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Champions Cup 2019/20

2456716

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 11,790 ✭✭✭✭Burkie1203


    Great defence from Zebo here. Real xfactor



    https://twitter.com/jaredwright17/status/1205596564221132800?s=19


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,498 ✭✭✭Paul Smeenus


    He just utterly can't be bothered.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 321 ✭✭171170


    He just utterly can't be bothered.

    It wasn't the only tackle he didn't bother to make on Friday evening. He looked good on the attack, but was incredibly lackadaisical in defence. As, in fairness, were a few of the other Racing players after they reckoned the game was in the bag, the exceptions being Chavancy and Imhoff who never gave up.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Eh lads - they won by a country mile, tackling is optional at that point.

    Albeit it's the attitude I wouldn't associate with genuine contenders.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,967 ✭✭✭✭The Lost Sheep


    sydthebeat wrote: »
    its not a "far better" rule

    it may suit this european league, but as a domestic league system, where stopping the opposition getting a TBP is valuable to each team....
    it absolutely isnt a far better system.

    Ive seen super rugby switch from the standardised system to the french system (in 2016 onwards) and the qualit it ay of games improved immensely

    you no longer had teams throwing in the towel after going down heavy in the first half... and you no longer had teams basically stop playing after getting 4 tries.

    its probably not workable in the HC because its basically 5 separate leagues where restricting a TBP doesnt really help the losing team.... but i will argue all day that in a season long domestic league its a FAR better system than the one the Pro 14 and Premiership employ.
    I dont see how a system where only one side can be rewarded for converting attacking opportunities is better though.
    I cant comment on super rugby as I dont watch it enough/at all really.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,211 ✭✭✭✭Clegg


    Eh lads - they won by a country mile, tackling is optional at that point.

    Albeit it's the attitude I wouldn't associate with genuine contenders.

    It's a pattern with Zebo tho. He's not a small man. He has plenty of weight to throw around and make a big hit if he wants, but he just doesn't. I remember the Pro 14 semi final at the RDS last year. Came on as a sub, crabbed across the pitch and ate up all potential attacking space for Munster. Three a few Hollywood passes into touch and did a brilliant turnstiles impression to let Lowe carry right over him. When Zebo can't be arsed it really shows.


  • Subscribers Posts: 41,836 ✭✭✭✭sydthebeat


    I dont see how a system where only one side can be rewarded for converting attacking opportunities is better though.
    I cant comment on super rugby as I dont watch it enough/at all really.

    Can you see why it makes for more competitive games?

    And if you can, can you see why, over the course of a season, it's a better system for real meritocratic results.


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,767 ✭✭✭✭molloyjh


    I'm with TLS here. I dont see how denying a team a point in a cup competition makes any sense compared to rewarding a team. If you're playing the team coming first and you're playing for second, as Northampton were yesterday, there is absolutely nothing in it for them denying us a TBP. Nothing. Why would they bother? Getting the TBP for themselves is far more likely to make them play the 80 rather than fly the white flag early on.


  • Subscribers Posts: 41,836 ✭✭✭✭sydthebeat


    molloyjh wrote: »
    I'm with TLS here. I dont see how denying a team a point in a cup competition makes any sense compared to rewarding a team. If you're playing the team coming first and you're playing for second, as Northampton were yesterday, there is absolutely nothing in it for them denying us a TBP. Nothing. Why would they bother? Getting the TBP for themselves is far more likely to make them play the 80 rather than fly the white flag early on.

    To clarify, I've already said it's unworkable in Europe.

    Much better in a domestic league though


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,967 ✭✭✭✭The Lost Sheep


    sydthebeat wrote: »
    Can you see why it makes for more competitive games?

    And if you can, can you see why, over the course of a season, it's a better system for real meritocratic results.
    maybe but it completely disadvantages one side in every game. It doesnt allow for real meritocracy in that way.
    It completely ignores the role one side can play in a game. A side who loses can never get 2 match points. I dont see why that is better either


  • Subscribers Posts: 41,836 ✭✭✭✭sydthebeat


    maybe but it completely disadvantages one side in every game. It doesnt allow for real meritocracy in that way.
    It completely ignores the role one side can play in a game. A side who loses can never get 2 match points. I dont see why that is better either

    Yeah you need to watch it in action over a whole league season, because its pretty much the opposite of what you've posted above.


