Five things I’m loving about Super Rugby this season
By Brett McKay, 17 May 2011 Brett McKay is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- Quade Cooper, Reds, Rugby Union, Super Rugby, Waratahs
126 Have your say
There’s been a lot to love about the all-signing, all-dancing “SupeRugby” in 2011, and before everything starts getting very serious very quickly, now seems as good a time as any to run the rule over some cherry-picked items of adulation.
Quade Cooper’s pass
I’ve said before that I could watch Cooper pass the football all day, and nothing’s changed my point of view. Except that I reckon it’s even better than when I first made this observation.
That wide, looping, spiralling pass onto a runner into space is something of beauty, literally a sight to behold. And impossible not to run onto, ask Luke Morahan.
I’d love to see Cooper’s inside pass from the perspective of Digby Ioane. The way I imagine it, when I (in Digby’s body) cut back inside and spot that ball being popped in front of me/him, “we” see blinding aura rays of light and hear the rejoicing of angels as the defenders part like the Red Sea and the proverbial saloon passage to the try line appears on the horizon.
Massive neon freeway billboards proclaim “TRY LINE 50m AHEAD” and applauding elephants and zebras form a guard of honour as I plant the ball under the black dot using Digby’s tattooed arm. And as I launch into the post-try break-dance, Greg Martin starts going off in the Fox Sports box like Bill Lawry after a Merv Hughes hat trick.
OK, so maybe that’s a little fanciful. Where was I…?
Anyway, Spiro has at different times referred to Cooper being both the Panini AND the Picasso of the pass and while that seems a little contradictory (having allowed Google to step in for my appalling lack of art history), it’s actually bang on the money; Cooper’s pass can be both classically beautiful and spectacularly outrageous.
I guess the old adage is true: I don’t know much about art, but I know what I like.
Sonny Bill’s offload
Wow, what a debut season. I don’t mind admitting that after Sonny Bill Williams first switched codes I was initially sceptical as to how well he would take to the 15-man game, and especially with the switch from forwards in league to the backs in rugby.
But having now seen him playing regularly, my early scepticism is long gone. Ducks don’t take to water as well as Williams has taken to rugby. The signs were there in the few ITM Cup games last year, and we got a taste of what was to come during the November internationals, but since he’s come into Super Rugby, he’s gone to another level again.
If anything, I’m now convinced that SBW’s grounding in the forwards in League has prepared him perfectly for the second-phase play in rugby.
His ability to stand in the tackle has literally gone from strength to strength in rugby, but what makes it all the more impressive is what his offloads produce. Whereas in league, an offload might produce an extra few metres as the defence squeezed in around behind, in rugby that second phase ball often catches the defenders either side of the ruck out, with the result being runners making bulk metres up through the middle.
Never mind that Sonny Bill’s running game is already enough to give the All Black selectors a nice little second-five headache, his offload is good enough to build an attack around. Maybe even a certain little gold Cup-winning attack.
The Stormers jersey
In this day and age of flash and bling and graphic design, isn’t it great to see a modern rugby strip that actually looks like a proper rugby strip. Now sure, it’s still all figure-hugging and unflattering for the fuller gent, but the Stormers are this year running around in what I think is the best jersey to ever grace a Super Rugby field.
It’s just the simplicity of it. White stripes on navy blue. And, bloody genius, the away strip is navy blue stripes on white!
Where some jerseys over the years have looked, well “interesting” at best, and some recent Australian charity strips have looked more like supreme pizzas or polka dot bikinis, the Stormers look like a proper rugby team.
And what’s more, being based on the Western Province stripes that date at least back to the 1940s (my very limited research found pictures), it gives the contemporary Stormers a grand sense of tradition.
Stripes are the new black. And everything that’s old is new again.
The Rebel Army
If there’s a better group of supporters in Australian rugby, I’ve not seen them yet. The Army has brought AFL parochialism to rugby, and it’s abundantly clear they have no equal around the country. They also have a guy in a wrestling mask.
When the Rebels get on a roll down at “the Stockade” – and wouldn’t AAMI love that moniker gaining traction – the noise emanating from the crowd is quite unbelievable. My couch 650kms away suddenly feels like I’m in row M and it’s quite obviously an outstanding atmosphere to play rugby in. The Army deserve a lot of credit for making this so, and good on them for getting together to share their passion for rugby in a foreign environment.
