I hate the phrase choker... unless of course you are talking about the All Blacks in the World Cup and then it is of course completely apt.
Some members of the British press have apparently savaged Cadel Evens for his inability to win this year's Tour de France.
Instead he had the audacity to fail completely and come second... for the second year in a row, in a race he rode without the team support Sastre had from CSC.
If there were to be a criticism of Cadel and his team it could be that he took the yellow jersey too early. Especially given that his team lacked depth and proved unable to provide the support he needed to maintain the lead all the way through the Alpine stages and into the time trial (oh yeah, he did ride faster than Sastre on that occasion too).
I am not sure that Cadel will ever win the tour. I am not sure that the pressure didn't get to him. I am not sure that it matters. The Tour is nothing if not unpredictable, some teams ride in breakaways to get themselves on tv and make good their sponsors investment, they simply have no hopes of winning a stage let alone the whole thing. It is an endurance race that requires extraordinary mental and physical strength and stamina. Anyone who makes it to the end (and many who don't) if they do it drug free deserves some respect. If you come second... well that is certainly no small achievement.
While the Australian press has not explicitly bought into the "Cadel's a choker" line something about this is more than a little off. I find myself wondering if their reporting of the British media story is a way of having your caking and eating it too. I mean the 'story' is all over the front pages of the Aussie papers online and faithfully and extensively reported. The quotes seem to be from one newspaper article in the UK paper the Times which again reinforces the sense that the Australian media is lopping off a tall poppy by stealth.
Get a grip journos. Most of us watch because we know we can't do, and you can bet your bottom dollar there is no one more disappointed than Cadel to have been the bridesmaid for a second year running.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Monday, July 28, 2008
It's theory... game theory
This just goes to show that there is more to sport than a bunch of buff meatheads (or skinny meatheads depending on which event we are actually watching) being paid heaps of cash to entertain us and avoid being caught out as a dopers, excessively violent, booze/drug addicts or skipping out on contracts to play rugby in France.
Indeed philosophy professors no less can find a justification beyond nailbiting and adrenaline...
I almost feel smart.
Indeed philosophy professors no less can find a justification beyond nailbiting and adrenaline...
I almost feel smart.
Sunday, July 27, 2008
Black and Blues
What a game!
The first Bledisloe more than lived up to expectations, both sides played out of their skins and the intensity was incredible. I certainly did not expect a 10-0 margin in the first 10 minutes to either side.
All Black Brad Thorne showed the indelible print of the NRL by being sent of in the first 6 minutes for a tackle so high he was lucky he didn't take Matt Giteau's head off.
In the second half a penalty try should have been awarded for a try saving professional foul committed when Sitiveni Sivivatu was tackled without the ball trying to score. I am not saying it would necessarily have changed the result but it would have shored the ABs lead.
I thought early on that the hungriest team with the best leadership would win. I wondered what the impact of both Ritchie McCaw and Stirling Mortlock being unable to play would have. The answer is that the lack of leadership in the ABs has been exposed, the Wallabies have it all over the ABs in depth in that area.
Soiolo is the only choice to replace McCaw as captain, none of the other experienced players have the skills. Ali Williams and Ma'a Nonu, while they have enthusiasm and talent, both need to be controlled by a strong leader and I am not sure Millsy has the head for it either. To expect Rodney to step into McCaw's shoes as captain and Collins' shoes on the flank with a debutant at number 7 was too much I think.
On the other hand the Wallabies have Smith to replace Mortlock, Waugh to have impact from the bench, Giteau in the back line to balance out a young but committed side.
The Wallabies defended well and the managed to slow the linebreaks and force the ABs into some passing that didn't look solid it looked desperate.
Well I bet the NZRFU is just so pleased that they let Deans slip through their fingers. While I accept that Henry is one of NZ's most successful coaches he has been in the job for a long time. Robbie and his Wallabies have everything to play for and they showed it last night.
Roll on Auckland. Let's hope that game is as good as this one was.
The first Bledisloe more than lived up to expectations, both sides played out of their skins and the intensity was incredible. I certainly did not expect a 10-0 margin in the first 10 minutes to either side.
All Black Brad Thorne showed the indelible print of the NRL by being sent of in the first 6 minutes for a tackle so high he was lucky he didn't take Matt Giteau's head off.
In the second half a penalty try should have been awarded for a try saving professional foul committed when Sitiveni Sivivatu was tackled without the ball trying to score. I am not saying it would necessarily have changed the result but it would have shored the ABs lead.
