Lineouts: Both BC and Army used 5 man line out a lot. BC used the lift and drive technique (lifters binding in gut vs rebinding) to get a great 10-12 meter drive. Sadly they did nothing this great drive, chosing instead to pass to the backs when the maul stalled--better options would be to try and restart drive, quick attack weak, box kick or roll ball out. Both lifted 2 pods in defense. BC's scrum half started infield on quick taps causing him to run to tap, turn around and back to fly half wasting 3-4 steps and vital fractions of a second. When ball got to backs it was often always a turnover or really bad ball.
Penalties: Army tried some crazy penalty play and never tried to quick tap. Play took several seconds to setup and of the three I saw2 were turnovers, and one was a try from the 5 meter line. This might have been the best option as the Army offensive scrum sucked ,lineouts were iffy, and BC shut down quick-tap opportunities also Army was down 17-0 most of the match and needed tries not 3 pointers.
Kickoffs: both teams played purposefully on kickoffs. BC lost the game on three consecutive kickoffs to start the second half. They didn't pressure Army enough, let Army play their pattern and lost the game on three kickoffs. BC did try to pressure, but on one the deep kick did not have enough hang time, on another they kicked short (which is useless against a good team) and on the last Army got possession, hit a mid field ruck and busted a 30 yard run. At high levels of rugby slight lapses on kickoffs will lose games.
Scrums: Neither side won clean possession on offensive scrums. Wow offensive scrums nearly impossible to win. You need to work hard to do quick hooks and attack quick. Both teams had their 8 man pulling the second rows back by their waist bands to let the scrums launch into each other a very new techniques.
Tackling: Elite teams never tackle one on one. Defenses always hit the ball carrier two on one. Usually both defenders hitting high and smothering the ball. Tackling drills need to emphasize this technique.
Sunday, September 30, 2007
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