Waratahs vs Blues – Super Rugby – 8 February 2020

Reading Time: 4 minutes

The Waratahs have blown hot and cold over the past few seasons picking up wins against teams like the Crusaders and then losing to the Sunwolves in the same season. The Blues have also been perennial New Zeeland underachievers despite fielding quality teams over many years.

This was never going to be the game of the season, but definitely an important one for both teams. Both want to get out under the shadows of the teams dominating in their respective countries.

The game started with some good attacking play from the Waratahs, but the Blues were the first to score. The far more organized play of the Waratahs was notable and can definitely be a basis to build a promising season on.

For the 2nd week in a row young Mark Nawaqanitawase impressed on the left-wing for the Waratahs. Playing way above his age level in maturity and with intelligence. He is staking an early claim for one of those Wallaby jerseys in the winter tests…

The huge rains in Newcastle made handling a bit more difficult and although there were a number of fumbles, both teams really did well to keep possession of the ball.

The Blues were definitely trying to also rebuild after previous seasons by being more disciplined in all facets of the game. Their execution of it was just slightly better than that of the Waratahs in the first half. They also took the points on offer and eased out to their 0-8 lead after 25 minutes.

The difference between the two teams was mostly down to the work without the ball. The Waratahs were a bit more sluggish waiting to see what would unfold. The Blues worked hard to get back into good defensive lines and get into a position to be effective in attack.

The 7-8 halftime score was a fair reflection of the efforts of both teams. Neither was flawless and it was some credit for both teams, but the Blues were definitely the best in the first half.

The Blues however decided to rain on the Waratahs parade and jumped out to a 7-20 lead shortly after halftime.

Despite the Mark Nawaqanitawase try to help wake you up a bit towards the end of the 2nd half, the quick tries by Mark Telea helped flatter the Blues with a 12-32 victory.

Waratahs

The discipline of the Waratahs in their phased attack and set phases was a lot better than it had been for a few years. It is clear that they want to put their hand up and let everyone know that the Aussie conference is not just about the Brumbies.

Throughout the first half, they were decent in most areas across the park, but they allowed the Blues to bully them especially at ruck time. This made it very difficult for them to stop the attack of the Blues and to get go-forward ball themselves.

The effort just before half time to go through 17 phases to take the score to 7-8 was a good confidence boost. Their patience was rewarded and hopefully, they learn from the results of this phase of play for the rest of the season.

Despite the brilliant try from Mark Nawaqanitawase for the Waratahs, the last quarter of the game turned into a snore-fest. The Mark Talea try to seal the victory for the Blues just barely helped to wake you up

Blues

The Blues were a bit lucky to get in for their first try after a messy lineout, but it just showed that there is enough in this inexperienced team to get points on the board when needed.

The advantage line was just breached by the Blues more effectively than their opposition and more regularly. It made things difficult for the Waratahs as they constantly had to turn around.

Through dominance, at scrum time Karl Tu’inukuafe definitely put a hand up both for the Blues and for new All Blacks coach, Ian Foster, to take notice.

Work at the ruck has however been the biggest improvement by the Blues team. If they can keep their physical dominance at ruck time throughout the 2020 season, they will be able to set up their very dangerous backs to punish opposition teams.

An important thing to remember is that the Blues put up a performance like this with 10 injured players in their squad…

Outstanding players

Waratahs: Michael Hooper (7), Mark Nawaqanitawase (11) Kurtley Beale (15)

Blues: Karl Tu’inukuafe (1), Patrick Tuipulotu (4), Blake Gibson (7), Hoskins Sotutu (8), Stephen Perofeta (10), Mark Telea (11)

ThysRugby player of the game: Mark Nawaqanitawase was sensational again and will no doubt be a Wallaby in the next few months.

Best plays of the game

  • Mark Nawaqanitawase’s little faked kick resulting in defenders overrunning and gaining some extra meters
  • Karl Tu’inukuafe dominating his opposing tighthead and dismantling the opposition scrum
  • 17 phases just before halftime by the Waratahs to get over for a try
  • Blues defending their own line at the scrum earning a penalty on the Waratahs throw 5m from the Blues’ own line
  • Mark Nawaqanitawase try after multiple phases in the corner. Incredible handling by the Waratahs in wet conditions

Final verdict

Waratahs: The team overall is on the up. Their physicality at breakdowns was just below average. If they keep getting dominated in the contact situation, they will struggle for the rest of the season.