I thought early on that the hungriest team with the best leadership would win. I wondered what the impact of both Ritchie McCaw and Stirling Mortlock being unable to play would have. The answer is that the lack of leadership in the ABs has been exposed, the Wallabies have it all over the ABs in depth in that area.
Soiolo is the only choice to replace McCaw as captain, none of the other experienced players have the skills. Ali Williams and Ma'a Nonu, while they have enthusiasm and talent, both need to be controlled by a strong leader and I am not sure Millsy has the head for it either. To expect Rodney to step into McCaw's shoes as captain and Collins' shoes on the flank with a debutant at number 7 was too much I think.
On the other hand the Wallabies have Smith to replace Mortlock, Waugh to have impact from the bench, Giteau in the back line to balance out a young but committed side.
The Wallabies defended well and the managed to slow the linebreaks and force the ABs into some passing that didn't look solid it looked desperate.
Well I bet the NZRFU is just so pleased that they let Deans slip through their fingers. While I accept that Henry is one of NZ's most successful coaches he has been in the job for a long time. Robbie and his Wallabies have everything to play for and they showed it last night.
Roll on Auckland. Let's hope that game is as good as this one was.
Labels:
All Blacks,
Bledisloe Cup,
Graeme Henry,
Robbie Deans,
Rugby Union,
Wallabies
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Hills and Spills
I had a bit of a late one last night (in a very undergrad way I operate on the theory that cheap booze kills lingering bugs) so I only caught the end of stage 16.
I saw enough to see that poor guy John-Lee Augustyn, who made it over the top first of the Tour's highest climb, stack it and lose both his lead and his bike.
Tough day at the office huh?
Apparently descending is a skill all of its own and Denis Menchov a Russian rider touted as the dark horse of this years tour.... well he is not so good on the downhill bits. He lost time to Cadel and to the other leaders last night as did the American Christian Vandevelde also reputed to be a chance to wear the yellow in Paris. Carlos Sastre on the other hand made up some ground but is still 41 secs behind Evans.
It seems too that losing the yellow has had a positive effect on team Silence Lotto with Yaroslav Popovych in the breakaway to the end. Nice to see that should Cadel need some help he may be able to get it...
Cadel did well not losing any ground to the two leaders, he is still trailing Kohl by 1 second and Frank Shleck by 8 seconds and according to those in the know, i.e. the SBS commentators, Cadel can still take it in the time trial. In fact they suggest that should he stay within a minute he should be able to take back the yellow jersey.
Well I don't know about that but even I can see that those numbers are small and the climbs are high and sportsfans that means it is game on...
Guess it's going to be another late night tonight.
I saw enough to see that poor guy John-Lee Augustyn, who made it over the top first of the Tour's highest climb, stack it and lose both his lead and his bike.
Tough day at the office huh?
Apparently descending is a skill all of its own and Denis Menchov a Russian rider touted as the dark horse of this years tour.... well he is not so good on the downhill bits. He lost time to Cadel and to the other leaders last night as did the American Christian Vandevelde also reputed to be a chance to wear the yellow in Paris. Carlos Sastre on the other hand made up some ground but is still 41 secs behind Evans.
It seems too that losing the yellow has had a positive effect on team Silence Lotto with Yaroslav Popovych in the breakaway to the end. Nice to see that should Cadel need some help he may be able to get it...
Cadel did well not losing any ground to the two leaders, he is still trailing Kohl by 1 second and Frank Shleck by 8 seconds and according to those in the know, i.e. the SBS commentators, Cadel can still take it in the time trial. In fact they suggest that should he stay within a minute he should be able to take back the yellow jersey.
Well I don't know about that but even I can see that those numbers are small and the climbs are high and sportsfans that means it is game on...
Guess it's going to be another late night tonight.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
And another thing...
My newest obsession is the Tour de France. I have never really watched cycle racing before but I must confess it is fascinating. Possibly one of the strangest sports ever with its combination of team work and individual glory, the way riders from competing teams work together and a strange sense of honour coupled with a massive reputation for harbouring serious drug cheats.
Of course I am now going to pontificate on a sport I know very little about. I think Cadel needed to lose the maillot jaune since his team appears not to have the requisite depth for success in the big mountain stages. At least not depth like team CSC who were incredible in stage 15.
I wonder what'll happen tonight...
Of course I am now going to pontificate on a sport I know very little about. I think Cadel needed to lose the maillot jaune since his team appears not to have the requisite depth for success in the big mountain stages. At least not depth like team CSC who were incredible in stage 15.
