SPIRO's 2015 RWC Diary: Alive, alive Oh! Ireland exposes England's power game

By Spiro Zavos / Expert

There is something really satisfying when a coach susses out his opponents’ weaknesses and then presents a side that follows the game plan perfectly to create a dominant victory.

The coach is the New Zealander Joe Schmidt. The team is Ireland.

The hapless opponents were England, who were defeated 19-9 at Dublin in a Test that suggests that Ireland, rather than England, will be the great hope of the northern hemisphere to win the 2015 Rugby World Cup.

Schmidt has taken a side that had the occasional good day – as Ireland did against the Wallabies in the pool round match during Rugby World Cup 2011 – but far more bad days – as they did later on in the tournament – to a side that has won its last 10 Tests.

This sort of consistency is virtually unheard of for Ireland. Coach Schmidt has been the conductor of the triumph, orchestrating a side that plays uncomplicated but effective rugby that is in-tune with the challenges posed by different opponents.

Schmidt worked England out brilliantly. He saw that without Mike Brown or Ben Fonden there was no threat of running back the ball from the back three. The English three were also lacking in technique and skill in catching the high ball.

Conflating this weakness is the fact that the England pack is a fleet of tanks: tough, slow-moving, and built to smash forward gradually. There is no real pace in the pack. No forward has the inclination or aerobic fitness to be as assertive going back in defence as the pack is in smashing its way forward.

So Ireland kicked the ball an astonishing 44 times.

Some of the kicks were long and raking, and forced the heavyweight pack to come back a long way to become involved with the next set of plays. Others were shorter and higher bombs, which ended up in fierce rucking and mauling contests as England failed to claim catches and move the ball on.

The result for the England pack was the debilitating effect I have called, when talking about the same tactics being used against South African sides in the past, ‘the running of the bulls’.

The England pack became tired with the incessant running back and fierce mauling. The more tired they became, the more likely they became of giving away penalties. England were penalised 13 times and their captain, Chris Robshaw, admitted that this was far too many penalties to concede – in their own half many of them – with a sharp-shooter like Johnny Sexton lining up the shots at goal.

Even more worrying for England is that the referee Craig Joubert – who will referee many of the top games at the RWC, including perhaps the final if the Springboks don’t make it – identified the many illegalities that England use at the ruck and maul. In the past, Joubert has missed these illegalities.

The sign of a strong side that is well-coached and capable of winning important trophies is when even the journeymen play strongly and contribute to the strength rather than the weakness of the side. No disrespect to Rob Egerton, but he played this role for the 1991 Wallabies when they won the RWC tournament.

Jared Payne, the New Zealand utility player who was more of a stand-out in the ITM tournament than he was in Super Rugby, played strongly for Ireland in the centres, providing muscle and determination to compensate for the relative smallness of the other backs.

All sides that win the Webb Ellis trophy have an outstanding halves combination. In Conor Murray (a big halfback) and Johnny Sexton (tougher than he looks as his smashing tackle on George Ford demonstrated), Ireland have a halfback and a flyhalf who, as a pair, are better than any other in world rugby.

England were exposed with their halfbacks, who dithered over the ball, kicked aimlessly and generally could not give any direction or meaning to the few attacks England did try to mount.

When Sexton was on the field the Ireland halves were decisive and precise in everything they did. They played what was in front of them using the plans and system, as exemplified by Robbie Henshaw’s try from Sexton’s smart kick, which came just after the fly-half motioned Henshaw to the zone where he was going to kick.

The Ireland pack revealed a scrum that held its own against England’s juggernaut eight, and a combative and smart lineout that stole a couple of England throws. The ferocity, pace, power and skill of the Ireland pack was more in the mode of a southern hemisphere pack, with plenty of mongrel and an instinct to make the decisive plays.

Ireland’s 10 wins in a row (and still counting) is a record for the national side. The All Blacks recorded 10 successive wins in the years 1987-88 when a World Cup was won. The Wallabies won 10 in a row between 1998-99 before winning the ’99 tournament. England won 10 Tests in a row between 2002-03 when they won the 2003 RWC.

Ireland’s victory over England moved them to third place on the World Rugby ranking, knocking England back a place:

New Zealand 93.70
South Africa 88.23
Ireland 86.38
England 85.11
Australia 82.95
Wales 82.85
France 78.96
Argentina 78.23
Samoa 75.39
Scotland 75.22.

Ireland are in Pool D of the 2015 World Cup, facing France, Italy, Canada and Romania. If they win their pool, as they should, they go into the half of the draw that should not contain the All Blacks (Pool C) or the Springboks (Pool B) until the grand final.

The winner of Pool D plays the runner-up in Pool C (probably Argentina) in the quarter-final. The winner of this quarter-final is will probably face the winner of Pool A (either Australia, Wales or England).

We know that upsets happen in the Rugby World Cup. But right now, following their tremendous victory over England, admittedly in Dublin and not London, Ireland’s hopes of a breakthrough 2015 tournament are ‘alive, alive Oh!’

The Crowd Says:

2015-03-09T09:02:44+00:00

Carmuddy

Guest


Hi, while some of your analysis is excellent, there are a number of errors. The kick for the Irish try was from Conor Murray and not Sexton. You said that Payne compensates for the relative smallness of the other backs. Robbie Henshaw is 1.91 m and 100 kg. Tommy Bowe is 1.91 m and 96 kg. That would make Horne and Leali'ifano lightweights or they just look bigger coz they're dressed in gold? Cheers Carmuddy

2015-03-05T13:19:25+00:00

Who?

