Three times a failure

Three times a failure

JON CARDINELLI can’t understand why the pointless Tri-Series is packaged as an entertaining contest.

The Tri-Series has concluded, and I find myself reaching for superlatives that simply don’t apply. Underwhelming is the best word to describe the three-game sham masquerading as a contest, and I’m underwhelmed because, like many other people, I made the mistake of thinking this most recent tournament meant something.

Did these results matter? No say the coaches of the Lions, Sharks and Stormers. Is there a trophy? Asked last week, one coach wasn’t even sure, but dismissed the question by reinforcing point number one: performance is the priority.

There’s no need to paint a set of pre-season games as a tournament, no need to lie to the public by telling them that warm-up games are contests. There’s no need to charge them to watch these games, nor televise them, because all it does is fuel the expectation of paying customers.

I’m disappointed as a rugby fan, but I would be livid if I’d had to pay to watch the Tri-Series. It’s like paying to watch training sessions be it on a rugby field or in the cricket nets. The players are sharpening their game for the tournament that matters, and while there’s value in watching pre-season matches so as to gauge performances and sneak a peak at potential combinations, there shouldn’t be the drama and illusion that results matter.

I attended all three Tri-Series games, and from what I heard from the public and press, there was a massive sense of anticlimax. But should we have got our hopes up in the first place, or should we have treated these practice sessions for what they were? And the question is directed not only to the fans and media, but to the authorities that green light ‘competitions’ like the Tri-Series.

Pre-season games are scrappy affairs, with coaches experimenting with different combinations. It’s also a time where coaches are reluctant to show their hand. As you can imagine, a pre-season tournament like the Tri-Series that’s watched on national television, and written about by journalists from all over South Africa, is unlikely to give much away in terms of tactical strengths and innovative ploys.

The authorities need to move away from this failed marketing exercise and embrace the kind of marketing that matters. Before 2009, a team like the Stormers would travel to Paarl or Wellington to tackle Boland in a set of pre-season friendlies. The fixtures were a hit in the local communities, and the coaches and players were able to experiment without fear of mass scrutiny or the risk of giving too much away.

There was usually one fixture against another Super Rugby opponent, but the fixture was never hyped to the extent that it is today. There also wasn’t a whole tournament reserved for the pre-season, as the right people realised that too much exposure can be a bad thing. Injuries are also a realistic concern, so you don’t want to be playing too many games at Super Rugby intensity before the tournament has even started. In this sense, the Bulls and Cheetahs have got it right with their pre-season programmes.

The three recent games at Newlands revealed little in terms of how the Lions, Sharks and Stormers will play this year. It may have shown which individuals are out of form, who still lacks conditioning, and who’d rather be at home, but that the Sharks lost two and the Stormers won two matters as little as the Tri-Series title itself.

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74 Comments

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  • 1.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    Neo African dragons!

  • 2.bryce_in_oz: Reply to this comment

    What a load of hogwash… trophy or not… title or not… scoreboard or not… these are warm-up games and have their ‘obvious’ (to most) importance just like they do across the Indian Ocean and across the Tasman for the NZAR sides…

    Punters don’t have to go and watch and nor should they expect to see scintillating rugby nor take anything from the scoreboards… always the WP mob eh?

  • 3.Great White Shark: Reply to this comment

    The Sharks need to go back to playing a once off against Harlequins at The Stoop. They played just hard enough to avoid and embarrassing defeat to a club side and just entertaining enough to thrill the hundreds of Saffer expats that made the train journey to see them.

  • 4.Tacitus: Reply to this comment

    Hey, don’t disparage the Velveglo trophy JC.

  • 5.stormersboy: Reply to this comment

    It may be a “worthless” tournament with no real standing, but anyone who was there on Saturday will agree that it was no “friendly”…

    The guys were going flat out at each other….

