The Boks have to play more rugby, less thugby
By Spiro Zavos, 12 Jul 2010 Spiro Zavos is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- All Blacks, Bakkies Botha, Eden Park, Jimmy Cowan, Rugby Union, RWC 2011, South Africa, Springboks
155 Have your say
Bakkies Botha has been correctly booted out of rugby until September for his idiotic head-butt on Jimmy Cowan early on in the New Zealand 32 – South Africa 12 Test at Eden Park. It will be interesting to see if the Springbok selectors continue with Botha for their campaign in RWC 2011.
If they do it means that they are determined to win important matches through thugby rather than by playing rugby.
The Springboks coach Peter de Villiers took great offence to a comment by his NZ counterpart Graham Henry to the effect that the Springboks are a hard team to play because ‘they don’t play much rugby.’ By that Henry meant that the since 2007 the Springboks have been the dominant team in world rugby by playing an essentially kicking rather than running game.
An expert thinker on the game explained the Springboks game to me this way: “Crucial to the Springboks’ success is bullying opponents into submission and winning the collisions. They kick their penalties into the corner (when not converting them into points). They dominant early on, physically and psychologically. They make their opponents play catch-up rugby.”
This analysis accentuates Henry’s point that by incessant kicking of high balls, the Springboks make the other side play ball-in-hand rugby. Under the old ruck laws the Springboks last year turned these high balls into penalties by tackling their opponents, and by not allowing them to play the ball, they forced penalties.
Under the new interpretations of the tackled ball, the tacklers are required to allow the tackled player to play the ball.
This meant that a side like the All Blacks that took risks of adverse penalties last year in running the ball were able to confidently run the ball from inside their own 22 at Eden Park. They literally ran the Springboks off their feet by refusing to kick for touch. The Springboks had only 9 throws in the entire Test, and lost two of them.
Some of the big Springboks forwards, when the biff of Botha didn’t work in softening the All Blacks, gave up the struggle to contain the black wave surging relentlessly at them. If they were cricketers you’d call them flat wicket bullies.
This brings us back to Botha.
Last year I incurred the wrath of what seemed like hundreds of South Africans when I labelled Botha a ‘serial thug.’ The Springboks themselves went to bat for him when he was (correctly) put out for a couple of months for an illegal charge into a maul that broke the arm of a British and Irish Lions forward.
He’s been sin-binned and put out of rugby in his career for biting, eye-gouging, striking, illegal charging, stomping and now head-butting.
There will be South Africans who will argue that he has been hard done by. But his record speaks for itself.
He is a serial thug.
Yes, Jimmy Cowan held him back by the jersey. But Botha broke free and tackled him as he was trying to pass. And then he head-butted him from behind, a cowardly and despicable action intended to damage the All Blacks half back.
Which it did. Cowan played poorly after that incident in the opening seconds of the match. He is going to see a doctor today to see if there is further damage.
Not long after Botha left the field towards the end of the Test, the Springboks brought on their ‘serial thug, number 2,’ Butch James.
And sure enough within seconds James had tried to rile Brad Thorn by throwing him illegally out of the way. He then planting his elbow across the throat of Corry Jane in an attempt to choke him while giving him a facial massage, with a hint of an eye-gouge, for good (really bad) measure.
James like Botha should not be selected for any Springboks side. He brings shame to the jersey and the tradition of the Springboks as a great side since 1896.
The fact that these two players get selected suggests to me that de Villiers (or whoever selects and coaches the Springboks) is more interested in getting results through thugby rather than rugby.
The point is that when the Springboks play rugby they are a formidable side capable of beating any other side in world rugby. On Saturday night they badly missed Fourie du Preez, the best player in the world and a silent assassin.
The All Blacks, too, seemed to have worked out the Springboks saucer defence which calls for the outside centre and wingers to rush forward looking for interceptions. The All Blacks smashed their forwards and backs into the soft centre of the curved defensive line. They invariably got over the advantage line while the Springboks, with their big forwards struggling for breathe, struggled to do this on the rare occasions when they did run the ball.
To be honest I thought the referee, Irishman Alan Lewis, was unduly tolerant of the Springboks offences. He did sin-bin Botha. This was after the big television screen had shown the Botha head-butt (which Lewis missed) a number of times.
He merely warned James, for instance, while he penalised Jane for tapping a ball a metre or so away when it was already over the touch-line.
