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Troy Queef posted:(clears throat) Not empty quoting.
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 17:38 |
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# ? Sep 10, 2024 06:04 |
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i was promised an explanation of Pods and i got a youtube video referencing them but i want more Pod Learning so i got the impression it's the groups you arrange your forwards in across the field, like 1-2-2-2-1 or 2-3-3-2 or whatever. i forget the total number it adds up to. what number does it add up to, and what do different arrangements signify? i'm guessing the side-members of the pods jump in on the sides of the middle-podster in the ruck(?) after the tackle and help win the ball back quickly. what role do non-forwards play in this? to what degree am i simply Wrong? i have a wallabies hat and nobody cares about this in the usa and ive got relatives down there too so im a wallabies fan for this tournament. i like new zealand in cricket - i've got my poo poo all hosed up
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 17:42 |
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Tyma posted:Even I'm qualified to play for Scotland. I'm qualified to play for Scotland, England, Wales and Ireland by grandparents.
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 18:19 |
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oystertoadfish posted:i was promised an explanation of Pods and i got a youtube video referencing them but i want more Pod Learning It’s coming my good dude
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 18:26 |
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I listen to a lot of football podcasts but never found a decent rugby one. Any one have any recommendations?
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 18:39 |
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Blood and Mud. For YouTube, Squidge and 1014 They could all go in the OP if you wanted
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 19:01 |
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bigfoot again posted:All non Maori New Zealanders should be made to play for Scotland imo I'm qualified for Scotland and Italy... FML
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 21:15 |
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Said I would do this so here goes. An effortpost on attacking structure and pods. Or, how to watch rugby more better. I’m gonna go ahead and assume you know what a ruck is Tyma posted:When the player with the ball is tackled to the ground, both teams crowd around him and form a Big Pushing Contest. You’re going to hear a lot about Ball Carriers, Line Speed, and the Rush Defence at this World Cup. Here’s why: So set pieces - scrums and lineouts- are the main times for teams to execute pre-planned set moves. For the rest of the game, the ebb and flow of rugby is all about the rucks. Defences have to decide whether to commit players to the ruck, trying to slow the ball down or even steal it - or to keep those players in the defensive line, giving up possession and trusting your tacklers. Generally, 15 defenders is more than enough to cover a rugby pitch, so the attacking side has to try and get the defence out of position. The easiest way to do this is is to get a runner over the Gain Line, which is generally the back foot of the opponents’ ruck. This means the defenders have to backtrack to stay onside, so it’s harder for them to charge up in your face. So break the gain line, recycle the ball quickly from the ensuing ruck before the defence can reset itself, and look for gaps. Current wisdom is that you have about Two Seconds to get the ball out of a ruck after a line break before the defence can reset. Two Seconds or less is called Quick Ball, and it’s what everyone wants. But a lot of the time, you don’t get quick ball. The best flankers in the world are expert at semi-legally slowing down the ball, holding it in the ruck for a second while their teammates reorganise. Slow ball is when you’re most likely to see the attacking team use Pods, thought they’re also part of the general structure of the game. So in the good old days when men were men and international rugby players were also solicitors and thoracic surgeons, attacking meant give the ball to the backs and they would Pass it Down the Line to the Fast Guy. Devastating flashy moves included the Miss One, the Miss Two, the Switch, and Bringing the Full Back into the Line. If you’ve played low level social rugby, you’re probably familiar with this style of play but it used to be what everyone did. The forwards would chase the ball over the pitch then all pile into the ruck when you’re smallest fastest barrister/RAF sergeant got tackled. Obviously it’s pretty inefficient to have your forwards run in after the ball all day. Especially when your forwards were twenty stone off-duty policemen. These days, because of better coaching and law changes, you only really need to commit two or three players to most rucks to win the ball, so it makes more sense to spread your forwards across the pitch in little groups, so they’ll already be there when the ball arrives. But modern pods do