Just coz it’s midweek and there is no news yet on the team,
My pro era pack would be Schoeman, Bulloch, Euan Murray, Scott Murray, Nathan Hines, Jason White, Mish, Simon Taylor
For gits and shiggles:Tichtheid wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 6:24 am
Just coz it’s midweek and there is no news yet on the team,
My pro era pack would be Schoeman, Bulloch, Euan Murray, Scott Murray, Nathan Hines, Jason White, Mish, Simon Taylor
I didn’t get as far as the bench but we have pretty much the same players if I’d included the five extras. I considered Rennie but his injury record made me discard him. Rambo was terrific but my memory of Bulloch throwing to Murray is that was our best ever lineout.Big D wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 9:19 amFor gits and shiggles:
Smith
Rambo (the version from the 18months where he was very good).
Murray
Gray Snr
Hines
White
Rennie - He could turnover ball but was also able to link play.
Taylor
Bulloch, Schoeman, Nel, Murray and Barclay on bench.
westport wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 9:26 am Hive Stadium will host Scotland U20 and the World Rugby U20 Trophy this July as eight international age-grade sides fight for promotion to the World Rugby U20 Championship in 2025.
Played over four match days at Hive Stadium (2-17 July), Scotland will hope to make the most of home advantage to claim the title and return to the U20 Championship for the first time since they were relegated in 2018.
Kenny Murray’s side been placed in Pool A with Japan, Hong Kong China and the Oceania qualifier while the Pool B will see U20 Trophy debutants the Netherlands facing Uruguay and qualified teams from Africa and North America.
While five teams are already confirmed, three nations must still qualify via regional competitions in Africa, North America and Oceania.
Samoa and Tonga will meet in the Oceania play-off on 8 March in Auckland, New Zealand with the winner joining the U20 Trophy line-up, while Africa will be represented by the U20 Barthés Trophy champion and North America by the winner of a play-off between Canada and USA.
The World Rugby U20 Trophy 2024 participating teams are: Japan (relegated from the U20 Championship in 2023), Scotland (hosts), Hong Kong China (Asia), Netherlands (Europe), Uruguay (South America) and Africa, North America and Oceania representatives.
While it's great to see this comp in Scotland, I remain miffed that Scotland is in it because they have no claim to be one of the competing teams. Pure Tier 1 apartheid this.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 9:57 amwestport wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 9:26 am Hive Stadium will host Scotland U20 and the World Rugby U20 Trophy this July as eight international age-grade sides fight for promotion to the World Rugby U20 Championship in 2025.
Played over four match days at Hive Stadium (2-17 July), Scotland will hope to make the most of home advantage to claim the title and return to the U20 Championship for the first time since they were relegated in 2018.
Kenny Murray’s side been placed in Pool A with Japan, Hong Kong China and the Oceania qualifier while the Pool B will see U20 Trophy debutants the Netherlands facing Uruguay and qualified teams from Africa and North America.
While five teams are already confirmed, three nations must still qualify via regional competitions in Africa, North America and Oceania.
Samoa and Tonga will meet in the Oceania play-off on 8 March in Auckland, New Zealand with the winner joining the U20 Trophy line-up, while Africa will be represented by the U20 Barthés Trophy champion and North America by the winner of a play-off between Canada and USA.
The World Rugby U20 Trophy 2024 participating teams are: Japan (relegated from the U20 Championship in 2023), Scotland (hosts), Hong Kong China (Asia), Netherlands (Europe), Uruguay (South America) and Africa, North America and Oceania representatives.
Ya dancer, if “ The Plan” works out in terms of time, I’ll back living near Embra in time for that
clydecloggie wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 10:05 am
While it's great to see this comp in Scotland, I remain miffed that Scotland is in it because they have no claim to be one of the competing teams. Pure Tier 1 apartheid this.
Lots of close calls.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 9:53 amI didn’t get as far as the bench but we have pretty much the same players if I’d included the five extras. I considered Rennie but his injury record made me discard him. Rambo was terrific but my memory of Bulloch throwing to Murray is that was our best ever lineout.
As much as I love WP Nel, and thank dog he was available for Scotland in his prime, because we had no one else bar a callow Fagerson, I think Fagerson offers more around the park.
Barclay v Kelly Brown is too close to call for me. Beattie jnr should have been held in the same esteem as Parisse, by all accounts it all came too easy to him and he never really had to try so he never got to the level he could have.
Subtle "you're all due me a beer" post.
That rumour on selection in the front row as a teenager confirmed here:KingBlairhorn wrote: ↑Sat Feb 03, 2024 11:25 amI also missed the second half but I saw enough to think this crop are better than previous years.Big D wrote: ↑Fri Feb 02, 2024 10:41 pmSome very frustrating errors in the bits of the 2nd half I saw. Lots of decent stuff too though.S/Lt_Phillips wrote: ↑Fri Feb 02, 2024 10:03 pm
In didn't see the second half - presumably more good stuff undone by the lineout and daft mistakes?
Apparently, and this is just a rumour, Blyth-Lafferty was withdrawn not through injury but due to tournament rules. The chat is you have to be 18 to scrum in U20 rugby for player welfare reasons. Anyone else hear the same? Poor show from the coaches to make an error like that if true.