Lewis was at Richie McCaw all day about staying bound to the scrum while he allowed Shalk Burger to get away well before the scrum was finished. He penalised the All Blacks for not releasing the ball in a tackle a couple of times while allowing the Springboks to hang on.
He gave a penalty against McCaw for breaking from the scrum (and the first points of the Test) when Ricky Januarie broke away from the scrum before the ball was out. This trick that has been deemed to be illegal for many years.
In a period of 5 minutes before half time and 15 minutes after half time, Lewis penalised the All Blacks seven times. This kept the Springboks in the match as Morne Steyn booted over three penalties.
Although they were beaten in every other statistic, the Springboks won the penalty count 12 – 5. I find this statistic amazing given that the Botha technique of flopping over rucks to seal off Springboks ball was exhibited throughout the match, and that the Springboks and not the All Blacks, were under pressure throughout the match.
It was significant of the Springboks’ kicking mentality, though, that even when the score line was 27 – 9 they went for goal (successfully) rather than go for a try from a 5m lineout. P
erhaps they did not trust their maul. The one maul they did try was smashed by the All Blacks.
Where do the Springboks go from here?
They should try to play a more expansive and challenging game (to the opposition’s defensive line) than their kicking and one-up barging game. Jean de Villers needs to come back into the centres. They need someone like Guido Aplin on the wing or at full-back to give some creativity to the attacks.
They need also to get some, or at least one, smaller forward like Heinrick Brustow who is currently injured into the pack for mobility around the field.
And they need a little more ticker from players like Pierre Spies who looked at times as if he dreaded running the ball because he was going to get monstered.
But most of all they need to change their mentality. They have to believe that they can win playing rugby.
A week is a long time in politics – and rugby.
Last week even New Zealanders had conceded their side had no chance of beating the Springboks. All the money in New Zealand was on the Springboks. Now, after a Test where the Springboks I thought were lazy, mentally and physically, the money will go on a New Zealand victory.
But they should not take a victory for granted. The Springboks did this at Auckland and have paid the price.
What is certain, though, is that after two tough Tests in New Zealand, the Springboks should be ripe for the picking at Brisbane, a ground like Eden Park where the Springboks rarely win.
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- All Blacks, Bakkies Botha, Eden Park, Jimmy Cowan, Rugby Union, RWC 2011, South Africa, Springboks


July 12th 2010 @ 9:15am
JB said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:15am | Report comment
A very good test match. A formidable performance from the AB pack, with the back row able to stifle everything that the boks back row executed so well at Super 14 level, and not just leaving it their captain. Our back row needs to emulate this, as I can’t recall one outstanding run from Spies, while one of the lasting memories of the test was Burger flat on his back while the AB forwards piled in to the contest. The boks 7 was hardly sighted and not to take away from the victors, just maybe underlines the slightest bit of complacency in the boks game since du Preez has been out.
The Wallabies will have to be at their best to beat either team, but if they couldn’t run the poms around the park, how will they do that do these two teams? The return of Robinson and Moore will help, but Elsom and Brown desperately need to help Pockock in the same way the McCaw had been a lone warrior before this test.
In the meantime, I hope the Boks and ABs continue to bash each other to smitereens. Go Wallabies. Also, just wondering if I’m alone in hoping for a back line of 9. Genia 10. Cooper, 11. not sure with injuries etc. 12. Barnes 13 Giteau 14. see 11. 15 AAC.
July 12th 2010 @ 9:16am
Hoy said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:16am | Report comment
I can’t wait for when the Anti Saffa Bashers get on and go to town on those who pick on them ‘unjustly’.
Yes Botha was held back by his jersey for 2 seconds. Then he headbutted a player, in my opinion, knowing he had already passed the ball anyway. He couldn’t have missed that fact.
Spiro is right, James is thug number 2. He has long been the bringer of shoulder charges and high shots across the park.
I have only seen the highlights, but it looked like some good play by the All Blacks. Good running rugby is back? Let’s hope so.
July 12th 2010 @ 9:25am
Brett McKay said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:25am | Report comment
Hoy, I don’t think it will be too bad actually, the response yesterday was very much that Botha got his just(ice) desserts, and I’m sure there were several republic-based Roarers in the discussion. 18 weeks suspension in 2010 and 2009, I think his records speaks for itself now…
And if you can find a replay of the game, “do yourself a favour”, because it was a cracking game…
July 12th 2010 @ 9:50am
kingplaymaker said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:50am | Report comment
Brett I could do with watching it again: if you know a where a replay can be found, don’t be coy.