But just imagine what they’ll be like when their team is winning…
Afternoon rugby
“What’s new?” my South African readers will comment. And it’s true; they’ve been playing in the afternoon for years. The Reds made a good fist of the late-summer heat in Brisbane on sunny afternoons, and now the Brumbies see it as the best way to combat the Canberra winter next year (“top shelf thinking”, if ever there was).
Life doesn’t get much better than a sunny afternoon of rugby, and quality dry-track rugby at that, in a family-friendly timeslot, and with a pie washed down with your beverage(s) of choice.
There’s probably only one loser in this equation: the TV ratings. Mere detail, thankfully.
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Follow Brett McKay on Twitter: @BMcSport
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May 17th 2011 @ 6:26am
kingplaymaker said | May 17th 2011 @ 6:26am | Report comment
It does seem that the Super format is coming into its own more and more with the appearance of more stars, a more even standard and I think the longer format gives it a bigger narrative and more build-up in tension towards the end.
I believe Spiro cast Cooper as the Paganini of the pass and forgetfully as the Picasso, but you have added the ‘Panini’ as well now, the only person of significance by that name on wikipedia being the following:
‘Pāṇini (Sanskrit: पाणिनि, IPA: [pɑːɳin̪i]; a patronymic meaning “descendant of Paṇi”) was an Ancient Indian Sanskrit grammarian from Pushkalavati, Gandhara (modern day Charsadda, Pakistan) (fl. 4th century BC[1][2]).
He is known for his Sanskrit grammar, particularly for his formulation of the 3,959 rules[2] of Sanskrit morphology, syntax and semantics in the grammar known as Ashtadhyayi (अष्टाध्यायी Aṣṭādhyāyī, meaning “eight chapters”), the foundational text of the grammatical branch of the Vedanga, the auxiliary scholarly disciplines of Vedic religion.’
If Quade Cooper can be taken to have defined or created an entire grammar of passes then the comparison with Panini could be apposite too.
The Paganini, Picasso and Panini of the pass.
May 17th 2011 @ 6:45am
Who Needs Melon said | May 17th 2011 @ 6:45am | Report comment
Mmmm… Panini
May 17th 2011 @ 8:59am
LeftArmSpinner said | May 17th 2011 @ 8:59am | Report comment
WNM, you sound like a hungry Homer (SIMPSON)!
May 17th 2011 @ 6:57am
Brett McKay said | May 17th 2011 @ 6:57am | Report comment
how ’bout this guy, KPM: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Paolo_Panini
May 17th 2011 @ 7:07am
kingplaymaker said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:07am | Report comment
In fact I thought of him but I always remembered it being spelt PaNNini.
He’s much better: a painter of impossible, fantastical views of ancient Roman ruins in the same way as Quade Cooper creates ‘fanciful and unreal’ passes.
A real connoisseur of passing must go far to find the right comparison!
May 17th 2011 @ 8:59am
LeftArmSpinner said | May 17th 2011 @ 8:59am | Report comment
guys, settle down. first the jersey thing and now Panini. its bread. end of story. move on. talk rugby!!!! lol
May 17th 2011 @ 6:28am
SA said | May 17th 2011 @ 6:28am | Report comment
Western Province have been playing in the famous navy blue stripes since 1881. They are nicknamed “Die Streeptruie” (The Striped Jerseys) in reference to their legendary blue and white hooped jerseys. Established in 1881, they are also known simply as “Province” by all South African rugby lovers.
May 17th 2011 @ 8:35am
Brett McKay said | May 17th 2011 @ 8:35am | Report comment
thanks SA, I thought that was the case, that the stripes have been worn for a lot longer that I could find. Your info here just underlines my point even more..
May 17th 2011 @ 7:50pm
Spencer said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:50pm | Report comment
WP play in blue and white..not navy and white.
The Stormers played for some years in Black!
May 17th 2011 @ 6:34am
WandaSlotkin said | May 17th 2011 @ 6:34am | Report comment
Brett – before there was Quade’s pass there was Bernie’s. Quade’s is terrific but Bernie’s was sublime. Now if we could only get Quade to punt those penalties out on the full every time with NO exceptions.
