Latest News
|
All the latest from the world of rugby« February 2009 | | April 2009 » March 31, 2009 ELVs have had their fun but don't deserve fairytale ending
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/31/2009 The motives behind the ELVs were genuine, but the outcome spectacularly unsuccessful according to Wynne Gray in the New Zealand Herald. "Rugby lost its way and a fair chunk of its soul when rucking was eliminated. The dynamic attacking action which encouraged continuity was considered too dangerous, both for players caught lying near the ball and in the battle for parental approval. The undiscovered joys of French club rugby
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/31/2009 Peter Bills delights in a feast of Top 14 action on trip to France - read his thoughts in the Independent. "One of the intrinsic delights of rugby football in Europe remains for many people an undiscovered gem. Yet for the connoisseur, this enduring secret of the game is easy to find, simple to locate and pleasurable in the extreme. If you love rugby, then a weekend of club games in the south of France ought to be top of your "must do" list and with so many clubs within an easy drive of Toulouse, it is easy to do. March 30, 2009 ELVs' zealots are a law unto themselves
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/30/2009 Former England international Brian Moore argues that just because you do not agree with all the ELVs does not mean you don't understand the game. Read his views in the Daily Telegraph. "Finally, the most disingenuous and thus most objectionable ploy perpetrated the proponents of the ELVs is to say that those opposed 'do not understand rugby'. We do understand, we just do not agree. O'Driscoll deserves chance to lead by example
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/30/2009 One of the easiest decisions facing the coach, Ian McGeechan, and the manager, Gerald Davies, is whether Brian O'Driscoll or Paul O'Connell should be the man who lands in South Africa carrying the Lions mascot, according to Tim Glover in the Independent on Sunday. "The most obvious answer is O'Driscoll, the Ireland captain who inspired his country with crucial tries at key moments. He also has unfinished business with the Lions after a lamentable tour to New Zealand in 2005, when his world was turned upside down by a double hit in the opening minutes of the First Test. March 29, 2009 Flutey: I remember that guy scared out of his life
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/29/2009 Riki Flutey, one of the few members of Martin Johnson's England team to enhance his reputation during the Six Nations campaign, has spoken for the first time about his shame at being involved as a naive 21-year-old in an assault case in Argentina. Read his thoughts in the Mail on Sunday.
"Flutey appreciated just how lucky he had been to be granted a second chance to follow the rugby career he had put at risk eight years ago. For in 2001 Flutey assaulted an 18-year-old Argentine student in the city of Rosario while on tour with Wellington Academy. Rugby world unites to drive out ELVs
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/29/2009 Rugby union is set to abandon nearly all the radical experimental law variations (ELVs) that have been trialled this season, according to Stephen Jones in the Sunday Times. "Since their introduction to international rugby in the summer of 2008, there has been widespread criticism of the ELVs from players and coaches in the northern hemisphere. However, it now appears that the demand for them to be scrapped stretches across the rugby world. Smith the driving force behind England rugby's swift transition
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/29/2009 A couple of weeks ago England would dive on a loose ball or drive it back into contact. Now they see it as an opportunity according to Mark Reason in the Daily Telegraph. "Despite his public silence, the evidence points to the fact that the attack coach, Brian Smith, is beginning to get through to even the dullest of players (excepting, perhaps, the obstinate Danny Cipriani). The most noticeable change in England’s game has been the willingness of all the players to move the ball on quickly following a turnover. Leinster now my priority
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/29/2009 Ireland skipper Brian O'Driscoll insists it was great to celebrate the Grand Slam win, but he is looking forward to settling back into club rugby. Read his thoughts in the Observer. "It is hard to describe how I am feeling after last weekend. The overriding feeling is tiredness, as everything from the past few days – the emotion, the physicality of the match, and the partying afterwards – has all caught up with me. I felt unbelievably nervous on the Thursday as we travelled to Wales, and Friday was a very long day trying to relax at the hotel and waiting for match day. In the build-up to the game there was definitely an underlying feeling of how important the match was – not that everyone in the squad was constantly talking about the Grand Slam but it was obvious it was on people's minds. March 28, 2009 Millennium memories to last a lifetime
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/28/2009 The Six Nations, the Triple Crown, the Heineken Cup and the Magners League are all Irish-owned. The Irish Times celebrates the recent dominance of Irish rugby by re-living the day leading up to their Grand Slam triumph. "It’s incredible really. Lock, stock and barrel, the whole shooting gallery, is now in the possession of Irish rugby. Boardroom battle has shamed ARU
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/28/2009 Former Australia boss John Connolly weighs in on the recent Australian Rugby Union election that saw Ron Graham elected President. Read his thoughts in the Sydney Morning Herald. "The plethora of phone calls I've received since Thursday from people concerned the ARU is being run on the personal agendas of chief executive John O'Neill just made my decision easier. O'Neill's dislike for Graham - a good friend of mine - stems back to his sacking in 2003, when Graham was a member of the board responsible for cutting O'Neill loose. Expansion drive would wear out the top players
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/28/2009 Saracens boss Eddie Jones there is only so much rugby a front-line player can take, read his thoughts in the Independent. "So the question has to be asked: why are the people who run rugby in England even considering launching a new "third" competition next season? The EDF Energy Cup, or Anglo-Welsh Cup – call it what you will – ends in its present form in the middle of April, and while I'm sure the final at Twickenham will draw an excellent crowd, it should be allowed to die a natural death, never to return. March 27, 2009 ELVs are strangling the game they are meant to be promoting
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/27/2009 Rugby's lawmakers are finding support for the new laws is dwindling in the northern and even southern hemispheres according to Shaun Edwards in the Guardian. "Rugby's lawmakers are in town this weekend. Armed with a pile of statistics, they hope to win a few converts to the experimental law variations that have been in force up here since the start of the season. I can't say I wish them luck – and I don't know many who do. Rucking will help sort out the mess
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/27/2009 The continuing emasculation of forward play is the worst part about the modern game according to Wynne Gray in the New Zealand Herald. "Every breakdown is a mess. Players who venture into that area are off their feet, coming in at angles, taking players out without the ball, playing the ball with their hands, releasing possession when support arrives rather than immediately - the offences are widespread. SA all the way
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/27/2009 South Africa lead the way in this year's Super 14 and the ELVs are definitely working for them, writes Phil Wilkins on rugbyheaven.com.au. "Led by European conservatives, argument has raged about the experimental law variations, essentially because their critics maintain that running rugby will bring about the demise of the big men, seriously threatening the massive-forward dominated game of the Six Nations tournament, with its crowds and riches. March 26, 2009 NZRU likely has a game plan for latest convert
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/26/2009 Perhaps the most attractive ingredient about new new Otago signing Michael Witt was that the former rugby league star qualifies to play for New Zealand in November, according to Wynne Gray in the New Zealand Herald. "Many league players have switched to rugby but not many have successfully made the transition to top-drawer five-eighths.
