Mallett is a lousy Pasta coach

Posted by Boertjie - 08/02/10 at 10:02 pm under Other Unions / Teams

Nick Mallet is a sophisticated man: he speaks several languages. He is bright: he was a Rhodes Scholar. He has been a very good coach: his Springboks in 1998/199 won 17 straight Tests, a South African winning sequence record. He is, however, a very poor coach of Italy.
“Italy plays the most unwatchable rugby that can ever have been inflicted on spectators by any team.”

Spiros Zavos, The Roar

He has set his team a goal of losing by no more than 15 points. That margin or preferably fewer points represents, Mallet has told his team, a sort of victory for Italy.

And to consolidate this negative team ambition, Mallett has imposed a style of play on Italy that ensures that his team can’t win Tests but will invariably lose in as ugly a fashion as possible.

This ‘losing ugly’ style makes Italy a difficult team to play expansive and attractive rugby against, as Ireland found on Saturday at Croke Park. They did, though, win 29 – 11 and this score reflected in a curious way a sort of double loss by Italy.

Ireland went past the 15-point mark and were never in any danger of losing the Test. Given the extremely negative nature of Italy’s play and the fact that this was the opening match of the Six Nations tournament, I thought Ireland were quite impressive.

There was nothing in the England-Wales match to suggest that these team will stop Ireland’s unbeaten run which now extends to 12 Tests, a national record for Ireland.

As well as being difficult for oppositions to play attractively against (the All Blacks and the Wallabies have struggled to put Italy away comprehensively in Italy), Italy plays (if such an active verb can be used in this context) the most unwatchable rugby that can ever have been inflicted on spectators by any team.

Every ball is kicked away. We don’t know if the backs can run and pass and make breaks because they never try these rugby basics.

They cheat at virtually every scrum. Against the All Blacks last year Stu Dickinson had a rare off day and let them away with this. On Saturday the French referee Romain Poite did not tolerate the boring-in tactics from the Italian front row and penalised them frequently, and correctly.

The worst aspect of their play, even worse than the never-ending kicking (with no one actually chasing the high balls), is the way the Italian halfbacks allow the ball to sit at the back of the ruck for more than 10 seconds. You feel like screaming out, ‘Use it! Damn you!’.

The sooner referees start applying a use-it or lose-it call, giving teams like Italy (and other ’sitters’ like England and Wales to only a slightly lesser extent) five seconds maximum to play the ball, the better.

Italy, too, like all the European teams play their first five-eighths mainly in the quarter-back position, directly behind the half rather than almost in line with him. The result of this senseless positioning is that most of the European teams, even Ireland and Wales – teams that actually try to run the ball – have to kick away possession quite often from turnovers rather than launching wide attacking raids.

Talking about senseless play, Alun Wyn Jones, the Wales second-rower lost the Test against England at Twickenham when he stuck out a leg to trip the English hooker Dylan Hartley right in front of the referee Alain Rolland. The score was 3-3 at the time just five minutes before half-time with Wales looking like a side that could continue its run of victories at the home of English rugby.

Ten minutes later when Jones came rather shame-facedly back on the field the score was 20 – 3. Even though Wales came back strongly and scored 14 unanswered points, the game was effectively lost by an action that Brian Moore (who is turning into an excellent commentator) called a ‘half-witted’ and ’silly cheap shot.’

England’s lineout was good, with Steve Borthwick doing a Victor Matfield in organising no fewer than six steals against the throw. The scrum was barely adequate, though. Jonny Wilkinson kicked too much and poorly and his positioning was in the European disease mode which made it virtually impossible for England to have any fluency in their backline.

England were an improvement on the side that performed so poorly against the southern hemisphere teams at the end of last year. But this was an improvement from someone on a life-support system to someone who is off it, for the time being.

Whether Saturday’s performance reflects an actual improvement or that Wales seems to be on another slippery slope to rugby mediocrity remains to be seen.

By far the best thing about England was their playing strip which reflected the strip used back in 1910 when Twickenham hosted its first Test. The off-white of the jerseys, with real collars, the band of blue around the waist of the white shorts and the blue socks looked terrific. The current jersey, with its red slash on the white, looks as if the England players have had their throats slit and blood is streaming out of the wound on to their jersey.

What a pity that Wales didn’t wear their 1910 playing kit, the famous scarlet jersey, the black shorts and the scarlet socks. The current outfit, a sort of Miami Vice red, with no collar, white shorts and green socks with a curious white pattern on them, looks like a dog breakfast.

Is it a coincidence that Wales played in a similar dogs breakfast fashion?

21 Comments

  1. Duiwel Duiwel says:
    February 8th, 2010 at 11:46 pm Reply to this comment

    B :rant: :whatever: :whatever: :poop:

  2. Duiwel Duiwel says:
    February 8th, 2010 at 11:47 pm Reply to this comment

    B :poop: ll :whatever:

  3. Duiwel Duiwel says:
    February 8th, 2010 at 11:47 pm Reply to this comment

    W :rant: :rant: P :brownie: :brownie:

  4. Duiwel Duiwel says:
    February 8th, 2010 at 11:48 pm Reply to this comment

    VR :rant: ST :poop: :poop: T

  5. Duiwel Duiwel says:
    February 8th, 2010 at 11:48 pm Reply to this comment

    SH :mrgreen: RKS

  6. Duiwel Duiwel says:
    February 8th, 2010 at 11:48 pm Reply to this comment

    TR :poop: NSV :poop: :poop: L

  7. Deon Deon says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 4:22 am Reply to this comment

    They tried running everything and regularly got whipped by 100 points. That is not good for growing the game.

