Quarterfinals, Cards and Bunker Blunders – who gets through?

A well-organised defence is key.

Seventeen sides have received cards in the tournament so far, with a total of 39 yellow or red cards issued. Most ill-disciplined/unlucky/dirty bastards/ref’s a cheat are Romania and Samoa with five each, Samoa edging the evil stakes with four yellows and a red to Romania’s five yellows (albeit two to one player). Chile and Namibia are next on four each, with Namibia winning the Excellence in Evil award with two reds and two yellows, to Chile’s four yellows. So three of the four most offensive sides are minnows and people want them playing more regularly? Pfft! Clean yer act up, you lot!

Portugal, Tonga and Wales are on three each, with the latter on three yellows and the first two with a red and two yellows. Of the QF sides, Wales are by some distance the dirtiest, dirtiest bastards, with their three cards of shame, Argentina have two (both yellow), and England, New Zealand and Fiji on one apiece, although the Flying Fijians have a paltry yellow, compared to the horrific reds that the other two have. Interesting to note that none of the big sides has picked up a card at all – Ireland, France and the Boks have been squeaky clean (as you’d expect, especially from the Boks).

Discipline is going to be absolutely key from here on in, especially in the tackle area (Karl, go home), with fine, fine margins likely to decide the Groups A & B encounters, whilst neither Fiji nor Argentina has a snowball’s against England and Wales if they are reduced to 14 for any length of time. So, to the matches themselves.

Wales v Argentina, Saturday, 4pm Marseille

Wales have had the best scrum so far in the World Cup, but the slowest at clearing the rucks, whilst for Argentina – once a feared scrummaging unit – it’s the exact opposite. Argentina have struggled this year, losing to England despite being a man up for the majority of the match, and not looking all that flash in their must-win encounter against Japan. Wales have been Gatball personified: well organised, fit and stingy on defence and this should get them over the line against the erratic, but more erotic, Argentines. If Argentina’s backs click (and they’ll need good, clean ball for this, and Wales without Faletau may be slightly weakened here) they are as good as anyone’s bar possibly France and Ireland and could sneak through in dramatic style. Wales though, play pragmatic rugby first and are likely to wear down Argentina and prevail in the end – with perhaps some LRZ magic to go with it. Wales by less than 10.

Ireland v New Zealand, Saturday 8pm, Stade de France

A massive, massive encounter with some wonderful recent history between the sides – most of it in Ireland’s favour. They’ve duffed the Kiwis in a series in Mordor and have had the rub against them more often than not in recent years (can’t be bothered to look at the actual stats, the cards ones were enough for one week). Ireland are the complete package, with a very strong tight five and probably the best balanced and most accomplished loose trio in the world at present. None of O’Mahoney, van der Vlier or Doris is a huge man – they’re all around 106kg – but they’re nimble, feisty and intelligent, giving their backs the platform to weave their magic from. Sexton commands his troops behind the marauding pack with aplomb, giving space and time to a very well-drilled and skilful back line. There really isn’t much you can fault in the side. The Kiwis have apparently been slipping in under the radar. I’m not so sure. Yes, they’ve been ruthless in dispatching the lesser sides, including an appalling Italy, but their last two Big Tests have been against teams that actually defend – and the Boks and France have both dispatched them with room to spare. Are they coming to the boil at the right time? I’m not so sure: they have a callow front row, an illustrious but fading second row and an unbalanced back row, with a captain many Kiwis don’t think should be in the side at all. The backs remain lethal, however, and give the All Blacks a puncher’s chance of creating an upset. Yes, an upset. Ireland by 7 or a bit more.