July 12th 2010 @ 9:58am
Brett McKay said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:58am | Report comment
KPM, it’d be out there somewhere: Google and Justin are your friends
July 12th 2010 @ 7:29pm
Eiger said | July 12th 2010 @ 7:29pm | Report comment
KPM, there is a 4 or 5 minute highlight reel on youtube at the moment which I found on Sunday morning (UK time). It may still be up there. I didnt manage to track down a full replay anywhere though (granted i wasnt looking too hard).
July 12th 2010 @ 10:41pm
kingplaymaker said | July 12th 2010 @ 10:41pm | Report comment
Eiger thanks I found that: unfortunately there doesn’t seem to be anything longer but only an All Blacks Springboks match from 1998.
July 12th 2010 @ 9:29am
nicksa said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:29am | Report comment
no 1 is denying what botha did was wrong! he deserved to get banned.
But u people arnt any better when u start judging an entire culture on a rugby players stupid mistakes.
I even read a comment earlier that went something like this ‘the dutch also played like thugs 2night, maybe its in their genes’.
The biggest joy i get from the boks beating the abs is shutting their arrogant and ignorant fans up.
July 12th 2010 @ 9:56am
ohtani's jacket said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:56am | Report comment
Since when were a bunch of Australians All Black fans?
July 12th 2010 @ 12:01pm
stu said | July 12th 2010 @ 12:01pm | Report comment
anytime you beat the boks
July 12th 2010 @ 9:56am
garyb29 said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:56am | Report comment
Nick – if you go back to some of the comments posted last week by SA fans, I’m sure the AB fans are enjoying the other side of that coin this week….
“The biggest joy i get from the boks beating the abs is shutting their arrogant and ignorant fans up.”
Two sides to every coin.
July 12th 2010 @ 11:19am
katzilla said | July 12th 2010 @ 11:19am | Report comment
Wow a bit OTT there nick and uncalled for.
I don’t see any Kiwi posters here making judgements on SA rugby.
I love the physical nature of SA rugby, its been the SA game plan since day one.
Certain individuals take it too far imo, but as long as the officials keep on top of the rotten few rugby can move on and we’ll all be happy in the end. Every country has its villains in history, at this point in time its Bakkies in SA.
We’ve had our own in NZ, if you ask OZ rugby fans who they hate most between Loe and Botha quite a few would say Loe.
I do agree with you though on one thing, the making a link between Dutch genes and thugery is out of order.
July 12th 2010 @ 1:46pm
el gamba said | July 12th 2010 @ 1:46pm | Report comment
Loe’s forearm to Carozza’s face was worse than that headbutt!!
There’s no room for any of this in Rugby all it does is damage the game’s reputation from top to bottom regardless of the nationality of the offender. I can’t imagine too many parents with a youngster out there in junior Rugby seeing that would be thrilled about their kids strapping the boots on.
With a record like Bakkies, SA should just not pick him again. He’s a liabilty to their team and soils the jersey he wears. I’d say the same if he was a Wallaby.
July 12th 2010 @ 5:58pm
nicksa said | July 12th 2010 @ 5:58pm | Report comment
katzilla
i do apologise.
just got slightly irratated when i came on here yesterday, this is a forum to discuss rugby.
I didnt expect to come on here and have my culture disrespected over a rugby game.
July 12th 2010 @ 11:15pm
katzilla said | July 12th 2010 @ 11:15pm | Report comment
I would feel the same way. No need for an apology.
July 12th 2010 @ 12:14pm
JJ said | July 12th 2010 @ 12:14pm | Report comment
Totally agree with some here, over the top assessment especially when you take into consideration of all the Hype pre-match that basically didn’t give the New Zealanders a chance.
As for the genes comments again totally uncalled for.
July 31st 2010 @ 2:22pm
Shaun said | July 31st 2010 @ 2:22pm | Report comment
Looks like they teach them young in NZ:
July 12th 2010 @ 9:31am
Tui said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:31am | Report comment
Saffas have been found out for mine. Their kick and chase rugby is not anywhere near effective enough this year. Will be intersting to see the change of tactics for the second test. Should be another cracker.
