Henderson: Gatland picked favourites, not form
British & Irish Lions second row Iain Henderson has suggested that head coach Warren Gatland had picked his team largely on credit in the bank and not on form.
He also criticised the Springbok-like tactics favoured by the New Zealander. who presided over a 2 - 1 defeat to the World Champions on South African soil in August.
The Ulster second row came into the Lions tour arguably the form second row in the Guinness Six Nations, but didn't feature in Gatland's plan for the Test series, missing out on all three matches, despite featuring against South Africa 'A'.
The miraculous return of the Alun Wyn Jones to the camp after a shoulder dislocation against Japan in Murrayfield in the first match of the tour may have sealed Henderson's fate, with the Welsh legend leap-frogging straight back into the Test squad.
"I would tend to agree with that statement," said Henderson, when asked by former Ireland teammates Rory Best and Tommy Bowe if he Gatland's leaned toward familiarity with certain players as opposed to form on BBC Sport NI's Ulster Rugby Show.
"Courtney Lawes, for example, hadn't played a lot of rugby, was injured going in, missed a lot of rugby, comes in and starts all three tests.
"Don't get me wrong, Courtney is a class player and he probably deserved to be playing, but that would lead you to believe that he (Gatland) wasn't picking on who was on form at the stage, because Courtney had already banked his form from before.
"He Gatland told me I had trained really well, played really well and unfortunately it just didn't work out the way I wanted it to be.
"I wouldn't be one to go nagging coaches. In my opinion, I go about my business and do what I can on the training pitch.
"I kind of feel among a lot of the staff and squad they felt similarly, but at the end of the day it's the top dog's decision and I wasn't there."
Henderson was also circumspect about Gatland's tactics, say the Lions tried to out Springboks the Springboks.
"You could play South Africa's game-plan against the Sharks or someone like that and whenever you get however many points up, you're winning the 50-50s, the slap-downs become a 50m try and all of a sudden people go 'well they're playing free-flowing rugby today'," Henderson said.
"Before you know it, you're trying to beat South Africa at their own game. South Africa just won a World Cup doing their own game. They're incredible at it.
"Falling into what they're incredibly good at I think is something a team probably shouldn't try to do playing a team like that."
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Well said except Argentina is most certainly not an “emerging nation” as far as rugby is concerned. If you’re making global-social-political claim, then I’m out of my depth entirely.
Argentina by multiple leagues of magnitude played better than Ireland today. Striking away a try in the 2nd minute did not necessarily lead to Arg demise, but as we all know, rugby is such an emotional game that then to be down 12-0 over nothing is gut-wrenching, especially as it was effectively a 19 point swing. Argentina’s fight back throughout the rest of the match was laudable.
A howl of great sadness for a beautiful sport that has criminal administrators, feckless refs, foppish TMOs, idiotic tv pundits, et al. attempting to collectively suicide the whole thing. No fault of the players or coaches necessarily. We have a situation where punitive cards that detract away from the essence and loftiness of the game itself are celebrated to a degree that is pathologically purblind. Rugby has created for itself a fetish for punishment rather than simply allowing the game to be played. Shameful.
Go to commentsAbsolutely right, can’t expect nearly an all kiwi officiating team to know the rules properly 😉
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