Jetstream wrote:A number of years ago Ulster Rugby invited two club representatives of every club,on a phased basis, up to Belfast to watch a match. They had some food and drink before hand with a mix of Branch officials and visiting team officials .It was a great idea and much appreciated
Watching the game yesterday I commented that for all our possession in the first half, we made few significant incursions against their blitz defence with no strategy on how to unlock it apart from maul. More importantly, the weight of hits from a physically more imposing Clermont meant we ran out if gas as the toll mounted.
I'm going back to a point I've made previously, many of our players, but forwards especially, are poorly conditioned in comparison to most teams above us. We are not physically capable of taking these teams on for a sustained 80 mins, and this falls further when we empty the bench. Stewart, Treadwell, Hendo, Rea, TOT, Wilson etc have no significant muscle definition. Addison, Mcilroy, Moore, Doak etc in the backs- same. There seems little attention to S&C in evidence. Watched Saints and Bulls B, Glaws etc in every other weekend game every team looks bigger and better conditioned, indeed muscular, as well as better prepared, strategically as well as skill levels. Until we either strengthen and condition what we've got, these beatings will continue.
Knife to gun fight or pop gun versus battleship.
Yep, compare the physical development of certain Leinsters players to try at if their Ulster counterparts.
Players like Van Der flier had a great off season around 2015 and came back a bit of a unit, soon became an Irish international.
Look at the physical development of Michael Milne and Jack Boyle.
If Tom Stewart doesn’t improve he won’t be winning many more Irish caps. He was better when he came on the scene a couple of seasons ago. Far too weak for a front rower.
But then again, perhaps it’s easier for the strength and conditioning coaches to stay quiet. Look at what happened Jared Payne, he was let go according to Ruaire O’Connor (sp?) because he kept questioning the coaching tactics and replaced by an inferior coach (Soper).
I suggest Soper is an inferior coach, purely because of the lack of development of the backs and attack under his tutelage.
Jetstream wrote:A number of years ago Ulster Rugby invited two club representatives of every club,on a phased basis, up to Belfast to watch a match. They had some food and drink before hand with a mix of Branch officials and visiting team officials .It was a great idea and much appreciated
How is that a great idea?
How does that help youth development?
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I will turn that question around. Do you think it was a bad idea?
To non Belfast clubs it was an opportunity to meet branch officials, ask questions, gather information, make contacts.
I know in my own club a branch coach or official has not set foot in it in the last 10 years. They pay lip service to the clubs outside Belfast.
Jetstream wrote:A number of years ago Ulster Rugby invited two club representatives of every club,on a phased basis, up to Belfast to watch a match. They had some food and drink before hand with a mix of Branch officials and visiting team officials .It was a great idea and much appreciated
How is that a great idea?
How does that help youth development?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I will turn that question around. Do you think it was a bad idea?
To non Belfast clubs it was an opportunity to meet branch officials, ask questions, gather information, make contacts.
I know in my own club a branch coach or official has not set foot in it in the last 10 years. They pay lip service to the clubs outside Belfast.
Not a bad idea as such, just sounds like a jolly boys outing.
There’s a paywall but I think you get one free spin.
If you can’t read it, they basically did more weights sessions!
Here's the thing Justin, even if you're not the most skilful player in the world, you can be among the fittest and strongest. This isn't "God given" but down to attitude and will. Our players are too cozy- back to jobs for the boys and contracts for life...
"We were way ahead of ourselves today than we were at the start of other European journeys with other groups of players, because a lot of these guys are getting experience very quickly - that's been the plan," Baxter added.
"Some of them have jumped way ahead of our expectations whether they've become internationals this season or done things.
"But as a group we've still got some maturing, both physically and mentally, to do because it is a young team.
"Dafydd's the Wales captain but he's only just turned 21, Manny's 20, Greg Fisilau 20, and they're some of our guys who we expect to the carry the mantle for quite a long time.
"They're going to need to be tough through days like today and they're going to have to not brush it off, learn from it, and they're going to have to learn that you can beat the best - but staying competitive is the next step."
Rob Baxter on rebuilding Exeter after the thumping from Toulouse.
Bobbievee wrote: ↑Mon Apr 15, 2024 11:49 am
"We were way ahead of ourselves today than we were at the start of other European journeys with other groups of players, because a lot of these guys are getting experience very quickly - that's been the plan," Baxter added.
"Some of them have jumped way ahead of our expectations whether they've become internationals this season or done things.
"But as a group we've still got some maturing, both physically and mentally, to do because it is a young team.
"Dafydd's the Wales captain but he's only just turned 21, Manny's 20, Greg Fisilau 20, and they're some of our guys who we expect to the carry the mantle for quite a long time.
"They're going to need to be tough through days like today and they're going to have to not brush it off, learn from it, and they're going to have to learn that you can beat the best - but staying competitive is the next step."
Rob Baxter on rebuilding Exeter after the thumping from Toulouse.
Sound familiar..............?
Only difference being Exeter stuck with one of the best teams in Europe for 50 minutes and actually looked dangerous
Difference Baxter and his team has planned for and delivered significant progress ahead of time, unlike UR who should've seen this coming.
But he has them fit and strong enough to compete, even with a reduced squad and young cubs. We babysit ours despite some of our young forwards showing they are capable but need mentored and developed. That's the tragedy/ waste that is UR
Agreed, if they are good enough, then they are old enough. Another outcome of the "blazer" generation mantra that so and so will be better next year etc. Not always true.
We need to be better at spotting the good " grow-your-owns". We have kept some too long who are not going to make it, and let go others who would have .
Jetstream wrote:A number of years ago Ulster Rugby invited two club representatives of every club,on a phased basis, up to Belfast to watch a match. They had some food and drink before hand with a mix of Branch officials and visiting team officials .It was a great idea and much appreciated