Sourdust wrote: ↑Sat Oct 28, 2023 10:21 pm
Well that was pretty dreadful.
I take the point about negative rugby, but that was hardly circus entertainers vs farm labourers, was it? NZ had more going forward perhaps, but not ENOUGH more to have any complaints IMO. They were the better side in the 2nd half, but only 5 points better when they needed 7. It's still a problem for the game's evolution IMO, that a team who can be so dazzlingly entertaining one week, can be so utterly nullified once they meet another team at their physical level. And that goes for both sides today, really. It's why France going out was a bad thing not just for France.
I think you are glossing over the fact NZ had 14 men for most of that.
Considering, I thought NZ were mightily impressive to create the chances they did. They will be frustrated by a few dropped balls under not that much pressure (though PTSD should take some credit for making everyone feel under pressure the whole time) and the two kicks, but they gave that a good go. I also don't agree with the criticism about not 'taking' three. They scored off a decision to do so (albeit after winning another penalty). It's a judgment call but I think the 'always take 3' brigade look at it a bit simplisticly.
Foe the boks, they are an impressive machine and deserve credit but I find them really annoying. I don't mind a team trying to get away with stuff at the breakdown, that's part of the game. I do mind the style of play, but they're entitled to it and contrasts of style have their place. What I mind and think they need to do something about is the timewasting. Whether it is constantly needing to be told where to stand at the line-out or the going down every breakdown. As someone said, they are not injured, they are just tired. It is so hard for a ref to deal with, but I don't think 'don't worry, clock is stopped' is enough. One it is boring. Two it gives them a rest. Three it kills momentum for the other team. I would like a rule that if the game has to stop three times for you to get treatment, you have to get subbed. They should also be stricter about playing on unless there is a scrum and it is a front five player.
On the reffing controversies, I think the Cane red and Kolisi yellow looked fair enough (though I would like to see more angles on Kolisi's). The penalty against Savea in the first half was wrong and arguable costly, but we can't expect a ref to get everything right. I liked how he dealt with the scrum but NZ might be frustrated as with another ref on another day they may have got more benefit from being slightly on top.
One thing though, it's noticeable that in big games the TMO protocol goes out the window. The knock on before Smith's try looked more than two phases back, the penalty Savea ended up getting near the line when Barnes had originally given a knock on was not foul play or in the act of scoring, there were several other examples and often are in finals or near the end of tight big matches. I see why they do it as it wouldn't be a good look if a massive call was obviously wrong but couldn't be fixed, but it is a whole can of worms. It means every decision becomes contestable amd leaves open the question of why others weren't looked at.
Trying not to focus on that kind if stuff, but the way SA played, they were barely looking to make linebreaks or score tries so the focus always ends up on the ref. It's one of the reasons I don't like it.