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,767 ✭✭✭✭molloyjh


    sydthebeat wrote: »
    Yeah you need to watch it in action over a whole league season, because its pretty much the opposite of what you've posted above.

    Even in a league scenario, if you're Cheetahs playing Leinster tomorrow then you're not playing them to top the conference, you're playing them to get into the playoffs and Europe. You want points, you dont care if you deny Leinster points or not.

    If you're playing Glasgow then what's the difference in Glasgow winning the game 4-0 or 5-1? Glasgow still get 4 points more, but Cheetahs would be a point closer to Ulster. Surely that would be preferable? Denying a point only affects your position vs that single opponent. Gaining a point affects your position vs everyone.


  • Subscribers Posts: 41,836 ✭✭✭✭sydthebeat


    molloyjh wrote: »
    Even in a league scenario, if you're Cheetahs playing Leinster tomorrow then you're not playing them to top the conference, you're playing them to get into the playoffs and Europe. You want points, you dont care if you deny Leinster points or not.

    If you're playing Glasgow then what's the difference in Glasgow winning the game 4-0 or 5-1? Glasgow still get 4 points more, but Cheetahs would be a point closer to Ulster. Surely that would be preferable? Denying a point only affects your position vs that single opponent. Gaining a point affects your position vs everyone.

    we complain every year about the disparity between teams... knowing the pro14 is just a procession for leinster. Last year leinster were qualified for a home semi with what, 5? games to go?? thats down to the fact that they get so far ahead in the other part of the season through amassing TBPs
    they lost 2 and drew one in their last 3 games..... results that arguably affected the league situation. This affects the integrity of the competition.. leinster can rest players for their closing games and pull back the rested big guns for the semi and final.


    in the last super rugby season with the standard bonus system, there were 64 TBPs awarded (16 rounds).

    in the 4 super rugby seasons since, in which the french system has been in place... the highest number of TBPs has been 54, with 40 and 44 over the last 2 seasons (16 rounds) so thats on average 2.625 TBPs per round over the last 2 seasons.

    the pro 14 had on average 4.9 TBPs per round last year....... so almost double.

    you would be foolish to think that, over the course of a season, this degree of amassing of TBPs doesnt distort the league ... and only serves to widen the gap between the good and not so good teams.

    and as a follower of SRXV i can certainly attest that the standard of games improved immensely from the previous system. You still get hammerings as you would, but you also get games where a last minute try for the opposition can serious affect your play off chances.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,558 ✭✭✭Ardillaun


    Zebo was less than ideally positioned for two of Ospreys’ tries.


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,767 ✭✭✭✭molloyjh


    sydthebeat wrote: »
    we complain every year about the disparity between teams... knowing the pro14 is just a procession for leinster. Last year leinster were qualified for a home semi with what, 5? games to go?? thats down to the fact that they get so far ahead in the other part of the season through amassing TBPs
    they lost 2 and drew one in their last 3 games..... results that arguably affected the league situation. This affects the integrity of the competition.. leinster can rest players for their closing games and pull back the rested big guns for the semi and final.


    in the last super rugby season with the standard bonus system, there were 64 TBPs awarded (16 rounds).

    in the 4 super rugby seasons since, in which the french system has been in place... the highest number of TBPs has been 54, with 40 and 44 over the last 2 seasons (16 rounds) so thats on average 2.625 TBPs per round over the last 2 seasons.

    the pro 14 had on average 4.9 TBPs per round last year....... so almost double.

    you would be foolish to think that, over the course of a season, this degree of amassing of TBPs doesnt distort the league ... and only serves to widen the gap between the good and not so good teams.

    and as a follower of SRXV i can certainly attest that the standard of games improved immensely from the previous system. You still get hammerings as you would, but you also get games where a last minute try for the opposition can serious affect your play off chances.

    How many of the TBPs that you are counting there went to the winning team, and how many to the losing team? Is the analysis comparing like with like?

    Last season Leinster won 17 games. Even without any BPs at all that's 68 points. Ulster with all of their BPs got 67. So Leinster had top spot secured regardless of BPs.