more than this. Here’s are the 1014 guys looking at a nice picture of some pods: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sssR2YbQAQM&t=231s So a Pod is a group of 2-3 forwards, usually with a ball handler just in front or behind -your 10, 12, and sometimes 15 (see New Zealand). The video shows a 1-3-3-1 formation - instead of a line of backs, you have groups of 3 forwards each with a back behind them. One forward will carry the ball, the other two will immediately win the ruck to get Quick Ball for the next attack. Two pods to hit the ball up, and a forward on each wing to help out when the ball goes wide (this way if your wing gets tackled there's someone there to win the ball quickly/a lazy bastard to loiter all game and then steal all the glory). This is why Kieran Read and Dane Coles scores so many tries on the wing, incidentally. So the 9 can either pass to the forwards in the pod, or to the 10 behind them. On slow ball, you’ll pass it to the big feller up front, he will have a charge and try to get over the gain line (hence Ball Carriers). When he’s tackled, he has two forwards with him to hit the ruck and try and get the ball out within that magic two seconds. And then the second pod is in position to do the same again. The best way to stop this is for the defence to charge up like loving lunatics and collide with the ball carrier as hard as possible. This is not good for your brain but it works. This is called having good Line Speed. But wait! Once the defence has focused on the ball carrier, he can pop a pass Out the Back to the ball handler behind him, who will chuck it wide while the defence is still committed to the narrow carrier. Brodie Retallick and Kyle Sinckler are really good at this kind of out the back pass. The idea is, the defence has to stay narrow to focus on the three huge cunts charging at them, so there should be space out wide. Often the 10 will tell the ball carrier whether to charge or pass it back, so the grunt doesn’t have to think, just show off his sweet sweet handling skills. So when you try to get the ball wide, the defence will often send a couple of players charging up to cut off the wide pass in midfield. This is the second part of the Rush Defence and it seems super risky but Ireland and South Africa in particular have honed it to an art. It’s the one tactic that’s given the All Blacks trouble in recent years, which is why they’re now playing an extra ball handler at full back - to get round the rush defence. But generally the best way to beat the rush defence is just to have massive loving ball carriers hump it over the gainline to stop the defence from charging up. This is why England have a chance to win this World Cup, but only if Tuilagi and the Vunipolas stay healthy. Those guys are very very nasty ball carriers. Examples!: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=926MDAqzkbI&t=115s Here at 1.55 England go left to Jamie George at the head of a pod. They win the ruck quickly and go the other way to a pod led by Tuilagi. Ireland have to focus on Tuilagi so he pops the ball out the back to Farrell. This forces Stockdale to come up into the line to cover; Daly chips into the space he just left, and they score. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KRx3KrQ83mc&t=28s At 0.28 Kyle Sinckler at the head of the pod draws in the defence and then shows sweet sweet hands out the back. Sam Johnson tries to rush out to cut off the pass but he absolutely fucks it and England have space out wide and eventually score. 4.21 same video Farrell has a midfield pod running outside him but he telegraphs the pass and Finn Russell intercepts and scores. Then at 5.21 the Scotland defence is absolutely knackered but the final nail is England run a big forward pod close to the ruck. The Scotland defence stays tight to stop it but Genge fires a nice pass out the back to Ford who runs in untouched to ruin the greatest comeback in the history of ever. So yeah basically a pod 1. Pre-spreads your forwards to be where the ball will be 2. Creates carrying units to try and break the gain line before winning the ball back quickly 3. Keeps the defence guessing whether the ball will go narrow or wide I find watching this game makes a lot more sense if I can identify the attacking pods - then you can see the decision a players are making - give the ball to the charging pod or use them as a decoy and chuck it wide. There are variations but this is the general gist. Hope that makes some sense. If you see something wrong then shout.
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 21:23 |
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Reminder that it's been exactly 4 years since this glorious day https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ghArmsJjQM
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 21:36 |
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Vaders Jester posted:I'm qualified for Scotland and Italy... FML Oh hello Tomasso Allan.
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 22:16 |
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Vaders Jester posted:I'm qualified for Scotland and Italy... FML I'm qualified for Canada and South Africa but I am not as cool as DTH van der Merwe.