I wonder what'll happen tonight...
Labels:
Cadel Evans,
Cycle Racing,
Team CSC,
Tour de France
Winter Wonderland
I have been sick for the last week and you know what that means... no excuses not to spend hours in front of the tv watching sport.
First a confession... I didn't watch the Tri Nations. I do like the current Channel 7 advertisement for this weekend's first Bledisloe Clash though. Calling Robbie Deans a losing world cup coach is a bit of a stretch though since he was in fact John Mitchell's assistant but hey who's splitting hairs here? This weekend will be very exciting with the highly anticipated inaugural meeting of Deans' Wallabies and Henry's ABs... tough to pick a winner but for once I think the focus will be on the coaches and less on the players. It'll be interesting to see what they've got.
The AFL was an interesting weekend. Need to rethink my tipping strategy though, I got 3 from 8 this week. Saints looked awesome against Hawthorne who had some questions asked they just couldn't answer. Could be good news for the Swans who are only 2 and a half games behind them on the ladder. Mind you the form the Swannies showed against Carlton is a bit concerning. Darren Jolly and Jarred McVeigh have proved themselves real assets for the Swans. McVeigh has come into his own with the Barry brouhaha getting an opportunity to show his class up forward. I also like LRT on the forward line, his hands are good and he doesn't have to make too many decisions and let's face it the ones he does make are usually not very good. Ryan O'Keefe was great and so was Paul Bevan and they had to be as Goodes was not firing on all cylinders and Kirk had the almighty responsibility of attempting to contain Chris Judd. O'Dwyer, on debut, laid some good tackles and looks promising for the future.
I was very pleased (as always) to see Collingwood go down with North Melbourne showing what happens when Dale Thomas and Travis Cloke are rendered ineffective.
Geelong are simply terrifying. If they were going to be taken it should have been this week. Admittedly the Cattery is a tough place to win but the Ling and Ablett out and with David Wojcinski a late withdrawal the time was right. As we gathered round the water cooler on Monday however, it was pointed out that Geelong are not a two man team... and wasn't that made abundantly clear on Saturday. Having said that the Bulldogs should be disappointed in their senior players. Johnson only managed a single goal and so did Scotty Welsh. Robert Murphy got none. Now I am not saying that they are a two man side but when you are behind the 8 ball you need your big guns to fire and this weekend they didn't. In the end 10 goals separated the Doggies and the Cats and if that is a grand final preview I am not sure I'd be trying for tickets.
God I love Winter!
First a confession... I didn't watch the Tri Nations. I do like the current Channel 7 advertisement for this weekend's first Bledisloe Clash though. Calling Robbie Deans a losing world cup coach is a bit of a stretch though since he was in fact John Mitchell's assistant but hey who's splitting hairs here? This weekend will be very exciting with the highly anticipated inaugural meeting of Deans' Wallabies and Henry's ABs... tough to pick a winner but for once I think the focus will be on the coaches and less on the players. It'll be interesting to see what they've got.
The AFL was an interesting weekend. Need to rethink my tipping strategy though, I got 3 from 8 this week. Saints looked awesome against Hawthorne who had some questions asked they just couldn't answer. Could be good news for the Swans who are only 2 and a half games behind them on the ladder. Mind you the form the Swannies showed against Carlton is a bit concerning. Darren Jolly and Jarred McVeigh have proved themselves real assets for the Swans. McVeigh has come into his own with the Barry brouhaha getting an opportunity to show his class up forward. I also like LRT on the forward line, his hands are good and he doesn't have to make too many decisions and let's face it the ones he does make are usually not very good. Ryan O'Keefe was great and so was Paul Bevan and they had to be as Goodes was not firing on all cylinders and Kirk had the almighty responsibility of attempting to contain Chris Judd. O'Dwyer, on debut, laid some good tackles and looks promising for the future.
I was very pleased (as always) to see Collingwood go down with North Melbourne showing what happens when Dale Thomas and Travis Cloke are rendered ineffective.
Geelong are simply terrifying. If they were going to be taken it should have been this week. Admittedly the Cattery is a tough place to win but the Ling and Ablett out and with David Wojcinski a late withdrawal the time was right. As we gathered round the water cooler on Monday however, it was pointed out that Geelong are not a two man team... and wasn't that made abundantly clear on Saturday. Having said that the Bulldogs should be disappointed in their senior players. Johnson only managed a single goal and so did Scotty Welsh. Robert Murphy got none. Now I am not saying that they are a two man side but when you are behind the 8 ball you need your big guns to fire and this weekend they didn't. In the end 10 goals separated the Doggies and the Cats and if that is a grand final preview I am not sure I'd be trying for tickets.
