Planet Rugby

The Cobus Visagie column

10th October 2012 17:40

Cobus visagie RC last

The All Blacks truly are a complete team

Former Springbok prop Cobus Visagie shares his thoughts on the Rugby Championship in the final installment of a series of exclusive columns for Planet Rugby.

Hats off to a special All Blacks side that has shown composure and class throughout the Championship, even though they were not even always playing their best rugby. It's a scary thought. They showed immense improvement in their line-out, which was their one potential Achilles heel.

They now actually possess an arsenal of different types of locks which they can deploy for different types of games - a strategy they have also deployed wisely with their front row, back row and even centre combinations. I did not think that an international team would be able to become so comfortably dominant in the modern era with all the analysis and the continued professional develop of players, most notably at club and provincial level.

Before we point fingers at the coaches who did not perform well in the tournament, it needs to be said that international coaching is a completely different ball game from the challenges at provincial and club level. Fundamental player development starts years before a player signs his first professional contract. General catch and pass skills, the ability to run into space and evasion skills are competencies that are developed at school and at agegroup level.

Steve Hansen can take little credit for the phenomenal captaincy abilities of Richie McCaw or the decision making of Dan Carter at this stage of their careers. He can however be credited for developing a very cohesive and disciplined pack of forwards with an incredible skill set. It is also clear that the team is responding as individuals and a unit to his and his management's guidance at half time - they played incredibly well in the second halve of most of their games. All signs of intelligent management and responsive and coachable players.

In the same vein Robbie Deans should not have to take responsibility for the technical issues in his front row, which is a systemic problem in the Australian game which has just never received enough attention at schoolboy and academy level. Heyneke Meyer is in the same boat with regards to general skill levels of backline players in South Africa. International coaches manage assets that have been developed at the lower levels. It is not their job to coach core skills. There is no time in the case of South Africa to develop the ability to see space or to optimise their physical conditioning in the eight weeks available to a management team.

As valiantly as Argentina gave account of themselves, their management is further removed from their players for the vast majority of the year and depends on their personal development at the European clubs they represent. Sadly their biggest strength was the very thing that derailed their plans in most games. Their enthusiasm and aggression, especially in defence made them incredibly hard to play against, but in the process the thin line between a spirited performance and ill-discipline was crossed too many times and in the process they eased the pressure on their opponents in crucial moments.

The professional game and the detailed analysis that underpins the development and success of modern team sports are revealing some very interesting statistics that the average supporter is struggling to process and understand. The game is even leaving a lot of coaches and gameplan theories in tatters at the moment.

The game of rugby has evolved at such a rapid pace over the last number of years that I believe it has left behind a significant part of the traditional supporter base in a no-man's-land of indifference and ignorance. Major contributors to this state of affairs are the incessant ploy of the IRB and national unions to continue adding more games to the rugby calendar to balance their books. Supporter fatigue has developed and the decline in viewing numbers in certain geographies, but most importantly, bums on seats, are well documented.

The other major catalyst for the incredible pace at which the game has evolved is the rule changes. Although the majority of the changes are in fact only clarifications of the interpretation of the laws, I find it has left most lifelong rugby enthusiast frustrated and irritated by the fact that they cannot understand half the calls the referees are making in the game - and neither do they understand the fact that the basic rules are sometimes completely ignored (mainly due to an overload of areas to focus on).

If you would conduct a survey and only include the most die-hard fans, it would be quite an eye-opener how far their perceptions are removed from the hard facts. If you would ask followers of the Championship which team kicked the most possession, it would be a unanimous vote for South Africa. The truth is they actually kicked the fewest number of kicks in the competition. The same would be true around an area like the scrum where Argentina is very highly rated, but in actual fact performed indifferently and was penalised and under pressure in numerous games - and even got scrummed off their own ball against the wallabies in the second halve.

The problem is the general inertia or stickiness of perceptions. It is true that it is more difficult to shake off negative perceptions, but good perceptions can be sticky as well.

The Championship has shown to me that brains will, more than ever, continue to trump brawn. Even if something is a strength in the make-up of your team, it does not mean you need to play to that strength all the time - the Springbok drive and long penalty attempts are a good examples of wasted possession. Ensuring you can play the complete game and focussing on controlling the game through the strength of your defence and the efficiency of your line-out - where the All Blacks have improved immensely over the last five years - you can play any style on attack and you will be able to adapt to the weather, opposition - even during a game.

The All Blacks approach each game differently and my conclusion is that one style will not secure medium and long term success of any team at the top end of the game moving forward - because the opposition will figure you out. But for the international managers to have options with regards to style and game plans, he needs to be supported by school coaches, academies and provincial coaches who are truly committed (and who has the ability) to coach the core skills of the game in a way that will develop players that can enjoy and execute the complete game. The health of the game and coaching at grass roots levels will always feed through to the top end of the game.

Until next year, cheers!

Cobus

Follow Cobus on Twitter: @Drieman3

Visagie earned 29 caps for his country and was the cornerstone of the Springbok team that reached the 1999 World Cup semi-finals. He earned the nickname "Drieman", or three man, because he played number 3 and scrummed like three men. He won four Currie Cups with Western Province and earned 43 Super 12 caps with the Stormers.