    When you're competing in any league I would assume earning points for yourselves that benefit you vs all other opponents is far more preferable to denying another team a point that may have little or no impact on your overall league position. That works doubly so for leagues set up as conferences. In the event of Leinster having 4 tries and a healthy lead, why would Munster care about denying Leinster a TBP? Surely they would look to play for the full 80 to get an extra point for themselves under the current rules, but be far less likely to play for the 80 if there was nothing in it for them to do so under the French rules?

    The more I think about it the less convinced I am by the French rules. As I said before, what's the difference between 5-1 and 4-0 other than the fact that both teams end up on less points in the latter scenario? They still end up on the same relative to each other, but less relative to everyone else. Neither team actually benefit from that, in fact both lose out. So how does that encourage teams?

    Maybe a better solution is to have a tiered BP system. Lose by 7 or less and get a LBP. Lose by, let's say, 10 or less and get 4 tries and get a TBP. That way the TBP isnt available to teams who get thumped, but you're still offering rewards for sides to remain competitive????


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  • Subscribers Posts: 41,836 ✭✭✭✭sydthebeat


    Less points being available throughout the season equals a more competitive league.

    Is that not what we want?

    Its just a shift in mind set.
    If all team can see the value in denying their opposition a TBP then everyone puts equal weight to it.... You get better games, the competition lasting for longer into the game.

    You don't get teams taking the foot off the pedal after 40 mins and the opposition running in late tries after being hammered.

    Those losing TBPs distort the meritocracy of the games, and therefore the league.

    Is the goal not to make the Pro14 a better spectacle and a more competitive league?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,615 ✭✭✭Dubinusa


    Rewatched the Leinster match and heard the commentator suggest the English sides are at a disadvantage? This has been a story that's been going around for a while! He was commenting on the IRFU and the international players. I assume. His grievance was about the pro 14, no relegation and the welfare program for the international lads!
    So, what can the English sides do? Obviously, raise the salary cap! Why wouldn't they? If they wish to be competitive, they should raise it!
    Almost every side in the premiership is loaded with international mercenaries. Sale is becoming Shangri la for Boks, like Munster. Lol. Every team has an all black or Aussie or P.I representation. More so than pro 14 sides.
    They talk about a B and I league. But what's the cost? Will the provinces go for a league with relegation? Could we instil a salary cap? Would that constrain the provinces. It's ridiculous imo, that the English union with vastly more resources are whinging about unfairness?


  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    Dubinusa wrote: »
    Rewatched the Leinster match and heard the commentator suggest the English sides are at a disadvantage? This has been a story that's been going around for a while! He was commenting on the IRFU and the international players. I assume. His grievance was about the pro 14, no relegation and the welfare program for the international lads!
    So, what can the English sides do? Obviously, raise the salary cap! Why wouldn't they? If they wish to be competitive, they should raise it!
    Almost every side in the premiership is loaded with international mercenaries. Sale is becoming Shangri la for Boks, like Munster. Lol. Every team has an all black or Aussie or P.I representation. More so than pro 14 sides.
    They talk about a B and I league. But what's the cost? Will the provinces go for a league with relegation? Could we instil a salary cap? Would that constrain the provinces. It's ridiculous imo, that the English union with vastly more resources are whinging about unfairness?

    Some of the complaints are entirely valid. We just don’t like to hear it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,375 ✭✭✭✭prawnsambo


    Dubinusa wrote: »
    Rewatched the Leinster match and heard the commentator suggest the English sides are at a disadvantage? This has been a story that's been going around for a while! He was commenting on the IRFU and the international players. I assume. His grievance was about the pro 14, no relegation and the welfare program for the international lads!
    So, what can the English sides do? Obviously, raise the salary cap! Why wouldn't they? If they wish to be competitive, they should raise it!
    Almost every side in the premiership is loaded with international mercenaries. Sale is becoming Shangri la for Boks, like Munster. Lol. Every team has an all black or Aussie or P.I representation. More so than pro 14 sides.
    They talk about a B and I league. But what's the cost? Will the provinces go for a league with relegation? Could we instil a salary cap? Would that constrain the provinces. It's ridiculous imo, that the English union with vastly more resources are whinging about unfairness?
    The reason for the salary cap and the problem with raising it is that clubs will go bust. Afaik, only one club in the Premiership made money last year (or perhaps it was the year before). In any case, it was Exeter with Leicester making a small loss. The rest made losses, some of them eye-watering and it's only the existence of the Nigel Wrays of this world that are keeping them going.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    prawnsambo wrote: »
    The reason for the salary cap and the problem with raising it is that clubs will go bust. Afaik, only one club in the Premiership made money last year (or perhaps it was the year before). In any case, it was Exeter with Leicester making a small loss. The rest made losses, some of them eye-watering and it's only the existence of the Nigel Wrays of this world that are keeping them going.

