Archive for the ‘RBS Six Nations’ Tag

Blues Talk TV – Episode 101   Leave a comment

This week on Blues Talk TV we take a look back at Leinsters win over the Dragons in Rodney parade and review the rest of the Rabodirect Pro12 action. We then take a look forward to Irelands RBS Six Nations game against France and discuss the dropping of Ronan O’Gara

Available also as an audio-only download from here

Blues Talk Blog – Ooh wot a loverly pair of drawers   2 comments

It was a strange weekend for the Leinster and Ireland fan. Leinster won, Ulster and Munster drew and Ronan O’Gara was dropped from the Irish squad.

Leinster picked up a winning bonus point over in Newport in a game that wasn’t televised. Going by Leinster Rugbys excellent Twitter commentary, we started well, dropped off, then picked it up again. Jim was at the match and will be discussing it on this weeks Blues Talk TV. The Dragons have been going through a rough time recently. Setting a new record for the biggest home loss in the Celtic League (in its various guises) was bad enough, but the word on the grapevine is that the cost cutting sights of the WRU are fixed firmly on the Men of Gwent. That would be a pity because despite Newport being no ones idea of an ideal holiday destination Rodney Parade has always been one of the most rambunctious and earthy grounds in the league and Dragons fans have come back year after year no matter how disappointing that which has gone before has been. But what made the weekend strange was not one, but two draws involving Leinsters Pro12 rivals.

Up in Ravenhill on Friday night, Ulster and Benetton Treviso served up an absolute thriller. Both teams were understrength to varying degrees, but neither allowed that to impinge upon the ambition they displayed. Ulster managed to build leads at various times in the match, being 17-3 and 20-10 up, but the leads didn’t reflect the balance of play and Ulster were unable to maintain them. Dean Budds hat-trick try at the death brought the sides level but the missed conversion meant they couldn’t take the win. The draw cost Ulster first place, with Glasgow taking over after a bonus point win against the Blues. Much like the Treviso game, Ulster had built up a huge lead at the top of the Pro12 table, but now, after just two wins from their last five, they’ve slipped to second, level on points with Glasgow (five wins from their last five), and just two points ahead of Leinster (also five from their last five) in third. The Six Nations period can often cause big shifts in the standings, and this year, whilst the positions are not particularly different than before the Spring Internationals, the gap has contracted significantly.

Down in Limerick Munster faced the only team they dislike more than Leinster, the Ospreys. These games are always feisty affairs, with more action off the ball than on it being par for the course, and Saturday night was no different. Whilst the end result was the same, the game couldn’t have been more different than the previous nights fare in Belfast. The Ulster – Treviso game had two teams who were going out to play rugby and if there were errors being made, they were errors caused by ambition. Munster and The Ospreys went out to grind each other down and not lose. The game was error strewn, and unlike in Belfast, they were errors of competence. Again, the draw was the fair result, both teams being as bad as each other.

This weekend also saw the latest instalment in Declan Kidneys increasingly bizarre talent show – ‘Out-half Factor’. In this show, three out-halfs go head to head in different games to win the approval of Simon Cowe…sorry, the Irish coach. The coach will then look at the performances and make a selection based on almost anything else. This weeks episode was an absolute humdinger. Plucky old-timer O’Gara took on the young blades Madigan and Jackson, and despite doing what he’s been doing for the last number of years, the same way hes always done it to retain his place in the Irish squad, he was booted out of the Big Brother house (well Carton House actually) without a ‘by your leave’. This of course presents a major problem for the gentlemen of the Irish media. For so long have O’Gara and Kidney been as one in their minds, and for last year or two they’ve spent metres of column space and a small rain forests worth of paper defending both, or either, because to defend one is to defend the other. Now what do they do? They are going to have to pick a side – this should be interesting.

Joking aside, is this the last of Rog in the green of Ireland? Probably. Should it be? Again, probably. Should it have ended like this? Most certainly not. ideally Rog should have retired from International duty after the 2011 Rugby World Cup where he could enjoy the plaudits his many years in the Irish jersey have earned him. His heated outburst after the Australian game however, where he said he was going to do so ironically meant that he couldn’t. Unless you’re Kevin Keegan you don’t go out on an emotional post match interview in the heat of the moment.

For me, it all started to come apart for O’Gara in the 61st minute of the Heineken Cup semi-final in 2009. O’Gara always had a small tell in his skip pass – a little double pump before release than no one really noticed until then. One person had noticed however, ironically one of his best friends on and off the pitch, and O’Driscolls intercept try laid it bare in one of the sports biggest games for the whole rugby world to see. It might seem like a small thing, but think back to O’Gara in his pomp for Ireland or Munster.