In 2003 Visagie moved to London to join Saracens for whom he played in 121 games and was voted in the Premiership Team of the Season for three consecutive years.

Comments

Rayz says...

Excellent article again Cobus.

Posted 01:14 14th October 2012

Sasquatch says...

@jonesy2:

Believe me man, we are not happy about the current state of the team. The local media in SA is far more honest about our feelings as regards the current poor run. I do,however, believe that both the Boks and Wallabies will be far more competitive next year, and the Argies have proven their worth.

Posted 01:56 13th October 2012

turboboy says...

Kids will always try and emulate their boyhood heroes. I think you also need to throw parents into the mix about how children should look at players from other nations and how they play not just their own club or country. I think this also gives a healthy respect for other countries players, skills and abilities something I feel is more prevalent in rugby and much much less in football.

Posted 23:39 12th October 2012

jonesy2 says...

nice work. i think the south africans need to sound more upset with their team it sounds like they are accepting this current form of mediocrity they have been drifting into a bit, we need to boks up and going and at their best and i think goosen at 10 is a very good step. goodluck to all RC teams in the spring tours

Posted 07:16 12th October 2012

Realbull says...

Great reading and honest content. Cant agree more, just too much rugby is being played and this is hurting our game.

Posted 06:29 12th October 2012

Rosco1971 says...

Wow, that is one of the best balanced and insightful rugby columns I have read in a Long time. Good work and IMHO bang on!

Posted 04:35 12th October 2012

jewell says...

I watched the argie v kiwi game with interest but was disgusted with some of the argie fans shining laser lights into the kiwi kickers eyes if that is the way thier fans behave the authorities should stop games in argentina until their fans can act like sportsmen Jimmy Jewell

Posted 03:55 12th October 2012

Patagon says...

Thank you Cobus! Very interesting observations, agree with all.

Posted 01:28 12th October 2012

NHSaints says...

Great article as usual. @PlanetRugby please get cobus to write the autumn international columns.

Posted 23:17 11th October 2012

Rosbif says...

Wow. Thank you. You write with effortless accuracy and knowledge. It makes such a difference to the usual stuff on these pages (sorry ED - the comment is more aimed at us fans than your journos). We fans should learn to write like this!!

Posted 20:02 11th October 2012

melkdave says...

An excellant column and series of articles ,very insightful and well reasoned every one of them .Also so right on fans perceptions lagging behind the facts,The bokke did kick less than usual ,but then for 2 games they didnt have M.Styen playing ,perhaps that had something to do with it lol(joke)lol.The wallaby pack does seen to have improved ,but they still have a very bad tendancy to eat dirt on their put in ,and feeding of the scrum is now a joke ,not even to the 2nd row ,but to the backrow now.Just what are TJs looking at ???Let the referee check on bindings the TJs on feeds ,and hinging..DAMN even the TMO could tell the ref on constant feeds and hinging/diving .Alsohave to agree that adaptabilty is now a vital key for success in international rugby,Being able to swith seamlessly from one type of attack to annother is vital now and the key to AB success imo.

Posted 19:10 11th October 2012

Pembs says...

Brilliant column

Posted 16:03 11th October 2012

rolf says...

Thanks Drieman for backing my position:

"Fundamental player development starts years before a player signs his first professional contract. General catch and pass skills, the ability to run into space and evasion skills are competencies that are developed at school and at agegroup level."

And that is whay our southafrican calls for a faster, passorientated gameplan can not be heared succesfully immediately, but need to be adopted from now on from school level, so we can harvest the results in 2015 the earliest!

Dare now, Heyneke and all saffas, and you will succeed maybe.

Posted 13:17 11th October 2012

breadman says...

Fantastic column yet again. The big man is putting rugby journos to shame, I don`t think I`ve read a better article than this in months

Posted 13:12 11th October 2012

kiwishamoo says...

Great final column, Cobus. A credit to the game!

Posted 10:22 11th October 2012

startledwombat says...

>Planet Rugby......do not let this man go ! His is the the most interesting, well reasoned column.

Well said!

This is the first time I've read any observer of rugby pointing out that NZ not only has a Plan B, they have a number of Plan B's.

It's taken the All Blacks a long time to get to this point. I had thought they learned the lesson in the 2003 World Cup, but they had to learn it again in 2007.

Five years ago.

So it seems that developing a seismic shift change within a team takes almost as as long as developing a player through the ranks and maybe as long as changing public perceptions of a teams strengths and weaknesses.

Mind you, I still want the Australian pack to stop dropping their shoulders below their hips, keep their backs straight, stop boring in and stop sneaking an early hit, before I can venture an opinion on whether or not the Wallaby scrum has improved.

Posted 10:13 11th October 2012

new_j4a says...

Hope to hear from you in Nov? Great stuff!!

Posted 07:23 11th October 2012

Magpie says...

Great work Cobus. Insightful and balanced column - please keep it up

Posted 06:57 11th October 2012

AWEBLAX says...

Well played Cobus thank you and goodnite...

Posted 05:46 11th October 2012

hayj05 says...

Yip well done, you've proven yourself to be a very intelligent Rugby columnist.

Great to see you've recognised the AB's improved lineout too, definately one of the main contributors to the improvement of this current AB's side.

Posted 01:27 11th October 2012

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