July 12th 2010 @ 9:54am
garyb29 said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:54am | Report comment
Great piece Spiro, was quite suprised by the margin of the result. But expected nontheless..
You’re right there Tui, been found out – next game will be a belter as well.
John Smit’s book is quite interesting with his revelations in the coaching (or lack thereof) of PDV!
July 12th 2010 @ 1:15pm
MarkR said | July 12th 2010 @ 1:15pm | Report comment
Tui – one of the downsides of the kick & chase is that you are dependant upon the other side making mistakes. last season was frustrating for an AB fan as they made too many mistakes against a good Bok side that played a simple game extremely well. Nothing wrong with a simple game plan, but what happens when the other team stops dropping the ball, or giving away penalties for not releasing due to the catcher not having enough support ?
Last seasons Boks tactics reminded me of the AB tactics from late 90s (I think) – kick for territory & chase hard, then rely on getting the turnover. It worked for until the Wallabies & Boks stopped making turnovers so all that happened was the ABs ended up defending & losing games they’d previously won.
Sat night was a cracker for an AB supporter, looks like Wgtn will be even better as I expect it to be closer. Then again, if the ABs are hitting a purple patch then it’ll be another drubbing whoever they play.
July 12th 2010 @ 9:32am
Sundo said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:32am | Report comment
I’ve siad it before, but tell me Brad Thorn isn’t the greatest forward ever to lace on a rugby boot? He is alone in the rugby world for his record of maintaining the level of performance he has achieved in both codes over such a long period of time. That is, absolute world class, pretty much ‘first guy picked’ status for the both the All Blacks, Kangaroos & Queensland. No other rugby league forward has ever made it to such a phenomenal consistency in rugby, and I venture there aren’t too many rugby forwards out there who could swap codes & be the success he was there (not that we’ll ever know now as there is no money in league….)
I thought he was mighty on Saturday night, and Keiran Reid wasn’t far behind. Super performance by the Blacks, looking forward to Wellington.
July 12th 2010 @ 11:22am
katzilla said | July 12th 2010 @ 11:22am | Report comment
Well said Sundo.
What he doesn’t have in height he makes up for in all out ticker.
July 12th 2010 @ 11:53am
OldManEmu said | July 12th 2010 @ 11:53am | Report comment
Brad Thorn – what the Wallabies would give for Brad Thorn.
July 12th 2010 @ 12:00pm
Sam Taulelei said | July 12th 2010 @ 12:00pm | Report comment
OME
Shouldn’t that be “Brad Thorn – what would he give for the Wallabies” Answer – his all.
July 12th 2010 @ 12:14pm
Spencer said | July 12th 2010 @ 12:14pm | Report comment
Absolutely right. Thorn is a credit to himself and every team he has played with. Controlled aggression personified.
July 12th 2010 @ 9:38am
Happy Hooker said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:38am | Report comment
No Spiro, what Ricky Januarie did at the back of that scrum was not illegal. What is illegal is dummying to pass. Halves regularly drop back away from the scrum to take a pass from the No 8 – happens all the time. He has to drop back first before the No 8 picks it up. McCaw was caught fair and square offisde and even he didn’t argue.
July 12th 2010 @ 1:30pm
Mick Gold Coast QLD said | July 12th 2010 @ 1:30pm | Report comment
It was smart wasn’t it? Januarie, a serial pest of a half, got Richie McCaw a beauty there but I venture that the ever thoughtful Richie won’t be sucked in a second time.
Januarie showed then why he continues to be selected after all these years, he is a top class performer.
July 13th 2010 @ 12:17am
MattyP said | July 13th 2010 @ 12:17am | Report comment
IRB Law 20.9(h): Scrum half: Dummying. A scrum half must not take any action to make the opponents think that the ball is out of the scrum while it is still in the scrum. Sanction: Free Kick
Isn’t it arguable that “any action” includes more than just dummy passing? I guess that’s what Spiro is getting at.
July 12th 2010 @ 10:02am
johnny-boy said | July 12th 2010 @ 10:02am | Report comment
When they are spanking the Boks !
July 12th 2010 @ 10:14am
cinematic said | July 12th 2010 @ 10:14am | Report comment
The Boks will simply turn up the aggro (expect Butch James to start). There’s really no where else for them to go to in one week. SA have some dazzling open field runners who have (almost) all been left at home.
