I probably should have written this up a few weeks ago, then I wouldn’t have had the problem of trying to summarise the entire four weeks of pool play into a single post. It’s been a taxing and difficult four weeks. Sitting on the couch and drinking beer for an extended period of time will take it out of even the most finely tuned athletes – a group of which I’m not a member. Sergeant Cleaver would have been proud of me though.
I cannot claim that the following is an accurate account of the Rugby World Cup so far. It is an accurate account of my recollections of said event – blurred somewhat by more beer than any person should have to consume in a relatively short period of time and distorted by the sorts of extreme fatigue only usually encountered by sportsmen of a far higher calibre than myself.
Pool A
It’s fitting that we start with a pool completely dominated by the Mighty Mighty All Blacks, however that is not really where the interest lay. Whilst our lads were always going to dominate, Pool A almost certainly had the strongest “also rans” in the tournament. The Tongans will be ruing their 20-25 loss to Canada up at Going Stadium and saved their best for last in defeating the Frenchies in the game of the pool at the Caketin. The Tongan fans deserve a special mention for their passionate supporting of their team. Not only did they bring colour and atmosphere to the tournament but I wouldn’t mind betting that they kept a few $2 shops in business while they were at it. Japan were the disappointment of the pool but JK’s lads – some of whom were Japanese – had their moments. James Arlidge is a bloke the M.M.A.B’s would probably be happy to have on their bench right now. As expected, the M.M.A.B’s emerged triumphant from the pool with no real worries (at least on the field) throughout their matches.
Best Pool A Moment – The Tongan front row taunting the dejected French when they called a scrum with time up on the clock. Sona Taumalolo is my hero.
Pool B
I’m not going to devote many column inches to Pool B as, frankly, I’ve seen more exciting games of rugby played by the ‘Rewa Hard Pressies XV. The Poms only just managed to get ahead of the pack after a close first up encounter with the Argies and needed to cheat against Romania by changing balls so Johnny Wilkinson could kick penalties (more on that later). On that same opening weekend, the Romanians were looking like pulling off the biggest upset in R.W.C. history and only lost to Scotland in the last minutes of their encounter. Georgia were never in the hunt – partially because they only have 750 registered adult rugby players and partially because it appears the selection staff only allowed players whose names ended in ***vili and ***adze. Scotland were awful and deserved to go home.
Best Pool B Moment – The Mighty Mighty Argies getting up over Scotland at the last moment and scoring one of the only tries in Pool B play.
Pool C
I think I’m 1/8th Irish – but I have a family history not dissimilar to Shane Howarth so who really knows. I know I like Guinness so that’s good enough for me. The much anticipated Ireland v Dirty Filthy Cheating Australia game did not fail to live up to the hype but even the staunchest of Irish fans would not have expected the result. Not only did Ireland win, but they showed a dominance in the forwards that no one was expecting. The result of this match not only confirmed that Ireland is every Kiwi’s new second team but also resulted in the knockout phase of RWC 2011 will becoming a North v South affair. I’m not sure I’m to happy about that yet but time will tell. Italy, Russia and the Yanks were all average and the only real highlight was so many Russian supporters turning out in New Plymouth – a direct result of the popularity of Russian bride websites in the ‘Naki.
Best Pool C Moment – No question at all – Ireland sending the D.F.C. Wallabies home from the Garden of Eden with their tails between their legs.
Pool D
The so-called “Pool of Death” went right down to the wire with Samoa almost getting out of pool play – their attempts only foiled by Dirty Filthy Cheating South Africa’s secret weapon Nigel Owens (more later). This came hot on the heels of the Welsh penalty-that-wasn’t and, had some calls gone the other way, P-Divvy and his team could well have been landing in JoBurg as I write this. Fiji and Namibia were never really in the running and anyone unlucky enough to have tickets to the Fiji v Samoa game (including myself) would have to admit that if Fiji have ever had glory days, they are well over now. Samoa put up a good effort against the Leek Eaters at Dairy Farmers Stadium but after only a few days rest from their previous encounter were unfortunate to be beaten 17-10. I think in the end the best two teams from this pool have advanced, but the Samoans have earned huge respect from rugby fans worldwide.
Best Pool D Moment – Samoa leading Wales at the half. I had no idea the ‘Tron was hiding so many white Samoans amongst their population.
Other Stuff (In Brief)
Referees
It’s no surprise that, once again, the Northern Hemisphere referees are struggling to keep up with the pace of the games. Look no further than Nigel Owen’s crucial decision against Samoa for failure to release the ball when the player wasn’t tackled in the South Africa game for proof. I completely agree with Nigel Owen’s assertion that he is “No racist or cheat” – No sir – you’re just bloody awful. In other referee news, Wayne Barnes does not appear to have improved in the last four years.
The IRB
Give yourself an upper cut IRB.
Your handling of the tournament schedule is just the start. England cheat and use a different ball – 2 waterboys get a few weeks rest. A player from a tier two nation wears the wrong mouthguard – $10,000 fine. You’re now asking players to run bible quotes past you before they are written their wrist strapping.
This. Is. Overkill.
Grow up and be aware of who you are alienating. You won’t be the first sporting organisation to be taken over by media moguls if you continue dictating terms in this way.
Best RWC Tweets so far:
RT @Sportzfreak – Best part of last night’s opening ceremony was the Cantab kid cheating to score a try.
RT @RaybonKan – The IRB: on the scale of popularity, they seem to sit somewhere between the IRA and the IRD.
RT @redcantab – Nigel Owens’ Twitter profile (@Nigelrefowens ) says he does a bit of stand up comedy. Oh, so THAT’S what he’s doing out there.
RT @russiarugby – Good multi phase attack shows Russia’s best play of the tournament, but it ends in a rare event of Wayne Barnes spotting a forward pass
RT @chowda_head – Murray McCully just announced he will take over as coach for #Aus after tonights loss
RT @RWC2011_stats – Total number of disparaging tweets about referee Barnes now at 3,000,000 mark.
RT @hopetimothy – The funeral for Dan Carter will be held on Hyperbole Lane near the TV3 News headquarters.
and – one from me… just to keep the M.M.A.B’s on their toes
RT @MikeCatty – ABs brilliant, Oz and SA well below their best, England awful but doing enough to win. I’ve seen this before. In 1991-95-99-2003 & 2007.
Filed under: Sports, Sports Roundup, Uncategorized | Tagged: 2011 Rugby World Cup, Ireland, Murray McCully, Nigel Owen, Nigel Owens, Rugby World Cup, Samoa, South Africa, Wayne Barnes | Leave a Comment »