Volume 2, Week 6 | |
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Editors Note |
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Brilliant!
Or as one reader suggests a “brilliant mess” and who can argue with that juxtaposition when referring to South African sport in general and rugby in particular? Three defeats in the Super 12, a home series defeat against the Australian cricket team,
soccer in turmoil so yes one could concur, what is so bloody brilliant?
It is very difficult to stay positive amongst the magnitude of negative results and feelings of despondency prevalent in our sports community at the moment and even more so when the president of the country makes it quite clear that winning should not be the sole focus. To hell with that – it is about time the government ceases their ambiguous statements and clearly spells out its terms. Is it a mathematical formula i.e. a % of “various colours” out of total registered players? Is it along total population i.e. white versus non-white? The sooner the players and coaches know where they stand then we can work to attain the necessary goals and targets. That is if they can find any professional players left in the country who has not left for the Northern Hemisphere in avoidance of politics and the bad rand! Positives – the Stormers, enough said. The men from Cape Town played magnificent entertaining rugby and there was nobody who did not enjoy their display last Friday. The Sharks defence and guts against a superior side and of course Ernie Els! Brilliant! The sad truth remain that South African rugby is currently in a “brilliant mess” with two of our teams devoid of the plot and the Sharks struggling to notch their first victory. The New Zealanders have lost all complacency and their top teams look hungry and ready to reclaim a trophy they regard as their “own”. The Australians are performing magnificently and with all three teams performing well it is easy to see why they are World Champions and so good in whatever sport they choose. There is a lot of professionalism and intelligence in their play. We can learn from that. The grand old man of broadcasting Bill McLaren finally unveiled his full all-time best XXII, the team is: A Irvine (Scotland); G Davies (Wales), D Gerber (South Africa), M Gibson (Ireland), D Campese (Australia); R Andrew (England), G Edwards (Wales); F Cotton (England), S Fitzpatrick (New Zealand), G Price (Wales), C Meads (New Zealand), F du Preez (South Africa), Z Brooke (New Zealand), F Slattery (Ireland), M Davies (Wales). Replacements: J Leonard (England), K Wood (Ireland), J Eales (Australia), I Kirkpatrick (New Zealand), N Farr-Jones (Australia), M Lynagh (Australia), M Burke (Australia). Two of SA’s greatest were included and it must be noted that Bill had very few opportunities to see our great players of the eighties perform. The current trend of reality television on our screens are enormously popular, there are ‘Pop Idols’, ‘Survivor’, ‘Big Brother’, and a nice little one called ‘Temptation Island’ now I’m sure most of you are au fait with these and probably spend some time watching them. If you wonder what this has to do with rugby you are quite right – nothing! But use a little imagination and look at these similarities with our current state of rugby. Pop Idols: an exhaustive weekly sifting of “talent” countrywide to find the one “special” performer that will be the next Pop Idol. SA rugby has been doing this for years and ever since the departure of one Joel Stransky and Henry Honibal the scouts have been out sifting and searching for that “idol” to perform in the Springbok no 10 jersey. The general public and press make old Simon Cowell look like a farm tannie selling koeksisters at the kerk bazaar and the contenders might as well perform Y-M-C-A with movements such is the “abundance” of talent available. Survivor: this one must go to the men in charge of South African rugby in whatever disguise; with all their strategies, alliances, back stabbing and hanging about doing nothing before the next task they manage to survive year after year while the rugby is heading one way – south. How about a special episode Survivor: Last of the Dinosaurs and maybe extinction will follow. Big Brother: well unlike Ferdie who eventually apologised for “kaking” in the garden our dear politicians keep on doing it all the time without apologizing and they are creating one monster mess. Meddling in every sport they have single-handedly destroyed all national sports pride in the name of transformation and created inferior teams who will soon lose any support they may have left in this country. Oh ja, they get to keep the millions. Temptation Island: like the couples our Springbok coaches have been tempted by all the worlds playing styles and Bob Skinstad, they’ve tried their best to force them upon our players with very little success. Hopefully the latest will emerge as one of the greatest by resisting temptation but then Wilde famously declared that he can resist anything but temptation. This weekend there are some tough matches for all the South African sides, the Stormers will face a stern test against the Highlanders and the Sharks will hope to salvage their campaign and register their first win. Enjoy!
