Attitude: It’s all in the mind, not the body

By Brett McKay / Expert

In the lead-up to their match against the Brumbies on the weekend, Western Force coach Michael Foley had some really interesting thoughts on the attitude adjustments he and his staff had to undertake after two less-than-ideal performances.

Asked whether ‘attitude’ and the mental side of the game had been a major focus coming into Friday night’s game, Foley’s response was as honest as it was thoughtfully explained.

“Attitude is often misunderstood in sport, because people always associate attitude with aggression. And while aggression is part of attitude, attitude is just how you view and prioritise things.”

“Our attitude at the breakdown has to be better; it has to be more important. We have to be more urgent about it.

“There’s two parts to it: it’s early in the season, and you know that there are things you can build into and you should be able to play better and you have to be totally committed to that. On the other side of the coin, you have to be candid about those performances.

“I think, particularly the Hurricanes game, on that point of attitude, we were ‘off’ and that’s the thing that cuts the most as a football team. If you go out there and play well and get beaten, that’s hard and it stings. But when you go out and you feel like there are elements of the game that you could’ve done better that would’ve made a difference to the outcome, and you just didn’t do that, that’s what gets up your nose.

“For us, we can’t rest on the Waratahs game, but it is a good reference point. Just two weeks ago, our attitude was unbelievable. We had to be good against those guys. There’s been a lot of discussion about how badly they played, but there were things that we anticipated they would do if we did certain things first. So some of the mistake they made, we felt that we drove. And again, you’re just saying simply to the players, ‘we had our priorities and our attitude right for that game’.

“Certainly against the Hurricanes we were off, and against the Brumbies, you’ve got to be right; you’ve got to be spot on.”

Contrast this with all the noise that emanated from north of the border last week, ahead for the Reds age-old clash with the Waratahs.

While former Wallabies Captain, George Gregan, famously once suggested “passion is overrated,” Queensland rugby types lined up to explain how passion was the key to the Reds pulling off the upset, in the oldest derby in Australian rugby.

Former coach Eddie Jones had his say, describing flanker Liam Gill as “a terrific player but far too nice to play Test rugby,” in his Courier Mail column on Saturday. Gill, Jones insisted, needed “an injection of Tony Shaw mongrel to become more ruthless in taking on skateboard kid Michael Hooper tonight.”

Shaw, a legendary Queensland captain himself, appeared in a stirring, clenched-fist-over-the-heart inducing photo in his old Reds jersey behind Tim Horan in his late-90s jersey, and current skipper James Slipper, in the 2015 playing kit. ‘History and passion will get us home’, was the underlying message.

Our own Chris Roche went even further on Saturday, telling us this Reds side had “courage,” if only one thing over their New South Wales counterparts, and demanded a straightforward game plan.

“Richard Graham’s game plan needs to be simply this – put the toughest 15 players out on the field on Saturday night and belt NSW into submission.”

To me, this felt like Queensland setting themselves up for failure, and it prompted me to pose the question.

“It’s an interesting plan Chris – my only question or concern would be that Queensland trying to play the physical game might actually play into the Waratahs’ counter-attacking game?”

I’m not going to sit here as say, ‘I told you so’, but, well…

The way the game played out on Saturday night looked to me a classic case of the Reds confusing attitude for aggression, and trying the out-belt the Waratahs at their own game. And all with a pack already weakened by significant injuries, further hampered by the matchday withdrawal of James Horwill.

I commend Liam Gill for thinking he was a two-metre, 130kg hulking behemoth as he charged into Waratah defender after Waratah defender, but eight metres gained from ten runs tells you his 184cm, 96kg frame was knocked back behind the gain line every time. And he certainly wasn’t alone on that front.

The Reds are playing like a team with all the wrong priorities. Where desperation to add one to the ‘win’ column will solve everything, and the manner with which they get that win is unimportant. The result is no evident direction, no shape, one-out runners not making the advantage line, and a backline standing so deep you were excused for thinking the wingers was dropping back for the counter attack.

There are multiple and valid excuses why the Reds are in this current predicament, but their attitude and priorities going into games at the moment is terrible.

Make no mistake, the Waratahs were far from perfect on Saturday night. If they played even half as well as they were by the end of 2014, they’d have put 50 on the Reds. Not taking a bonus point win away from Brisbane against that Reds side should be infuriating the ‘Tahs like sand down your Speedos.

Though they still didn’t get the result, I thought the Force were much improved in their performance against the Brumbies. Their execution let them down regularly, but they never shied away from the contest, and showed good patience in attacking the Brumbies line for the last half hour of the match.

“We didn’t get the result, we need to be better, but this was a very important game for us because of our disappointment last week. It was very important we responded,” Foley said post-match.

“If you don’t win then clearly you’ll walk away disappointed but the players showed what it means to play for each other and what it means to play in the jersey. That’s an absolute imperative. If you don’t have that you’ve got nothing.

“It got to a point where the game could have slipped away, but we remained composed and built back into the game. Our second half was quite good,” he said.

And he’s right. They didn’t get the result, but the Force are already better equipped to host the Rebels this Friday night because of the way they played the game out last Friday.

The Reds, on the other hand, with the Brumbies arriving on a roll, are still trying to work out their priorities.