Did Spiro really refer to Quade as the Panini of the pass? The old anecdote about Panini relates that he’d often, before a recital, cut one of the string beans in his sandwich and play the entire recital on just a Swiss and whole wheat hold the mayo.
I like the old rugby jerseys too, but the Stormers have radiator stripes, not the real thing like the Crusaders. Some of the French teams designed theirs using Paint in Windows 7. Which brings up another quandry re duds – if all the smartest S15 players are now wearing football boots in pastel shades, should second row forwards ditch their black electrical tape and make a fashion statement?
May 17th 2011 @ 8:46am
Brett McKay said | May 17th 2011 @ 8:46am | Report comment
Wanda, the line for the Stephen Larkham Appreciation Society starts behind me, you certainly don’t need to preach his sublimeness here
I actualy think our Locks should make a statement by going back to black boots. What’s going on with purple and hi-vis orange suddenly?!?
May 17th 2011 @ 6:39am
Moaman said | May 17th 2011 @ 6:39am | Report comment
Nice read,Brett.
May 17th 2011 @ 6:52am
Who Needs Melon said | May 17th 2011 @ 6:52am | Report comment
10/10 for positivity Brett. I remember all last summer how much I was looking forward to this rugby season and I haven’t been disappointed. There have been some fantastic games, some upsets and some damn fine rugby. And while it was looking all Crusaders for a while there, now I think there are quite a few teams in with a shot.
May 17th 2011 @ 6:53am
Damo said | May 17th 2011 @ 6:53am | Report comment
Panini of super rugby commentators. Lots of colourful words and, like the Reds attack no one could quite predict where it was going.
May 17th 2011 @ 7:07am
Brett McKay said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:07am | Report comment
cheers Damo, glad you enjoyed it…
May 17th 2011 @ 7:11am
Damo said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:11am | Report comment
Yes Brett despite the woes of 4 out of 5 OZ franchises I am pleasantly surprised each week. The season is still alive for about 10 teams. There are now about 4 teams firming as favourites. And it seems that more people are following teams outside their conference this year. There are non-OZ fans following the Reds and Rebels for instance. I have always liked the Highlanders and it is great to finally see them get some reward for effort this season.
Rugby is winning.
May 17th 2011 @ 7:03am
Tom said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:03am | Report comment
Good article and I agree with most of it. Not sure super rugby has been that successful as the organizers thought. Crowds have been poor seeing we play home teams twice. Player depth in the Australian division is a obvious worry.
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May 17th 2011 @ 8:07am
The Bush said | May 17th 2011 @ 8:07am | Report comment
“Player depth in the Australian division is a obvious worry.”
I don’t think the organisers were expecting this to be perfect in the first season mate…
“Crowds have been poor seeing we play home teams twice.”
This is due to performance, not the structure.
Reds crowds are up because the team is up. Brumby crowds are down because they suck. Rebel crowds are excellent, but they have no yard-stick to measure by. Force crowds are as they were last year, well down on the first season or two, but stable.
Now Waratahs crowds… Lets not go there…
What has been a success as a result of the increase in derbies is the TV ratings, and at the end of the day this pays the bills!
May 17th 2011 @ 11:04am
Gary said | May 17th 2011 @ 11:04am | Report comment
It’s only the Tahs and Brumbies crowds that are down. Force crowds are down on previous years only because they are playing in a smaller stadium which is full to capacity every week. Reds and Rebels are good.
Do noyt make the mistake of thinkng that the problemns with Rugby in NSW are being experienced in the rest of the country. They are not.
May 17th 2011 @ 1:32pm
The Bush said | May 17th 2011 @ 1:32pm | Report comment
Gary,
Are you responding to me?
I can’t see where you’ve disagreed or pointed out a mistake?
I said the Reds crowds are up. I said that the Rebels crowds are good (can’t be up because they didn’t exist last year).
I said the Force’s crowds are the same as last year (when they first moved to the current stadium).