Great to see the AB’s scrum cranking up.
July 12th 2010 @ 10:30am
TembaVJ said | July 12th 2010 @ 10:30am | Report comment
Well done to the AB’s they played an absolute blinder, this should settle some of the talk especially from me. I was very impressed with Mills, master stroke from Henry to keep him instead of the brilliant but green Dagg.
Spiro you have been gagging all year to write about bakkies, it must be a relief. I agree though and hope SA moves on from Bakkies, he has become liability.
It was a good game by the All Blacks, they looked better then they did in years.
The 3N is alive.
July 12th 2010 @ 11:25am
katzilla said | July 12th 2010 @ 11:25am | Report comment
“this should settle some of the talk especially from me”
Damn you, I had saved all your posts in previous threads to throw back out at you once this happened and now I have nothing,
Good sportsmanship Temba
July 12th 2010 @ 12:17pm
JJ said | July 12th 2010 @ 12:17pm | Report comment
Just been through some of the Columns and like has already been said nice to see you come out and admit to a bit of talk especially after some of the debating you had with some posters and unfortunately those posters have been proved right to some degree.
July 12th 2010 @ 12:22pm
TembaVJ said | July 12th 2010 @ 12:22pm | Report comment
What a boring place the roar would be if not for a bit of trash talk, ill be expecting a couple more post like yours JJ some not so friendly. If we solely relied on Spiro’s predictable rants and everyone agreeing on everything then it would be boring as hell. Thanks for pointing out what I have already said though…
I never knew I worked with so many Kiwi’s!
July 12th 2010 @ 12:30pm
JJ said | July 12th 2010 @ 12:30pm | Report comment
Going from what I have read mate, there have some very unfriendly posts towards other posters especially those who do have a differing opinion to some.
Must say from what I did read there must be a fair few roarers with egg on their faces today.
July 12th 2010 @ 10:31am
Sam Taulelei said | July 12th 2010 @ 10:31am | Report comment
I knew that Bakke’s senseless act would get a lot of press. However, that was the only thuggish act in an otherwise brutal and clean game. Even Butch James petulance was nothing in comparison and probably only bears mention due to his personal history rather than the severity of his action. If it was committed by any other SA player I doubt there would be any great fuss over it.
I must say I am disappointed with this article. The majority of it focuses on the flaws within the Boks tactical approach, inconsistencies with the referees rulings and two players who are clearly unpopular with this author. If this was a Wallaby victory there would be praise for the coaches brilliance, praise for the players brilliance, courage and heart etc.
After reading many columns from Spiro regarding the talent and ability of supercoach Robbie Deans, It would have been balanced to acknowledge the performance of Graham Henry and his team in turning the fortunes of this All Black team around in the most emphatic fashion and playing the style of rugby that Henry wants to see played, the players want to play and Kiwi fans love to see played.
I wrote earlier in the year that I believed the All Blacks best weapon is their coach and his role change to overseeing strategy and attack played to his strengths which is most evident in how the All Blacks have improved their counterattack, their width in attack to counter the Boks rush defence and how the back three operate as a cohesive unit. Last year the Boks were the trendsetters but if the All Blacks continue to succeed, then watch the rest of the world focus on counterattacking from the back and selecting their back three as unit and not just as individuals.
The beleagured Steve Hansen also requires special mention for his work with the forwards at the setpieces which fell apart in last years Tri Nations test against the Boks, and were strong, steady and at times dominant. The perpetual, continuity game favoured by the All Blacks gains a lot of advantage with the tackler having to release and roll away from the tackle. You see many players picking up the ball and continuing the momentum either by pick and go, passing wide or offloading in the tackle and not just waiting for the halfback to appear. Once the All Blacks made the advantage line or crossed it, the Boks were stuggling to slow the ball down and were forced to make many more tackles which wore them down. The All Blacks were confident to even throw the ball in quickly when hard on defence so as not to allow the Boks forwards to get a breather.
In this clash of the titans, the All Blacks have made their opening gambit and have the Boks in check, now we wait to see how the Boks respond in Wellington and whether they change their approach to the game or modify their tactics and selections.
July 12th 2010 @ 10:47am
TembaVJ said | July 12th 2010 @ 10:47am | Report comment
Very true Sam, the AB strategy was spot on and even better executed… Good job by the entire outfit.