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# ? Sep 19, 2019 23:05 |
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Georgia Georgia is one of the better not good nations in world rugby, and have taken Italy's status as "associate nation most likely to be ruined by joining the Most of their players play in France, which therefore means I know next to nothing about them, so see below for some quality Youtube/wikipaedia based scouting. Incidentally, they are probably the least favoured team by the commentator community at the world cup, owning to easy to pronounce names such as Giorgi Tkhilaishvili and Tamaz Mchedlidze. Forwards As far as playing style goes, Georgia are expert producers of Big Lads. Notable Big Lads include: Mamuka Gorgodze for whom you can just read the Italian entry for Sergio Parisse and replace the names and position (Gorgodze is a lock). He's back in the side for one last hurrah after his successor got injured. Please try not to confuse him with Beka Gorgadze or Otari Giorgadze. Beka Gorgadze, a No8 who the Guardian reckon is their star most likely to have a breakout at the tournament. Who am I to argue with the Guardian? Levan Chilachava, who I include as he perfectly embodies Georgian rugby by being a 21 stone prop. May well have eaten an incautious back after training one day Backs Little, runny-about lads are less favoured in the team, but they do have some. Tedo Abzhandadze is their fly half. He is young, has evident star quality and plays in France. If you guessed that this makes him wildly inconsistent, congratulations! You understand French rugby. Still, he can do stuff like this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zSAImqrj8E8, though please do note the running it out from practically standing on the dead ball line, and imagine how well that'll go in senior rugby. Fixtures Georgia grace pool D with Australia, Wales, Uruguay and Fiji This is probably unfortunate for them, but it should be great for us. Fiji-Georgia in particular promises to a festival of wildly overelaborate passing, borderline filthy tackling and props blowing chunks in the middle of the field before halftime. As their first match is against Wales, it also seems very likely Georgia will take the prized Dragonslayer award given to the team that inevitably critically injures a key Welsh player and ruins their world cup. Current holders Uruguay are also in this pool, which promises to be entertaining. A final note, they have Graham Rowntree and Joe Worsley on their coaching staff, which I worry may causing Englanding by proxy. tarbrush fucked around with this message at 23:22 on Sep 19, 2019 |
# ? Sep 19, 2019 23:17 |
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Kick off is about 4 and a half hours away. Just in case people needed to know this information. Not sure what the opening ceremony will be like but, hopefully, they are sticking to around 20 minutes or so. Honestly I am getting sick of the Olympics and their bloated openers and may the RWC never try to approach them.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 07:05 |
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ElectroMagneticJosh posted:Kick off is about 4 and a half hours away. Just in case people needed to know this information. My ticket says opening ceremony starts at 18:30 and kickoff at 19:45 Japan time; not sure how much time they’ll give players the field for warmup or if they have them warming up on a practice pitch, but being Japan I wouldn’t hope for a short ceremony.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 07:50 |
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Can't believe I promised to help some friends and completely forgot when kick off was Set my alarm for 5am for tomorrow though!
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 08:19 |
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I do love tournaments in Japan, 8.30am weekend starts are amazing
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 08:27 |
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I’ve got one of my good mates coming around tomorrow. We’ve got the Aussie game, then France - Aregentina and then the All Blacks. It’s an amazing time zone for Australia. Sport from 2:30pm, beers, bbq! I’m so goddamn excited!
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 08:50 |
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Georgia are my absolute second tier team, they just give it such a good go
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 09:00 |
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lenoon posted:Georgia are my absolute second tier team, they just give it such a good go I was really happy when I drew them. The combination of Extremely Large Boys and backs that do the Full France is extremely my jam
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 09:01 |
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Madkal posted:I'm qualified for Canada and South Africa but I am not as cool as DTH van der Merwe. This is a sad fact of life for many people.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 10:03 |
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Rugby
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 10:25 |
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bigfoot again posted:Really cool effortpost
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 10:26 |
Thank god Scottie Stevenson is here to explain Japanese culture for me.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 10:32 |
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I wish there were an option to turn the commentary off for this
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 10:36 |
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Japanese kids singing World In Union, it's on. It's started. It has begun.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 10:42 |
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BOD, Wilkinson, and Warburton on ITV. This might be the nicest pundit team ever.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:08 |
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Rumours swirling that Howley isn't the only one mixed up in the betting scandal.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:16 |
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Snitches get stitches, Howley .
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:21 |
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Standing on Tatami mats with their suit shoes. Absolutely shocking display.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:21 |
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Stuck in work but I'll be sneakily watching at my desk, just hope this RWC matches that stellar loving OP. So how many points will Russia concede here, 60?
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:21 |
bessantj posted:Rumours swirling that Howley isn't the only one mixed up in the betting scandal. IS THAT HARRY ELLIS' MUSIC?
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:24 |
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oystertoadfish posted:i have a wallabies hat and nobody cares about this in the usa and ive got relatives down there too so im a wallabies fan for this tournament. There are over 125,000 registered players in the US and the old boys club I play with currently has two sides on tour in Japan. They'll each play three games against other touring old boys clubs and attend several world cup matches. Use this link to find a club near you and go watch rugby live.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:33 |
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Russia have come to play.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:50 |
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Japan not woken up yet
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:52 |
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full back would probably have wanted to catch that.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:53 |
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Lol
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:53 |
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He wasn't even close to catching that
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:55 |
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Welp
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 11:55 |
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nice offload
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 12:01 |
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# ? Sep 10, 2024 06:04 |
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Messy but this might actually be a fun game.
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# ? Sep 20, 2019 12:04 |