    The provinces would all be loss making too if money wasn't pumped in by the IRFU.

    I do not know much about the story in France, do their clubs stay in the black?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,293 ✭✭✭MarinersBlues


    Dubinusa wrote: »
    Rewatched the Leinster match and heard the commentator suggest the English sides are at a disadvantage? This has been a story that's been going around for a while! He was commenting on the IRFU and the international players. I assume. His grievance was about the pro 14, no relegation and the welfare program for the international lads!
    So, what can the English sides do? Obviously, raise the salary cap! Why wouldn't they? If they wish to be competitive, they should raise it!
    Almost every side in the premiership is loaded with international mercenaries. Sale is becoming Shangri la for Boks, like Munster. Lol. Every team has an all black or Aussie or P.I representation. More so than pro 14 sides.
    They talk about a B and I league. But what's the cost? Will the provinces go for a league with relegation? Could we instil a salary cap? Would that constrain the provinces. It's ridiculous imo, that the English union with vastly more resources are whinging about unfairness?

    They had the same spiel before Gloucester v Connacht on BT.
    Warburton was the one pushing it - focusing on the lack of relegation as the main advantage. The only Pro14 team in the Champions Cup who currently benefit from a lack of relegation are Ospreys and they aren't exactly making hay in Europe!
    Pat Lam was getting in on the act as well, which was a bit disappointing.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    They had the same spiel before Gloucester v Connacht on BT.
    Warburton was the one pushing it - focusing on the lack of relegation as the main advantage. The only Pro14 team in the Champions Cup who currently benefit from a lack of relegation are Ospreys and they aren't exactly making hay in Europe!
    Pat Lam was getting in on the act as well, which was a bit disappointing.
    Or maybe indicative that there is actually real merit in what is being said, when a guy who has coached in both setups is saying the same thing?

    We like to dismiss this stuff out of hand as whinging etc because it doesn't suit our narrative that the Pro14 system is great and fair and the privately-owned system is bad and unfair.


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭✭ Halle Inexpensive Sheepskin


    awec wrote: »
    The provinces would all be loss making too if money wasn't pumped in by the IRFU.

    I do not know much about the story in France, do their clubs stay in the black?

    This is not a good comparison for all sorts of reasons. The IRFU, which the provinces are part of, lives within its means.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    This is not a good comparison for all sorts of reasons. The IRFU, which the provinces are part of, lives within its means.

    IMO it's a fair comparison.

    What is the difference between money being pumped in from Nigel Wray, and money being pumped in from the IRFU? In both cases, it is money being put in to keep the lights on. For some reason, we've decided one scenario is good and the other bad.


  • Subscribers Posts: 41,836 ✭✭✭✭sydthebeat


    awec wrote: »
    IMO it's a fair comparison.

    What is the difference between money being pumped in from Nigel Wray, and money being pumped in from the IRFU? In both cases, it is money being put in to keep the lights on. For some reason, we've decided one scenario is good and the other bad.

    because the IRFU still has to be profit making from the business of rugby.

    Nigel Wray is funnelling funds from his activities outside of rugby to artificially inflate the value of the english premiership.


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭✭ Halle Inexpensive Sheepskin


    awec wrote: »
    IMO it's a fair comparison.

    What is the difference between money being pumped in from Nigel Wray, and money being pumped in from the IRFU? In both cases, it is money being put in to keep the lights on. For some reason, we've decided one scenario is good and the other bad.

    You're talking about the provinces as if they aren't part of the IRFU. It's all one organisation and again, it is set up to live within its means. Every player at every province is ultimately an IRFU employee. The national team generates the majority of money in the pro game here with players that develop at the provinces. If Caelin Doris or Ronan Kelleher get capped this year it's because the Leinster academy have done their job. One of the main reasosns the IRFU exists is to promote the professional game in Ireland and it allocates its resources accordingly.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,293 ✭✭✭MarinersBlues


    awec wrote: »
    IMO it's a fair comparison.