Blues: A welcome return to winning ways away from home. Their first in a few years. They don’t look like a pedigree side yet, but there is some promise in the team. When they are back to full strength it would be interesting to see what they can do.

Chiefs vs Crusaders – Super Rugby – 8 February 2020

Reading Time: 4 minutes

The Chiefs and Crusaders always dish up some of the best rugby you will see in the Super Rugby every year. When it gets to a derby match it just takes a step up that leaves any lover of the game with a smile on their faces.

With two of the best Super Rugby teams coached by the two best coaches in Super Rugby, it was never going to be an average game. As much as it was Chiefs against Crusaders, it was also definitely Warren Gatland against Scott Robertson.

The Chiefs were deserved winners and the game was a spectacular display of hard rugby. I honestly don’t know how other teams are going to compete against them with any realistic chance this season.

I am a bit biased to the Chiefs side and have loved their play over the past few years, but the class of the Crusaders is undeniable. This could be seen again in how they took control of the game in the first quarter and cruised to a 12-3 lead. The Chiefs try helped to just balance it out a bit and at 12-8 we knew that we were going to be in for another mouthwatering display of Super Rugby.

The Chiefs were however not taking any chances fielding their strongest possible. This after almost running into problems the previous week for not doing so.

Towards the back end of the first half, there was some courageous defense from the Waikato team keeping out a slick Crusaders attack. As a result of all the pressure, the Crusaders made a few small mistakes not due to lack of talent, but through resilient defense.

Although people rarely give teams like the Bulls credit for this part of the game, the old adage goes “take the points when they are on offer”. The Crusaders had three easy penalty opportunities in the last 10 minutes of the first half but decided not to take one of them.

The Chiefs made them pay shortly after the half time break to score next to the posts. This was off the kickoff and 11 phases. The Crusaders defense was found wanting, but not so much due to a lack of skill from their side, but rather the attacking prowess of the Chiefs.

One of the best battles in the game was however at the breakdown. Over the past few years, the Crusaders have been the best in the business when it comes to working for 80 minutes at ruck time. The Chiefs were up to the challenge in every way. The speed to the ruck by both teams ended being an amazing arm wrestle throughout. Just one more facet of the game that the New Zeelanders treat with the utmost respect and is so extremely crucial to success in a game (pay attention Australian and South African teams!).

Sense prevailed for the Crusaders early in the 2nd half and when they were presented with their 4th kickable penalty either side of half time, they actually took the points on offer.

Near flawless Chiefs

They played their stronger team and were able to flex their considerable rugby muscle when needed. For a large part of the first half, they had to fight on defense and did so admirably. A lot of huge work was done off the ball to cover space make crucial tackles.

After having to defend their own try-line relentlessly for the last 10 minutes of the first half, they started the 2nd half in style. The took the ball through 11 phases after fielding the kickoff until their scrumhalf Te Toiroa Tahuriorangi went over.

Patience and skill were on display for everyone to see and after defending like trojans they were able to shift gears and go on multiple phases of attack with ease.

The crucial turnover penalties forced by Lachlan Boshier towards the end of the game helped to get the Chiefs into an unassailable position.

Crusaders at their best for 95% of the game, but…

Quickly out the gate, as they are… well in recent years. In years gone by the first few games were always an opportunity to take advantage of a slightly less organized Crusaders outfit. Those years are however long gone.

Their confidence in their own abilities resulted in them totally ignoring the points on offer at the end of the first half. The Chiefs defense ensured that they got absolutely nothing from it.

Their championship-winning defense was however on display again for everyone to see throughout the game. This couldn’t be more evident than the 22 phases of attack that the Chiefs put in around the 50th minute. The Crusaders just kept working extremely hard at ruck time and proved why they have been the top defensive team over the past 2 years.