Time the biggest test for Wilkinson's Lions hopes
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/26/2009 Jonny Wilkinson’s grim six month fight to make the Lions tour has been hit by renewed concern over the state of his left knee according to Peter Jackson in the Daily Mail. "The ‘minor setback’ which forced Newcastle to withdraw him from their substitutes at Bath last weekend is now in danger of turning into a major one for both the player and the Lions, despite the delayed announcement of their 35-man squad. Players have until April 12 to book their seats on May’s flight to Johannesburg. Lions face their biggest challenge
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/26/2009 Lions coach Ian McGeechan feels that this summer's trip to South Africa will be the toughest test the elite tourists have ever faced. He spoke to Mick Cleary in the Daily Telegraph. "McGeechan will put a lot of emphasis on personal relationships. Players will share rooms, travel as a group, even if not required for midweek matches, and have one common coaching set-up in charge. March 25, 2009 Wheels coming off for Waratahs
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/25/2009 Spiro Zavos, writing on rugbyheaven.com.au, believes that the Waratahs could be in serious trouble if their backs don't start firing soon. "The train carriage I was in coming back from the enthralling Waratahs-Crusaders contest at ANZ Stadium at Homebush Bay was quiet until a good old boy dressed in the Waratahs colours came in. "Cash in on the Waratahs demolition sale," he spruiked. "Waratahs caps for $5. They might win next week." The ELVs stink
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/25/2009 Eddie Butler believes that the ELVs can finally be shown to be harming the game after the Six Nations, in his blog for The Guardian. "I have a friend who is an economist, whose job it is to study numbers, compile data and analyse figures. He is an expert in statistics and his advice is: never trust them. They can be used to support whatever his clients wish. March 24, 2009 Off Johnno's back
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/24/2009 Simon Barnes, writing in The Times, is glad that he can now stop clamouring for Martin Johnson to lose his job as England manager.
"I can't tell you what a relief it is not to be writing a Johnson-must-go piece. England beat Scotland at Twickenham on Saturday, leaving the victors amazingly in second place in the final RBS Six Nations Championship table, a strange and deeply unexpected achievement. And it means that Martin Johnson stays on as England team manager. March 23, 2009 All in the balance
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/23/2009 Slipping standards plays rejuvenated hope: Eddie Butler reviews the fortunes of Wales and Ireland in The Guardian. "Wales are usually pretty easy on the eye, but theirs was a campaign of slipping standards and erratic behaviour. There is an interesting balance between finishing within seconds of a triple crown and ending up fourth in the table. Because it all went wrong, the audit in the house of the 2008 champions could well become spiteful. Good...but not good enough
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/23/2009 David Hands, writing inThe Times, believes that the Six Nations' stunning finale cannot mask the inadequacies of the competing teams. "That is why we have an enduring love affair with the Six Nations: for the history, the rivalry, the passion of players and supporters, the whole theatrical drama of it all. Does that make it good sport? In practical terms, yes, for its all-embracing qualities, for all those Irish youngsters who now want to emulate Brian O’Driscoll and Paul O’Connell rather than listen to tales of Jack Kyle and Karl Mullen, the brightest-eyed of octogenarians but who are pages in the history book since they won Ireland’s only previous grand slam 61 years ago. March 22, 2009 Kidney's team have the potential to dominate
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/22/2009 There is a self-belief in this group that is a wonder to behold, writes George Hook in the Irish Independent. "The Grand Slam of 1948 was the beginning of a golden era. For four years they dominated the championship and another clean sweep was only averted by a draw in Swansea. This team can now kick on and dominate Europe all the way to the World Cup in 2011. Ireland finally reach the promised land
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/22/2009 John O'Sullivan hails Ireland's Grand Slam achievement, writing in the Irish Times. "The Grand Slam famine is over 61 years after Ireland’s only triumph as Ireland produced a remarkable performance underpinned by high tensile mental steel to win a truly heart-stopping encounter that wasn’t decided until the final kick of the game. O'Gara clinches his place in history
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/22/2009 On a Cardiff evening of relentless tension and improbable drama, Ireland delivered their glorious Slam writes Patrick Collins in the Mail on Sunday. "The roar which greeted Jones's failure went ringing triumphantly across the Irish Sea. For sporting success was never more timely or more joyous. Recession has attacked Ireland with singular savagery. Unemployment soars, unrest is threatened, national bankruptcy is fearfully mooted. The ancient agony of emigration raises its awful head, and an emergency Budget promises nothing but pain. O’Gara drop goal defeats Wales
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/22/2009 it was a wonderful match with a climax as good as any in Six Nations history writes Paul Ackford in the Sunday Telegraph. "If anyone still has doubts about the courage of the modern rugby player and the gladiatorial nature of the big games, the first quarter would have dispelled those reservations. The start was fantastically confrontational. Television doesn’t convey the intensity of the collisions, nor do the elevated seating positions offered at Twickenham, Croke Park, Murrayfield and the Stade de France. To understand the spectacle properly you have to be up close and personal. Glory at last for Irish aces
