Two northern hemisphere teams will contest the 2019 World Cup semi-finals

By Spiro Zavos / Expert

One of the most annoying and inaccurate notions about success at Rugby World Cup is that of teams ‘peaking too soon’, thereby destroying their hopes of winning the tournament.

»It used to be a running joke in the commentary of Peter FitzSimons, designed to somehow point the bone at the All Blacks.

Rugby World Cup Teams

The truth of the matter is that New Zealand, who can invariably be accused of peaking too soon (except for their dismal year of 2009), have won three World Cup titles, two back-to-back in 2011 and 2015, and were defeated finalists in 1995.

The All Blacks in 1987 and the Springboks in 1995 are the two teams that came from the back of the field to win.

In six Rugby World Cup tournaments, the winner had strong form going into the competition. The Wallabies, coached by Bob Dwyer and Rod Macqueen, were among the favourites to win in 1991 and 1999.

Sir Clive Woodward’s England side, winners in 2003, were favourites after defeating all the top-tier teams leading up to the tournament.

The Springboks won in 2007 under Jake White having established a formidable record of wins at home. They covered up their poor away form by treating the tournament in France as if it were being played in South Africa. They went into a virtual laager during the tournament, before defeating an England team in the final that they had already crushed in the pool rounds.

History suggests, therefore, that teams that do not peak in their performances in the two years before the tournament have little chance of winning the Webb Ellis trophy.

With this in mind, we come to an initial analysis of the first round of the 2018 Six Nations.

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And this brings us to the enigma that is Wales.

In the 1970s, Wales produced the sort of brilliant players and play that we now expect from the All Blacks. Those of us who know our rugby history and have been in the crowd for a Test at Cardiff will always love Welsh rugby. The passion and the hwyl (the singing of the crowd) provide the unforgettable impression that you are in Rugby Country when you watch Wales play at the Millennium Stadium.

What Mecca is to the followers of Islam, what Rome is to Catholics, the Millennium Stadium with Wales playing your team is to ardent followers of the rugby game. It is an occasion every fan should experience.

In the opening match of the 2018 Six Nations, Wales played with the craft, skill, toughness and passion of those great teams of the ’70s. The 34-7 bonus-point demolition of Scotland, four tries to one, was as devastating as it was unexpected.

Last year, the Scots almost beat the All Blacks, leading rugby prophets to predict a Scottish revival into the first tier. Instead, the side was exposed in the set pieces, defence and attack. In other words, the defeat for Scotland – and victory for Wales – was comprehensive in every respect.

Gregor Townsend’s team made the mistake of playing wide before establishing any momentum in the middle of the field with driving play by the forwards. This was compounded by an obsession to have players in the line and hardly anyone supporting the ball carrier. The result was Wales’ ability to win penalties by pressurising opposing rucks.

Scotland also discovered that if you play a ball-in-hand game, which to their credit they tried to do, you have to have a sophisticated, smart and well-organised set of defensive systems to cope with the inevitable mistake or turn-over.

One of the opening phases of play, in fact, revealed how well-organised Wales were on defence (Shaun Edwards take a bow) and how poorly organised Scotland were.

The play went on for about five minutes. Both teams exchanged box kicks that gave away possession. Then there long passages of phase play. Finn Russell, the terrier Scotland number 10, was smashed to the ground in a tackle and the ball was slowly recycled. Wales’ impressive halfback, Gareth Davies (a great name in the history of Welsh rugby!) intercepted a clumsy, ponderous pass and ran about 50 metres to score the opening try.

For all the years that Warren Gatland has coached Wales, the side has been one-dimensional in attack. The emphasis has been on a grunt – even in the backs, with massive wingers – on moving the ball forward and relying on kicking and pressure to force errors and points from the opposition.

Warren Gatland (Mike Egerton/PA Wire)

Perhaps it was the experience of the British and Irish Lions players insisting on an all-court game in New Zealand, and their consequent success in drawing their Test series against the All Blacks, rather than Gatland’s baseline-obsessed game, that encouraged the coach to allow some flair and running.

Whatever, Wales now look like a side that on its day can beat any other nation. An early test of this suggestion will come next week, when they play a rampant England side at Twickenham.

Ireland’s last-gasp victory over France, in Paris, was impressive as well, although in a different way.

It takes a special team to win away from home, especially when time is up, after squandering a lead to an unexpected try. This is the sort of heroics the All Blacks specialise in.