England v Fiji, Sunday, 4pm, Marseille

The Flying Fijians have been more a Sopwith Camel with a spluttering engine, than an F16 jet this tournament, and come up against the most ridiculed sporting side in the history of ridicule. A question of who wants it less may be on the cards. Fiji have lost a couple of key players and the bereavement in the camp may upset their rhythm – or it may spur them on to greater things. They’re still capable of breathtaking tries and length of the field gallops, but their final passes and general handling have let them down this year. Get it right, and they could pull off the shock of the weekend (yes, I know they beat England a few months ago, but still). England? They’ve picked the Venus de Milo at 10, with his unique interpretation of None Shall Pass! and Marcus Smith at 15 – not a familiar position for him and one that he may regret if a few 20 stone (not sure if that’s an actual, possible weight for a man) Fijians come flying through the defenders in front of him. England’s pack should have the measure of Fiji’s and I think we’ll see slow poison from them, with Farrell pulling the strings from behind, although I don’t expect a symphony of slickness outside of him. England by 10 or thereabouts.

France v South Africa, Sunday 8pm, Stade de France

It is testimony to my great skills set that I’m able to type this whilst hiding behind the couch with my eyes closed. For every moment of surging belief that the Boks are Back and have been playing possum up until now (there’s a lot of tinfoil speculation that this is indeed the case down here) and will now reveal their full hand, there’s a sinking feeling that this is as good as it gets and we’ve got no more gears. The Boks have picked a side that has surprised many – with Cobus Reinach preferred to Faf and Libbok retaining the 10 jersey over supposed saviour Pollard. Damian Willemse at 15 may be the number one kicker as well. All in all, it look a more enterprising back division (save for de Allende at 12) and the 5-3 split on the bench has two very good fetchers and link players in Deon Fourie and Kwagga Smith, as well as the monstrous presence of RG Snyman in addition to the two props. Faf, Pollard and Willie le Roux give the Boks more flexibility in terms of how the match is progressing – if we’re well up, Faf will keep France pedalling backwards; if we need points, Pollard to kick; if we need creativity, Willie to play first receiver. France? Well, like Ireland they have few weaknesses and some sublime players – it’s not just about Dupont, with Jalibert, Fickou, Penaud and Ramos they have stardust aplenty in the backs. France also have a pack that can match the Boks in every department, including the famed ‘physicality’, and have been extremely disciplined. The set pieces should be titanic and it’s an area in which the Boks have been curiously sloppy in this tournament. France also attack wonderfully – when it’s on. A curious note is that apparently France have kicked more than any other side in the last 8, which is strange for a side of supposed gazelles, but the Kiwis also did it in their pomp. Clever, accurate kicking is poison to opponents and France have been excellent at this. As the depression settles in reading this, I’m reminded that the Boks almost beat France in Marseille in November last year, despite having played most of the match with 14, so it’s not all over, yet. It should be a humdinger! The head is leaning towards France with their fantastic side and even more magnificent supporters, the heart is pure green and gold. I’m going with the heart. Boks by no more than 3.

Bokky sunshiny optimism by Deebee7.

Blog News

I’ve added a page to the site for help with Tech Issues (click on Other Pages at the top right). So far it addresses the issue of WordPress not remembering your login and not allowing you to recommend posts or comments.y

Also, I have heard from TomPirracas who has sent this fab video of great reffing.

Onna telly this week

Friday 13th October

Bristol v Leicester19:45TNT Sports 1

Saturday 14th October

Exeter v Saracens13:30TNT Sports 1
Wales v Argentina16:00ITV1 / STV / S4C / iPlayer
Ireland v New Zealand20:00ITV1 / STV

Sunday 15th October

Sale v Northampton13:30TNT Sports 1
England v Fiji16:00ITV1 / STV / RTÉ2
France v South Africa20:00ITV1 / / STV / RTÉ2

356 thoughts on “Quarterfinals, Cards and Bunker Blunders – who gets through?

  1. sunbeamtim's avatarsunbeamtim

    Ha, yes indeed they did, Refit. I would have taken it away just for the way he was whining at the ref “it were part of the tackle, part of the tackle” to one of the most obvious slap downs I have ever seen. With Semi’s Mr.Gadget extending arms and octopus like pads on his fingers, he could well have caught that himself and run straight over Faz. I have seen far less obvious yellows given.
    Totally agree with Slade. He needs someone else to control him. Also Manu, 50 mins tops. Maybe start with Marler and give Genge a long run on ? Also, Sinkler looks flat, I would go with Stuart, again, one half is pretty much enough for Cole.