    What is the difference between money being pumped in from Nigel Wray, and money being pumped in from the IRFU? In both cases, it is money being put in to keep the lights on. For some reason, we've decided one scenario is good and the other bad.

    The sole focus of the Irish system is to promote the sport in Ireland. The focus of the Aviva seems to be to facilitate TV companies making money for tv companies.

    The Irish system prolongs careers and invests in the community. The English/French system imports people from poor parts if the world and runs them into the ground

    The Irish system is proven to be sustainable the French/ English system is proven to not be sustainable.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    The sole focus of the Irish system is to promote the sport in Ireland. The focus of the Aviva seems to be to facilitate TV companies making money for tv companies.

    The Irish system prolongs careers and invests in the community. The English/French system imports people from poor parts if the world and runs them into the ground

    The Irish system is proven to be sustainable the French/ English system is proven to not be sustainable.

    Does it? Do you have data to back this up?

    Again, this is something we like to say, but as far as I am aware there is no evidence whatsoever that Irish players have longer careers than their English or French counterparts. There is not a shred of evidence that the system does anything at all.

    I am not so sure our system has proven to be sustainable, nor has theirs proven to be unsustainable. Again, this is something we've just decided.

    Our league is a joke, and this is a product of the system.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 27,270 Mod ✭✭✭✭Podge_irl


    awec wrote: »
    Or maybe indicative that there is actually real merit in what is being said, when a guy who has coached in both setups is saying the same thing?

    We like to dismiss this stuff out of hand as whinging etc because it doesn't suit our narrative that the Pro14 system is great and fair and the privately-owned system is bad and unfair.

    I think the funding argument is valid, but they could relegate half the Pro14 every year and Leinster still wouldn't care.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    Podge_irl wrote: »
    I think the funding argument is valid, but they could relegate half the Pro14 every year and Leinster still wouldn't care.

    Agreed, I think the relegation thing specifically is a bit of a red herring, it's not as if there are any other teams worth promoting to replace them.

    The fact that you have a league where 14 teams are owned by just 5 owners is the underlying problem. There is a reason that this sort of setup is generally not permitted by most, if not all serious sporting leagues.

    Not that I expect anything to change, but some of their complaints are definitely entirely valid. I don't think the current rugby setups are going to last long term to be honest.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 24,767 ✭✭✭✭molloyjh


    sydthebeat wrote: »
    Less points being available throughout the season equals a more competitive league.

    Is that not what we want?

    Its just a shift in mind set.
    If all team can see the value in denying their opposition a TBP then everyone puts equal weight to it.... You get better games, the competition lasting for longer into the game.

    You don't get teams taking the foot off the pedal after 40 mins and the opposition running in late tries after being hammered.

    Those losing TBPs distort the meritocracy of the games, and therefore the league.

    Is the goal not to make the Pro14 a better spectacle and a more competitive league?

    Was the original point not just about what goes on in games, i.e. that teams on the end of a hockeying should never get anything from the game?

    Less points may mean a more competitive league, but less points on offer in games would make less competitive matches. As I said, why would a team from conference A care a jot about denying a BP to a team from conference A? Why would 5th place care about denying 1st place a TBP? In those scenarios surely the losing team would be inclined to hang on in games more when there is something on offer for them?

    And why exactly does less points mean more competition? I'm sure at times it does and at other times it doesnt. Points are at more of a premium, sure, but the more teams can get from games the more they have to fight for each week and the more they could catch up with others in the league. Meaning those teams they are in direct competition with need to consider that and look to maximise their points as a result. This reduces the margin for error in tight battles in the tables.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,375 ✭✭✭✭prawnsambo


    awec wrote: »
    The provinces would all be loss making too if money wasn't pumped in by the IRFU.

    I do not know much about the story in France, do their clubs stay in the black?
    I'm not sure all the provinces would be loss making. Leinster for example, would be close enough with the payouts from the EPCR and getting paydays from matches in Lansdowne. Presumably sponsorship would be significant as well. But it's apples and oranges comparing the IRFU's support of the provinces with the 'sugar daddies' supporting Premiership clubs. The IRFU can't walk away, rugby is its business and the provinces are a vital part of its player development programme.

