: Tue May 05, 2009 11:28 am
All this talk about wingers dropping back is fine and under any other scenario you are quite right, but once the opposition get 15m or less from your line then exactly how far do you think a winger can drop back 2m? 3m? that is more than enough for an astute kicker/halfback etc. to make it look like he is going to kick and then give a cut out pass to the now unmarked winger or make it look like he is going to give that pass and then put in a kick to the ingoal.
Whichever way that is done the winger has very little time to decide whether to move forward or backwards. Mostly kicks through are defused by somebody taking an educated guess and getting it right what will happen pass or kick. If they get it wrong then they can be made to look slow, incompetent or just bad. It is purely a decision making process.
The bits that are annoying are when the player guesses right but then makes a balls up due to thinking too much (ala Gardner for the Richards try on Sat).
While the fullback shouldnt be sat in the corner for these kicks he should at least be only 1 or 2 m inside of the kicker so that he has a great chance of getting to the ball first as he only really needs to concentrate on moving in one direction. The same as the opposition winger - who has all of the advantages over the defensive winger.
You should also have a player in the line but somewhere around the posts to look for any sort of ricochet or reverse kick.
For me these are the places which are letting us down, not always the fullbacks fault as sometimes they have made the previous tackle, but structure should compensate for this, but at the moment it isnt.