A favourite move of both teams when in their own third of the field, from the mind of Alan Gaffney, was a skip pass off quick ball (preferably off the top line out ball) where O’Gara hit the player in the outside centre slot (usually after the actual 13 running a dummy inside line to create a gap for the 12 drifting outside him) with an bullet to put him through that gap. it worked time and time again, and like Gaffneys loop play so loved by a succession of Leinster outhalfs was very difficult to either predict or stop. With that pass taken out of the equation though, teams with O’Gara at the helm found themselves limited and the player himself seemed to be hesitant when required to move the ball. And whilst his kicking game was still as long and accurate as before, changes to both the laws, and the way the laws were to be applied, especially at the breakdown, meant that all a kicking game really did was give the ball back to the opposition, and if they were any way competent, they weren’t likely to return the favour.

If this is the end for O’Gara, then a look back at his career numbers is monumentally impressive. He is Irelands second most capped player of all time and the record holder for Irish caps. He has been on three Lions tours, won two Heineken Cups, three Celtic Leagues, a Celtic Cup, a Grand Slam/6 Nations Championship and 4 triple crowns along with setting so many records for points scored that I can’t be arsed listing them all.

There may have been ‘better’ Irish Out-halfs, but there has never been a greater Irish Out-half.

Blues Talk TV – Episode 100   Leave a comment

This week, on Blues Talks 100th episode, we take a look back at Irelands disappointing loss to Scotland in Murrayfield and Leinsters bonus point win over Scarlets in the RDS. We discuss the fallout over the selection of Paddy Jackson and preview Leinsters next match, away to Dragons.

Also available as an audio-only download from here

Blues Talk TV – Episode 98   Leave a comment

This week on Blues Talk TV the team take a look back at Irelands disappointing loss to England and review the performance. We also take a look at Leinsters win over Cardiff and preview the match against Treviso

Available as an audio only download from here

Same Old Enemy, Same Old Story   1 comment

Well we’re back to square one. After the game against Argentina and the first half against Wales, it looked as if Ireland had turned a corner and were beginning to play to their potential. But the second half against Wales and the entire game against England brought us back to earth with a bang and the vista is no less appalling than it was at the end of the last six nations and the summer tour. The question is why.

Or should that be how? In the build up to the game, particularly after last year in Twickenham, we knew that the set piece – in particular the scrum – would be vital. Well we held our own at scrum-time and even managed to do a bit of damage on the English put in. After a shaky start we held our own at the lineout and broke even and ended up with a superior return to Englands. We also had an edge in the maul and our tackling stats were better than those of the opposition. Given that we had more possession and territory also, then how it all go wrong? Well its simple really. Rugby is a tough game, a tough hard game, and getting your hands on the ball against top quality opposition is bloody hard work, so when you make all those tackles, win those collisions, work hard at the set piece, then the last thing you want to do is give the ball straight back to the opposition. And yet, time after time, thats what we did.

We managed to do it in two distinct ways. There was a period during the first half when it seemed that the Irish players had dipped their hands in some kind of rugby ball repellant. Heaslip alone dropped the ball three times, and although he racked up the highest count, it wasn’t a solo act. When Brian O’Driscoll drops one, its a hint that it might be one of those days. That was unplanned though. The other ways we gave away possession were entirely of our own making. Both outhalfs kicked away ball after ball after ball. For some reason it was considered tactically wise to kick the ball to an English back three containing the two best full backs in the Aviva Premiership. The thinking was, presumably, to play the game in English territory and wait for them to make mistakes, either with the ball or of indiscipline. Its a negative tactic but it has succeeded in the past. However there were two problems with it on Sunday.

Firstly, Ireland were the ones making the mistakes, not England. Lancaster has instilled a clarity of purpose in this England team. Every player in the squad knows what his role in any given situation is, and they stick to it. They have a simple game plan, but one suited to the team meaning they rarely make mistakes. There have been more talented England teams over the last decade, but none since 2003 knows what its doing and why as well as this one does. The second problem is that under Lancaster the ill-disciplined rabble that often took the field under Johnson are a thing of the past. The Haskell binning aside, England gave away very few penalties in kickable positions. When Ireland kicked to them, they drove the ball upfield, though never becoming overextended which can lead to penalties as players get isolated when the numbers available to secure the ball dwindle, before kicking back to Ireland to let us make the mistakes and concede the penalties. The played the way we wanted to play, only better.