Guest


Exactly. I rate Sexton's passing game as the best in the NH. They're still finding their best centres after the departure of BOD, and have had injuries there to key players. It's also worth noting that, in those 10 straight wins are wins over both Australia and SA, and the last time they played NZ they needed Mr Owens to give a dubious penalty to the ABs with 10 seconds on the clock to give the ABs a final sniff, and Cruden to get a second (and undeserved) kick to lose it... Ireland, are, for me, the Australia of the NH. Wales are NZ - they think they're the guardians of the game, it's their national sport, they traditionally play the most varied game. England are SA. That's ludicrously obvious. Ireland... They have a tendency to produce a few stupendously talented players, then mix them with some genuine journeymen. They can play an attacking game, but often fall over mentally. They also have issues with recruitment against a game where it doesn't matter if you drop the ball and you cant stand anywhere (AFL vs Gaelic Football). An Ireland win at the RWC would be the next best thing to an Aussie win - even if their coach is a Kiwi!

2015-03-05T03:52:27+00:00

SP

Guest


Not sure Ireland are clueless with ball in hand but England certainly are.

2015-03-05T03:50:35+00:00

SP

Guest


were winning.............but lost. Doesn't matter if it's in the 84th minute or 3rd minute.

2015-03-05T01:08:29+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


agree totally Hoy. Love to see Ireland win the WC. The ONLY truly smart coaches Wallabies have had are Rod McQueen and Dwyer IMO. The others were / are too one dimensional. They have a formulae that works initially and sticks to it blindly. They do not adjust to opposition or to changing tactics that negate theirs.Cheika seems like this. Deans was, Connolly,Alan Jones, the list goes on.

2015-03-05T01:07:16+00:00

Mike

Guest


Sure, you expressed it conditionally. But you were the one to introduce the idea. I can't see it referred to in the article or anywhere else. No reason at all to think that that is the best England aspires to.

2015-03-05T00:56:59+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


What I would give for a truly smart coach... I support the Reds, and the Wallabies... I thought Link might be our thinking coach after what he did with the Reds, changing game plans etc, but he didn't really do it too much at international level, and probably didn't get enough time to prove to be a thinker or not really... Sextons tackle was not that smashing... though it looked good. Ford was weak, very weak in contact, and that allowed a normally weak defender like Sexton to get in under him and lift and drive... It was poor from Ford really. Don't get me wrong, by weak defender, I mean someone who does not dominate tackles, though to be honest, I have always thought of him as a bit of a poor defender. Put it this way, I would be pouring fast, big, men down his way early on in a game. Ireland are improving very well. If they are to win the WC as you say, it will probably mean they might meet their nemesis team, The All Blacks, in the finals, and it goes without saying, but really needs saying, they have never beaten them. It would truly be momentous for them to beat the ABs in the RWC final!

2015-03-04T23:55:46+00:00

Akari

Roar Rookie


"And I don’t think anyone wrote that England “only aspire” to that result – except you." No Mike; that is your statement and not mine. I said, "Good luck to England if that is the best that they aspire to."

2015-03-04T22:37:27+00:00

Play the Game

Guest


1....2...............................................................3,4,5.6,7

2015-03-04T21:01:26+00:00

Kane

Guest


And if they do win they will have beaten SA, France, Argentina, and Ireland the last time they played them. All teams that the Wallabies lost to in their most recent encounter with them. So it makes sense that they would drop behind them.

2015-03-04T20:57:21+00:00

Kane

Guest


The way I saw it was that when the final whistle was blown I think NZ were ahead. So I think it's fair to say that their game plan worked against NZ, that is if there game plan was to get close and still lose.

2015-03-04T19:36:41+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Then you have Rhys Ruddock, Robin Copeland, Jack Conan, Eoin McEwen, in the wings. Jack O'Donoghue Munster blindside and number 8 is a great prospect at 20.

2015-03-04T18:49:00+00:00

richard

Guest


I suspect Schmit will be the leading candidate to lead the BIL's in NZ in 2017.Hansen will have his work cut out to win the series,methinks.( I can always live in hope they give the job to Gatland).

2015-03-04T17:47:00+00:00

Derm

Roar Guru


Good grief indeed. All that remains is for you to tell us who you know is the best half-back pairing in the world currently.

2015-03-04T17:40:40+00:00

Derm

Roar Guru


Oh. O'Donnell is 27 with 8 senior caps to his name.

2015-03-04T15:56:07+00:00

Common Sense

Roar Rookie


That's been annoying me too. There is no such thing as a 'Super Rugby Grand Final'. There is no such thing as a 'Rugby World Cup Grand Final'.

2015-03-04T12:32:39+00:00

Not Bothered

Guest


Ummm, it was the last time they played so the 'ummmm' was justified. Just seems a bit funny to suggest that Irelands gameplan wont work against NZ when the last time the 2 met Ireland were winning until about the 84th min. So ummmm just calm down.

2015-03-04T12:29:48+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


A big part of rugby is durability. Marler over Corbo. Because he gets hurt less, heals faster, and you can count on him.

2015-03-04T12:21:06+00:00

Derm

Roar Guru


I would have thought 3rd in world rankings is not a long way from the top - but if you're sitting in first or second spot, maybe it is.

2015-03-04T12:20:52+00:00

pjm

Roar Rookie


He's got a name people love to say, they always get mentioned.

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