations, not just Russell, where the likely outcome may be 7 points for either side. We may be easing off on this judging on the first two games but it's a bit early to tell.
Of course Russell isn't bigger than the team, but I'd imagine he is involved in about 75% of the tries we score, yet feels Townsend is unable/unwilling to listen to his thoughts on how we could better shape our tactics/attack. You can view that as playing for himself I suppose, and he certainly needs reigning in at times, but I don't think you can expect to get the most out of a player (who happens to be our most skilful attacker) if you completely ignore their opinions on how to play the game.
I accept there's some hearsay among all that, and I've half-responded to Eugene here, but the idea either party is completely blameless doesn't seem right.
There are some promising signs in the 2 games so far, forwards being more direct, defence overall, but a lot of the same issues continuing too. I think we definitely have to see out the 6 nations before we can judge this rearranged coaching setup, but Townsend still looks a bit out of his depth to me. That's not the same as thinking there is actually a viable alternative ready to go.
As in the assumption that Townsend doesn't listen or take on board what any player says. There is no evidence. Of course the coach listens bit at the end of the day its the coach's head on the block if the tactics/, gameplan and results go wrong. Not Russell's.
Then you admit Russell needs reigning in at times, and whinge that he has been reigned in.
What you are getting from Eugene and Casehead is a view from outside the Scottish agenda driven bubble. Listen to them, on this they are spot on.
And a wee bit less of the self delusional hype. We punch above our weight. Townsend's win record as a coach is still better than Cotter's and funnily enough better than Russell's as a player
I called out your unsubstantiated assumption. Probably too much for you to grasp. That's condescension, calling it out wasn't.Mikey Brown wrote:You posted something a while back about reading things properly to avoid looking dim. You misread/misunderstood on that occasion and seem to have done it again here.septic 9 wrote:you have a fertile imagination.Mikey Brown wrote: I get where you're coming from, but there are quite a few signs of us trying the same tactics over and over again with very little success outside of occasional 'giant-slayings'. I'm not sure 'second guessing' is anyone's issue here? I wouldn't have thought sticking to a game plan is either. It just feels like our tactics are easily undone when things don't go entirely our way. Or we come up against a team like SA where it looks like our players are fully expecting to get blasted off the park, and inevitably do. It's demoralising and the last signs of growth in that area were under Cotter.
I feel like Townsend's plan is actually pretty reliant on miracle plays. We repeatedly get ourselves in these incredibly risky situations, not just Russell, where the likely outcome may be 7 points for either side. We may be easing off on this judging on the first two games but it's a bit early to tell.
Of course Russell isn't bigger than the team, but I'd imagine he is involved in about 75% of the tries we score, yet feels Townsend is unable/unwilling to listen to his thoughts on how we could better shape our tactics/attack. You can view that as playing for himself I suppose, and he certainly needs reigning in at times, but I don't think you can expect to get the most out of a player (who happens to be our most skilful attacker) if you completely ignore their opinions on how to play the game.
I accept there's some hearsay among all that, and I've half-responded to Eugene here, but the idea either party is completely blameless doesn't seem right.
There are some promising signs in the 2 games so far, forwards being more direct, defence overall, but a lot of the same issues continuing too. I think we definitely have to see out the 6 nations before we can judge this rearranged coaching setup, but Townsend still looks a bit out of his depth to me. That's not the same as thinking there is actually a viable alternative ready to go.
As in the assumption that Townsend doesn't listen or take on board what any player says. There is no evidence. Of course the coach listens bit at the end of the day its the coach's head on the block if the tactics/, gameplan and results go wrong. Not Russell's.
Then you admit Russell needs reigning in at times, and whinge that he has been reigned in.
What you are getting from Eugene and Casehead is a view from outside the Scottish agenda driven bubble. Listen to them, on this they are spot on.
And a wee bit less of the self delusional hype. We punch above our weight. Townsend's win record as a coach is still better than Cotter's and funnily enough better than Russell's as a player
As this bizarre condescension seems to be the only language you understand, do you want me to go through and highlight some of the important bits?