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/22/2009 There will be endless debate as to the true quality of this Ireland side but there can be none surrounding the achievement of a Grand Slam writes Stephen Jones in the Sunday Times. "Rugby became a pastime only for supermen in Cardiff yesterday. This was one of the most thunderous, passionate and brutally hard occasions ever seen at the Millennium stadium, or anywhere else in sport, for that matter." Drop of genius from O'Gara
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/22/2009 Munster man's late kick breaks Grand Slam drought and releases Blarney Army to turn Welsh capital green writes James Corrigan in the Independent on Sunday. "Very few countries know how to celebrate quite like the Irish and this morning the streets of the Welsh capital will still echo to the sound of the Blarney Army's jubilation. Put simply, and without a trace of hyperbole, this was one of the island's proudest sporting occasions. If not its very proudest. Kidney's men to expel chokers' tag at last
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/22/2009 Ireland produced a performance of immense courage and resolve at the Millennium Stadium to end their long wait for Six Nations glory according to Paul Hayward in the Observer. "This was a sub-standard Six Nations Championship, bedevilled by rule changes, aerial bombardments and dual-personality performances by France and England. Yet, right at the end, serendipity served up a contest of stunning ferocity, in which Wales fought to hold what they had (the title of Grand Slam champions) and Ireland battled for something that has eluded them since the powdered egg days of post-war austerity. March 21, 2009 Eighty minutes to immortality
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/21/2009 A first championship in 24 years would be duly recognised as a fine achievement, but having given themselves this shot at immortality, it’s almost a win or bust scenario for Ireland according to Gerry Thornley in the Irish Times. "Enough talking. Now, at last, the game of truth. It’s been a long time coming this week so, particularly after all the brouhaha, this evening’s little title showdown in Cardiff can’t come quickly enough. This may simply be the biggest game of these Ireland players’ lives, particularly if they win. Wales' celebrity talisman aims to heap bad luck on the Irish
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/21/2009 Gavin Henson has never lost when he and Tom Shanklin have started at centre. He will try to extend that run today against his nemesis Brian O'Driscoll. James Corrigan writes in The Independent. "The last time these two sides met in a Championship decider was 2005 when it happened to be Wales stretching desperate hands across the decades to grab their own elusive Grand Slam. The hype was as overblown as the hwyl and, despite nobody knowing at the time, it had spilled on to the pitch to cover the two most famous players on view in its associated vitriol. Later that same year, in his infamous tome, My Grand Slam Year, Henson accused O'Driscoll of gouging him that day and of yelling in his ear: "How do you like that, you cocky little f****r?" Martin Johnson spot on in construction work
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/21/2009 Jonny Wilkinson offers his thoughts on England's latest turnaround in his latest column for The Times. "Johnno has not gone for any short-term gains or short-term success. To be more specific, he has let a squad understanding develop, allowed players to find their roles within the team and started to build a better platform up front. Momentum is earned in this way; it is not bought or cheated. Ireland will stick close to their script
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/21/2009 Fear of failure may be the key to the Six Nations showdown between Wales and Ireland at the Millennium Stadium according to Rob Kitson in the Guardian. "Someone was using a well-polished crystal ball when the 2009 Six Nations fixture schedule was compiled. This may not be remembered as the greatest championship in the tournament's long history but it will go down to the final minute of the final game in one of the world's finest venues. Regardless of who hoists the trophy at the Millennium Stadium this evening, the climax has been engineered far better than we have any right to expect. March 20, 2009 Rugby is at a crossroads
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/20/2009 Writing in The New Zealand Herald, Inga Tuigamala bemoans the lack of action from the NZRU in the recent SANZAR disputes. "The Sanzar crisis is a major testing ground for the credentials of our top rugby administrators. Rugby is at a serious crossroads and by my reckoning, is simply in survival mode at the moment. It needs people with a vision and the ability to revamp the way it is run or else I fear the game many of us have treasured is in major trouble. Keeping up with the Joneses
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/20/2009 The Times takes a close look at two of Wales' Joneses. prop Adam and lock Alun-Wyn. "Anyone who has watched the players during the national anthems before a game will have noticed that Alun Wyn Jones gives Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau a real hammering. It is his way of dealing with the emotion. March 19, 2009 Wales may have blown it already
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/19/2009 Writing in The Times, Stephen Jones takes aim at Warren Gatland's selection policy. "Warren Gatland had the grace on Tuesday to do what so few top coaches ever do - apologise and admit that he'd got things wrong. That is something we have not heard this season from Martin Johnson, Frank Hadden or Marc Lievremont and all three have far more to be sorry about than the Welsh coach. March 18, 2009 Are Ireland the best in the north?
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/18/2009 Paul Wallace and Kyran Bracken debate the place of Ireland at the head of the Six Nations table in The Guardian.