God I love Winter!
Labels:
AFL,
All Blacks,
Bledisloe Cup,
Bulldogs,
Collingwood,
Geelong,
Graeme Henry,
North Melbourne,
Robbie Deans,
Rugby Union,
Swans,
Tri Nations,
Wallabies
Saturday, July 12, 2008
ABs in World Cup form?
Well the All Blacks certainly do not look like they are in the kind of form that will win them the tri-nations this year.
In fact, my concern is that they are in the kind of form that loses them world cups.
After a win against the Boks last week they went down this evening and at the House of Pain no less.
Lets just say it wasn't unexpected.
The Boks defence was awesome... It was virtually impenetrable and the ABs struggled to find a hole anywhere. Some great tryline vigilance from the Saffers in the second half saved an almost certain try. The same could not be said of the ABs who had a defensive line with holes so big you could drive a truck through them.
It was an moment of individual brilliance that put the game away. A wonderful chip and chase resulted in the South Africa's second try. The Boks were a man down and the ABs had no answer... they were left wanting.
There were some seriously questionable refereeing decisions... for example the interpretation of the off side rule left a little to be desired and he called the Boks out twice for interfering with men off the ball and didn't card the worst offenders once.
Burger fulfilled his role as an enforcer well and on the borderline of legality which was to be expected... In the end the ABs had to rely on DC who missed only once but at the most crucial moment... guffing a field goal attempt in the final minutes.
It will be interesting to see the Boks against Robbie Deans' Wallabies next week in Perth.
I reckon the tri-nations crown is up for grabs and will be a hard ask for the ABs to beat the Boks in SA... stranger things have happened though so I'll live in eternal hope.
In fact, my concern is that they are in the kind of form that loses them world cups.
After a win against the Boks last week they went down this evening and at the House of Pain no less.
Lets just say it wasn't unexpected.
The Boks defence was awesome... It was virtually impenetrable and the ABs struggled to find a hole anywhere. Some great tryline vigilance from the Saffers in the second half saved an almost certain try. The same could not be said of the ABs who had a defensive line with holes so big you could drive a truck through them.
It was an moment of individual brilliance that put the game away. A wonderful chip and chase resulted in the South Africa's second try. The Boks were a man down and the ABs had no answer... they were left wanting.
There were some seriously questionable refereeing decisions... for example the interpretation of the off side rule left a little to be desired and he called the Boks out twice for interfering with men off the ball and didn't card the worst offenders once.
Burger fulfilled his role as an enforcer well and on the borderline of legality which was to be expected... In the end the ABs had to rely on DC who missed only once but at the most crucial moment... guffing a field goal attempt in the final minutes.
It will be interesting to see the Boks against Robbie Deans' Wallabies next week in Perth.
I reckon the tri-nations crown is up for grabs and will be a hard ask for the ABs to beat the Boks in SA... stranger things have happened though so I'll live in eternal hope.
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Pollyanna?!
So the new coach of the ACT Brumbies reckons they can win the Super 14 in 2009.
That's right sportsfans... next year!
Now I love a challenge and I love a bit of confidence but seriously this is a huge call especially since the team hasn't made the final since they won the thing in 2004. You could be forgiven for thinking this is setting them up to fail.
Having said that there are big boots to fill in Canterbury and other NZ sides have lost some key players to retirement and lucrative overseas contracts so perhaps he is not so crazy after all.
Still I think it'll take more than a year to get the Brumbies into finals contention.
But Andy Friend is not completely naive. in the SMH article, he acknowledges that "he [is] taking over at a low point in the club's history."
I am not sure whether it is a relief that he is candid with the press or that he only has his rose-tinted glasses on half the time.
That's right sportsfans... next year!
Now I love a challenge and I love a bit of confidence but seriously this is a huge call especially since the team hasn't made the final since they won the thing in 2004. You could be forgiven for thinking this is setting them up to fail.
Having said that there are big boots to fill in Canterbury and other NZ sides have lost some key players to retirement and lucrative overseas contracts so perhaps he is not so crazy after all.
Still I think it'll take more than a year to get the Brumbies into finals contention.
But Andy Friend is not completely naive. in the SMH article, he acknowledges that "he [is] taking over at a low point in the club's history."
I am not sure whether it is a relief that he is candid with the press or that he only has his rose-tinted glasses on half the time.
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