We greeted the dawn of the new, Sanderson, ear’ole with a hard-fought, somewhat scrappy, but ultimately very satisfying, win.
Continue reading “View from the armchair: Leicester 15 Sale 25”Tag: rugby
View from the armchair: Sale 20 Worcester 13
No-one’s going to use this game as an example of why anyone should start watching rugby union. It wasn’t pretty, it wasn’t exhilarating, it wasn’t particularly interesting. It was, though – and this is important – a win.
Continue reading “View from the armchair: Sale 20 Worcester 13”View from the armchair: Gloucester 19 Sale 22
This one took us through the looking glass into an alternative reality where Sale, having lost the first half, rally in the second to outmuscle the opposition and snatch victory.
Continue reading “View from the armchair: Gloucester 19 Sale 22”View from the armchair: Sale Sharks 23 Wasps 26
It’s like déjà vu all over again. A one-word summary of this game might simply be: “frustrating”.
Frustrating because we’ve seen it all before: get a decent start, look good in attack, build up a lead. Opposition changes tactics at half-time and we look—
The details are slightly different, but the overall story of this game was depressingly similar to last week’s: butchered chances, lucky escapes, failing to capitalise on dominant periods.
At half-time, my little demon was jumping up and down like puppy trying to get a biscuit. He knows…
I’m not going to go over it – read last week’s report, it still applies. When we go in with a half-time lead, but without having been really dominant, you know that the opposition are going to have a chat about how to change things around and we’re going to keep on doing the same things.
Yes, there are some basic errors in there, but not as many as there used to be. The biggest problem, as I see it, is a lack of adaptability. We find something that works, get a lead, the opposition change, we don’t. We fail to wrest control back when the tide of the game inevitably turns against us.
We also seem to have decided that the speed/bulk balance should be biased toward bulk, with the result that, when someone does make a clean break, he is often left isolated and gives up the penalty. I just wonder what proportion of the penalties we give away are for holding on in the ruck? And how many of those penalties signal an end to a promising attack?
Enough. Positives: We’re fourth in the table. Last season, we were third at this point, but had flirted with sixth and eighth. At least this season, it’s been third, fourth, fourth, fourth.
The line-out is less of a worry than it was. Not perfect, by any means, but currently hovering around 75–80% completion rate. Quality of ball from the line-out is, I feel, a bigger issue than actually winning it. There’s no point in winning the ball if all you’re going to do is spike it into the ground in front of Faf’s toes.
Among the positives, I want to mention Marland. I’ve seen comments over the last few months questioning whether he should even be in the squad, let alone the team. In my opinion he is absolutely worth his place in the starting line up. I’m not going to use his injury to excuse anything, other than to say that, to my eye, he seems to be getting a bit more pace back with each passing week. Consider: he burned Odogwu over half the length of the pitch, and kept pace with Kibirige for a similar distance.
(On a related note, what was with Sam James bringing down Bassett, when every bookie in the country had him 100–1 on to score? Best try-saving tackle ever.)
Anyway, my point is not about his speed, it’s about his attitude. I watch Marland, I see someone who is looking for work; he’s coming off his wing to provide options, he’s often first in at a breakdown. He may not be a tackle machine, like Jonno, but I’ve seen him bring down some big guys in crucial positions. I don’t know what the issue is with Denny but, right now, he’s a shadow of the guy we signed a few years back. Marland is much more deserving of place than him. If Byron was fit, we’d have two industrious wingers out there posing all sorts of problems.
Assuming the ball ever gets to them, of course.
What else? JP ‘Burj’ du Preez is providing a useful target in the line-out, but it’s still an open verdict on whether he can provide the leadership in that area that Bryn the beard did. Let’s see what happens when Josh is back out on the field.
Best wishes to Zach Kibirige for a swift and complete recovery. I don’t care what the rivalries are, I don’t want to see anyone stretchered off the pitch. Good to see him up and smiling post-match.
A win at Gloucester next week is more than desirable; I think it’s necessary. Not for league position – that’s recoverable – but to regain some confidence. A win at Kingsholm followed by a win the Friday after at home to Worcester would give the team a bit of momentum going into the second Europe break. Get a Challenge cup place from those two games, and we should have loads of belief for the trip to Leicester at the end of January.
I’m not panicking yet, I’m just a frustrated supporter who wants his team to kick on and start living up to their obvious talent.
View from the armchair: Sale 15 Edinburgh 16
It’s like déjà vu all over again. A one-word summary of this game might simply be: “frustrating”.
Continue reading “View from the armchair: Sale 15 Edinburgh 16”Vue du fauteuil: Toulon 26 Sale 14
Did anyone (seriously) expect a win away to Toulon? Even without the internal upheavals of this week, it was always going to need a Herculean effort to get 4 or 5 points from this game.
Continue reading “Vue du fauteuil: Toulon 26 Sale 14”View from the armchair: London Irish 13 Sale 21
A win’s a win, for a’ that, and let’s not forget that this was a win. Scrappy, yes. Ugly at times, certainly. But after three games, two of them away, Sale are still 4th in the table, with two wins and a narrow, last-minute loss.
Continue reading “View from the armchair: London Irish 13 Sale 21”View from the armchair: Newcastle 15 Sale 13
Exciting, engrossing, enthralling, epic. These are just some of the words that absolutely nobody used to describe this game.
Continue reading “View from the armchair: Newcastle 15 Sale 13”View from the armchair: Sale 32 Saints 23
TOO. MANY. PENALTIES. Get a grip, guys, this is getting ridiculous.
Name any referee and every supporter of every team will swear blind that said ref has got it in for their team. It’s an immutable law of the universe — by comparison, the 2nd law of thermodynamics is a mere suggestion. So it was that Ian Tempest was the villain who penalised Sale 17 times from about midway through the first half until the end of the game (for context, Saints gave up about three penalties in that time).
Continue reading “View from the armchair: Sale 32 Saints 23”View from… Season review 2019-2020
This is how the season ends, not with a bang, but a whimper.
Ok, that ignores the small matter of the PRC win, but with the final game of the regular season being called off at the 11th hour, the immediate sense of let-down takes a bit of a shine off of winning what is, after all, a pretty minor competition in the great scheme of things.
Continue reading “View from… Season review 2019-2020”
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