Ireland boss Farrell targets Springboks' 'unique way of playing'
Ireland head coach Andy Farrell says that none of his squad’s injured players have been ruled out of next week’s Autumn Nations Series opener against the world champion Springboks. The newly-installed world number one team return to Test match business when South Africa arrive in Dublin on November 5.
It will be Ireland’s first game since their historic Test series-clinching victory over New Zealand in Wellington just over three months ago. Ireland also face Fiji and Australia during their autumn schedule, with a number of players at varying stages of recovery.
Full-back Hugo Keenan, scrum-half Jamison Gibson-Park and prop Tadhg Furlong are among those with injuries, although Keenan and Gibson-Park will be reintegrated to training this week alongside the likes of Jacob Stockdale and Tadhg Beirne.
Ulster’s national squad contingent of Robert Baloucoune, James Hume, Rob Herring, Michael Lowry, Stuart McCloskey, Tom O’Toole, Nick Timoney and Kieran Treadwell, meanwhile, returned from South Africa on Monday night.
The Irish Rugby Football Union said “they will be managed over the coming days” following recent illness issues experienced by the Ulster squad while in South Africa for United Rugby Championship games.
“Some players don’t need that much game time. Some players are able to just hit it straight from the word go, some players need five or six games to hit the ground running,” Farrell told reporters on Tuesday. "It’s up to us to assess that. We are not a massive playing group as well, so needs must at times. Certainly, nobody is ruled out at this stage.”
Ireland have beaten the Springboks six times in the last ten meetings but Farrell is braced for the challenge that awaits. “They have got a unique way of playing and they are all on the same page - that is their strength, isn’t it?” he added. “They know their point of difference and go after it hard and have been very successful in doing that.
“To get back up to speed for that first game and be at our best is where we want to be and we all know it is where we have to be coming up against a good team like South Africa.”"
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Yes no point in continually penalizing say, a prop for having inadequate technique. A penalty is not the sanction for that in any other aspect of the game!
If you keep the defending 9 behind the hindmost foot and monitor binds strictly on the defending forwards, ample attacking opportunities should be presented. Only penalize dangerous play like deliberate collapses.
Go to comments9 years and no win? Damn. That’s some mighty poor biasing right there.
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