I'm not sure we are doing the same thing again and again. I think we went right into our shell during the world cup. We've also started kicking (clearance wise - most of the chips out wide have gone) a lot more over the last year.Mikey Brown wrote:I get where you're coming from, but there are quite a few signs of us trying the same tactics over and over again with very little success outside of occasional 'giant-slayings'. I'm not sure 'second guessing' is anyone's issue here? I wouldn't have thought sticking to a game plan is either. It just feels like our tactics are easily undone when things don't go entirely our way. Or we come up against a team like SA where it looks like our players are fully expecting to get blasted off the park, and inevitably do. It's demoralising and the last signs of growth in that area were under Cotter.cashead wrote:If you're going to sack a coach because he second guesses and makes a mistake, you're going to run out of fucking coaches. It's like there's this belief that it's literally impossible for people to reflect on their mistakes, learn from what happened and improve.
And regardless of how good Russell is, and he is a good player, no one is bigger than the team, and if Townsend is sacked to appease Russell, then the team and those that are calling for Townsend's head for this, can enjoy what they've got coming to them.
I feel like Townsend's plan is actually pretty reliant on miracle plays. We repeatedly get ourselves in these incredibly risky situations, not just Russell, where the likely outcome may be 7 points for either side. We may be easing off on this judging on the first two games but it's a bit early to tell.
Of course Russell isn't bigger than the team, but I'd imagine he is involved in about 75% of the tries we score, yet feels Townsend is unable/unwilling to listen to his thoughts on how we could better shape our tactics/attack. You can view that as playing for himself I suppose, and he certainly needs reigning in at times, but I don't think you can expect to get the most out of a player (who happens to be our most skilful attacker) if you completely ignore their opinions on how to play the game.
I accept there's some hearsay among all that, and I've half-responded to Eugene here, but the idea either party is completely blameless doesn't seem right.
There are some promising signs in the 2 games so far, forwards being more direct, defence overall, but a lot of the same issues continuing too. I think we definitely have to see out the 6 nations before we can judge this rearranged coaching setup, but Townsend still looks a bit out of his depth to me. That's not the same as thinking there is actually a viable alternative ready to go.
Thanks, those are both very interesting. The problem in the 22 seems to me to be us trying to be sensible and pragmatic but in a way that doesnt suit usChunks Baws wrote:A wee piece on us doing the same shit over and over again:
https://www.rugbypass.com/news/the-glar ... as-to-stop
And this one about Hastings is very interesting:
https://www.rugbypass.com/news/analysis ... nn-russell
He was promoted based on pro14 performance. But sometimes that only tells part of the story. Glasgows European performances were very average overall. No one would be expecting semis or finals but 1 QF and often not being close to qualifying is still pretty average. He built on a very good foundation provided by Lineen (IIRC they made the play offs and 2nd in a poor euro group under him that year) but looking back they should have done better in Europe in terms of getting put their group. Pro 12/14 form isn't enough to merit an international job IMO unless you are restricting the talent pool to you own country.Eugene Wrayburn wrote:If Finn can't make the decision not to have another beer in the teeth of a code of conduct and all the other players telling him not too then he's a fucking liability who shouldn't be anywhere near the squad. It actually makes sense of a lot of what has been wrong with Scotland. the maddening inconsistency and the inability to stick to a plan for a game. The attempts to go for miracle plays rather than press home an advantage. These all smack of a pivot playing for himself rather than the team.
Anyway I'm very surprised to see most of you wanting to see Toonie gone. He's obviously a good coach or he wouldn't have got where he did with Glasgow. It's probable he should have done a bit more learning before Scotland but I personally think you'd be better of sticking than twisting.
Who called for Townsend's head for this?cashead wrote:And regardless of how good Russell is, and he is a good player, no one is bigger than the team, and if Townsend is sacked to appease Russell, then the team and those that are calling for Townsend's head for this, can enjoy what they've got coming to them.