Some very frustrating errors in the bits of the 2nd half I saw. Lots of decent stuff too though.KingBlairhorn wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 4:55 pm [quote=KingBlairhorn post_id=338120 time=<a href="tel:1706959548">1706959548</a> user_id=465]
[quote="Big D" post_id=338069 time=<a href="tel:1706913667">1706913667</a> user_id=371]
[quote=S/Lt_Phillips post_id=338057 time=<a href="tel:1706911398">1706911398</a> user_id=271]
In didn't see the second half - presumably more good stuff undone by the lineout and daft mistakes?
I also missed the second half but I saw enough to think this crop are better than previous years.SomersetJock wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 8:44 pmSome very frustrating errors in the bits of the 2nd half I saw. Lots of decent stuff too though.KingBlairhorn wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 4:55 pm [quote=KingBlairhorn post_id=338120 time=<a href="tel:1706959548">1706959548</a> user_id=465]
[quote="Big D" post_id=338069 time=<a href="tel:1706913667">1706913667</a> user_id=371]
[quote=S/Lt_Phillips post_id=338057 time=<a href="tel:1706911398">1706911398</a> user_id=271]
In didn't see the second half - presumably more good stuff undone by the lineout and daft mistakes?
Big D wrote: ↑Thu Feb 08, 2024 8:11 pm Said this on the match thread thread.
Darge really needs to have a break out 6N/international season and be the 7 we all think he can be at that level.
Need a lot more from the back row than a high tackle count from each of them this week.
Game will rise or fall up front.
Got to say I do have some sympathy. 19 times they were pinged (16 pens, 2 others where advantage was over, 1 free kick).
Equally the ref was pinging Wales early on to the point he warned them after eight minutes. They adjusted to him, we didn’t.topofthemoon wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 12:22 amGot to say I do have some sympathy. 19 times they were pinged (16 pens, 2 others where advantage was over, 1 free kick).
5 at attacking rucks: 3 where there were Welsh offences that could as easily have been whistled. 1 where the ref just didn't see what actually happened. 1 so borderline with Scotland metres from a try it really stood out in comparison to the ref generally favouring the attacking team.
3 at scrums: 3 toss of a coin calls that could have gone against Wales or been reset on another day.
3 offsides: all 3 of a toe over the line nature. Would only take a few minutes to find instances of players in similar positions not getting penalised (including the very final play of the game and the Welshman who tackled van der Merwe on the goal line).
3 off feet, slowing ball at a tackle: 2 were 50/50, the other was a rank bad decision by the ref.
2 high tackles: both seatbelts and both marginal whether contact was actually made with the neck.
1 maul collapse: the only egregiously daft act.
1 contact in the air at the lineout: as soft as they come.
1 tackling while on the ground: after the ball was passed and wholly immaterial to the game.
After their review I think Scotland's work ons from the above won't really be related to discipline with the exception of take an extra step at rucks and don't do dumb shit with mauls that are travelling at speed (George...)
- better work to be in position to make clear outs, especially when breaks happen
- keep in the defensive line to avoid needing to make over the shoulder tackles
If even 3 or 4 of those decisions go Scotland's way it breaks Wales' momentum and the comeback doesn't happen.
That game could be replayed 100 times (same ref, different ref, whatever) and you wouldn't get a sequence of 17 infringements in a row going against Scotland. It's such a freak occurrence I don't think you can legislate or prepare for it.
Aye, there's a fair number of those kinds of offsides at rucks by Wales subsequent to the warning. Also other infringements in a similar kind of vein, including:Tichtheid wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:27 am
He warned them that after three offsides the next one would be a yellow card, then didn't penalise them for another hour or so, despite there being a good few examples of the same type of "offside" that Cummings was pinged for and you can clearly hear O'Keefe telling Wales to get back onside "take a step red" after the warning.
I'm not exactly sure what adjustment Wales made.
Part 2 of the match preview:topofthemoon wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 9:36 pm For Scotland Rugby News, part 1 of the match preview for Scotland v France this Saturday.
- 500 championship matches;
- why it's likely to take a high score to beat France;
- previous history with referee, Nic Berry.
https://www.scotlandrugbynews.com/analy ... r-referee/
Watched the second half. Scotland genuinely played well, final score 29-14. Gave themselves too much to do in the end, but they showed a lot of heart and this wasn’t a shaming by any measure. Our No 10 will have nightmares about twice missing touch when kicking to the corner.KingBlairhorn wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:35 pm I feel a bit for the u20s here, 19-0 feels a bit harsh, they’ve played okay. France ruthless though and their backs are electric, Scotland have nobody with that kind of verve.
Night and day between these u20s and the last few years IMO. That second half was good and a little bit more execution (4 kicked dead by Coates?) it might have been a one score game. The scrum was broadly good against the French monsters and the maul defence was excellent at times.KingBlairhorn wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:35 pm I feel a bit for the u20s here, 19-0 feels a bit harsh, they’ve played okay. France ruthless though and their backs are electric, Scotland have nobody with that kind of verve.
Maybe, just maybe, the Super 6 is actually working?KingBlairhorn wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 9:53 pmNight and day between these u20s and the last few years IMO. That second half was good and a little bit more execution (4 kicked dead by Coates?) it might have been a one score game. The scrum was broadly good against the French monsters and the maul defence was excellent at times.KingBlairhorn wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:35 pm I feel a bit for the u20s here, 19-0 feels a bit harsh, they’ve played okay. France ruthless though and their backs are electric, Scotland have nobody with that kind of verve.
Perhaps things aren’t quite as bad as they seem.