I agree... at least the All Blacks are proof you can play that way and still be reasonably successful.FalseBayFC wrote: Thu Aug 19, 2021 9:29 amAre there more scrums and lineouts in todays game than say the seventies and eighties. Attacking rugby is stifled more by the rise of the defensive analyst and the conditioning of players. Modern defensive patterns mean counter attacking from kick ball and turnovers is the only time you'll really see attractive running rugby.Grandpa wrote: Thu Aug 19, 2021 8:51 amExactly.... is that a crime?sorCrer wrote: Thu Aug 19, 2021 8:46 am
Caused by the incessant desire to see exciting tries scored.
Rugby is at it's best when you get long passages of play... first one team is about to score and then the other.... back and forth.... why turn it into a game that is a series of set pieces? Where stoppage time is longer than ball in play time... watch NFL if you like that...
It's a fallacy that rugby has always been this game of exciting running. Only one team has been able to do that consistently and that is the All Blacks. France and Australia have had their moments but not year in year out like NZ. The rest of us play to our strengths and do what we can to win.
For what its worth I think that the players that South Africa is producing now are even better suited to an expansive game. Guys like Mapimpi, Fassi and Kolbe are electric. Our most improved player is Lukhanyo Am who at a push could still be playing at the 2027 world cup. These guys have been as influential in the Boks success as the big boys up front.
Success shouldn't mean low risk, conservative rugby only... that's what we want the next generation to believe anyway...
I also agree the Boks have so much talent under-utilised...