We are probably arguing the same thing here for the sake of arguing. Of course, Eddie does have orcsbut he has dropped the Vunipolas, one of whom Eng's entire fwd game plan revolved around or they have become injured or past it.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 7:00 pm It doesn't matter if they're not all regular starters, it's a 23 man game now - witness the success of the SA "bomb squad" and having that size available makes a big difference. It's a pretty long list of players!
I'm not moaning about the French, I'm pointing out a contradiction to the idea mooted by my friend that everything's okay because apparently player sizes have diminished recently: the most successful teams right now have a surfeit of absolute mutants. Rugby as a pro sport values sheer size very highly indeed. Right now, SA and France have that size. England have had it in the past. NZ have had it in the past. One of the reasons why Scotland's not been able to win a 6N is because for all their talent, they've rarely been able to field a properly beefy side. Size gets you out of trouble and can cause teams problems even when skill is letting you down. Size gives you more space to play with, gives you front foot ball, a big set-piece advantage, and (ironically) means that the game is less physically demanding for the side with the size advantage, so fitness is more of a concern for the smaller team. Size makes rugby easier.
England would definitely pick gigantic players if we had them. We have big guys - the front row is hefty (though not Mauvaka/Atonio giants), Dombrandt is a unit, Tuilagi when fit is obviously a powerhouse, and Steward is very tall - but we don't really have the sheer size of an Atonio or a Mauvaka or a Danty or a Willemse or whoever right now. We're left hoping that a mediocre player like Joe Cokanasiga can show some form and fitness, because he's massive, or hoping that Ollie Lawrence (5'9", about 97kg) can be our Ma'a Nonu or Danty or De Allende (108kg, 110kg, 105kg respectively). Quins' Esterhuizen would be a godsend to England, because he's a 12 that's actually big and good, not pretend big like Lawrence - 6'4" and 113kg. It's been true for a while now that our coaches think we develop massive blokes all the time and want us to play like that, but we don't. Hence the idiocy of building a gameplan around a sicknote like Tuilagi, when there's no ready-made replacement. Hence hanging on to Billy Vunipola no matter how bad his form got, because the alternatives meant a different game plan. Christ, it's why Mike Tindall's career carried on so long. He was Actually Big, unlike Jamie Noon or whoever we tried to shoehorn into that position post 2004. It's why Matt Banahan got 16 caps. There are players who buck the trend just by having physicality and athleticism far beyond the raw stats of their physical form - the likes of Itoje or Dupont are good examples of this - but being a gigantic bastard gets you a long way in rugby.
Size really does cover up a multitude of sins in rugby, and the more giant players you have, the more likely it is you're gonna win. The more of them you have available to you, the higher the chance you'll get some that are also really good and talented rugby players who are also fit enough to survive at international level. French rugby is full of players like this, from what I've seen. Ditto Saffer rugby.
France does have mutants in abundance at the moment and it's not just the size but the skill sets that come with it. When you watch Bourgarit last week or Chat earlier this season before injury, you see big guys (not Mauvaka large for props) who can motor and handle.......... and can't get near selection. The most athletic, fast, skilled freak of the lot is Macalou who is nowhere near the side. Not far behind in those stakes are Jordan Joseph and Demba Bamba. You also may have seen the hooker Montgaillard and wing Jefferson Joseph in the U20s. The one who is sailing under radar at the moment is SH Le Garrec at Racing who is not a million miles from Dupont but also has a 90%+ kicking game and bar injury will be a selection certainty by the time of the RWC.
2 things have changed in French rugby
1) Finally, the sorts of kids from rough, immigrant backgrounds are finding pathways into the game.
2) The very belated attempts to restrict foreign players