    There's never much (if any) talk of French clubs under pressure financially. Gate receipts would form a big part of their income and then there's also the 'sugar daddy' factor. They've always had massive budgets, so something has to be keeping that money flowing in.


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,767 ✭✭✭✭molloyjh


    awec wrote: »
    IMO it's a fair comparison.

    What is the difference between money being pumped in from Nigel Wray, and money being pumped in from the IRFU? In both cases, it is money being put in to keep the lights on. For some reason, we've decided one scenario is good and the other bad.

    I wouldnt call one good and the other bad. I would call one clearly more sustainable and therefore more stable. But the fundamental difference in the 2 countries means what works for one may not work for the other. Could the RFU manage a dozen clubs the way the IRFU manages 4? Probably not. Do they need the same level of control? Probably not.

    Ultimately it's the individual clubs where we will see the differences. In England their fortunes may vary as private backers come and go over time where as in Ireland we should be able to be more consistent. Again, this has pros and cons. The chances of Connacht winning the HEC are pretty slim. They'll never get a sugar daddy to invest to the point that they'll see a huge improvement in a short time. But similarly they'll never have to face closure or move 100 miles because that's where the money is bringing them.

    Trying to equate 2 completely different set ups like this is a fools errand tbh.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    prawnsambo wrote: »
    I'm not sure all the provinces would be loss making. Leinster for example, would be close enough with the payouts from the EPCR and getting paydays from matches in Lansdowne. Presumably sponsorship would be significant as well. But it's apples and oranges comparing the IRFU's support of the provinces with the 'sugar daddies' supporting Premiership clubs. The IRFU can't walk away, rugby is its business and the provinces are a vital part of its player development programme.

    There's never much (if any) talk of French clubs under pressure financially. Gate receipts would form a big part of their income and then there's also the 'sugar daddy' factor. They've always had massive budgets, so something has to be keeping that money flowing in.

    They can't?

    Ask Connacht fans. ;)


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭✭ Halle Inexpensive Sheepskin


    awec wrote: »
    Agreed, I think the relegation thing specifically is a bit of a red herring, it's not as if there are any other teams worth promoting to replace them.

    The fact that you have a league where 14 teams are owned by just 5 owners is the underlying problem. There is a reason that this sort of setup is generally not permitted by most, if not all serious sporting leagues.

    Not that I expect anything to change, but some of their complaints are definitely entirely valid. I don't think the current rugby setups are going to last long term to be honest.

    Why is this a problem? Because the English like to whinge about it?


  • Subscribers Posts: 41,836 ✭✭✭✭sydthebeat


    molloyjh wrote: »
    Less points may mean a more competitive league, but less points on offer in games would make less competitive matches. As I said, why would a team from conference A care a jot about denying a BP to a team from conference A? Why would 5th place care about denying 1st place a TBP? In those scenarios surely the losing team would be inclined to hang on in games more when there is something on offer for them?.

    and like ive said already.... over the course of a whole season its generally levels out. youre saying "why would.....?" and im saying that it already happens... theres no hypothetical here.

    watch super rugby next year, and watch teams that are ahead continue to push on, for fear of the opposition getting within 3 tries.

    the losing team will still continue to push on with a LBP the goal.
    the leading team continue to push on to stay at least 3 tries ahead.

    i suppose in super rugby there is the advantage of only 3 teams being seeded for the play off, with 5 places left for the wild cards... after all the conferences joining up in an overall league.

    pro 14 only has 6 teams involved in the end of season, with 2 already through to the semis. i think this is a mistake and a poor ending to a league.

    if pro 14 had the same system last year (and assuming the same 1st v 8th etc desceding system) we would have seen the same 3 weeks of games.. .but with 2 extra games.

    QFs
    glasgow v blues
    munster v benneton
    leinster v ospreys
    Ulster v connach

    SFs
    Glasgow v Ulster
    Munster v Leinster

    Final
    Glasgow v Munster?

    this would have meant that (a) had results went the same way, leinster would have travelled away for their semi or (b) would have ensured results in the last
    few rounds to ensure a home semi.

    would blues / edinburg / cheetahs / scarlets etc try harder in games to ensure their play off rivals dont get easy TBPs?? of course they would.

    anyway, the point being that less TBPs equals a more competitive league, and less chance of the league being artificially effected by early qualifications and / or teams out of the running for those valuable 6 playoff places


  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    Why is this a problem? Because the English like to whinge about it?

