Over the past few years, football has increasingly become a
game of statistics. Percentage points of possession, territory, shots on goals,
completed passes have become nearly as important as the only statistic that
really matters. The score line.
Rugby has followed this trend to some degree and whenever
one watches matches on TV, you are bombarded by statistical analysis. Scrums,
Lineouts, line breaks, tackles (made and missed), how many times the fly half
kicked or passed are all now shown on screen. But like football, the most
important stat is the one in the top left hand corner.
SALE
|
GLOUCESTER
|
|
34%
|
Possession
|
64%
|
33%
|
Territory
|
67%
|
204 out of 229 (89%)
|
Tackles
(% made)
|
85
out of 110 (77%)
|
10
|
Penalties
conceded
|
4
|
15
|
Turnovers
conceded
|
16
|
6 out of 6 (100%)
|
Lineouts
won
|
13
out of 19 (68%)
|
2 out of 2 (100%)
|
Scrums
won
|
5
out of 5 (100%)
|
75 out of 78 (96%)
|
Rucks
won
|
158
out of 159 (99%)
|
0 out of 0
|
Mauls
won
|
3
out of 3 (100%)
|
16
|
Clean
Breaks
|
15
|
25
|
Defenders
beaten
|
25
|
7
|
Offloads
|
12
|
Sale Sharks 57 – 10 Gloucester
A casual glance at the table above without knowing the
result would probably suggest that it was a close game possibly edged by
Gloucester. Unfortunately for the few hardy souls who travelled to the
Northwest last Friday it wasn’t the case. The Cherry and Whites somehow
contrived to gift try after try to a Sale team who had previously looked
vulnerable and had started the season pretty poorly.
Simply passing and catching a rugby ball appeared to be too
much for the Gloucester side at times. Consistently getting into fantastic
areas, only to lose the ball in contact or have it intercepted. Time after time
lineout ball in the opposition 22 was squandered but rather than change tact
and go for points, every penalty awarded ended in a similar result.
Injuries to key players have robbed Gloucester of their
strongest line-up for much of the season. Charlie Sharples is now out until the
New Year, Matt Scott, Ross Moriarty and Fraser Balmain are also likely to be
some way off returning. But this result was not down to missing players, but
simply put poor play, poor decision making and poor skill. There is no doubt
the players are trying, but this is the third occasion where some on the field
seemed to have left their brains in the changing room. The solutions aren’t
easy. Some members of the squad are going to have to drastically improve their
performances to retain their place. Johann Ackermann knew he had a tough job on
his hands before the season started and the excitement and delirium that accompanied
the opening weekend win against the Champions is now being replaced with the
grim reality that Gloucester are still an inconsistent side who make too many
errors.
Gloucester are creating lots of chances but currently lack
the patience and ability to turn these into points. What is particularly
galling at the moment, is seeing how well departed winger Jonny May is doing at
his new club, Leicester. 5 tries already this season, for a team who are not
controlling games and whose pack has been struggling for parity let alone
dominance. His ‘X-factor’ is something that his former club are missing.
Sale took their chances all night. They worked well without
the ball, forced mistakes and pressured the Gloucester lineout in particular.
They will lose games where they play better than this, but for most of the fans
in attendance that will be of little concern.
Once again there were some bright spots, but it is difficult
to praise any team that ships 50 plus points. The next match against early
league leaders Northampton will not be for the feint hearted. Richard Hibbard,
speaking on Radio Gloucestershire this week, noted that Northampton in
particular have the ability to blow teams away with their strike runners and
intensity. Defensive structures have been at the heart of training this week,
but some would suggest that simply making the correct decisions in the
opposition 22 would be the area that home side should be working on.
If Gloucester do win on Saturday, they will have won 3 from
6, all their home games and be ‘on par’ for many peoples early season
expectations. Should they lose, the perception will continue to be one of a
club in decline once again failing to reach the next level required.
If nothing else, last week has reminded everyone that
statistics are a great tool to focus the mind and to direct training and
improve problem areas. But territory and possession only give you the ability
to score tries, you need the skill and patience to actually do it.
As a Sale supporter I have to say we played very well, but against a better performing team (on the night) we wouldn't have probably scored 4 of those tries. I Honestly didn't see any bright points for Glaws, and that in itself is unusual. What isn't shown in the stats is that we scored 21 points whilst Twelvetrees was in the bin and had we failed to score those, the scoreline would have been closer...but I can't see the end result being any different.
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