Apart from the team performance, very few Irish players can be happy on an individual level. The front 5 battled well, holding their own at scrum and line out, but Cian Healy will almost certainly be paying a visit to the beak this week for his use of the feet in a first half ruck. I was brought up with the ethos that if you’re on the wrong side you deserve what you get, but the Citing Commissioners frown on obvious rucking on the joints. An inch or two either way and Healy would have been fine, but his accuracy will be his downfall. Of the back row, only O’Brien can be happy with his performance. Heaslip, as has been already mentioned above, could not hold on to the ball and whilst he was the top Irish tackler, his effectiveness as a ball carrier was entirely negated by his slippery hands. O’Mahoney put in a mirror image performance of that of his captain, despite a couple of yardage grabbing carries, his work without the ball was reminiscent of Neil Francis in all his pomp. When you’re out tackled by Ronan O’Gara, its time to take a long hard look at yourself.

The half backs as a unit were mediocre at best. Murray box kicked well, always giving his runners a chance to win or at least contest the ball in the air. The presence of O’Gara is an inhibitor on him though. When he’s paired with his senior provincial team mate he takes too much ball on himself, perhaps realising that O’Gara doesn’t possess a running threat. His passing though has returned to the levels of his debut season, which is good to see. Both players who comprised the other half of this unit had games to forget. Johnny Sexton kicked too long too often, and whilst he was more successful in navigating his team into the opposition 22 than his replacement, it was negated by the error count outside him. O’Gara had a poor game. Since the tell in his pass was exposed in the 2009 Heineken Cup semi final, his game has become confined to his formerly undoubted prowess at kicking and simple one out passes. Some might uncharitably suggest that his game was never much more than that, but they’d be wrong. At the tail end of Kidneys first run as Munster coach and under Gaffney, one of Munsters primary moves off line out ball off the top (particularly between Munsters 22 and the 10 metre line) was for O’Gara to hit Mike Mullins at 13 with a hard flat skip pass that had enough length and velocity to take him outside his opposite number more often than not, and the running rugby played by Ireland under O’Sullivan, some of the most expansive ever played by an Irish team, owed much to his distribution skills at pivot. Those days are gone now, however, and his game has constricted in terms of ambition and effectiveness. 5 of his first 6 kicks from play found an English breadbasket without troubling the touch judges.

The bench had a significant role in this match also, either by what contributed, or by what wasn’t there to contribute in the first place. Zebo broke a bone in his foot early in the match, an injury that was like a bucket of cold water being poured over the crowd given the pre match buildup, and was replaced by Keith Earls, who, in his best position, put in an excellent performance. At outside centre he looks well out of his depth, but on the wing he’s a constant threat with his pace, step and power. Earls was a Lion in 2009, and on the wing you can see why. O’Gara also came on before half time, but after that the Irish bench had little to offer. Englands bench however was a different matter. Hartley, Wilson, Lawes/Waldrom and Tuilagi were all introduced all of whom are players with real international pedigree. Some may not be particularly likeable, but they know their way around a pitch at his level.

A number of the Irish players, including the captain, seemed somewhat overwrought by the occasion. The hype in the lead up to the game was huge. The irish media were billing this game as the grand slam decider, as if for either team overcoming France was but a formality, and the winners march to 6 Nations glory would be inevitable. For all that players talk about ignoring the media, its not always possible when despite a midnight sitting of the Dail to liquidate Anglo and talk of billions of euro being saved or not being saved, or whatever you’re having yourself, the game is still the dominant story of the week – such was the level of saturation coverage of this game.

Finally to the coach. Blues Talk has never hid its lack of confidence in the current incumbent, and Sunday has done little to change that. We had our 40 minutes of entertainment against Wales, more than enough for us, and against England it was back to kick, kick, and kick again – and if that doesn’t work, why not try kicking it. Theres not much more than can be said about Kidneys tactical prowess and selectorial skills that hasn’t already not been said by the Irish print media and their sycophantic colleagues in Montrose. But, despite losing on Sunday, and being the losingest Irish coach of the Millennium, should we beat an eminently beatable French team, expect his contract to be renewed to take him through the next Rugby World Cup.

I can hardly wait.

Don’t forget to tune in to Blues Talk TV on Thursday for a detailed review of the game and a look forward to Leinsters game against Treviso, which isn’t being shown on television because RTE spent all their money on chew toys for a rabid George Hook.

Blues Talk TV – Episode 96   Leave a comment

This week on Blues Talk TV we discuss the departure of Johnny Sexton to Racing Metro and of Andrew Conway to Munster and what these moves mean for Leinster. We also preview this weekends Six Nations action including Irelands match in Wales

Audio only download available from here