  • 6.Tegejo: Reply to this comment

    One couple of questions answered in the last game:

    1) Elgar Watts should start for the Stormers. Had a big impact on the running game….
    2) Ricky January should be shot.
    3) Bryan Habana should retire.
    4) Gary van Aswegen in out of his depth
    5) JLP should start at 10 for the Sharks, as Lambie is in the same league as Gary van Aswegen. – Light-weight
    6) Lwazi Mvovo will be the next Sprinbok winger, with Bjorn Basson.
    7) Stormers seems to be fit in the pre-season. This should be telling come the end of the tournament.

    This really was not a good game to watch. Only a few positives coming from it. Like I said on another thread… Lions and Cheetahs can be quietly confident….

  • 7.stew: Reply to this comment

    SA sides in the past have been under cooked at the beginning of the season – fact – this tournament has at least got the players going for the start …………. And besides it has been 2 months since we have seen any decent rugby ( not that **** Heineken cup) so we are ready to start !!!

  • 8.stew: Reply to this comment

    @Tegejo(Tegejo)-6: I love Habana but gosh did he have a **** game on Saturday …. think he needs to shave his hair.

  • 9.Tegejo: Reply to this comment

    @stew(stew)-8: I was amazed at the fact the he could not get away from JLP.

    But how brilliant was Watts? This kid made a HUGE impact on the game. His kicking from hand was great, and he just seemed to calm down the entire backline. I see great things in his future.

  • 10.gunther: Reply to this comment

    Of course it something.

    It’s the only thing that stops western province from selling its trophy cabinet on eBay.

  • 11.stormersboy: Reply to this comment

    @gunther(gunther)-10: :)

  • 12.Robzim: Reply to this comment

    @Tegejo(Tegejo)-9:

    Watts came on at a time when the scrums were uncontested, the sharks have brought on all their reserves and the game has lost all its structures. One cannot judge him under such circumstances.

    @gunther(gunther)-10:

    There is another trophy up for grabs during the Stormer/Boland match. You should try and attend the match – the co-owner of Boland rugby Kurt Darren is doing a gig just before kickoff, not to be missed :)

  • 13.Thelastmovement: Reply to this comment

    Jon you tool.

    Of course it means nothing in the bigger scheme of things, but f sakes it still it awesome to watch some top rugby players playing.

    Would you honestly rather they played Boland or maties? (no offence mean there). Mmm wonder how much pre-season support the teams could build up from playing shimlas pre-season. Idiot.

  • 14.munkiboi: Reply to this comment

    jeepers JC I pity you for thinking these games meant anything in the first place. it is january. the stupid 15 kicks off in under 3 weeks, and quite frankly i think its all ridiculous.

    in my opinion all rugby is laregley meaningless until after the domestic rounds are done. the competition has a stupid format, and its crazy our players are going to be committed from this early when the only thing that matters in 2011 starts in around 8 months time.

    i am hoping all our boks take a slow start to the season, and dont worry about hitting form until july.

  • 15.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Tegejo(Tegejo)-9: he is slow off the mark though…

  • 16.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    Well there is not much to be said for the article, it is not like there was really any questions asked and if there were, it seems JC answered them himself.

    But I will again beat the old drum of live sports, scrap that, pro-sports being presented as such.

    All nations with the exception of SA and possibly England are complaining about waining numbers in the stands, and for the life of me I cannot understand when authorities will realise that when people go to a stadium, they want to be entertained.

    And that does not mean some dude on a hi-fi hooked up to the PA system ‘entertaining’ the crowds with his personal CD collection or some aerobics bunnies prancing around on the field to music that is out of sinc to the moves for a guy on the stand 100 meters away.

    And that is why I refuse, and have not ever paid more than R100 for any ticket to any sporting event in this country, and never will.

  • 17.Taahirah: Reply to this comment

    @PissAnt(PissAnt)-16: Dont like the Stormer girls huh?

  • 18.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    @Taahirah(Taahirah)-17:

    They’re girls?