Outstanding players

Chiefs: Samisoni Taukeiaho (2), Atunaisa Moli(3), Lachlan Boshier (6), Te Toiroa Tahuriorangi (9), Aaron Cruden (10), Solomon Alaimalo (11), Anton Lienert-Brown (12), Sean Wainui (14), Damian McKenzie (15), Brad Weber (21)

Crusaders: Codie Taylor (2), Mitch Drummond (9), David Havili (10), Jack Goodhue(12), Sevu Reece (14)

ThysRugby player of the game: Lachlan Boshier – non-stop work at the point of contact winning a couple of crucial penalties at the rucks

Best plays of the game

  • The defensive effort of the Chiefs for 5 minutes on their own line from the 30 minute mark
  • The try by the Chiefs just after half time, going over 60 meters up the field and working through 11 phases
  • The Chiefs going 22 phases on the attack, but the Crusaders holding firm just outside their 22 and forcing a penalty at ruck time
  • Brad Weber creating something out of nothing on the blindside to put in Sean Wainui
  • Lachlan Boshier’s two penalties earned at the ruck in short succession
  • Chiefs defensive effort on their own line to turn over the ball after the Crusaders had a very attacking lineout on the 5m
  • Lachlan Boshier winning another penalty at the ruck with 2 minutes to go putting it out of reach for the Crusaders

Final verdict

Chiefs: With almost all of the 1st choice players back in the team they were pure class. There weren’t really any flaws in their game and they won the game with their electric attack on the back of their amazing defensive efforts.

Crusaders: The Crusaders were impressive and even though the Chiefs outmuscled them on the day, there is no doubting their pedigree. Not much to worry about except having to learn to take points when it is on offer.

Brumbies vs Rebels – Super Rugby – 7 February 2020

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It looked from the start that it was going to be a one-sided slaughter. The Brumbies rushed out to a 24-0 lead without really breaking a sweat and the Rebels looked completely out of sorts. They did claw back a try to go into the shed trailing 24-7.

The Brumbies were however impressive throughout the contest (well most of it) and really took a step up from last week. The Tom Banks try was just a precursor of what was to come and at no point did the Rebels look like they would threaten.

The tries either side of half-time was encouraging to see from the Rebels, but you never got the impression that they would kick on from there.

A little credit needs to go the Rebels way for the two tries that they scored either side of half-time, but this was countered shortly after by a try by the Brumbies in the corner.

The attack from the Rebels was very predictable most of the time and their almost-3rd-try was from a well-worked maul. A glimmer of hope, yes… but enough to turn the game around? Maybe…

Brumbies are on the up…

The Brumbies had a FAR better display than in week 1. There was intensity across the park. It was not flawless, but they must be commended for the huge step up taken in a single week.

Last week they looked average at best and unlikely to achieve any results that weren’t against other struggling Australian teams. They do however look like they are on the up and have shed a lot of the rust that showed in week 1.

Stumbling Rebels early contenders for the wooden spoon

How do you turn things around when you lose to the Sunwolves in week 1, then you get ripped to shreds by the Brumbies in week 2?

They need to take a step back and breathe first. They have a couple of senior players that need to take a step up and lead the group of youngers back from the brink.

Dane Haylett-Petty, Reece Hodge, Matt Toomua and Marika Koroibete form the core of the most exciting backline in Australia and should be dominating.

The mix of youngsters and experienced campaigner in their forwards need to make the step up and provide more quality for their backs to work with. The responsibility sits on Ruan Smith and Isi Naisarani’s shoulders.

Outstanding players

Brumbies: Folau Fainga’a (2), Thomas Cusack (7), Noah Lolesio (10), Solomone Kata (14), Tom Banks (15),

Rebels: [crickets chirping…] I know that is harsh, but when you possess that much quality across the park and don’t pitch up for the game, no one deserves a shout out

ThysRugby player of the game: Solomone Kata

Best plays of the game

  • The two tries either side of half-time by the Rebels. It showed that there is hope and that they didn’t give up… it just didn’t last
  • Recovery from Brumbies after the quick 2 tries to set up the Folau Fainga’a try in the corner after 15 minutes in the 2nd half

Final verdict

Brumbies: They impressed with the improvement from week 1. It was a team effort that deserves credit and currently, it doesn’t look like there will be any opposition in the Australian conference to threaten their continued dominance.

Rebels: Where do you go from here? It would be difficult to fall further, so the only way to go is up. With the rare glimpses that they showed and the quality that they possess, they should forgive themselves for these first two weeks… wipe the slate clean and put on the big-boy pants.