If Bakkies plays it wont be normal if he doesn’t spend 10 on the side, everyone know by now what to expect from him and you would think it wont still give “the author” a knee jerk reaction. Cameras follow him around all the time, he is known for it and its become a issue for South Africa, time to move on.
Nothing should take away from an awesome All Black performance, the balance is being restored and i am eating some of my words today.
July 12th 2010 @ 11:27am
Sam Taulelei said | July 12th 2010 @ 11:27am | Report comment
That’s ok Temba we can share some biltong and a case of beer to wash it down together.
July 12th 2010 @ 9:10pm
Ben S said | July 12th 2010 @ 9:10pm | Report comment
‘Last year the Boks were the trendsetters but if the All Blacks continue to succeed, then watch the rest of the world focus on counterattacking from the back and selecting their back three as unit and not just as individuals.’
Hang on young, Sam, that’s Johnson’s current startegy with England (and was two seasons ago). Maybe Henry was watching the 2nd Test between England and Australia?
Let’s be honest though, NZ tried what they tried in SA last season, but they did it more accurately and with more aggression, hence they had a forward platform to work off. I don’t think there was anything revolutionary in the game – just basics done very well by some confident players with exceptional skill levels – which is what NZ rugby has long been about. Also, the NZ fitness levels must be right up there.
July 13th 2010 @ 1:14pm
Sam Taulelei said | July 13th 2010 @ 1:14pm | Report comment
Agree with your observation Ben S, unlike last year the forwards were able to set the platform so that the backs were more or less operating on or over the advantage line. That aside there has obviously been a lot of work done on the All Blacks catching skills and how to counterattack from the Boks high kicks. They move it quickly to the middle of the field, look up for where the space is and either attack directly or spread it to the flanks. Watch how when Cory Jane has the ball he’s always looking to offload to someone coming in from behind where the defence can’t see them as they’re focusing on the ball carrier. Richard Kahui has been able to make a lot of metres up the middlle of the field, running off a short pass from Jane. Last year the All Blacks counterattack was more scattered and reliant on an individual break rather than looking to put a teammate into space. The Boks did themselves no favours either with their poor chasing in a jagged line leaving lots of gaps to exploit. That will be the first thing they’ll fix this week.
July 14th 2010 @ 2:57am
Ben S said | July 14th 2010 @ 2:57am | Report comment
‘They move it quickly to the middle of the field, look up for where the space is and either attack directly or spread it to the flanks.’
Spot on.
July 12th 2010 @ 8:47pm
mother teresa said | July 12th 2010 @ 8:47pm | Report comment
sam,pleased henry is doing the strategic stuff now cos the other guys have been retarded imho.the reds template was used and refined clearly but before the abs rejoice too much the astute will acknowledge that the absence of du preez at half made for an easier test than the bulls/reds encounter—so good luck this week my friend.
July 13th 2010 @ 6:12am
darwin stubby said | July 13th 2010 @ 6:12am | Report comment
“the reds template was used and refined clearly” – rubbish, please stop peddling this myth and take time to read Ben S directly above if you require clarification
July 14th 2010 @ 5:38am
Joseph said | July 14th 2010 @ 5:38am | Report comment
Sam i am not so sure YET that the coaches should be fanned. I saw a bunch of players in black wearing 1-5 on Saturday peeved from last years drubbings (and they were drubbings even though the scores might flatter us kiwis) looking to make amends. Old saying in footy….. Your forwards win games, your backs decide by how much. Quite apt reflecting on Eden Park. Consistent front foot ball is what was missing against the Boks last year. AB’s superiority has dined off that for 2 decades and when opposition teams slow it down to a static Heineken Cup style bruiser then our players minds arent conditioned for so much down-time during games and lose interest!
Seriously though me thinks Hansens selection of new personnel as opposed to his coaching is responsible for this. Mealamu, Franks, Read and Donnelly in for Ross, Soioalo, Tialata, Hore IMO were masterstrokes. There is the panacea! Mealamu was deserved Man of Match as was Thorn and Woodcock and young Franks. This coming from a winger!! FTR Mike Cron is in charge of scrums not Hansen.
Overall the AB’s approach at Eden Park didn’t wane too far from last year. The difference being ….. attitude and execution! So for me lets see if this level of drubbing-ness continues before bowing at the alter of Father Ted!