'We had a meeting today and spoke about it again' - Tahs all too aware of Achilles Heel
NSW Waratahs are focused on improving their discipline as they prepare to face a Western Force side they admit they "don't know too much about". The Waratahs slipped to a 32-26 loss away to Queensland in the opening round of Super Rugby AU in Brisbane last Friday, the first defeat in their last 12 Super games against their oldest rival.
The ill-discipline which marked some of their early season displays before coronavirus shut down Super Rugby reared its head again as the season re-started against the Reds.
The Waratahs were on the wrong end of an 18-9 penalty count and had promising prop Angus Bell sin-binned.
"We had a meeting today and spoke about it again," Tahs' defence coach Jason Gilmore said.
"But there's a difference between talking about it and actually doing something about it on the field, both at training and on Saturday night.
"It's definitely a focus point for us this week."
In addition to being binned, junior internati onal Bell was worked over in the scrum by Wallabies' powerhouse Taniela Tupou.
But Gilmore, who also coaches the Junior Wallabies, is confident the youngster will quickly bounce back.
"Being involved with Angus for the last 12 months, he is a guy that is very mature for his age,"' Gilmore said.
'"It was a really tough day at the office, so I'm sure he will take some good learnings out of that. Confidence-wise he will be fine."
The Tahs' next assignment is on Saturday at the SCG against a Force side that will play their first game of the fledgling competition after receiving a bye in round one.
They have very little recent footage of the Force, who played just one game in the Global Rapid Rugby series back in March before that tournament was postponed and have since added several players to their squad.
"It's a bit difficult. I've seen a couple of their trial games this year," Gilmore said.
"For us this week we've just got to be careful that we are not too focused on the Forc e.
"We don't really know too much about them. We've just got to make sure that our systems are as good as they can be."
The Waratahs hope to have experienced centre Karmichael Hunt back from a hamstring injury.
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Keep? Do you have any idea what league is like? That is what rugby has turned into, not where it's trying to go. The universal body type of mass, the game needs to stop heading towards the physically gifted and go back to its roots of how it's played. Much like how SA are trying to add to their game by taking advantage of new laws.
That's what's happening, but as Nick suggests the slow tempo team can still too easyily dictate how the fast tempo team can play.
You mean how rugby used to be before teams started trying to manipulate everything to take advantage for their own gain to the discredit of the game.
Go to commentsIs that "paid" or compensated?
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