Highlands vs Sharks – SuperRugby – 7 February 2020

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You would be forgiven for thinking you are in a parallel universe if you watched the first half. The Sharks were leading the Highlanders in Dunedin and not just fractionally. An impressive 3-27 lead!

It must be said that the Sharks with good quality for their lead. Although the Highlanders weren’t at their best, despite the smattering of All Blacks, the Sharks were utterly dominant.

The key was going to be if the Sharks could keep their concentration for the whole 80 minutes and if the around-the-world traveling would take its toll.

The New Zeeland rugby machines is however a totally different beast…

Highlanders

They were their own worst enemy through the first 50 minutes of the game. Whenever they had the ball they were error-prone and looked like they were unsure of what to do. They basically looked like an Australian Super Rugby team at the start of the season.

After their first try, they were however able to start a bit of a comeback and were finding their stride in many facets of the game.

The efficiency improved with every phase. The error county slowed down with every possession and they turned it into a game in the last 20 minutes of the contest.

Their comeback efforts were definitely admirable but just came too late in the game. Errors in the first 50 minutes were their downfall and it was a combination of horrible handling errors as well as

Sharks

The Sharks dominated absolutely every facet of the game in the first half. After going down 3-0 in the first half they started kicking into gear. After the first two penalties, the last 10 minutes of the first half was a crushing display!

As the 2nd half started it looked like it was just going to be more of the same. They took the score out to 3-30 with another great kick from Curwin Bosch.

Were they going to keep their cool? The next 10 minutes the wheels started coming off however and it looked like it was going to be another day of heartbreak in NZ.

The lucky Fassi try however sealed a victory that you had to say was well deserved for the Sharks.

Outstanding players

Highlanders: Josh Dixon(5), Aaron Smith (9), Mitchel Hunt (10), Jona Nareki (11)

Sharks: Curwin Bosch (10), Lukhanyo Am (12), Madosh Tambwe (14), Aphelele Fassi (15)

ThysRugby player of the game: Aphelele Fassi. Despite Curwin Bosch keeping up his 100% kicking record, Fassi was just sensational

Plays of the game

  • That first half of the Sharks!
  • The Highlanders getting the scrum penalty after messing up their own lineout on 60 minutes
  • THAT scrum followed by the cross-kick resulting in the Highlanders try in the corner by
  • The Sharks turning a defensive into a penalty after pushing back the Highlanders over 10 meters!
  • The little tap back in-field to put in Michael Collins for a try in the 75th minute

Final verdict

Highlanders: took 50 minutes to find their stride, but were outplayed for the most part by a Shark team. A large number of errors need to be addressed and worked on during the coming week.

Sharks: more clinical than they have been in the last 5 seasons! Their play was a joy to behold and a really encouraging sign for the 2020 season. Can they keep this up?

HS Centurion under 15s – Week 1

Reading Time: 6 minutes

I am fortunate enough to take charge of the under 15s at HS Centurion in 2020. My youngest is playing for the under 16s in one of the stronger teams in the school. The team I inherited has however had a tougher time of it…

In 2019 the under 14 group went through the season with zero wins. It is important to understand the back story. The school has faced a challenge of a slowly aging demographic in the surrounding neighborhoods and only one feeder primary school.

There are a couple of other schools in the area who have their pick of players and also have the option to offer bursaries to promising young rugby players.

How do you compete?

How you start such a challenge

Knowledge is power is a cliche that has been heard a million times around the world, but it became one for a reason. If you don’t understand the details, you don’t know the whole story. You don’t know where to start.

The rugby trials will happen on 29 February and this basically gave us 5 weeks for pre-season training (we started last week). The first matches are two weeks after the trials.

According to the school’s pre-season schedule, players will be training twice a week leading up to the trials. When we started this means that we had 10 practice sessions of an hour each.

I coached two of their promising players last year as part of a under 15s 7’s group and got to know a little bit of what their 2019 season had been like.

So I started by not getting on to a field but first talking with the players who were willing to listen.

We set up a session on Friday 24 January after school to talk. There were 11 players that pitched up. More said they would come, but they were obviously skeptical…

Go with a plan, but don’t talk AT the players

I had prepared a plan on how we should approach the practice sessions, how we should play the game and how I will conduct practices. It was more important for them to first vent.

