How I learned to stop worrying and loved the bomb

By Walter Penninger / Roar Guru

While most fans prefer a good backline move, forwards breaking through the middle of the ruck or a crossover from a scrum, collecting a kick – whether a bomb, grubber or cross-field punt – and steaming towards the try-line is more likely to produce points on the board.

All the above are of course necessary ingredients in any team’s arsenal.

When Wests Tigers’ Benji Marshall scored his try from the scrum against Souths in the Charity Shield I was not only surprised he still had the speed, but I could also not remember when I last time I saw a try from the scrum in the NRL.

This was what I thought was the original object of a scrum – namely to keep the forwards bottled up and give the backs a chance (in fact the scrum is much more ancient than that but that is a complete article in itself).

Backline movements which sweep the field and with long breaks and long chases also seem to be rare these days.

So now we have percentage plays, working up the field, minimising mistakes, stealing metres from dummy half, and then the almost inevitable kick on the sixth tackle, which brings me to the subject of this article again.

If you are stuck in your own half and behind the forty then there is always the relatively new innovation of the 40/20. The trouble is that you need a good kicker, but if you have a good chase then at least you should get field position. If Jamie Soward is not the best at this then he is close.

I should also mention here that the kick out on the full, which has no particular tactical benefit of which I am aware, seems to be prevalent at this time of the season. No one is prepared to claim this title.

There is also the short kick from the restart, which I think is about to have a resurgence. Tired players are not prepared and the short kick can retrieve a ball from a team which may have otherwise just steamed ahead. Benji Marshall is probably the best exponent of this kick at the most surprising times.

There is the chip kick and re-gather which always seems to work better when there is no fullback at home. Trouble is that you have to kick and catch and be fast enough to make it to the line. Not sure who is the current contender in this category.

Then there is the grubber, either an intended grubber or an ‘I lost the ball forward and then kicked it’ grubber. Rewards here depend on how far from the line you are, whether you can kick it again and whether you can actually re-gather.

Then there is the cross-field kick designed to put a winger or outside back away, effectively a big cut-out pass which can go forward. It can be very effective for catching sides out and has become very popular these days

But inevitably we come to the bomb. A multi-purpose kick from the past designed to confuse both attacking and defending teams and therefore provide a level playing field for whatever happens next. But now we have blocking defences, which for the most part seem to negate attacking chances.

I am sure there are many other variants and on the whole I prefer the backline movement, but I could also go for the chip kick every now and again.

The Crowd Says:

2015-02-12T11:07:14+00:00

Muzz

Guest


Paul Kent mentioned that his last contract was 230k a year.Thats a nice increase he's earned for his family. Have you heard anything about Sam being homesick?

2015-02-12T06:20:59+00:00

Epiquin

Roar Guru


Very true. I fancied Sutton as 5/8 because of his strength, but his combo with Reynolds was a bit off. Reynolds just signed a two-year extension on his deal with Souths for what the Terrorgraph says is about 500k a season. This despite all those reports last year that he was on the outer at Souths and they were shopping him around.

2015-02-12T05:20:35+00:00

Muzz

Guest


Reynolds and Keary have some type of special understanding imo.One would think they've been playing together for years.I've always thought that Reynolds and Sutton were such an odd pairing.Like there wasn't much trust.Roles appeared to overlap at times and both struggled to take ownership of the individual on-field responsibilities. There's no doubting that Reynolds is prepared to work towards being the best he can.He now has to just kick on and take his game to the next level. Any idea on what he's current market value is?

2015-02-12T05:06:13+00:00

Epiquin

Roar Guru


I know I'm a little biased as a Souths fan, but I think he could be an Origin bolter, especially since Keary took part in the Emerging Blues Camp. Reynolds has a fantastic kicking game (second in the League for kicking metres behind Soward) and probably has the best defense of any halfback in the League. I remember reading a stat last season that he has the lowest missed tackle rate. Plus he got the monkey off his back last year when Souths won the GF. Only thing working against him is his choke factor - the Prelim in 2013 and the first half in last year's GF. It's unusual he seems to perform poorly in big games because during the regular season he is so good in pressure situations.

2015-02-12T04:29:45+00:00

Muzz

Guest


His kicks to the corners are nice too.Perfect trajectory so as his outside backs can run through at full speed.Just ask Jorge Taufua Interesting read, Walter

2015-02-11T21:48:26+00:00

Epiquin

Guest


I'd like to propose Adam Reynolds as the best in the game for chip-and-chase kicks. Firstly, because he's the only one who seems to use them. Secondly, because he uses them in high stakes situations. Lastly, because he actually manages to pull them off.

AUTHOR

2015-02-11T21:00:17+00:00

Walter Penninger

Roar Guru


Sorry there is one major kick I forgot to mention that is the kick up the bum that Souths will get from the NRL for the Arizona incident

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