Lucas
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Heads We Win, Tails You Lose by Desmond Organ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This past week we have yet again been enlightened as to the ultimate agenda that is driving sport and therefore rugby in South Africa. There has never been any doubt in my mind or the minds of countless others that there is a definite target that the government is aiming at. That target involves the systematic transformation of rugby in South Africa. |
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Join the SARUGBY news and discussion group for the fastest sarugby news and the most intense debates around the South African game. Send a blank email to sarugby-subscribe@yahoogroups.com |
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Differing Standards by Mark Foster | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The Super 12 competition may be billed as the most exciting and toughest competition in the world however this writer begs to differ. Round three of matches produced easy wins for all the top teams and there were bonus points galore, an indication of poor defences and a rift in standards. |
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Super 12 Log | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Rugby Forum Super 12 XXII |
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The favourites are beginning
to show and this is reflected in the individual performances with the
Brumbies, Crusaders, Highlanders, Waratahs, Reds and Stormers from SA
producing the goods. An interesting selection would be the Worst XXII
available! 1. Bill Young (Brumbies) |
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Quotes | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
"When these guys tackle you they assault you."
Frans Ludeke
"If the bloke was not showing promise we wouldn't take the punt." Bob Dwyer on Mat Rogers before the competition. I look at Colin Meads and see a great big sheep farmer who carried the ball in his hands as though it was an orange pip. Bill McLaren When overseas teams tour South Africa we treat them like gods. We seem afraid of upsetting them. But they feel nothing for us when we go overseas. Rudolf Straeuli |
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Letters to the Editor (letters@rugbyforum.co.za) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dear Ed.
I'm Afrikaans speaking but for the sake of all my fellow rugby "crazy heads" I'll do this in a language understood by everyone. See, the same goes for rugby. The basics is understood by all. |
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Dear Ed. You usually start your story with "BRILLIANT!" I'd like to know what can possibly be BRILLIANT about the state of South African rugby at the moment? I call it a brilliant mess. Heavens knows what is going on in SA rugby now a days, but I doubt if there is any South African who can truly say he/she is proud of what he/she saw last weekend. Yes, the Stormers did well. But that is only the Stormers! We are supposed to be one of the big dogs in rugby. It is impossible when only one of our four Super 12 teams perform. How on earth are we going to take on the Australasians in the 3-nations? We do have the players, I agree, but how do they play? Will Dolfie be able to get their minds turned away from this horrible competition? Teach them to win and win well? I am so glad I never appl ied for that job. Not that I stood any chance of getting it, but what if SARFU decided to give it to any pampoen like me, anyway. I think any pampoen couldn't make a bigger buggerup of it, they might have given me the job, anyway. Where do we start looking for the solution to this horrible problem? What I heard from Joost on Superrugby, E-tv, last night, made my hair stand on end. It is really true! The players are told how to play! There is no initiative! They play like robots! Game plans! Game plans!! Game plans!!! I hope Dolfie's game plan is to win matches. That was the only game plan we had, forty years ago when I played this marvelous game. I know it has changed over the years, but like Joost said, a prop forward has a certain, basic duty to fulfill, so has a hooker, a lock, and all the other players. Only after the tight 5 have done their basic duties very well, they can start thinking of playing along with the backline. In other words, only after you have tapped almost all the energy from your opponent, he must be barely able to breath, only then, if you still think you can, go join the backline. In other words, go back to the message given to that famous Bok team in, when was it, 1937? "Scrum. Scrum. Scrum." Now a days it will include rucks and mauls. Any player with a number from 1 to 5 on his back, outside a ruck or a maul, must either be injured, or shouldn't be in any team. Not even under 9! The next step should be, I think, to find a backline full of energy, enthusiasm, speed, vision, skills, footwork and as tough as nails. Energy to keep on and on at full speed in the attack. Enthusiasm to support every move made by any team mate, to take the ball another 10m farther. A vision to read the game in the first 5 to 10 minutes and see the gaps for himself as well as for the man next to him. To enable every pass to stick and put the catcher in a better position. Feet that can keep the opposition guessing. What will he do next? Which way is he going to move? Tough, to tackle an opponent but once, fair but as hard as possible. The next time the ball comes his way, his eyes must be wondering, searching for the guy who tackled him the last