I asked them about 2019 with a couple of leading questions. At first, it was just the two I coached last year that spoke up and I started writing it down. Slowly but surely they kept sharing their frustrations, their challenges, their doubts and through all of that you could see their hope that things might be different in 2020.

After they had talked for about 30 minutes and I had loads of notes, I recapped it and told them that I would like to tell them what I would want to do for the season.

Asking them first what they went through as players and understanding THEIR point of view allowed me to adjust my approach to how I will coach them during the season. It allowed me to tie back my ideas to what they had to say.

They had been heard.

The first week of training

During the first week of training, I tried to focus on a variety of skills emphasizing that I didn’t care if they made mistakes, only that I want them to try as hard as they can to improve.

During the Tuesday session, they improved as well as during the Wednesday session

The most important thing you can do during these early sessions is to look for clues. The clues you are looking for are:

  • where are the obvious gaps in skills?
  • where are the opportunities with what they currently can do?
  • who are the most influential players in the group?
  • who show promise, but lack confidence?
  • which of them looks uncertain in everything that they do?

It is important to really look at each of these individually because if you can solve most of these puzzle pieces early, you are in for a turnaround season.

Where are the obvious gaps in skills?

Often coaches stop here. If you teach them how to master a skill, you have done a good job, but it is a toss-up on whether or not the team will perform.

If you only address the skills gap, you will see that there are phases of play during games where the players really look good. When the pressure is on, you will however often see cracks appear.

Those cracks are not as a result of a lack of skills.

Where are the opportunities with what they currently can do?

This takes a little bit longer to identify. The makeup of your team will be unique. You might have a well-balanced team (fairly rare). You might have a lot of sizes, but not much speed. You might have a small team and loads of speed. You might have athletes with potential but not with a lot of experience.

The team I have has 3 or 4 forwards who stand out a bit above the rest. In the backline, there are 3 players that really stand out. This is in based on what I have seen in week 1 but week 2 will really be telling.

None of them have really been tested thus far in terms of what they offer in speed, strength and ruby IQ. This will become more apparent in week 2 as I work on different skills.

The players you have ties into my next point.

Who are the most influential players in the group?

Especially at this age players are still swayed by the “heroes” in the team. Those were the players who stood out when they played together at lower age levels and they look up to them.

These players should receive special attention, not at the expense of the other players but in terms of the responsibility they carry in another way.

They become your group of captains. A true captain leads by example both in practice and in games.

Talking to them individually and making them responsible for looking after 2 or 3 players serves two purposes:

  • They learn to take responsibility for their actions and are less likely to mess around during practices
  • The players receiving the extra attention take a step up as they get “preferential” treatment from one of the stars of the team

Who show promise, but lack confidence?

These players are primed to become your next wave of stars in the team. If you place close attention to them and have quick 30 second chats with them regularly you will get to the bottom of why they lack confidence.

You will find out what is important to them, what they want to achieve, what makes them happy…

These players are often the ones who weren’t given the same attention and opportunities of the other star players in previous years. They are uncertain of where they fit into the mix.

They need to know that you are paying attention to them. It is crucially important to tell them whenever you see them do something well in practice. It doesn’t matter how small.

If you do that, you will see that they suddenly have a bit of a spring in their step. They are more alert. Keen to get another compliment from their coach.

Keep at this and soon you can “upgrade” them and give them 2 players to look after…

Which of them looks uncertain in everything that they do?

I know I probably used up my quota of cliches, but here is another one “a chain is only as strong as its weakest link”. When it comes to crunch time, this group of players will be the ones that carry you over the line.

You might think I am crazy but hear me out. During a game, these players need a moment. One tackle. One run (no matter how short). One ruck where they force a turnover…

Hoping for that is leaving too much to chance. Working with these players so that hope turns into a probability, now THAT is where you want to get to.

These players have probably NEVER received any attention from their coaches. Their parents are either frustrated by this or by them and often they don’t get the support they deserve.

You are the coach and it is your duty to turn this around. These players need to be singled out, but in a good way. Here are a couple of simple things you can do:

  • Call them to the side when they have done something right. Tell them and give them a compliment and a smile. Repeat it often.
  • Call them to the side when they have made a mistake. Tell them that it is okay and that you know they can actually do it. Do this VERY selectively and rather try and find positives to emphasize.
  • Involve them and search for that one little spark. Go overboard with your praise in front of everyone!