"Wales – if you don't count the performance against Italy from what was essentially a second-string side – are probably capable of playing the best rugby in the northern hemisphere and England looked very good against France. But Ireland have shown so far that they have the best team, a great bunch of old pros who have benefited from an injection of youth, power and pace. They remind me very much of Argentina at the last World Cup, with game-breakers all over the side, and the youthful exuberance has rubbed off on people such as Peter Stringer and Gordon D'Arcy who look revitalised. March 17, 2009 The chess game
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/17/2009 Peter Bills has no time for slow, deliberate scrum-half play at the base of a ruck in The Independent. "The failure of modern day players to understand the value of quick ball from the breakdown, frankly bewilders me. They stand there looking at the ball beneath their feet at the back of a ruck like some mother hen proud of the golden egg it has just laid. C'etait Waterloo!
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/17/2009 Charles Bremner reviews the French media's reaction to Sunday's Six Nations defeat to England in The Times. "Usually it's the British who like reminding the French of Waterloo and Trafalgar. Today, French commentators have been invoking the ancient humiliations to qualify the epic defeat that their rugby team suffered at the hands of the English at Twickenham yesterday. March 16, 2009 Say it: the Grand Slam is on the table
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/16/2009 The countdown is on to the Six Nations, and Grand Slam, decider between Ireland and Wales in Cardiff this weekend, writes Gerry Thornley in the Irish Times. "You sensed it would come down to this. The last game of the championship, at 5.30pm in the Millennium Stadium next Saturday, will pretty much see the whole shooting gallery up for grabs. It can be said now. The Grand Slam is on the table. England finally reach the tipping point
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/16/2009 England's team of 007s spy chance to get far more than a quantum of solace according to Simon Barnes in The Times.
"For months, nothing they did worked. Everything they touched turned to filth and corruption. Bad things led to bad things with the most devastating inevitability. But yesterday, in a match that was not so much extraordinary as unbelievable, England beat France 34-10 and ran in five tries. Johnson finally gets to say: I told you so
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/16/2009 After a long wait, this was a tantalising glimpse of what is possible for the England writes Kevin Garside in the Daily Telegraph. "Men in late middle age, temporarily unhinged by the fantastic inversion playing out in the spring sunshine, took to their feet like Morris dancers to execute the Twickenham jig of the embarrassing uncle. The All Blacks had turned up in white shirts and France played like last week's England. Borthwick proves a leader at last
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/16/2009 Steve Borthwick defied his critics with a stand-out performance in England's demolition of France according to Richard Williams in the Guardian. "If you wanted a symbol of England's victory yesterday, you needed to look no further than the bridge of Steve Borthwick's nose. For the first time since he was awarded the England captaincy last autumn, the big black scab there refused to break and bleed. March 15, 2009 Irish on cusp of greatness
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/15/2009 Writing in the Irish Independent, Eamonn Sweeney believes that there is no team which deserves to close out the deal the way this team of O'Driscoll, O'Gara, Hayes, O'Connell, O'Callaghan, Wallace et al does.
"Eighty minutes to go. Eighty minutes to consummate the most successful era in Irish rugby since the 1940s with the crowning glory last achieved in those years soon after what we called the Emergency and everyone else called World War Two. Ireland make hard yards towards Grand Slam tilt
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/15/2009 Ireland will chase a Grand Slam next Saturday in Cardiff, potentially their first in 61 years and only the second in their history after a flawed but character laden performance at Murrayfield according to John O'Sullivan in the Irish Times. "Conceding six penalties in the opening 20 minutes, Ireland put themselves under unnecessary pressure especially as Paterson had yet to miss a kick in this season’s Six Nations Championship. He posted the first three opportunities presented, the first from the touchline, which should have been a salutary reminder not to transgress, but Ireland were serial offenders. Sharp reminders could add sparkle to the final weekend
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/15/2009 That Ireland and Wales encountered stiffer resistance than they expected may be a good thing for the climax of the championship according to Eddie Butler in The Observer. "It says something about the Six Nations, and possibly nothing too complimentary about its quality, that the two sides who will fight for the title on Saturday struggled to victories against the teams who vied only last week for the wooden spoon. This seems to be one of those championships that is losing its sparkle the closer it approaches what should be an utterly climactic final weekend. Martyn Williams on his comeback
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/15/2009 The Welsh flanker on his short-lived retirement, how to make the perfect break, his training regime and what kit he uses - read his thoughts in the Sunday Times. "The 33-year-old flanker brushes aside his short-lived retirement as a “mistake” brought on by Wales’s early exit from the Rugby World Cup in 2007, and “18 tough months of playing rugby”. Green light for Grand Slam
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/15/2009 Writing in the Sunday Times, Stephen Jones reports from Ireland's narrow victory over Scotland at Murrayfield insisting the exuberance of youth preserved their Grand Slam challenge. "The dream lives on for Ireland after a nightmare of a match. They go to Cardiff well on course for their second Grand Slam and there is no shame in playing badly when paralysed by nerves, by the experimental law variations and by the fact that your key men were off-form, as were Ronan O’Gara, Brian O’Driscoll and several others yesterday at a wind-swept Murrayfield. Mother of all gigs awaits Ireland in Six Nations
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/15/2009 Ireland enjoyed a memorable sing-song with folk legend Christy Moore earlier this week and kept the party going on Saturday writes Brendan Gallagher in the Sunday Telegraph "It was Cliff Morgan, choirmaster for Wales and the Lions as well as one of the game’s legendary fly-halves, who always maintained that a team that sung together normally won together and perhaps he had a point. If great things are to be achieved a side have got to be comfortable in their own company and that’s the benefit and value of evenings such as Monday when Moore dropped into their hotel March 14, 2009 Sanzar left in the dust