    Why is it a problem to have multiple clubs owned by a single owner?

    Because sporting integrity is tarnished. This is why it is not allowed in pretty much every other sport. How can you have a serious league if the clubs are not independent entities?

    It is incredibly convenient for the IRFU, for example, that their 4 teams happen to be playing each other for the next three weeks, which conveniently happens to be right before another pair of euro fixtures. So, very conveniently, the IRFU will be able to instruct all their teams to take it handy for the next few weeks and will go into these euro games nice and fresh, but not having cost them anything in the league since they all got to trade a few points among each other.

    If the pro14 weren't so weird, and the IRFU only owned 1 team, then they could of course tell that team to rest their players, but there would be absolutely nothing to prevent the opposition going full strength and putting 50+ points on them. There wouldn't be these convenient runs of fixtures, placed at nice little times during the season.

    This is one of the English (and French) issues. They don't have periods in their season where they are guaranteed to play soft fixtures, because the guy who owns Leicester has absolutely no influence over the guy who owns Saracens. This is how it's supposed to be.

    The setup of the Pro14 is nonsense, which is absolutely one of the reasons why interest in it lags behind England and France, and why it struggles to attract any serious media interest. The only time you see teams go at each other full tilt is during the playoffs at the end of the year.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,375 ✭✭✭✭prawnsambo


    awec wrote: »
    They can't?

    Ask Connacht fans. ;)
    The threat there was ending professionalism in Connacht. Not closing it down. But you clearly knew that. :p

    But to be fair, there's always the danger of that happening if things go pear shaped. However it's the IRFU we're talking about, not the FAI. ;)


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,767 ✭✭✭✭molloyjh


    awec wrote: »
    Why is it a problem to have multiple clubs owned by a single owner?

    Because sporting integrity is tarnished. This is why it is not allowed in pretty much every other sport. How can you have a serious league if the clubs are not independent entities?

    It is incredibly convenient for the IRFU, for example, that their 4 teams happen to be playing each other for the next three weeks, which conveniently happens to be right before another pair of euro fixtures. So, very conveniently, the IRFU will be able to instruct all their teams to take it handy for the next few weeks and will go into these euro games nice and fresh, but not having cost them anything in the league since they all got to trade a few points among each other.

    If the pro14 weren't so weird, and the IRFU only owned 1 team, then they could of course tell that team to rest their players, but there would be absolutely nothing to prevent the opposition going full strength and putting 50+ points on them. There wouldn't be these convenient runs of fixtures, placed at nice little times during the season.

    This is one of the English (and French) issues. They don't have periods in their season where they are guaranteed to play soft fixtures, because the guy who owns Leicester has absolutely no influence over the guy who owns Saracens. This is how it's supposed to be.

    The setup of the Pro14 is nonsense, which is absolutely one of the reasons why interest in it lags behind England and France, and why it struggles to attract any serious media interest. The only time you see teams go at each other full tilt is during the playoffs at the end of the year.

    For as long as I remember French sides have been sending weakened teams on the road more than not. It's odd how that is conveniently forgotten when this argument comes up all the time.


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  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    molloyjh wrote: »
    For as long as I remember French sides have been sending weakened teams on the road more than not. It's odd how that is conveniently forgotten when this argument comes up all the time.

    But that's not the same thing at all, that's why it never comes up.

    A French team could send a full team away any time they wanted. Every French side can prioritise whatever fixture it wants, to suit itself, because they are all independent.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,728 ✭✭✭Former Former


    French and English teams prioritise the league because it is in their best interests to do so.

    Irish teams prioritise Europe because it is in their best interests to do so.

    Neither of these is objectively better or worse.


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,767 ✭✭✭✭molloyjh


    awec wrote: »
    But that's not the same thing at all, that's why it never comes up.

    A French team could send a full team away any time they wanted. Every French side can prioritise whatever fixture it wants, to suit itself, because they are all independent.

