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Author Topic: World Cup Rugby  (Read 61711 times)

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Offline binnsy

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #135 on: October 06, 2011, 08:46:34 AM »
Toby Flood will start at centre outside Jonny Wilkinson for England in their World Cup quarter-final against France.

Flood replaces Mike Tindall, who suffered a dead leg against Scotland, while Wilkinson has shaken off an arm injury.

expect Mark Cueto returns on the left wing as ted for the suspended Delon Armitage.

James Haskell loses the number eight jersey to Nick Easter, while lock Tom Palmer starts ahead of Courtney Lawes.

Haskell and Lawes both have to settle for a place among the replacements, where veteran Simon Shaw provides another second-row option as manager Martin Johnson opts for five forwards on the bench and only two backs.

"James is particularly unlucky not to start," Johnson admitted. "But it is far more of a 22-man effort on the day than ever before.

Continue reading the main story Mike and Manu have played well together but this gives us different options on the field. But it is a tough call when you have to leave out guys like Mike
Johnson on picking Flood at 12
 "It was a particularly hard call and I said that in front of the team, that he [Haskell] didn't deserve it the way he has played.

"But he will still have a massive impact on the match. Everyone wants to start but your role is no less coming off the bench."

Johnson said Tindall "has been sore all week" and unable to train fully with the team, although hinted that his omission was not entirely down to fitness.

"By Saturday he would be touch and go, that is part of the equation with Mike, and Toby has played really well," he explained.

"Mike and Manu [Tuilagi] have played well together but this gives us different options on the field. But it is a tough call when you have to leave out guys like Mike."

Flood has played at 12 outside fly-half Wilkinson on 15 occasions for England, and Johnson denied starting with both his pivots was a gamble.

"You always put a lot of thought into your selection, no moreso than for a World Cup quarter-final," he added.

England team: B Foden (Northampton Saints); C Ashton (Northampton Saints), M Tuilagi (Leicester Tigers), T Flood (Leicester Tigers), M Cueto (Sale Sharks); J Wilkinson (Toulon), B Youngs (Leicester Tigers); M Stevens (Saracens), S Thompson (London Wasps), D Cole (Leicester Tigers), L Deacon (Leicester Tigers), T Palmer (Stade Francais), T Croft (Leicester Tigers), L Moody (Bath Rugby, capt), N Easter (Harlequins). Replacements: D Hartley (Northampton Saints), A Corbisiero (London Irish), C Lawes (Northampton Saints), S Shaw (Unattached), J Haskell (Ricoh Black Rams), R Wigglesworth (Saracens), M Banahan (Bath Rugby).

Offline candy

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #136 on: October 06, 2011, 08:54:30 AM »
 franceflag

Offline candy

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #137 on: October 06, 2011, 09:16:14 AM »
26 Feb 2011   England   17 - 9   France
     20 Mar 2010   France   12 - 10   England
     15 Mar 2009   England   34 - 10   France
     23 Feb 2008   France   13 - 24   England
     13 Oct 2007   France   9 - 14   England
     18 Aug 2007   France   22 - 9   England
     11 Aug 2007   England   15 - 21   France
     11 Mar 2007   England   26 - 18   France
     12 Mar 2006   France   31 - 6   England
     13 Feb 2005   England   17 - 18   France
     27 Mar 2004   France   24 - 21   England
Looks about even to me.

Offline JAI P.E.A.

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #138 on: October 06, 2011, 09:29:17 AM »
  boxingguy  slapfight  bravo1, SEE YOU IN THE FINAL  redman

Offline candy

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #139 on: October 07, 2011, 07:57:19 AM »
For our Celtic cousins.The Irish are the Welsh that could swim. irelandflag
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=5H4t1kDG1Mg#t=8s

Offline candy

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #140 on: October 07, 2011, 08:00:04 AM »

Offline smithy99

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #141 on: October 07, 2011, 09:17:55 AM »
Dont forget to Lay the All Blacks its time to make some money


Lay Lay lay the All Blacks ridiculous odds



Offline Paddyram

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #142 on: October 07, 2011, 05:04:05 PM »
For our Celtic cousins.The Irish are the Welsh that could swim. irelandflag
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=5H4t1kDG1Mg#t=8s

Other way around actually, but you gave us St. Patrick so lets not quibble.

Offline smithy99

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #143 on: October 08, 2011, 06:53:13 PM »











 redman       redman

Offline smithy99

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #144 on: October 08, 2011, 06:58:55 PM »
Congratulations WALES


« Last Edit: October 08, 2011, 07:03:49 PM by smithy99 »

Offline Paddyram

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #145 on: October 09, 2011, 03:21:53 AM »
Congradulations Wales, stuffed us good and you deserved the win.  Now go on and f@#kin win the thing now.

Offline JAI P.E.A.

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #146 on: October 09, 2011, 10:30:26 AM »
  icon_must  icon_latest Despite losing 19-12 to France and exiting the World Cup at the quarter-final stage, manager Martin Johnson says the majority of his side have their best days ahead of them.  :D

The former World Cup winner says his team suffered because they didn't take their chances and made too many mistakes. buttslap

But Johnson, whose contract ends in December, declined to discuss his future in the role.
 newsleeping

Offline JAI P.E.A.

