Canadian_Rugger
Bench Player
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2004
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I think that's fantastically optimistic.
Glad to see this place hasn't changed much, back to t2rugby.com then. See yah later!
I think that's fantastically optimistic.
Glad to see this place hasn't changed much, back to t2rugby.com then. See yah later!
Sorry for not mindlessly agreeing with you! Don't let the door hit you on the way out.
2007 - You didn't think SA were the best team that year ?? I thought they clearly were . Definitely the best drilled forward pack and set piece in this cup added with the right amount of sparkle in the backs I thought they were well worth their win .
Let's be honest 2007 was hardly a vintage year for any rugby team...
Don't worry tatter tot, I won't
The reason they want to do it, is of course money, getting the 8 biggest teams In the last 8 will attract more viewings and more revenue than for example having Tonga and Georgia in the last 8, that's the truth as far as I see it..
Well, lets see.
They started the tournament as the 4th ranked team in the world.
They played the following teams
Samoa (11th) 59-7
England (7th) 36-0
Then they struggled against teams ranked 10 places below them
Tonga (15th) 30-25
USA (14th) 25-21
Then the playoffs
Fiji (13th) 37-20
Argentina (6th) 37-13
Essentially, they got to the final without ever playing any of the top three teams in the world, and played the 7th ranked team in the final, which had more in common with a game of school-yard force-back than it did with rugby... 92 aimless back & forth kicks in 80 minutes, one every 52 seconds. Watching paint dry would have been more exciting.
As opposed to NZ and France in the "thrill-a-minute" 2011 final?
Lets be honest here all RWC finals are interesting for the occasion rather than the rugby on offer. And then almost only so for the fans of the teams involved rather than the neutral. Its just set up to be like that. Also rugby was different in 2007 and you can't blame the teams that played to the situation the best (SA, England and Argentina) for the context in which the tournament took place.
And lets not discount Argentina in 2007. They came in with a golden generation of players and at the end were 3rd overall of the RWC and rankings (not that I am willing to put too much emphasis on the rankings as its a mere snapshot and teams' approaches differ in the lead up) and SA thrashed them 37-13 in the SF. Argentina in turn annihilated France 34-10 for 3rd place, that same France that did for NZ in the QF.
So what am I getting at; its just too easy to take a string of one-off results and string them together in order to illustrate whatever you want. On the whole and all factors considered SA were good value for their ***le in 2007.
Edit:
Now if the RWC was awarded to the team that was the best across the 4 years leading up to the tournament then fine, give it to NZ. But its not. Its a tournament. And its played across less than 2 months. NZ just weren't their best right then and there. SA were.
Yeah, but for how long??
Sure the top tier sides will power their way through to reach the QF's, but there is no denying the improvements in some of the lower tier countries and their performances. With rugby growing more popular over the world, their is a sense of inevitability that at some stage, all the pools could be groups of death.
I don't think things will change much any time soon. There are six teams in the Six Nations but Scotland and Italy are generally rubbish. Neither side has a great domestic set up and neither side seems to be improving at the youth level. The four Rugby Championship teams are always up there. The Pacific Islands are hit and miss. They never have a great build up between cups so it is all about how they can pull together. You would never count them out of the odd upset but they are just as likely to turn around and lose to Georgia. The USA/Canada are improving but need regular games against higher quality opposition.
You mean, like the All Blacks playing the US last year, and the Wallabies playing them this year?
The USA topic has been moved, so on with discussion of draws and groups of death.
I wish rugby had more groups of death tbh. But for that we need more strong teams. Right now, group rugby feels a wee bit of a farce to me.
p.s. That was a bit of an annoyance to do; there's no split function, I had to copy and then delete posts in both threads. I will not be in a hurry to do it again and will generally only respond to requests for a split in relatively short threads with wildly divergent tangents like these. Just so everyone's clear on that - and that's an announcement, anyone who wishes to reply to this bit should do so somewhere else, so as not to drag things off topic again.