The Test was played in rain and mist, making the field and ball greasy. Ireland kept the ball in close, won the battle for possession and position and Johnny Sexton kicked all but one of his shots at goal.

But conditions did not allow for any of the eloquence that Wales invested in their game. And France, it must be said, provided a much sterner challenge than Scotland.

The Test ended with one of the most suspenseful periods of play I have ever seen.

With a few minutes of play remaining, France scored a try against the run of play, and the conversion gave the home side a 13-12 lead. The French then stormed back into the Ireland half and were awarded a penalty. The shot missed.

To begin their final series of plays, the Irish won their drop out from the 22, then calmly and resolutely then went through 41 phases – the most successive phases I have ever seen in a Test. It is almost double the sequence made by New Zealand when they snatched victory from Ireland at Dublin a couple of years ago.

Then Sexton booted a dropped goal through the rain and mist from about 40 metres out.

Jonathan Sexton (Warwick Gastinger / CC BY 2.0)

The skill involved with this kick was exceptional, given the conditions – Sexton apparently remembered he had booted a similar goal against Treviso.

He took the decision to kick from a great distance because he believed the Irish pack had, at most, two more phases left in them before they would be overwhelmed by the fired-up French resistance.

It takes a special team to win a Test in these circumstances; a special player like Sexton to orchestrate the sequence of phases with a recoverable drop out, deft passes, a clever cross kick and then having the courage to take the long-range attempt; and a special coach, Joe Schmidt, to instil in the side the belief that the game is never over until it is over.

No wonder pundits are beginning to talk up Ireland’s chances of being the second European team to win the Rugby World Cup.

The third Six Nations Test over the weekend saw England overwhelm Italy at Rome 46-15, seven tries to two.

England’s last four tries came in the final 12 minutes, a late tsunami of points rather like what happened to the Wallabies on their northern tour last year, when the home side scored 24 points in the final 26 minutes.

Eddie Jones’ side have now won all bar one of their last 24 Tests. According to Richie McCaw, England are justified in believing that they can win the 2019 tournament.

One of the most impressive aspects about England is the way that young players have come into the side and played well. This suggests there is growth to become even better than they are right now – number two in the world rankings, with the chance to be top dogs if they get through the Six Nations undefeated.

Last November, Clive Woodward declared that only three sides can win next year’s World Cup in Japan: New Zealand, England and Ireland. It’s a big call considering no northern hemisphere side made the semi-finals in 2015.

To this list of potential winners, I would add Wales, Australia and South Africa – the side that came closest to defeating the All Blacks in the last tournament.

This brings me to my first fearless prediction for the year: two of the semi-finalists in 2019 will be northern hemisphere sides.

The Crowd Says:

2018-02-09T00:49:57+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


Good to hear from you Jake on the rugby. I thought you’d still be in 5-0 therapy.

2018-02-08T02:18:03+00:00

MARTO

Guest


You make laugh Sven. What silverware has he won with a " National team " ?? Come on Sven.. Tell us mate. haha

2018-02-08T02:15:23+00:00

MARTO

Guest


Malo, That means you must rate the other Waratahs/Wallabies like Bernard " The error ridden can`t kick no vision Foley and Tommy " Tiny boned " Robertson ? Oh dear..

2018-02-07T21:48:25+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


Bristol will be striving to avoid relegation next year.

2018-02-07T21:30:38+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


OK, you poached Naholo who is a very good replacement for Piutau - Next!

2018-02-07T21:27:25+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


Can you T-man? Go on then. Te’o has an English mother and left NZ when 17 to play rugby league. You poached Hughes from Fiji and then he moved to Wasps. Solomona is a league player and currently 5th choice winger and slipping down the list as we speak. Hughes is also not first choice. We’ve already established that most of the players you claim have damaged the ABs by leaving have been replaced by players you poached from the islands, so off you go, give me chapter and verse on the current England squad.

2018-02-07T16:04:33+00:00

Rugby Fan

Roar Guru


Amazing what bitterness will do. You'd prefer to malign your countrymen rather than accept the much more reasonable proposition that some players have the character to thrive in different professional environments, and some don't. It would be easier to understand the need of New Zealand supporters to whine constantly about player drain if those same whiners put forward plans to develop the sport globally. What role should New Zealand rugby be playing? You say you don't need to import talent, and then you also say you don't want to export talent. How on earth does that model work in professional sport? Come back to us when you have figured it out. How are you doing on developing international standard referees? New Zealanders have a lot of good things to say about Glen Jackson. How can that be? He was one of the traitors who left New Zealand rugby to play in the north. And then - good lord - he took his RFU referee training courses in England before going back to the NZRU. Really sorry about that. Now you know, I'm sure you'll want to ditch Jackson, and fast track all those other great refereeing prospects you have.

