Good points made of course. I guess it comes down to the coach's gameplan and this would explain that. On the other hand, the coaching style that I'm more used to (in my playing days) was to play your team's strengths first and foremost and to think about neutralising your opposition second. The theory being, I guess, your strength is their weakness.Neil F wrote:John; this assumes that Henderson has a place in Ulster's best pack (or, more accurately, Ulster's best pack for this game). I do not buy that assumption. Henderson plays a game that fans like to see and he's young. I think there is, based on these two things, a tendency to overrate his contribution to date. Yes, he is an almighty carrier of the ball - he has pace and power in the loose and always seems to get over the gainline in the right. He also has big question marks over his discipline (in part, this can be chalked down to youthful enthusiasm, I'm sure).John_e_boy wrote:So what is the story with all these bench appearances for Henderson?
IRFU player welfare programme?
Carrying some kind of knock?
I can't help thinking that using him as an impact sub after 50-60 minutes still gives your opponents the best part of the game to avoid facing your strongest pack. Especially given Henderson's ball-carrying skills and extra lineout option if needed.
I simply don't understand it, but I guess I'm oldskool - you start with your strongest team and hope the subs don't drop the tempo when they get on.
An away game in France against a team with a monster pack who will look to rumble and win penalties is, therefore, not necessarily the best opposition against whom to play Henderson. Henderson may give away penalties and he will certainly take the ball into contact. These are two things that Ulster may wish to avoid, particularly early in the game. Keep the heavyweight Montpellier pack moving, tire them out, then spring someone like Henderson from the bench to punch through the holes left by tired legs. To me, this would be a sensible approach.
So, let's look at Ulster's preferred selection, which would have been Williams at 8 and Wilson at 6. Williams is a big beast of a ballcarrier but he also has a plethora of skills, particularly his offloading, that would suit him well to the gameplan one expects Ulster to play. Wilson, who prefers to play at 8, brings the host of technical and handling skills of an 8 into this game, so again, fitting with the game Ulster may wish to play. In the absence of Williams, Diack is played at 6. Diack is also a converted 8 with plenty of skilful attributes, particularly very good hands and good linking play, which again will help the ball moving. First, he would, therefore, be the most direct replacement for Williams, with Wilson moving to 8, thus causing the least disruption to how Ulster have, probably, been preparing to approach this game. Second, his discipline is rarely questioned.
In this respect, I would say that Diack is the right call and is the better of the two players for this game. I don't think, yet, that Iain Henderson has a place in Ulster's strongest pack on any given day but I think this is particularly pertinent for the game on Saturday.
But again, amateur rugby coaching vs top level professionals. I see the difference. I see Saturday's game being really tight and the opportunities of breaking the gainlain/passing a defender with ball in hand will be limited, which is why I'd prefer to see someone like Henderson who could be doing exactly what the defensive strengths of Diack probably won't.
Anyway, it's going to be another nerve-wracking 80 minutes for sure.
And I'm still in a state of shock after watching Wasps v Bayonne last night. Fitzgibbon refereed very well - ergo he's just biased against Us