Bismarck to Bryan: 'Apparently Owen Farrell played better than you this year bru'
This week we will mostly be concerning ourselves with England, Australia and the Lions, and one of the finest caption competition winners yet...
Finally, after a November spent crying into many a pint after two so near and so far results, England came alive. Could even the most steadfast and blissfully ignorant of fans have seen that coming?
The 80 minutes that did for a New Zealand team utterly looking like the one extra Test was one too many from a long year were a lesson to all in steely execution of game-plan, unswerving focus on technique and a perceptible improvement in homework.
England defended so well, you would have sworn the AB calls had been leaked and learned until they could be recited ad verbatim. Lightning line speed, tough tackling - England missed only one tackle in the entire first half - intelligent use of the referee's idiosyncracies, the English put it all together. Imbued with a little more skill and finesse, they might have had 50.
Not one of the All Blacks has considered using illness, fatigue or George Clancy as an excuse (penalising Kieran Read for getting a hand on the ball during a mid-air collision? Uuh...), an attitude befitting the world's best team. They know they were well-beaten.
But perhaps this has been coming more than people think. It's well-documented that the English were a couple of bad decisions away from the beating of both South Africa and Australia - that a couple fewer slippery hands would have done for the latter long before the decision not to go for posts late in the game. This time the decisions were spot on all the way through.
Eerily, the whole way England have worked and worked, snapped and heels and finally come up trumps against one of the SH giants is reminiscent of the onset of the successful part of the Woodward era, with detail adhered to in every aspect of the game and its preparation, and the execution of the grand plan. The plans are different, but the attitude and spirit are a perfect match.
Given the way France have swept most before them this November, this year's Six Nations looks set to be one of those Anglo-French tussles. Then we have a Lions tour and then two more years.
Plenty of time then for a comparatively green team to gain its experience and learn more and more, plenty of time for a team rediscovering its identity to gear up for its own World Cup. We'll know for sure after the Six Nations, but England are right on track for 2015.
Also on track are Australia. Written off in so many quarters and humiliated at times against France, Robbie Deans' side has managed to turn November into a resounding success. Narrow victories over and England side on the up and a full-strength Wales side are never to be sniffed at.
Deans has endured a gruelling year. He's survived an injury crisis, a crisis of confidence, a period of unashamed success and crowing from the old enemy that has left Wallaby fans in despair at times, and a mini-rebellion from within the squad.
But he has emerged from all that with a successful November and a squad now looking deeper and more at ease with itself than for some time.
2013 is set to be a very special year for the Wallabies. The last time the Lions came a-calling, it was Australia's golden generation that had clinched one World Cup and went close to retaining that two years later.
This time it's a team now well down the road of rebuilding, one that has developed a terrific inner strength and siege mentality, one that clearly sticks together in times of hardship. It's also well-stocked with talent - even the scrum is less shaky these days.
Bring that Lions tour on!
Over to those Lions: we'd wager there are a few more names set to leap onto the hypothetical team sheets in all four home nations over the coming few days.
Four weeks ago, the Lions were mostly Welsh, perhaps a quartet of Irish, another of English and maybe even a Scot or two.
Now? Well... English players like Joe Launchbury are worth adding to the consideration, as are the Irish entertainers who broke the mould - and the tryline - against Argentina such as Simon Zebo and Craig Gilroy.
Add the competition for places there onto England's resurgence and France's free-flowing form and you've got a Six Nations to make the mouth water!
Finally, it was touched on earlier in the week by a colleague, so we won't go on about how Owen Farrell ought to be about 20 places further down the list for IRB Player of the Year.
But among such travesties, humour can be made.
Such as the accompanying picture of Bryan Habana's 'reaction' to Farrell's nomination...
Loose Pass compiled by Richard Anderson







Comments
melkdave says...