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/14/2009 Writing in the New Zealand Herald, Wynne Gray takes aim at the blazer brigade within SANZAR and the IRB. "Talk about sticking the cold steel up 'em, exposing the ineptitude of the Southern Hemisphere administrators in their own dungheap ... sorry the soon-to-be soaring grandstands and Eden Park surroundings which will host the 2011 World Cup final. France's old stagers threaten England's new regime
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/14/2009 Writing in the Daily Telegraph, Mick Cleary previews England's clash with France at Twickenham and insists the time for factoring in the quality of the opposition as mitigation for an England performance is over. "But make no mistake. For Martin Johnson's England, tomorrow's game against France is laden with jeopardy and significance. How England can avoid yet more yellow fever
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/14/2009 The Times sought the opinions of a group of distinguished former players from the past 40 years to identify where it is going wrong for England and what they can do to keep all 15 players on the pitch. "How is it that England, which is renowned as the most disciplined of rugby countries, has leapt to the top of the leaderboard in penalties conceded in this championship, outranking even Italy, who have so often held that dubious honour? Even though they beat Italy comfortably, England conceded more penalties and gave their opponents the same number of kicks at goal as they took themselves. Rugby decisions they lived to regret
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/14/2009 Following Nick Mallett's daft decision to play Mauro Bergamasco at scrum-half earlier in the Six Nations tournament, the Independent looks at other ploys that proved unwise. "A feature of the Lions' troubled tour to Australia in 2001 was the on-going spat between Austin Healey (right) and Wallaby lock Justin Harrison. At Gosford, against Australia A, Harrison had chased the scrum-half out of a ruck after seeing him hit one of his team-mates in retaliation for a kick on Will Greenwood. Five reasons to back Ireland's first slam since 1948
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/14/2009 Eddie Butler offers five key factors could combine to see the men in green snatch a rare piece of silverware - read his thoughts in the Guardian. "1. The longevity of John Hayes - "...He does not charge like one in open play or rip up the set pieces, but Hayes is deceptive. The Irish scrum, for example, does not go anywhere. Hasn't for a long time. Opponents target it and Ireland hold firm, Hayes bearing the brunt of their weight. We have to win hearts and minds, says Johnson
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/14/2009 England manager Martin Johnson is keen to see his side keep the home crowd on-side during their Six Nations clash with France according to Robert Kitson in the Guardian. "As Martin Johnson openly concedes, there is no hiding place for England tomorrow. Defeat to an improving French side would not, in itself, be a disgrace but woe betide the hosts if another couple of players are sin-binned and their defence fails to scale the heights of Cardiff and Dublin. Twickenham supporters are mostly a loyal bunch but the fraying fig-leaf currently preserving English modesty is in some need of reinforcement. March 13, 2009 A Wilkinson abroad?
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/13/2009 Mark Souster, writing in The Times, ponders the reasons for Jonny Wilkinson's interest in a move to France. "For years, followers of rugby and the career of Jonny Wilkinson have scratched their heads in disbelief at the England star's insistence on staying at Newcastle Falcons despite their singular lack of success. For the once golden boy of the English game, loyalty and a desire not to cut and run, however tough the going became, have been his watchwords. March 12, 2009 Crafty 'Boks aim to hit Lions from a height
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/12/2009 Writing in the Irish Independent, Peter Bills insists that trying to play normal rugby for 80 minutes at that altitude is a killer for visiting sides.
"For the Stormers' game at altitude in Pretoria last Saturday, Erasmus adopted a fascinating strategy, one the Lions might well consider emulating when they go there in June. Basically, for the first 50 minutes, Erasmus's team refused to play any rugby. They chose some heavyweight, experienced guys up front to win the ball and selected two arch kickers, Willem de Waal at fly-half and Percy Montgomery at full-back. Both kicked the leather off the ball in those first 50 minutes. Hungry Leamy straining at the leash
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/12/2009 The Irish Times' Johnny Watterson talks to the frustrated, ambitious Denis Leamy about his return to the starting Ireland XV. "Leamy’s injury concerns have been exacerbated by the blooming of backrows Stephen Ferris and Jamie Heaslip in tandem with the form of David Wallace and also by Declan Kidney’s policy of keeping a squad internally competitive. The older Leamy watched from the physio table as two younger players appeared to consolidate their positions with strong performances in the first three Six Nations games. Heaslip, with 16 caps was born in 1983, 11-cap Ferris in 1985. Leamy, born in 1981 and initially out in the cold, has earned 10 caps more than Heaslip and Ferris combined. Shaw back to beef up England
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/12/2009 Writing in the Independent, Chris Hewett reports on England's decision to recall 35-year-old lock Simon Shaw. "It is a mighty long time since England felt the need to bulk up against the French: probably not since the mid-1970s, when the tricolore pack boasted such delicate little charmers as the heavyweight boxer Gerard Cholley and the lock Jean-François Imbernon, who liked to be known as "The Godfather". But for this weekend's Six Nations meeting at Twickenham, where defeat is simply not an option for the home side, Martin Johnson has ordered extra helpings of beef. Cipriani's popularity will not be a pre-condition to selection
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/12/2009 The Wasps fly-half would be advised to get his game back to its best at his club rather than sweat in the England pressure cooker according to Paul Rees in the Guardian. "It is not as if Cipriani's performances for Wasps merited a recall, even if his selection last November, just weeks after he had returned from a serious leg injury, said more about England's problems in the outside-half position than the 21-year-old's form. Given the emphasis England have placed on defence this year, an outside-half suspect in the tackle was not going to be an automatic choice, although Andy Goode hardly offered much more in the way of security. March 11, 2009 A raging sense of injustice
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/11/2009 David Hands, writing in The Times, believes that Nick Kennedy has been hard done by after being dropped by England.