Keep doing this and the hope will turn into probability.

Keep doing this and they will probably “upgrade” and eventually help a next wave of players, because they have been there.

Crusaders vs Waratahs – Super Rugby – 1 February 2020

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Without looking to exert effort the Crusaders cruised to a decent lead at half-time of 24-6. They ran in 3 tries in the process with great ease. The Waratahs just never really stood a chance.

It looked to be a routine butchering of an Australian Super Rugby team by a New Zealand Super Rugby team. Mark Nawaqanitawase didn’t like that idea and in a few short minutes pulled the Waratahs from 24-6 down to 24-18. There was hope…

The Crusaders machine is however something that just dazzles spectators and stuns opponents. They do something that has been hailed by all rugby pundits globally praise them for: superior basic skills executed with accuracy at pace.

People often read “basic skills” as they can really pass and catch like pros. That is however only a drop in the bucket of what good basic skills entail. That is however a story for another post.

The quick short kick off from the 22 on about 65 minutes and the try that followed showed how broad “basic skills” can be.

The part that I must still figure out over the coming weeks is how they are so damn efficient at taking an opponent and dismantling them so effortlessly. All opponents come to play the Crusaders with great intent. It does however look like the Crusaders simply sum up opponents… take their strong points and turn it into mush over the course of a game.

They put the “cruise” in Crusaders

It is very early in the season, but it would be difficult to imagine the Crusaders not lifting the trophy at the end of the season again. Many teams will still get used to the pace, sort out some errors and put up a good fight, but the Crusaders are already so far ahead! …again…

The Crusaders look like they are just in The Zone all of the time. They always seem to have time on the ball, acres of space, support runners aplenty and a defense that washes over every offensive effort.

There are two parts that stand out to me in how they really crush opponents:

  1. The basic skills are near flawless – tackle technique, ruck work, passing, catching, kicking running at gaps, closing down space on defense…
  2. Their skill when they don’t have the ball – seeing a situation unfolding either on defense or on the attack and getting into position. It sounds like a simple sentence, but they are in position for each situation way before their opponents

They are set apart by doing #1 at an absolute top level, but #2 they rarely mess up. People don’t see it as a skill and very few teams outside New Zealand value it but just think about it… Is there ever NOT someone to pass to? When that cross-kick is done is there ever a wing out of place? Are they ever short on numbers on cross-defense? Do they often succumb to overlaps or holes in the middle of defense?

Waratahs better than what the score said

The Waratahs somehow messing up a 4 on 2 about 5 minutes into the 2nd half didn’t help their cause. That was a glaring mistake and the steady decline in the power of a scrum that dominated at the start showed what the Crusaders do to you.

They showed a couple of signs of promise throughout the game often carving open a usually watertight Crusaders defense. This showed that there definitely was enough in that backline to cause damage. Once lines were breached it was however a case of a deer in headlights and they just could not finish it off.

How about 19-year-old Mark Nawaqanitawase though! You don’t usually see a player of this age stepping into a Super Rugby game and fight through 3 Crusaders defenders to score in the corner. That wasn’t his only contribution though… that intercept try minutes later turned the game completely on its head!

Players of the game

Crusaders: Scott Barrett (4), Richie Mo’unga (10), Leicester Fainga’anuku (11), Braydon Ennor (13), David Havili (15)

Waratahs: Mark Nawaqanitawase (11), Kurtley Beale (15)

ThysRugby player of the game: Mark Nawaqanitawase – to have the influence he had from the wing in a losing cause at age 19… Brilliant!

Plays of the game

  • The Mark Nawaqanitawase double in short succession. The first being the best in getting through 3 Crusaders and having to improvise to get the ball down and not go into touch
  • Richie Mo’unga being on the field. He was a class act last year. He lost nothing this year
  • Crusaders try from their own 22. Quick thinking, vision, unselfish play and speed

Final verdict

Crusaders: They are 90% there already this early in the season. If they get a little better I don’t have much hope for the rest.

Waratahs: Flashes of promise followed by total disappointment. Their forwards need to take a step up as a pack to give their very lethal backline a chance to shine and get them over the line.