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #147 on: October 09, 2011, 10:47:05 AM »
Magnificent Wales reach World Cup semi-finals.  redman bravo1
Hats off to a magnificent Welsh display. Hats off to the mastermind Warren Gatland, to the inspirational captain Sam Warburton, and to the happy band of colourful Welsh supporters who make every game seem like a World Cup final. Their passion breathes life into each and every one of their contests.

 

I want to isolate one man though, because despite the three excellent Welsh tries, the victory over Ireland was built on a teak-tough defence.

 

The man in charge of that particular area of high impact is Shaun Edwards, and he is doing a wonderful job. Ireland were not at their marauding best, but they asked a lot of questions, especially in the first half.


To give you some idea, the Welsh had completed 85 tackles at half time, compared to 46 by the Irishmen. Lock forward Luke Charteris had made 16 of those by himself, before withdrawing, injured, from the field of battle.

 



 
Wales reached their first World Cup semi-finals in 24 years and on this evidence Sam Warbuton's side will fancy their chances of reaching a maiden World Cup final. PHOTO: Getty

Wales knew they had to withstand the Irish barrage, and the only way to do that was by throwing their bodies on the line repeatedly. Normally the defensive plaudits would head in the direction of the back row, and indeed they should this time, too. But the efforts of the entire team were staggering.


Who was underneath a pile of bodies preventing a try by Sean O’Brien after a quarter of an hour? It was probably the smallest man on the pitch, Shane Williams.

Not content with a scorching opening try to set the tone, the former World Player of the Year catapulted himself into harm’s way in order to preserve his side’s lead. It was a moment which epitomised the collective Welsh desire.

Edwards’ contribution was not simply to ensure the defensive structure was robust. He and Gatland have been working on a strategy for some weeks now. It involves a return to one of the fundaments of the game – tackling the opposition low down, to prevent any momentum.

“We were trying to take the Irish feet from under them straight away” said Gatland. “We looked at the Italian game last week, and Italy went too high against Ireland. Our focus was to go very low, and try to deny their ball-carriers any go-forward.”

 

Edwards is not a man to dish out praise in a hurry, but he was purring afterwards, saying: “The leg-tackling was of the highest order. We’ve spent a lot of time in the last few months trying to reinvent the art of leg-tackling. To do that you need players with technique and courage, and we definitely had that.”

 

Needless to say, all that defending saps the energy. Whilst the Irish laboured over their rucks, shovelled slow ball out to their ball-carriers and became more desperate with every passing second-half minute, the Welsh remained spring-heeled.

 

This is where the benefits of a painful trip to Poland bore fruit. The cryogenic chambers, the ice baths and the spartan conditions almost certainly offered little in the way of fun. But the benefits were on display inside the Cake Tin. Chips down, lungs bursting, Welshmen manned the barricades.

 

“Our defence was absolutely outstanding, and it shows what good shape the guys are in. They were getting excited about defending without the ball,” said Gatland.

 

Ireland will be distressed that they failed to rediscover the magic of their previous wins over Australia and Italy. The fury was missing, the penetration lacking, the accuracy gone.

 

For periods of the first half they had opportunities galore, possession galore, territory galore, but little to show in the way of a reward. Wales’ defence was magnificent, but a side packed with Grand Slam winners and Heineken Cup champions should have found a way through.

 

The two second-half tries they conceded were soft, from an Irish perspective. There was no-one home on the blindside for Mike Phillips' cheeky score, and Jonathan Davies was waved through the midfield by Cian Healy and Keith Earls.

 

For many of this Ireland team, there will be no more World Cups. Brian O’Driscoll, Ronan O’Gara, Gordon D’Arcy and Paul O’Connell will not be around for 2015. For such warriors of the Irish cause, it was a deeply disappointing way to end a campaign so full of promise after that victory over the Wallabies.

 

So the Welsh are left to fly the flag of the home unions into the remaining fortnight Down Under. They will fly it with pride, and a spirit of adventure. They are an overwhelmingly young group, cutting impressive figures here: driven, single-minded, fearless and friendly. In the interviews after the game I was struck by the calm responses from the players as they head towards a semi-final clash with England’s conquerors France.

 

There was a contentment, a satisfaction at a job well done, but no jubilation, no over-excitement. As their remarkably mature 23-year-old captain Warburton said, “we’ve won nothing yet”.

 

Indeed they haven’t, but a World Cup final place is now well within the Welsh grasp, and a fairytale ending is not out of the question. There were grown men clad from head-to-toe in red, leaping uncontrollably into each other’s arms as the final whistle blew in Wellington. If it all ends tomorrow, this Welsh team has already made a lot of people very happy. love5 party4 redman punk bananadance party14 spot1

 

 

Offline Happylarry

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #148 on: October 09, 2011, 11:04:18 AM »
Going out in the semis is marginally better than going in the quarters I suppose. Still worth f-all at the end of the day.

Offline JAI P.E.A.

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Re: World Cup Rugby
« Reply #149 on: October 09, 2011, 11:27:43 AM »
QUOTE, There was a contentment, a satisfaction at a job well done, but no jubilation, no over-excitement. As their remarkably mature 23-year-old captain Warburton said, “we’ve won nothing yet”.Indeed they haven’t,If it all ends tomorrow, this Welsh team has already made a lot of people very happy.  party4 bravo1. HAPPYLARRY ? STOP EATING THOSE SOUR GRAPE'S   punk bananadance redman   

 

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