I’ve watched every RWC since it’s inception in 1987 and enjoyed the majority of them. I’m still not sure how I feel about this year’s ending, but it was probably one of, if not the best World Cup tournaments on a number of fronts. Nevertheless, there was still the good, the bad and the ugly.
THE GOOD
It was so pleasing to see the first black South African captain raise the cup above his head. Siya Kolisi was not a token appointment, he was at the pointy end of the Boks spearhead – an awesome player in his own right, a solid leader and a deserving winner. This was truly an integrated team and whilst it’s taken 24 years, it was great to see a better representation of SA Rugby on the field.
Numerous aspects of rugby have definitely evolved since 1987 and the onset of professionalism has pushed the game beyond the point of no return, some things for the better but some things have made it worse. This time around I believe the local Japanese culture has truly rubbed off on players and fans alike, bringing out the best in human beings.
Never before have we seen players bowing to the crowd after a game on a world stage – respect. Fans doing the unthinkable and cleaning up the stand after a game – selflessness. Teams such as Canada, despite having their final game cancelled helping local communities clean up the devastation left by typhoon Hagibis – compassion. The ABs still staying ahead of the curve and taking humility to yet another level by loading/unloading their team bus – leadership. The Japanese team and the country’s fans have brought back a semblance of order and class to the world game – honour.
Take another bow Japan, it was an awesome effort in the face of Mother Nature throwing her worst at you.
THE BAD
It wouldn’t sound right saying the good, the dumb and the ugly, but if we’re talking about a ‘bad’ decision by a player it would have to go to France’s Sebastien Vahaamahina who decided to elbow Aaron Wainright from Wales. A truly dumb brain explosion when there are about 35 different camera angles available at any one time.
Also under the bad banner are the whistle blowers. Now, I’m not going to turn this into a refereeing bash-fest, but I, and from what I’ve read and heard, many others feel the adjudication was pretty bad at this tournament.
The inconsistencies and what appeared like a disregard for the laws frustrated the fans, players and coaches from start to finish. I’m all for keeping players safe and the game clean, but the number of cards for ‘high or dangerous’ tackles varied way too much between refs and ruined perfectly good contests where a penalty would have been sufficient. Sure there were some deserving of cards but not the majority.
Players leaving their feet and tacklers not releasing at the breakdown. Moreover, players not supporting their own weight and entering from the side and probably one of the most frustrating was how often the defensive lines were offside. What is the role of an AR? Let’s pray it doesn’t re-emerge at club rugby during the upcoming season!
THE UGLY
The juxtaposition of absurdity. You have one of the greatest teams of all time unloading their own luggage, not complaining when one of their games is cancelled. Not to mention losing with dignity and humility, aligned with a team like Italy who had the audacity to whinge about not getting to play their last game. Not only was there limited perspective or context to their comment, there was no compassion to the enormity of the situation at hand. The Italian team has an appalling 6 nations record (won 12, drawn 1 and lost 86). They barely deserve to remain in that competition let alone worthy of playing the ABs in a RWC. A draw is about as good as they’re ever going to get so why say a word? All I need to say about Scotland is they got their just desserts in the end and the world won’t forget their petulant behaviour for a long time. Shame on those who complained as it was a well publicised fact before the tournament started.
The last ugly part of this post is the Wallabies style of play, not just at this tournament but over the last few years. I respect the coach wanting to develop a different style of play but the reality showed he was tactically naive. The bottom line was the players didn’t have the skills to effectively play the style. What was the skills coach doing? Will he keep his job? After it failed game after game surely blind Freddy would have readjusted his approach. I was completely dumbfounded that the team just kept rolling out the same game plan and as expected it was like Groundhog Day.
It got me thinking about the difference between conviction and selfishness. Was the Wallaby coach within his rights to have total control or simply irresponsible with the quest bestowed upon him? What responsibilities do the players hold as custodian of our game? Should blind loyalty be admired or should there have been players with enough courage to question the coach’s reality? May be there were players that spoke their mind and they are the ones no longer around? I’m sure Bernie Larkham wouldn’t have kept quiet about the go to tactic of trying to run it out of their red zone as the team’s exit strategy. Most with even a tiny rugby brain would understand the difference between sound and stupid exit strategies. I don’t believe it’s a coincidence Larkham was the fall guy after the review.
The former national coach may have been the best we had at the time, but he was also the only coach ever to be given so many chances with such an appalling win/loss record, not to mention the freedom he was given, yet he found it difficult to adapt when his carte blanche freedom was curbed. What does that say about his ability to handle change and adapt to new circumstances? He is not the only one that created the mess, but as the top dog you’ve got to own it and saying there was no alignment between himself and management as his final statement says more about him than them.
Let’s hope whoever they appoint to take the helm has more tactical, technical and selection nous to allow our national team to be more competitive in the lead up and during the RWC in France in 2023. Sadly it may take us until 2027 to get back up to speed.
Arigatō, Nihon!
Jikai mata aimashō 👍🏼🇯🇵