  • 19.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    Lwazi Mvovo is a beast, he BOUNCED l.cronje like a ping pong ball! :mrgreen: if wacko jaco was watching he must’ve had flashbacks of when it happened to him :D

    Mthatha Express kwedini!

  • 20.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    Sis, nasty, scrap that comment.

    They are just earning a living.

  • 21.stormersboy: Reply to this comment

    @PissAnt(PissAnt)-20: Can’t understand why they were wearing green though….

  • 22.Bill Reyts: Reply to this comment

    Can anyone explain the one two three steps Ricky takes before being bulldozed by the opposition? My the guy has become so slow and it definitely has a negative affect on the backline! He is being tackled every second ball he gets! Is that really the best Stormers have? If so there are huge problems ahead.

  • 23.stormersboy: Reply to this comment

    @Transformation(Transformation)-19: he looked very good on Saturday. Pick of the wings for sure.

  • 24.Couchcoach: Reply to this comment

    What the hell? Everyone who has half a brain knows that these games will not be spectacles, so why this little rant?

    Moreover, the first rounds of the Silly 15 will be filled with handling errors and poor tactical kicking. It is the nature of the beast.

  • 25.grant10: Reply to this comment

    well….for 2 x R40 and 1 x R30 i got to see 240 minutes of practice rugby sitting on a grandstand on the halfway line.

    Maybe I am easy to please, but I certainly enjoyed the games…..of course the intensity and quality was not there….but that is too be expected…

  • 26.stormersboy: Reply to this comment

    @Bill Reyts(Gumboots)-22: Yes he looks very slow. That Louis Schreeder looked good again. Very energetic.

  • 27.grant10: Reply to this comment

    mvovo and basson may just be the 2 bok wings come wc….

  • 28.Couchcoach: Reply to this comment

    @Bill Reyts(Gumboots)-22: Oh ****, do you mean to tell me that we are stuck with the old Ricky?

    You have just gone and spoiled my day…oh for some common sense in our rugby – is that too much to ask?

  • 29.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    @stormersboy(stormersboy)-21:

    I missed them, but I suppose that would be because Neo-Africa (sponsors) primary colours are green.

  • 30.grant10: Reply to this comment

    johan sadie also looking sharp….our youngsters showing the ou manne how to do it..

  • 31.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @grant10(grant10)-27: pdv will never drop the FatBoys Club!

    speaking of which, why wasn’t Habana at Butch’s wedding?

  • 32.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    Stormers have problems at 9 and 10.

    They are not creating any width or space on attack. Unimaginative angles with ball in hand which leads to predictable, and easily defendable plays.

    No-where is pace created on the ball, and as much as Duvenhage and Januarie is to blame for this, so are the 10′s although Elgar did provide some spark it must be said.

  • 33.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Couchcoach(GI POT)-28: and he is more dikgat this year than last!

  • 34.Couchcoach: Reply to this comment

    Speaking of quality of rugby, England looked bloody good against Wales on Saturday and it was all down to Toby Flood. He was brilliant in the way he altered his running lines, his tactics and his distribution.
    Their backline showed the world how to make use of an overlap; not with long passes, but with an inside centre who drifts into the space and takes a flat pass on the outside of his opponent. Hape was just as impressive – then he played flat and then he played wide. All in all, their backline played at pace from deep and attacked the spaces.

    Wales were not bad themselves. Just a pity that they stick with pig neck Jones at 10. He could not get his backline away with a bulldozer. On the whole, on current performance, they are going to beat the **** out of us in the WC and England are fast becoming real contenders.

  • 35.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    @Transformation(Transformation)-31:

    Speaking of Habs…

    I would’ve walked off the park if I was him.

    When your wing has to create his own space from the base of a ruck you get some sort of idea of the quality of ball they receive.

  • 36.Couchcoach: Reply to this comment

    @Transformation(Transformation)-33: Eish, kunzima

  • 37.Dusky: Reply to this comment

    @Transformation(Transformation)-19: Was it Lionel Cronje that bounced off the Mthatha express, or was it Bryan Habana ?