time. We all know what happens next. Either he knocks on or misses the ball completely. And if he is so brave as to catch the ball a second time, give him one more, fair and as hard as possible. Sometimes it might ev en take three such tackles, but in the end I can asure you, it will work. That is how we played. All right, I never played for the Bokke or any provincial side. Why? Because I got tackled like that. Fair and hard and I broke my leg. Those days the medics weren't so organised and that tackle ended my career. We need men who want to play for their team, for one another and their country. Guys who will be proud of the salary they receive because they really, really earned it with good, hard, fair and honest play. The trash we have been dished up the last three weeks, we'll just not take. Coaches must realise that they are not there to be nice to the players. Rugby has always been a very tough, competitive sport. Soft hands make septic wounds in this sport. If your player can't cope, Mr. Coach, get rid of him as soon as possible, before he takes your name down the drain. A lesson our previous Bokwagter never learnt. To coach a rugby team is a very, very lonely job. Sometimes you like a player very much, and he is a good player. But there is someone better, then, Mr. Coach, your integrity comes through. Then you must show courage to make the right choice. Your friendship or your team? Where does your loyalty lie? Many coaches will tell you that the bribes they took, to choose a "friend" in the side, just never worked. Their conscience ate them all the time. Some coaches will even t ell you that they hated a player's guts, but because that player was the best in that position, he chose him and made a new friend for life. And the team won game after game. And that coach slept well, night after night. To summarise, choose the best players available, do the basics right, and make your game plan: "LOOKS AT THE SCOREBOARD!" Kys. |
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Dear Ed
Thanks for the Brilliant! reviews and views expressed in this forum. |
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Rugby Forum By the looks of it the writer is also from the Cape. Why is it that you have excuses for the Stormers not having there best side available however the Cats are without the best 3 in world rugby in Andre Venter, Rassie and Vossie. Then we lost a Tinus and Smiley and Japie and Wylie but nobody noticed this. For the Stormers to play without Bop it actually strengthening their side as Adrie is a better rugby player. One thing I do believe is that the Bulls hade enough opportunities to perform and SARFU now needs to appoint the 4th franchise to the Cheetahs as year after year we are in the semi finals Regards Ernest The Stormers lost Kempson, Marais, van der Linde, Skinstad, De Kock, van Straaten, Paulse all test players as well as Rossouw and Dixon who are midweek players to injury. The Cats lost 3 test players to injury the rest left their provinces and country for various reasons - hardly worth comparing isn't it? |
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Dear Ed
Here we go again. |
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Dear Ed Most of the letters and conversations about SA rugby are the same old.....this is wrong that is wrong from people that mostly have very little idea what the solution is....so please let me enlighten these masses....SA rugby is suffering from a hangover.....they had to much Ian Mac just before we returned to international rugby and we don't seem to rid ourselves of that mental picture of hit, go to ground, drive over....as we see from the amount of penalties the SA sides gave for holding the ball on t he ground. This hangover is a big problem....we make the breaks well but we then go to ground at the first contact....this is the problem....instead of staying on our feet and waiting for support so that we go to ground when WE want to, we go to ground out of instinct.....for if...k sake William Web Ellis picked the soccer ball up because he wanted in his hands...why do we want it back at our feet?....just a little proof of what I mean.....against the Cats Larkham did a basic peel around and ended up with just Janjties to beat...now a SA player would have tried to take him on....Larkham simply stopped 2m from him....taking him out of the game....waited for the support and boom 5 points.... Going to ground is not a bad thing.....so long as it is at your terms.....defenses against a SA team is made so easy by this problem...just provide them something to make contact with and they will go to ground WHERE EVER THEY ARE...and more often that not you can get to the ball and win it or they will have to hold on and bingo you win both ways...and by the way I have coached with great success but you can imagine the shock when I coached teams to stay on there feet and create continuants in a Mac craze set up. Thanks and I hope somebody can see the method in all the madness. Regards. Andre van Rooyen Ps: chatting to an ex Shark/Bok he tells of a conversation with Kobus Venter...Straeuli's assistant last year....the Sharks wanted to play a more expansive game but he said that they lacked the basic catch and pass skills. |
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Dear Ed. |
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Copyright 2002 Rugby Forum. All rights reserved. This e-mail may be freely distributed, provided that the document is left in its original form. Submissions are the opinion of the author and do not necessarily reflect that of the editor or owner. |