From Borneo Eagle to Grand Slam contender
It’s a mistake to look too far ahead. Only one link of the chain of destiny can be handled at a time.
By Saturday Ireland will have arrived at the last link. Since Jonny Sexton’s very late drop goal in Paris, it has felt that Ireland’s destiny was a Championship defining St Patrick’s Day showdown with England. What wasn’t scripted however, was England no longer being a contender by the time they got there.
It says a lot about England’s snakes and ladders rise and fall under Eddie Jones that their Twickenham role has been reduced to that of -at best the spoiler at a Grand Slam party. For many seasons providing a bump in the road for the eventual Champions was the role of the Irish in front of a vociferous Dublin crowd. And it’s hard to see English pride at Twickenham lifting their team to the level of upset that the Irish once made their signature.
But that signature has changed and the Irish under Joe Schmidt are a very different beast. Schmidt has created a team with the knack of winning tight games and the knack of winning when not at their best. But on Saturday I fully expect this Irish team to be at their best and the English to offer only temporary resistance. Ireland don’t only want to win, they will want to win in style.
Unlike Ireland England’s enforced changes has weakened their starting fifteen. Ireland have coped incredibly well with injuries which bodes well for Japan next year.
For all the superb individual Irish performances at different stages of this year’s Championship maybe the role played by Bundee Aki has been the most significant. We all know that Joe Schmidt likes a Kiwi in midfield and in recent seasons Jared Payne has filled that role. But the unavailability of Payne and others gave Aki a chance to stake his claim and he’s done much more than that.
For a guy who used to turn out for Borneo Eagles -a friend recalled this week -and played for them on the pitches of Singapore Cricket Club in seasons past, Aki’s journey to mainstay of a potentially Gram Slam winning Irish team has maybe been the most remarkable. His performances have arguably elevated him to first in line of Schmidt’s midfield options and it will be intriguing to see what the first-choice combination will be when the likes of Ringrose, Farrell and Henshaw are all injury free at the same time.
Last November, amongst others Neil Francis was stinging in his criticism of the selection of Aki for Ireland. Francis has been consistent but from some quarters it was a level of criticism that felt greater than that of the likes of Payne, Stander and Strauss. But another strong performance and a win on Saturday will make Bundee just as Irish as anyone who’s ever worn the green jersey.
The greatest danger to Ireland is being overly cautious and giving England too much respect. Providing they avoid that pitfall and back themselves from the start, this weekend will provide an Ireland Grand Slam and hats off to Joe Schmidt.
The torment of precautions often exceeds the dangers to be avoided. It is better to abandon one’s self to destiny
Comments on RugbyPass
Ben is a little incel desperately trying to stir the pot and stay relevant. We used to get mad at his articles. Now we just feel sorry for him
190 Go to commentsPerhaps we may need to put an asterisk on NZ’s ‘87 WC win since the Boks weren’t there. You know, just as a reminder. Poor Ben Smith. Go cry somewhere else.
190 Go to commentsNz should have won. I didn't watch the game, but the ref was at fault and the bounce of the ball and the Bokke used the Bomb squad and the Bokke slow the game down and the Bokke scrum. They should remove the scrum. The Bokke are to strong. Not fair. Nz should have won
2 Go to commentsThanks for a much more balanced piece Ned and not that BS that Bin Smuth just posted a short while ago. read this article and then Bin Smuth’s and tell me there isn’t a huge difference🙄
2 Go to commentsWere the Baby Boks part of this game or did the Baby Blacks play themselves?🤔 That man Bin Smuth once again does a little write-up on the game and it is like 95% about the Baby Blacks🤣 Glad he ends off with the Baby Blacks were actually in cruise control for most of the game and weren’t actually playing for the win WTF🤣🤣 Maybe he was expecting the Baby Blacks to run rampant….
1 Go to commentsOne does not expect anything more from Ben Smith who epitomises the worst of New Zealand media arrogance and an inability to balance what he has to say about any team that beats the All Blacks. His reference to context is pathetically thin. He does not comment that Frizell deserved a red card given his blatant manipulation of his body to ensure that he could drop his body weight onto Mbonambi’s lower leg. No mention of the ball lost forward before the All Black’s try (lost in-field of the 5 metre line and gathered beyond). The All Black commitment and effort was superb and there was little in it. Given the Springbok passage to the final and the loss of their hooker in the first three minutes, their resolve and capacity to win their fourth final out of eight attempts (not three out of ten) deserves the praise that has been forthcoming from media around the world, worth reading and listening to. Ben should join his “pundit” friends on TV - he would fit in well. This sort of article reduces any credibility Rugby Pass has ever had. Why persist with this sort of nonsense? The man does his country and a rugby blog a disservice.