The Crowd Says:

2015-03-11T17:13:13+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Toomua, Barnes and SNK are Qlders. Lynagh owned the shirt. Fact is that sweet fa has been produced out of NSW between Ella, Knox going on to Foley. Even Manny Edmonds was a ACT boy. Aus needs Qld to produce more of these players regardless of whether the play for the Reds.

2015-03-11T08:32:31+00:00

Stray Gator

Roar Rookie


I think the two components coming up might be worth watching - Cheika-style hard body forward play combined with Larkham running lines, all played at breakneck speed. And if we get the set pieces sorted....

2015-03-11T08:11:59+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Let's warehouse them in clubs then. Ignoring the fact, it would create another barrier to appealing to players to recruit, we can just have some tough players whose skills and athletic development are behind where they should be instead. We do this no different to every other country, so you cannot hold up club rugby as the solution.

2015-03-11T07:13:58+00:00

Lano

Roar Guru


Bakkies: I dont think you are correct on the fly-halves, not anywhere close to accuate. Qld: - Cooper and Flatley. Others: Foley, Toomua, Barnes, Huxley, Norton-Night, Gitteau, Kafer and many more.

2015-03-11T06:44:47+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Exactly you need players that can clean out when you win turnovers or hit the ruck when you have slowed it down. George Smith couldn't do it on his own.

2015-03-11T06:37:23+00:00

Bakkies

Guest


Aus Rugby needs Qld to be strong as they produce players particularly in the tight five and at flyhalf.

2015-03-10T23:32:27+00:00

pjm

Roar Rookie


It's about putting someone who has the quality to make it in SR and putting them through a year or two of club rugby, not taking club stalwarts who have the toughness of club rugby but not the quality of SR. Right now a player like Gill goes from the sanitized world of Junior Rugby to the sanitized world of Professional Rugby, and we wonder why they have no mongrel.

2015-03-10T23:09:55+00:00

Combesy

Roar Guru


mate wasn't getting defensive at all, just mentioning that you missed one. I agree the wallabies don't rely on any one team being strong to win. What the wallabies need is collective form across all of the provinces. IMO, something that does help at International level is when a province has had a strong winning record at a certain ground. I.e like the reds at suncorp in 2011/2012 and the waratahs last season.

AUTHOR

2015-03-10T22:39:12+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Harry, that's along similar lines to something I heard Justin Langer say, back when I was still playing cricket, which was, simply: "Train like you give a sh!t, so you can play like you don't"

2015-03-10T22:33:21+00:00

Train Without A Station

Roar Guru


Kind of like Dallan Murphy, Trent Dwyer, Tim Davidson, David Harvey, etc. who were all long term high quality club rugby players, who failed to make an impact at the next level?

2015-03-10T22:31:00+00:00

pjm

Roar Rookie


Rugby's a whole different game without 20 cameras getting every angle.

2015-03-10T22:28:17+00:00

pjm

Roar Rookie


Blades - Not a great Gregan, Larkham, Little - Backs, there to look pretty. Eales - Different era where his body type was near the norm, not the veiny muscle of today. He wasn't know for physicality when he played either, more for his skills Kefu - Happy face, massive body. Gill doesn't have the massive body.

2015-03-10T14:41:08+00:00

Rob G

Guest


correlation is not causation mate. in 2011 fidel castro resigned as cubas leader. Maybe that was the reason we won the trinations???? Obviously having any team winning super is going to boost our chances for wallabies, I'm just saying the idea that it has to be the reds is absurd. I am not having a go at the reds in any way though mate, so don't get all defensive as usual.

2015-03-10T14:39:26+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Good essay on attitude. Schalk Burger has spoken on this subject. He says he plays as if there is nothing else in the world that matters in that moment. That's the key, I think. Utter focus.

2015-03-10T09:49:11+00:00

Cynical Play

Guest


Sonny Bill's like that.

2015-03-10T09:07:40+00:00

soapit

Guest


difficult to say their defence was too good with what the reds offered. thats the problem playing against a team like that, so little to gain.

2015-03-10T08:33:49+00:00

Daz

Guest


I'm sure posters on here must be truly sick and tired of me trotting out my old adages. One of the other ones I grew up with is if you are going to hit, hit hard. Don't stuff around. The advice I always got at footie was you are more likely to get hurt if you go in halfheartedly. Give it your all and come out on top. Take the pawn out, put the man on his arse and get straight back on your feet to continue the attack. It's a numbers game, the more numbers of the opposition are suffering on the ground the greater the opportunities open up. It's not that bloody hard. Moses only gave ten rules to an entire nation and subsequently millions of their spawn. Most of the complexity of rugby can be reduced down to about ten or so too.

2015-03-10T08:21:02+00:00

RobC

Roar Guru


Putting aside the atrocious drop balls, falling asleep in D for the two tries, fubared kicks, and brainless shovel ball to/from Frisby, and a couple other things... I thought Reds pack were generally smart in their D, despite losing the power/weight disparity. Their TOs won were pretty good. Their attack started to get some good momentum in 3Q. But a soft KO was punished by Betham.

AUTHOR

2015-03-10T08:08:10+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Ah right, now I get you..

AUTHOR

2015-03-10T08:06:45+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Absolutely spot on mate..

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