"Professional sport seldom has much to do with fairness for its participants but if Nick Kennedy does not have a raging sense of injustice at missing Sunday's game against France, it will be strange indeed. The London Irish lock has been growing into international rugby during this Six Nations Championship so to be supplanted by Simon Shaw will be very galling. Will the real Martin Johnson please stand up?
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/11/2009 The Sunday Times' Stephen Jones is bemused by England dropping Nick Kennedy, enjoys Nigel Starmer-Smith's commentary and pays tribute to TV blondes. "Johnson was not brought in for his diplomatic skills or his coaching skills or for the nuances of the game. He was brought in to follow his instincts and to bank on his experience. I find it absolutely incredible if Johnson truly believes that the Shaw-Borthwick combination is the best he can field to play against France. It seems that he is making excuses on a daily basis for a selection which, deep in his heart, he must suspect is the wrong one. March 10, 2009 I'm the statsman
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/10/2009 Robert Kitson, writing in The Guardian, believes that the modern game is being stifled of its attacking charm by relentless defence and statistical analysis. "It is increasingly likely that this Six Nations title will be won by a hunched bloke sitting in the stand, eyes trained on a monitor. More than ever we live in an age where prevention is nine-tenths of the law and defence is king of the road. Last year, Wales won a grand slam not so much because they played their opponents off the park, but because they stopped them crossing their try-line. Full stop. Shaun Edwards's mean machine coughed up only two tries in five matches and it made all the difference. Dull Six Nations points to another year of Southern dominance
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/10/2009 John Leicester is not very impressed with the standard of rugby on show in this year's Six Nations and predicts more joy for Australia, New Zealand and South Africa when the hemipsheres clash later this year. Read his thoughts in the New Zealand Herald. "You can almost hear the All Blacks licking their lips. The Springboks and Wallabies, too, for that matter. France playing without fear
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/10/2009 France coach Marc Lievremont is creating a team that will play without fear, according to Hugh Godwin in The Independent. "Marc Lièvremont kept his hands firmly on the desk in front of him when he met the media after the recent win over Wales but he might as well have given them the "bras d'honneur". Arm bent at the elbow, fist pumping upwards; the Gallic equivalent of our two-fingered salute. By inflicting a first defeat on the Welsh in two years of the Six Nations Championship, Lièvremont's France stayed in the running for the title and they will jog into Twickenham this Sunday with confidence renewed. March 9, 2009 Welsh journeymen crowned as sevens kings
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/09/2009 The Western Mail reflects on Wales' unlikely triumph at the 2009 Rugby World Cup Sevens in Dubai.
"Training at Cornish Pirates, Exeter Chiefs and London Welsh will be a curious affair this week. So, too, at Neath and Newport in the Principality Welsh Premiership, while not even the plusher pastures of Cardiff Arms Park, Rodney Parade and the Liberty Stadium have welcomed too many world champions. Household names will be elsewhere, preparing for Six Nations skirmishes at Murrayfield, Twickenham and Rome, but the golden glint of World Cup medals will shine as much as the sevens rugby in Dubai itself. Johnson can kick-start England with some forward thinking
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/09/2009 Writing in the Daily Telegraph, former England hooker Brian Moore believes England are not far away from a performance that will oust the pessimists and show the wisdom of the appointment of Martin Johnson. "At the moment, views range from Stuart Barnes's that fundamentally England are bereft of a forward-thinking strategy and that the whole tactical approach has to be radically altered to those of Johnson himself, who believes that but for minor setbacks in the last two games, England would be sitting pretty; played three, won three. As usual, the truth lies betwixt these extremes. Wilkinson return too late for French mission
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/09/2009 Newcastle fly-half Jonny Wilkinson is nearing a return to action after a five-month injury lay-off but England will not be on his mind according to David Hands in The Times. "That is part of Wilkinson’s problem: his standing remains so high in the game after his record-breaking international achievements that any return to action creates the assumption that his form will immediately demand recognition by his country. He has always been totally realistic about his expectations and only when he is fit and ready will he contemplate the international game. Barry John’s praise for new Wales skipper
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/09/2009 Former Wales international Barry John believes his former side are in good hands with lock Alun-Wyn Jones handed the captaincy for the Six Nations clash with Italy. Read his thoughts in the Wales on Sunday. "I don’t think there is any doubt that in the Ospreys second row we have the future as far as the leadership of the Wales side is concerned; and I’m talking about the 2011 World Cup for definite. To be captain you have to have total command over your jersey; you should really be the first name on the team sheet. Forget philosophy – Ireland just need to keep winning
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/09/2009 Never mind the Grand Slam, Ireland are concentrating on Scotland at Murrayfield according to skipper Brian O'Driscoll writing in the Guardian. "All this talk of Ireland winning the grand slam is in the media and certainly not within our changing room. I don't think there is any more pressure on the players now than after our first win against France. Nothing has changed for us. We still have a certain number of matches that have to be won against tough opposition. In the Ireland camp we are all completely focused on the Scotland game on Saturday. Win puts women in sevens heaven
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/09/2009 Greg Growden reflects on the recent success of Australia's women's side at the Rugby World Cup Sevens - read his thoughts in the Sydney Morning Herald. "Women's rugby in Australia has long been the forgotten sister of the local game, but that all changed on Saturday when our sevens team won the inaugural World Cup tournament in Dubai. Australian Rugby Union chief executive John O'Neill, who attended the tournament, was one of many to yesterday praise the sevens team, which defeated New Zealand 15-10 in a final that went to sudden-death extra time after the game was tied 10-10 at full-time. March 8, 2009 Clive Woodward should mentor Martin Johnson
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/08/2009 The vision and stature of Clive Woodward can help Johnson’s England reach great heights - so says former England captain Lawrence Dallaglio in the Sunday Times.
