Ireland coach Joe Schmidt woke up to headlines singing his praises after he masterminded a superb 29-15 victory over Southern Hemisphere heavyweights South Africa at the weekend.
The 49-year-old New Zealander – who in his maiden Six Nations campaign guided the Irish to the title earlier this year – has proved a master at preparing the team for different challenges, wrote former Ireland lock turned journalist Neil Francis in the Sunday Independent.
“He may have the air of a headmaster but with the conscience of a rattlesnake his team was a personification of their head coach’s mindset,” wrote the 50-year-old Francis, who was capped 36 times.
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“Schmidt’s preparation of his team is such that now it is well on the way to being an appreciable difference and Heyneke Meyer, the Springbok coach, has been dwarfed intellectually by the mild-mannered and softly-spoken Kiwi.”
Francis said the Springboks had played like a team that thought the game was already won as they were coming off beating world champions New Zealand three weeks ago and ending their 22-match winning run.
However, he added they and the public in general had underestimated Schmidt’s brilliant strategy which condemned their opponents to their first defeat to a Northern Hemisphere team in four years.
“The roosters came to town with the sound of their own propaganda ringing in their ears and were lulled into a false sense of security and that is how they played,” wrote Francis.
“Once again we have misjudged Joe Schmidt’s savant-like quality. He was pinioned on the selection front [he had 18 capped players unavailable for selection because of injury and illness] but his overall game plan reeked of intelligence and preparedness.”
That is not to say the Springboks emerged unscathed from criticism.
“When the Springboks gaze into the bedpan of defeat they can point to a number of factors which hindered their cause,” wrote Francis.
“Prime among these was the performance of their scrumhalf Francois Hougaard, who certainly had the worst performance of his career at test level.”
Former Ireland prop Peter Clohessy writing in T’ said this was no lucky win despite having been under relentless South African pressure in the first-half which they resisted.
“Let’s be clear about this: Ireland won because they out-played South Africa and made the second-best team in the world make mistake after mistake,” wrote the 48-year-old, who won 54 caps.
Clohessy praised the leadership shown by captain Paul O’Connell and No.8 Jamie Heaslip as well as man of the match Jonathan Sexton, who contributed 16 points with metronomical kicking.
He said the rookie centre partnership of debutant Jared Payne and 21-year-old Robbie Henshaw settled quicker with the calm authority of Sexton alongside them as they began the daunting task of replacing the iconic duet of Brian O’Driscoll and Gordon D’Arcy.
It was the first time neither the now retired O’Driscoll nor D’Arcy (who sat out the match) had appeared in a starting line-up since 1999.
“They [Payne and Henshaw] defended consistently, got themselves in the right positions and showed no weaknesses that South Africa could exploit. That was vital,” wrote Clohessy.
However, Clohessy, never one during his playing days to shirk a challenge and who often got the wrong side of referees, said the victory raised expectations.
“People will now expect nothing less than three out of three [Test wins] this month,” said Clohessy referring to the games against Georgia and Australia.
“Winners are judged by the highest standards.”
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Ireland have paid a dear price for their impressive demolition of South Africa in Dublin at the weekend.
The Irish are awaiting the results of scans on injured midfielder Jared Payne, following an injury he suffered in their 29-15 win over the Springboks.
The New Zealand-born Ulster star made his Test debut in the clash in Dublin, alongside Robbie Henshaw in the centres, but hobbled off in the latter stages of the clash.
Early indications are that he has sprained his foot.
He will now undergo a scan on Monday to assess the extent of the problem and coach Joe Schmidt said he is unsure if the 29-year-old will be fit to face Georgia next weekend.
“He’s had an X-ray that’s clear, so it’s a step in the right direction, not that he’s taking too many rampant strides at the moment,” Schmidt said after the match.
“But I’m hopeful that it will be okay, but we won’t know until probably Monday or Tuesday, because I think there’s some scans booked for Monday, just to get a better picture on that foot.”
And Schmidt believes his new centre pairing proved their Test class against one of the most formidable international outfits.
“They did well: I think all week we knew it was a tough ask, and we talked about it on Thursday, and I know it’s been a topic of discussion,” said Schmidt.
“And I know in the end people will make their own minds up.
OK, you are all FULL of Sunday Rugby News… I will now go in and watch the Sunday movie… believe it is Robocop.
We need some Robocops here in SA… shoot the shit out of the criminals, fark them up totally!
grootblousmile wrote:
Julle het nie die elektrisiteit om sy batteries te charge nie 😛
@ Victoriabok:
GBS het soos 12 generators om hulle te power 😀
MacroBok wrote:
Dis nie vir Robocop nie, dis vir sy “slaapkamer speelgoed” 😈
2 @ Victoriabok:
Janee wragtig, ons sal hom maar moet charge met SONKRAG!
Imagine Robocop met so paar moerse SONPANELE op sy kop… hehehe
4 @ Victoriabok:
What happens in the bedroom, stays in the bedroom!!
‘Boks convert to running game and get the s… kicked out of them. That flatline defensive system was shown up by Brendon Venter’s Sharks against WP last year Currie Cup final, you have to be able to adjust your game plan. Bad luck ‘Boks, got out-smarted by Irish. Congrats to Irish (as much as it hurts).
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