I’ve said only the Waratahs and Brumby crowds are down… due to the style, or lack there-of of the performances on offer…
May 17th 2011 @ 7:11am
ohtani's jacket said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:11am | Report comment
Cooper’s pass can be both classically beautiful and spectacularly outrageous, and outrageously forward. In the game against the Hurricanes, he threw one pass that was so forward the receiver had to almost dive to catch it. And he was at it again against the Blues.
The good thing about Quade Cooper is that because he never tackles anyone he won’t be injured in the collision. The bad thing is he might do his shoulder throwing a forward pass.
May 17th 2011 @ 7:32am
BennO said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:32am | Report comment
haha nice one!
As bad as that would be for the player, that would be hilarious really.
May 17th 2011 @ 8:39am
Brett McKay said | May 17th 2011 @ 8:39am | Report comment
OJ, I can’t disagree with that too much, and it’s an innevitability that when passes are thrown the way Cooper does that some will drift forward or even that some will just be forward out of the hands. I used to think the same of Larkham, but when they’re thrown for a man to run on to, I can live with them “drifting”..
May 17th 2011 @ 10:27am
Jerry said | May 17th 2011 @ 10:27am | Report comment
The forward passes that annoy me – and both Genia and Cooper do this a lot – are the ‘flat’ short passes, cause those are inevitably forward out of the hands rather than the standard momentum type forward pass (that really isn’t). Those short passes, especially when close to the defence, give the ball carrier a huge advantage in terms of hitting the gap (see Higgenbotham’s break for the Reds second try).
May 17th 2011 @ 2:32pm
Muzza said | May 17th 2011 @ 2:32pm | Report comment
sBW does em too
May 17th 2011 @ 5:59pm
Jerry said | May 17th 2011 @ 5:59pm | Report comment
All players do ‘forward passes’, SBW included. Most of those are when they’re running at pace, meaning the hands go backward but the ball drifts forward. Those are legal.
The specific ones I’m talking about are when players are crabbing sideways – there’s no forward momentum, so if the ball goes forward it’s cause it was passed forward. Genia and Cooper are far from the only guys that do it, but they both do it fairly often.
May 17th 2011 @ 7:17am
Damo said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:17am | Report comment
Methinks teams get the crowds that organisers deserve.
And CEO stands for Chief Experience Organiser.
Mr ONeil has influence over team culture too includingTahs’.
May 17th 2011 @ 7:24am
Damo said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:24am | Report comment
Oh OJ there you go again running down our home grown Aussie talent.
Next you’ll be telling us that Dingo is not a genius. !!!!
No you misunderstand Quade- he iis keeping his tackling as a surprise element waiting for the RWC final. And anyway Quade did more tackling than I did last Friday night. How about you OJ?
May 17th 2011 @ 7:44am
Nick_KIA said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:44am | Report comment
May 17th 2011 @ 8:12am
ohtani's jacket said | May 17th 2011 @ 8:12am | Report comment
I tackled as many beers as I could in two halves of rugby.
May 17th 2011 @ 8:15am
Nick_KIA said | May 17th 2011 @ 8:15am | Report comment
I was going to say…
Given I don’t think OJ is playing in the S15 (unless that is you under the pseudonym Adam Thompson) I don’t think his tackling ability is a decent yardstick with which to compare QC.
Although comparing QCs to us blogosphere hacks’ might make QCs look passable I suppose.
May 17th 2011 @ 8:26am
Tigranes said | May 17th 2011 @ 8:26am | Report comment
Damo I think OJ is just jealous that QC is playing for Australia and not NZ.
May 17th 2011 @ 10:24am
jeremy said | May 17th 2011 @ 10:24am | Report comment
We’re actually waiting for QC to switch to league and play next to Sonny Bill in the Kiwis. And Dingo Deans will come home to coach ‘em.
YOU HEARD IT HERE FIRST, FOLKS.
May 17th 2011 @ 7:59pm
Spencer said | May 17th 2011 @ 7:59pm | Report comment
That will reverse the trend…during the month that Quade moves to New Zealand the net monthly movement of Kiwi’s to/from Australia will be how many?..about 4,499 going west!
May 17th 2011 @ 8:30pm
Jerry said | May 17th 2011 @ 8:30pm | Report comment
It also might temporarily halt that whole average IQ of both countries increasing….