"England are ranked eighth in the world which is about as low as a country with more players than anybody else can get...There is a problem, a deep-rooted malaise in English rugby and its name is not Martin Johnson. He is doing a good job in the circumstances but the circumstances are wrong. Under Johnson, England are becoming harder to beat and there is every chance they will beat the French and the Scots over the next two weekends. But how far are we intending to go on this journey? Are England likely to go to the 2011 World Cup in New Zealand as the No 1-ranked team in the world? Italy could kick England's bid for 2015 Rugby World Cup into touch
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/08/2009 England's chance of hosting the 2015 Rugby World Cup is coming under threat from a buoyant Italy according to Paul Ackford in the Sunday Telegraph. "Italy, whose government has underwritten the £80million guarantee required by the IRB, will have access to the right-sized football stadia provided they can do a deal with the Serie A authorities, and they also tick the box of a "developing rugby nation". Following widespread criticism of the IRB's decision to side with New Zealand rather than Japan for the 2011 tournament, rugby's governing body is keen to demonstrate that it is capable of venturing outside the old Five Nations countries and the southern hemisphere big three of New Zealand, South Africa and Australia. Italy, a member of the Six Nations since 2000 but with a chronically under-developed domestic league, is still viewed as an emerging nation on the world stage. For all their sins, England will beat France
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/08/2009 Defeats in Cardiff and Dublin hardly suggest England are in crisis according to Eddie Butler in The Observer "The good thing about Martin Johnson is that he saves on the plinth. He stands so tall that you don't have to waste time undermining some great marble base to bring him crashing down. Can NZRU legally deny McAlister?
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/08/2009 Gregor Paul believes the New Zealand Rugby Union's existing rule about eligibility belongs to a different age and has been made to look awkward and ill-conceived. Read his thoughts in the New Zealand Herald. "There is something the New Zealand Rugby Union board will have to decide if they refuse to make Luke McAlister immediately eligible for the All Blacks - would that be legal? March 7, 2009 Return to traditional Lions values can restore the roar
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/07/2009 Former Ireland and Lions star Tony Ward hopes that this year's elite tourists can learn from the past - read his thoughts in the Irish Independent.
"If '97 launched the Lions into the professional age, the '05 tour from hell brought a deluded few back to reality with a bang. For those of us privileged to have worn the Lions colours and to have partaken in the unique touring experience, that debacle saddened us. Few tears were shed at the overall outcome to that tour. Working on getting the right blend
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/07/2009 Writing in the Irish Times, Gerry Thornley finds that as transitional periods for Ireland go this one has a good mix of new energy and experience. "Three of the players who started against England last Saturday – Brian O’Driscoll, Ronan O’Gara and John Hayes – have now played 90 Tests or more in what looks like a foot race to become the first Irish player to reach a century of caps, while a further four have a half-century to their name. Yet at the other end of the spectrum, a half-dozen of the starting line-up at Croke Park a week ago had 15 caps or less to their name. Eddie Jones: You need three or four years to build a club
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/07/2009 As his time as Saracens supremo nears an end, Eddie Jones reflects on the pressures on the sport's leading coaches in The Independent. "So the figures tell us that, on average, a Guinness Premiership coach can expect to stay in his job for around 20 months. It's a pretty brutal statistic, but I wouldn't say it surprises me: rugby coaching has had an increasingly unstable feel to it for a while now. Regime change in Rugby Union
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/07/2009 Rugby union is becoming more and more like football in its willingness to sack coaches. Chris Hewett examines a disturbing trend, while the Saracens coach offers a first-hand insight into the perils of having to deliver instant success. Read his thoughts in The Independent. "Richard Hill ended a long and frequently heroic coaching association with Bristol last week, and the manner of his leaving was not pleasant in the slightest. Eddie Jones will walk away from Saracens at the end of the season, exasperated and unfulfilled, while Philippe Saint-André is about to leave Sale, one of the best top-flight teams in England, for Toulon, one of the worst in France. There is no guarantee that when Wasps begin their 2009-10 campaign in September, they will do so under the stewardship of Ian McGeechan. The same uncertainty surrounds Dean Ryan's future at Gloucester. Rees gives England clear sign of intent
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/07/2009 As Wasps flanker Tom Rees returns to action following a knee injury, David Hands of The Times believes all he has to do is stay fit for an extended period so that he can exert the influence that so many believe he can for his club and country. "Comparisons of one era to another are mostly invidious, but Wasps are going through a period reminiscent of 14 years ago. At that time a troop of experienced players, led by Rob Andrew, headed north to begin the professional era with Newcastle Falcons and Lawrence Dallaglio, a young back-row forward, became captain and headed the drive into the most successful decade of the club's history. March 6, 2009 Last chance saloon
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/06/2009 Wales and Wasps coach Shaun Edwards puts forward his belief that England must beat France to silence their critics and move on in The Guardian. "Four years ago France, with their coach under the cosh as his side wobbled unsteadily towards World Cup disappointment on home soil, were at Twickenham in the Six Nations and by half-time they were being blown away. England had scored two tries and if Charlie Hodgson and Olly Barkley had not missed a couple of kicks apiece, would have been out of sight. However, at 17–6 there were few reasons to doubt a home victory. March 5, 2009 Can Sevens revitalise the game?
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/05/2009 Stephen Jones remains unconvinced by the lure of Sevens in The Times. "On the subject of Sevens you may remember that I had to issue a retraction recently. I had become tired of the endless media handouts (written by people from exotic locations) declaring that Sevens was a fantastic way of developing top-class professional players when it palpably is not. Mathew Tait is just one player we tend to overrate because he has scored some sensational tries in Sevens when space was massive and lack of power did not count for much. There are other examples. March 4, 2009 Captain Sensible in uncharted waters
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/04/2009 Robert Kitson believes that Martin Johnson may be out of his depth as England manager, in his blog for The Guardian.