2018-02-07T08:29:03+00:00

Neil Back

Roar Rookie


They'll be right. Still got Davies, Evans, Thomas, Roberts, Lewis, Hughes, Morgan, Griffiths, Edwards, Rees, Jenkins, Owen, Price, Phillips to stick with Alun, Arwel, Arwyn, Bryn, Ceri, Dai, Geraint, Ieuan.......

2018-02-07T02:30:42+00:00

Taylorman

Guest


Nah, too scared to lose at home, too scared to try anything. Rabbits in the media headlights. Showed in their performances individually and collectively. Understandable. The ABs had that in the 12 final.

2018-02-07T02:26:07+00:00

Taylorman

Guest


Yes Poth I agree. Acceptance is something you probably know very well. Our players coaches, you’ll accept everything and anything.

2018-02-07T02:24:19+00:00

Taylorman

Guest


Yes amazing what money will do.

2018-02-07T02:21:04+00:00

Taylorman

Guest


Well FB, we have progress, at least you’ve moved from denial to sarcasm, can you get things a bit quicker please and not waste so much dialogue on the obvious.

2018-02-07T01:51:47+00:00

Taylorman

Guest


Tell me Fun, where are your harvests? Oh that’s right. You buy the fully built, prepared and successfully tested models that purr before you run them into the ground. Details of the harvests please or is that just an expression, as I can tell you the models your lot poached, date, who from, where they went, how many tests each has won, all the fine detail. Harvest details please or is it just a check google and find birthplace then make one massive assumption?

2018-02-07T01:50:10+00:00

Ruaridh

Guest


Geez, T man, at times you do come across as a dull old xenophobic! Did your wife leave you for an (as you'd put it) "NH fan". Try not to get so wound up all the time! You do realise that the quality of the all blacks doesn't reflect on the quality of you as a person right?

2018-02-07T01:40:00+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


I think it's time Wales started coming up with some new names. There are only so many combinations of Gareth, Daffyd, Neil and Jenkins, Smith, Williams and Jones that can be used.

2018-02-07T01:21:23+00:00

Derm

Roar Guru


Jake - I like the sneaky way you move between using northern hemisphere and home nations to lengthen the time gap. 12 years sounds so much better than saying the last RWC.

2018-02-07T00:52:49+00:00

Fox

Roar Guru


Yeah he played in the pre-season game Taylorman where the Highlander thrashed the Tahs but neither was close to full strength With Jordie Barrett - a freakish player like his brother - and Dagg the AB's are well covered a fullback and Havilli and MS and McKenzie as well so if Ben Smith gets injured - not ideal losing the best 15 but the AB's have plenty of world class cover. I think it was smart getting all those new guys on the Northern Tour - and they now have to take what they have learned into super rugby.

2018-02-06T23:45:26+00:00

Fionn

Guest


I would definitely jump at the chance to live in Japan and become fully engrossed in the society for a portion of my life. I think the ability to live and work abroad is one of the great things about a professional rugby career. Rarely, these days, to people want to spend their entire life in a single tiny (or big) island. Most people want to broaden their horizons.

2018-02-06T23:31:57+00:00

Rugby Fan

Roar Guru


Like I said, you present your countrymen as terribly fragile, closed-minded people. Fortunately, we know that's not a true picture. In their different ways, players like Nick Evans, Jerry Collins, Doug Howlett, Xavier Rush, Carl Hayman and Isa Nacewa all became key men at their clubs. You don't become a fan favourite by not putting in the effort.

2018-02-06T22:44:14+00:00

Jake

Guest


Come 2019 it will be 12 years since a home nation even made it to the final and I doubt 2019 will be any different. NZ will account for england in one semi final (provided they don't collapse in the pool again) and SA v Oz will make up the other semi.England sporting teams only win world cups approximately every 40 years (1966, 2003) and it is the cricket teams turn next time in 2040. A rugby RWC for england is a long, long way off. Ireland are mentally weak and the others not good enough.

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