190 Go to commentsEtzebeth went on to say: “I would never dream of saying that systems stay in place following a change in captain. To say that would be deeply, deeply, disrespectful of Siya. A while back an Irish person told me they would be fine without Sexton, so I’m just responding to that.”
3 Go to commentsClose games are what we want to see…. What a match it was…. I am sure that everyone was drained by the end of it. The reality of it all there has to be a winner and a loser. The fact that we still talking about it is almost 6 months to the day Rugby is the winner.. Asante sana… Here is to 2027 and what it will bring out.
190 Go to commentsIt’s going to be a good game. COYQ
1 Go to comments“Shock”, the guy was casually saying he was just slightly surprised. Nowadays if you say anything it gets taken completely out of context. Calm down everyone.
156 Go to commentsAll I can say after reading this bitter, sour, sad piece is… Thank you very much! This will be read in the change room just before kick off on 31 August…
190 Go to commentsLook, we know contradicting opinions and wacky comments bring readers and clicks, so well done to RP for allowing always-wrong-Ben to say something here. However RP needs to put a disclaimer next to his comments for their own credibility. NZ was and is incapable of acknowledging their opp beating them. They refused so with Ire and with Arg in 2022 and also the Boks in 2023 x 2. Nothing Ben says here holds water, NZ attacked backwards, except when Kolisi and Kolbe was off And cyncialy took out Bongi, we played without lineouts for 75mins. Kolisi and Kurt-Lee almost scored twice. Thats 3 vs 2 for Boks, but the Boks opportunities was legal. Boks should have been 16-3 up by half time. Tacticaly the Boks attacked better defended better scrummed better (without a hooker) kicked better and crossed the whitewash more times. Boks beat Fr Eng Nz to win in 23, comeon give some credit at least. Even Federer Verstappen NY Mets, Mamoa, was able to see a great human sport achievement by the Boks and their DNA Boks #RWC27 !🏉
190 Go to commentsForget the 85kg bit, that can become something else. However I do like the one off test on ANZAC day idea. SR plays Fri/ Sat, test players travel Sunday and the squads have the full week together before playing Saturday. Rest of SR has a week off. Either involve women's teams in same location or in the other country and rotate annually. Herbert is right in that change is needed.
3 Go to commentsI’ve read loads of nonsense before but this article takes the cake. Or perhaps someone changed the date for April Fool's Day.
3 Go to commentsReally Rugbypass? Ben Smith I think you forgot what the Springboks did to the All Blacks at Twickenham 8 weeks earlier? Springboks 35 All Blacks 7. There is alot of ifs and buts in your article. The All Blacks threw the sink at the Springboks and unfortunately they were not good enough regardless if they played with 14 men or not. It was the Springboks who forced the All Blacks to make mistakes! Sorry but not Sorry the Springboks is the best ever Rugby World Cup Nation in the world. 4 Cups baby!
190 Go to commentsYou just backed the Boks with that fantastic review! Well done! Have some cake!
190 Go to commentsBen Smith please write up something better than this. The Springboks would have won the world cup if you were 15 men on the field. They would have found a way, they always find a way to beat the All Blacks.
190 Go to commentsWow, there is a lot of “could have” and “ should have” in this waist of time dribble. I love the desperation in this story to search for a glimpse at a silver lining. Here are the facts, NZ was a badly coached and undisciplined shadow of their former glory. They never took the lead in a game they were never going to win.
190 Go to commentsGOTTA MAKE ‘THE GEORGE’ HAPPEN!!!! That’s a great idea! A trans Tasman midget battle on ANZAC Day. I don’t think the ABs Wallabies game should be a one off winner takes all though, just the first match with the other two later in the year with the RC. Reason being, no one will ever shut up about how aussies couldn’t win it when it was a 3 match series.
3 Go to comments@Ben smith. Thats knock out rugby. So honeslty who cares?
190 Go to comments