    Ja – shame, old Jaco Vd Westhuisen must have run to the bathroom in tears when he saw that and had his flashback.

    You cant take Mvovo from the front when he is in full stride – I know he doesnt quite have the same physicality, but he reminds me a bit of Jonah Lomu. He has no problem with just going straight over the top.

  • 38.grant10: Reply to this comment

    @Transformation(Transformation)-31: which is why I am looking forward to the 2015 WC!

  • 39.Dusky: Reply to this comment

    @PissAnt(PissAnt)-35: I thought Habana was poor. He again, constantly waits around for the intercept but in general play he is poor. His handling was bad, and his defense was hardly spectacular.

    I also wonder if his wife expected him to grow that Belgotex carpet on his head when they got married. Looks terrible !

  • 40.Couchcoach: Reply to this comment

    @grant10(grant10)-38: I would not get my hopes up about that year’s WC – the pattern in our sport shows alarming tendencies towards self destruction and a blatant disregard for the basics of the game; both on and off the field.

  • 41.Transformation: Reply to this comment

    @Dusky(Dusky)-37: i think it was l.cronje trying to cover, habana is on the other wing…

  • 42.coma: Reply to this comment

    I liked Odwa at 15, saw a few hand-offs there. How the Sharks did not win the game is beyond comprehension.

  • 43.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    @Dusky(Dusky)-39:

    His hands let him down once.

    He got one intercept.

    His defense nothing wrong.

    If you consider that 90% of the ball which went out wide was received on the wing standing still, I don’t know what you expect wings to do.

    The handling by the inside backs was shocking.

    Considering how many balls went wide, and how often Habana handled the ball, you should get an idea of this guys’ workrate.

    Off-hand, I cannot even remember who the other wing was, I never saw him.

  • 44.Couchcoach: Reply to this comment

    @Dusky(Dusky)-39: I believe the Habana bedroom has velcro attached to the ceiling so that Habs can swing from the ceiling in his superman outfit

  • 45.Dusky: Reply to this comment

    @coma(coma)-42: 2 or 3 very poor finishing errors – thats how they did not win. They could have been 27 points ahead with 10 minutes left.

    They will have to sort that out – quickly ! This is an old issue for the Sharks. It looked like it was coming right toward the conclusion of the Currie Cup, but on Saturday it was the same old thing.

    Too much white line fever…

  • 46.Dusky: Reply to this comment

    @PissAnt(PissAnt)-43: I will agree with you that the ball that came to him wasnt great quality, but I can also tell you that as a world class wing – and probably at one time the best in the game – in my opinion Habana did not perform to expectations.

    He must remember, its his talent and not his name that makes him valuable. Personally, I think Habana has a bit of a big head. A big, carpet covered head.

  • 47.justrugby: Reply to this comment

    The big prooblem is not always the inside backs, it is this need to have forwards standing in the backline causing moves to breakdown all the time, it drives me crazy !!!

    Look at the New Zealanders and Aussies , it’s the backs who do the majority of running and passing !!!! yes at times the need to have forwards taking it up and sucking defenders in is definitely there, but time and time again I see the forwards standing in the backline retarding moves !!!

    This happens with the Boks as well !!

  • 48.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    @Dusky(Dusky)-46:

    Well I don’t know him personally, so can’t comment on that.

  • 49.Dusky: Reply to this comment

    @Couchcoach(GI POT)-44: His Superman outfit, or his Bulls jersey ?

  • 50.PissAnt: Reply to this comment

    @justrugby(justrugby)-47:

    Said it to some guys after the game.

    When you go back and watch it on TV, compare how many first time passes went to Van Aswegen, and how many to Lambie.

    It has grated me for years in SA rugby how good quality front-foot ball gets passed to a bloody tight-5 forward from the base instead of the play-maker, which is the flyhalf…

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