    And there are very few IRFU mandated rest weeks. There is a number of games players are allowed play in a period. The provinces then generally pick and choose which games to play them for and which to rest them for. That's why generally in Christmas interpros the home team is a strong one while the away team is a weak one. The provinces arent going to rest these guys for the HEC games because they can afford to drop points in the league more than in Europe.

    This year is the exception. There is a mandated 2 consecutive weeks off. This is because the RWC players have had so little time off all year given the RWC pre-season. Theres a human factor at play here too, which is another thing that gets regularly forgotten.


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,767 ✭✭✭✭molloyjh


    French and English teams prioritise the league because it is in their best interests to do so.

    Irish teams prioritise Europe because it is in their best interests to do so.

    Neither of these is objectively better or worse.

    This. That's a financial thing given the revenues in their leagues. We get our money from the national team and then Europe with the league being the smallest earner. Hence our priorities are fundamentally different. This is simple reality. People can balk against it all they want but it's not going to change.


  • Administrators Posts: 54,091 Admin ✭✭✭✭✭awec


    French and English teams prioritise the league because it is in their best interests to do so.

    Irish teams prioritise Europe because it is in their best interests to do so.

    Neither of these is objectively better or worse.

    Maybe true, but it is certainly frustrating that the competition we watch week in, week out, is run in such a half arsed manner for a competition we see much less of.

    The imbalance is far too great IMO. I get that our league is never going to be amazing, but it should be better than it is.


  • Registered Users Posts: 24,767 ✭✭✭✭molloyjh


    awec wrote: »
    Maybe true, but it is certainly frustrating that the competition we watch week in, week out, is run in such a half arsed manner for a competition we see much less of.

    The imbalance is far too great IMO. I get that our league is never going to be amazing, but it should be better than it is.

    If the Welsh got their act together it would be though. I get the interpros have become a very, very pale shadow of what they were. And that sucks. But when there are at least 2 teams in the league massively underperforming that's 3 or 4 games affected for every other team in the league. If that changed and we had 7 or 8 teams really fighting it out we'd be grand and could probably take a couple of crap interpros. Theres a lot of dross in the Premiership and theres a big scramble now to gloss over that and justify their poor performances in Europe by crapping on the P14. There is a lot of dross in our league too, but we dont start blaming others for that.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 5,933 ✭✭✭jacothelad


    It makes a mockery of the game.

    Should a team that loses by a large margin deserve anything? My opinion is no. You shouldn't earn a point for scoring tries in garbage time when the contest is over.


    What about if they scored 4 tries at the beginning of the game and then got hammered later?...


    It's not a perfect system but it serves a purpose and keeps games alive right to the end in many circumstances. I am much more concerned with the appalling level of refereeing which ruins game after game and TMOs who appear the be related more to Helen Keller and Blind Dave than to rugby and it's laws.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,166 ✭✭✭✭Zzippy


    They had the same spiel before Gloucester v Connacht on BT.

    Of all the games to moan about the Pro14 that was hardly the one. Connacht have one of the smallest squads in the league and don't have the luxury of being able to rotate wholesale for league games.

    prawnsambo wrote: »
    The threat there was ending professionalism in Connacht. Not closing it down. But you clearly knew that. :p

    What's the difference, apart from the semantics involved in your statement?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,047 ✭✭✭Bazzo


    There seems to be this false idea that the premiership is a far superior product to the pro 14. I watch quite a bit of it cuz I have BT anyway and I find a lot of the matches even with rotated squads a lot more competitive/entertaining than some of the absolute ****e you see in the premiership.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,375 ✭✭✭✭prawnsambo


    Zzippy wrote: »
    What's the difference, apart from the semantics involved in your statement?
    There would still be support for Connacht clubs and development work I'd assume. Connacht as a provincial squad would continue to exist as an amateur setup. I know this is hardly something to get excited about, but it's a hypothetical situation, which never happened. A premiership club that went bust would probably disappear completely. Ground gone, property sold to pay creditors etc.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,615 ✭✭✭Dubinusa


    We turn out more lads from our academies than the premiership sides. Our young players get tested regularly, and will progress. England have one a couple of u20 rwc's and few of these lads get their chance!
    How would the likes of Lyttle and Shane Daly progress if the provinces only played the 1st team lads.
    The premiership is not stacked with great teams. 3 or 4 of them would lag in the pro14.


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