A tad overflowering about England imo,yes it was a fantastic performance against New Zealand .But it was only one performance,so im not getting carried away.After the 6Ns if England continue to perform like that,then yes ill be very happy ,and thinking England wil be real contenders in 2015.As to the Lions still a bit to early imo,to pick the squad ,but quite a few players have put their hands up,espically from England and Ireland,but lets not forget there are some players who havent played yet ,who will want to strike a claim.IE SOB,R.Kearney,D.Lydgate and T.Croft to name a few,i will say they need an excepional HC and /or 6Ns to prove themselves atm.
Lions squad atm going on summer and aurtum form only,subject to change lol
1)D.Cole, C.Healy,R.Grant
2)D.Harltly,R.Best.tT.Youngs or R.Strauss
3)A.Corbariso,A.Sheridan,M.Ross
4)J.Launchbury,R.Grey
5)G.Parling,C.Lawes D.Ryan
6)C.Robshaw.T.Wood.
7)S.Armitage,R.Rennie
8)B.Morgon,D.Denton,,SOB
9)D.Care,B.Youngs,L.Dickson
10)J.Sexton,F.Burns,T.Flood
11)Gilroy,T.Vissier,G.North
12)O.Farral,B.Barritt,
13)M.Tulagi,J.Davies
14)A.Cuthbert,C.Ashton
15)A.Goode,L.Halfpenny,M.Brown
Dont know how W.Gatland is going to be able to limit the squad to 35 ,i feel you/we need 38 players really to provide cover for every position,and yes i know SOB is a leapof faith atm ,but imo 8 is hisbest position
Posted 11:41 03rd December 2012
KingShark says...
What was that about pictures and thousand words?!
Posted 11:37 03rd December 2012
TVaddict says...
@Richard Anderson
Clancy also gave a free kick to NZ when the English maul was going forward (maybe pushing too hard), a yellow card for a first offence at the half way line, and the penalty that lead to NZs first try was for Farrell going 'off his feet' when he was standing the whole time. Don't be such an idiot as to say that the decisions went one way, or are you secretly BokAvenger? Clancy is a bad ref, he shouldn't be in the job, but he managed to have one of his 50-50 days which is something at least.
As for the lions, I'd say that baring injury or extreme lose of form Healy, Cole, Ryan, Sexton, Roberts, Tuilagi and Halfpenny must have all but secured their places. 'Newish' players that put their hands up to be seriously considered Wood, Gilroy, Robshaw, Corbisiero, Morgan, Launchbury, Zebo, Visser, Youngs and Strauss. The 6 nations is going to be awesome!
Posted 11:11 03rd December 2012
stag says...
richard, it was good win by england and it was great to see them beat the ABs. re your comment 'this year's Six Nations looks set to be one of those Anglo-French tussles.' - let's see about that. england have to visit landsdowne road - they will not win there. They also have wales away from home. Ireland have france & england at home with all their big guns back - o'driscoll, o'connell, ferris, best, o'brien & kearney. can see the following outcome - france, ireland, wales, england, scotland, italy
Posted 10:54 03rd December 2012
rorygilmore says...
One England win does not a "right track" make. This is a familiar replay of articles concerning England over the years. I didn't watch all of the England/Aussie game, but I can say that England never once looked like they were capable of breaking the SpringBok defence nor of crossing the line against them.... so their Capt's decision to take the penalty was probably the right one. Nevertheless, they still never looked like having the beating of SA. The truth is that after 2 of tough matches the England Rugby team started to learn a few lessons and they came together against an out of sorts All Black team which in truth, had a tour that was a bit too easy after playing Scotland, Italy & Wales and accepted one game too many. And an AB team that looks better than it actually is this year because of injury ravaged SA and Australia. No matter what the NH scribes and fans think.... the SH teams are always expected to roll over Wales, Ireland, Scotland & Italy ....with gas to spare. Intermittent losses (particularly for the Boks & Wallabies against Ireland & Scotland in recent times) have been aberrations and are unlikely to become the norm. Bar England & France, the rest are surely not RWC threats and have never been.
Posted 10:42 03rd December 2012
mayhem says...
Full strength Welsh side!!!!? are you drunk?
Posted 10:32 03rd December 2012