"It is almost 11 months since Martin Johnson was unveiled at Twickenham as England's soon-to-be manager. Remember what he said that April lunchtime? By chance I found the cutting protruding from a sea of paper beneath my desk yesterday. "I'm aware there's a perception that if I'm involved it will all be OK and we'll be successful. But that's not the reality and it never was. I've got my eyes open. I'm not thinking I can turn up and it will work straightaway. It's about getting the right environment and getting the right people around the team in all the various roles. And, obviously, getting the right players and helping them to reach their potential." Football plundering England's stocks?
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/04/2009 Owen Slot, in his column for The Times, believes that the dominance of football at mini level could be harming the development of young English players. "Maybe the problem for England rugby is that they get too many second-raters. The cream of the country goes to football and rugby makes do with what is left. March 3, 2009 Back to the future
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/03/2009 Spiro Zavos is unsure that a "State of Origin" match between Queensland and New South Wales is appropriate in the era of Super Rugby, on rugbyheaven.com.au. "John Connolly, the doughty and successful coach of Queensland in their glory days of the "it's great to be an Australian, and even better to be a Queenslander" attitude, has proposed a rugby union state of origin match. The idea has some merit but it really reflects a back-to-the-future obsession when the main game for Queensland was to defeat NSW. Time for Johnno to muck in
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/03/2009 Writing in The Daily Telegraph, Mick Cleary puts forward his belief that England manager Martin Johnson needs to gain the respect on his players first-hand. "True, there was a severe downturn in results during the autumn when record scores were posted against England by South Africa and New Zealand. But Johnson was new to the job, slack was being cut, and hope was on the horizon. March 2, 2009 England's cheating problem
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/02/2009 Simon Barnes takes aim at England's disciplinary problem, and has little time for their excuses, in The Times. "The England rugby union team do not have a discipline problem. They have a cheating problem. There comes a point when a team break the laws of a game so often that you can no longer consider their conduct a series of aberrations, a collection of individual blunders or a problem of over-enthusiasm. So let's call a spade a spade. Friday night rugby a saving grace
Posted by Huw Baines on 03/02/2009 Writing in The Guardian, Eddie Butler is thankful for the superb showing from France and Wales on Friday night as Saturday's Six Nations offerings plumbed the depths. "When it was announced that the Six Nations was going to hold a Friday-night party in Paris, there was a groan. Change is not always welcome in our rugby. Well, thank goodness for that nine o'clock special, the France‑Wales game that made up for one of the most woeful Saturdays of rugby in living memory.
March 1, 2009 Scots workmen dig for victory
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/01/2009 Iain Morrison was far from impressed as Scotlan registered their first win of the Six Nations against Italy at Murrayfield. Read his views in The Scotsman. "Scotland kick-started their Six Nations campaign with their first championship win over Italy in three years, although it was beer and sandwiches stuff rather than the champagne and caviar fare that was on the fans' wish list. O'Driscoll delivers decisive points
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/01/2009 Ireland's victory cannot hide a feeling of sheer relief according to John O'Brien in the Irish Independent.
"As an occasion it promised nothing of the explosive drama we witnessed here two years ago and, in no way did it ever come close to delivering it. O'Driscoll inspires Ireland in battle of attrition
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/01/2009 John O'Sullivan reports from Croke Park where Ireland kept their Grand Slam dream alive with victory over England. Read his report in the Irish Times. "Ireland will reflect on this 80 minutes at Croke Park grateful for several outstanding individual performances but primarily for the fact that England once again displayed such gross indiscipline that ultimately proved their undoing. Sin-bin city traps Johnson’s serial offenders
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/01/2009 Stuart Barnes insists England skipper Steve Borthwick is not up to the task of leading his country - read his assessment in the Sunday Times. "Do not let the late try for England and the one-point defeat mask the realities of where England reside in terms of their international status. They were a mid-table member of the elite when Brian Ashton was dismissed; they are now thrashing around furiously in the shallows with the minnows, shorn of confidence, know-how, a kicking strategy, leadership and discipline. Scotland relieve pressure on Frank Hadden
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/01/2009 Mark Palmer reports from Scotland's victory over Italy at Murrayfield - read his thoughts in the Sunday Times. "Frank Hadden is a great one for context; for poking around behind the scoreline to check whether parts of the story have as yet gone untold. This time he will know better than to bother with the forensics. Game won, case closed. So pitiful were the Italians, so infrequently were Scotland required to drag themselves above the banal, that serious debate over where Scotland are going, and whether, indeed, Hadden should go, requires to be deferred for a fortnight. Warren lifts our heads because we've still got points to make
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/01/2009 Writing in the Independent on Sunday, Wales fullback Lee Byrne picks through the pieces of his side's defeat to France. "It took only a few minutes after the end in Paris for Warren Gatland (right) to stand up and say what needed to be said. For the first time in two years it was a losing dressing room for Wales in the Six Nations, it was deadly quiet and all the boys' heads were down. But Warren is not the type to let that atmosphere settle. He told us we cannot be disheartened, the Championship is still there to play for, and that immediately became everyone's focus. England guilty as sin
Posted by Graham Jenkins on 03/01/2009 Paul Ackford offers a damning verdict on England's latest Six Nations performance in the Sunday Telegraph.
"Another two yellow cards for England and another match defiled by indiscipline. Unless England improve their self-control they have no right calling themselves an international rugby team. The yellow epidemic has now reached 10 in four games under new team manger Martin Johnson. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||