    They have set a marker on the road to being competitive and are working towards that.

    First building the basics.

    Ole Spiro at his best again.

  8. DavidS DavidS says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 10:39 am Reply to this comment

    This Spiros is that Australian moron who keeps whining about anything about South Africa…

    Duh

    Italy were playing to their strengths…

    Before the game they were predicted to tajkke a fifty pointer

    They didn’t…

    In fact they played bladdy well to hold Ireland to just 29 and put some of their own points on the board.

    Spiros is like all Australians… believeing that in a real world rugby is supposed to be as pretty as Swan Lake and points should be awarded for style and grace..

    He can screw off for al I care…

    Along with his Aussie mates…

    The 1991 and 1999 Aussie great teams played some of the most boring conservative rugby around and I do hear a thunderous silence from the Australia regarding THAT era’s boring rugby…

    Reply to Deon @ 4:22 am:

    Agreed

    Spiro is like the persistent green vaginal discharge an overused whore in an old gold rush town would get because she was outnumbered 10-1 in the canteen…

  9. Deon Deon says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 10:57 am Reply to this comment

    Reply to DavidS @ 10:39 am:

    Ek het nounet baie gegiggel oppad huistoe. Ry agter ‘n Jeep Wrangler. Op die rollbar hang ‘n nommerplaat wat se: “ANC KAK GP”

    Die ou het obviously nie baie tyd vir hulle nie. :twisted:

  10. Deon Deon says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 11:00 am Reply to this comment

    From what I saw of the Oirish/Pastas’s game, the Pasta’s played quite well.

  11. Namboer Namboer says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 11:04 am Reply to this comment

    Reply to DavidS @ 10:39 am: Demmit onkel D, bring ek darem nou amper my brekfisbiskuite op toe ek beginne lees aan daai laaste stukkie, nie eers tot by die einde gekom nie!
    :tpuke:

    Reply to Deon @ 10:57 am: Het hulle dan GP nommerplate in Oz ook, of het ek iewers die plot gemis dat jy affie Kaap na die convicts se eiland verhuis het?

  12. DavidS DavidS says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 11:43 am Reply to this comment

    Reply to Deon @ 10:57 am: HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH

    Uitstekend!!!

    Moenie laat cab dit sien nie, hy sal kla…

  13. Deon Deon says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 11:48 am Reply to this comment

    Reply to Namboer @ 11:04 am:

    Nee dit is obviously ‘n stukkie geskiedenis wat hy saamgebring het.

  14. Deon Deon says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 11:51 am Reply to this comment

    Reply to DavidS @ 11:43 am:

    Gee ek om wat ou ashtray dink?

  15. DavidS DavidS says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 12:38 pm Reply to this comment

    Prediction for the Lions – middle of the pack

    Jonathan Mokuena is exciting = duuhh is black version of that Stormers fool of a few years ago that was walkingyellow card… played well at Griquas right up till when international refs ended S14 and 3N… then was walking card… like Brussouw without a brain…

    Reply to Deon @ 11:51 am:

    Nee mar sy gesqueal sal my irrirteer soos enige liberaal antwoord hy feite met opinie asof dit dieselfde ding is… en hy gaan ons natuurlik “grace” met sy opinie en dit sal my versuur.

  16. bryce_in_oz bryce_in_oz says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 5:48 pm Reply to this comment

    Spiros has NEVER coached at any international level…

  17. bryce_in_oz bryce_in_oz says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 5:52 pm Reply to this comment

    Fact is… with such little depth… the Pasta’s in the last few seasons thanks to Mallet have never looked better… it must have been the recent almost upset against the Wobblies that grates Souvlaki…

  18. fyndraai fyndraai says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 6:37 pm Reply to this comment

    year of match
    Team Mat Won Lost Draw % For Aga Diff Tries Conv Pens Drop Year
    Italy 5 1 4 0 20.00 106 228 -122 9 8 10 5 2000
    Italy 5 0 5 0 0.00 106 207 -101 8 6 17 1 2001
    Italy 5 0 5 0 0.00 70 183 -113 4 4 13 1 2002
    Italy 5 1 4 0 20.00 100 185 -85 12 8 6 2 2003
    Italy 5 1 4 0 20.00 42 152 -110 2 1 9 1 2004
    Italy 5 0 5 0 0.00 55 179 -124 5 3 8 0 2005
    Italy 5 0 4 1 10.00 72 125 -53 5 4 10 3 2006
    Italy 5 2 3 0 40.00 94 147 -53 9 8 9 2 2007
    Italy 5 1 4 0 20.00 74 131 -57 6 4 11 1 2008
    Italy 5 0 5 0 0.00 49 170 -121 2 0 12 1 2009
    Italy 1 0 1 0 0.00 11 29 -18 1 0 2 0 2010

  19. fyndraai fyndraai says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 6:41 pm Reply to this comment

    Best years for Italy in 6N has been 2006 and 2007.

    PD only -53 and they actually won 2 matches in 2007.

    Last year they lost by around -25 per match.

    I guess -18 against Ireland is not so bad then.

  20. bryce_in_oz bryce_in_oz says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 6:51 pm Reply to this comment

    Reply to fyndraai @ 6:41 pm:

    Give us the scores against Aus for the last 5 yrs?

  21. Boer Boertjie says:
    February 9th, 2010 at 7:05 pm Reply to this comment

    Six victories in ten years?
    Not really an upward curve.
    And I’ve read that 9 of the
    team are not born and bred
    Pastas.

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.