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  2. ClydeMillarWynant's avatarClydeMillarWynant

    I see the England cricketers did their bit for the rugby boys today, losing to Afghanistan bringing the rule of three and all that fully into play.

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  3. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    What a start from France!

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  4. First blood to France.

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  5. Bloody hell, Mauvaka has a set of wheels on him.

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  6. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    South Africa reply! This is intense!

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  7. ClydeMillarWynant's avatarClydeMillarWynant

    Amazing start to the game.

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  8. Smart work by Arendse.

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  9. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    How do you like De Allende now, Deebee?

    Liked by 1 person

  10. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    Ah yes, Deebee is drunk in charge of a braai.

    They cannot possibly keep up this madness for 80 minutes!

    Liked by 1 person

  11. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    Hope they do Thaum! France score again. This is even better than last night’s game.

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  12. That was a peach of a pass by Dupont.

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  13. Ok, when was the last time you saw that happen?

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  14. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    Kolbe! What a try!

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  15. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    Oh just stop! South Africa with another brilliant try!

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  16. This is just going to be ‘who scores last’ when it gets to 80mins.

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  17. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    Both sides going for the bonus point try before half time here. Has nobody told them?

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  18. Kolbe is having an absolute blinder, attack and defence.
    And the French are in again! Nuts.36 points in 31 minutes.

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  19. Dab's avatarDab

    Thought this would be a cagey affair. Missed first twenty minutes doing kids bedtime… missed four tries!?! Wtf???

    Liked by 1 person

  20. Oof, Libbok should have just kicked that again.

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  21. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    Didn’t see the game this afternoon. I take it that this one is a bit better?

    Liked by 1 person

  22. Just a wee bit Borderboy, just a wee bit.

    Liked by 1 person

  23. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    Even the camera crews look exhausted.

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  24. Ha! Dallende just grabbed Danty in full charge and stopped him cold. He never did that for Munster.

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  25. Dab's avatarDab

    @BB This is better than most games, to be fair. But I thought this afternoon’s game was pretty good entertainment.

    Liked by 1 person

  26. sunbeamtim's avatarsunbeamtim

    Ooh Eben, not much of a dip there from Antonio. Bet they don’t have the balls to call it tho. Etzebeth turning into a gentleman in his old age too, very sporting apology and hug there.

    Liked by 1 person

  27. slademightbe#42again's avatarsladewas#42

    and, breathe……………….

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  28. Jebus. Finished burning meat. That was a helluva half. And yes, Thauma, slightly pickled.

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  29. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    This seems just as intense as last night, but even more open, if that’s possible.

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  30. flair99's avatarflair99

    Good game this. Hope Eben’s YC remain a YC.

    Liked by 1 person

  31. It stays a YC.

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  32. shylurkingmrcoddfish's avatarshylurkingmrcoddfish

    Have there ever been 4Qfs with as much interest and quality?

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  33. ClydeMillarWynant's avatarClydeMillarWynant

    Surely a big offside there?

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  34. shylurkingmrcoddfish's avatarshylurkingmrcoddfish

    What is the Bokke substitutions supposed to mean ?

    Like

  35. ClydeMillarWynant's avatarClydeMillarWynant

    Jalibert’s stepping and timing of his passes is just outstanding.

    Liked by 1 person

  36. @MrCod – that Rassie’s a bit shit at stocking the bench?

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  37. ClydeMillarWynant's avatarClydeMillarWynant

    SA are getting a few decisions here.

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  38. thaumaturge's avatarthaumaturge

    WTF Jalibert?

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  39. ClydeMillarWynant's avatarClydeMillarWynant

    Dupont should have got done for not using the ball when told to at that ruck on his own line.

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  40. ClydeMillarWynant's avatarClydeMillarWynant

    Apparently the steaks are rising. Need Deebee to confirm.

    Liked by 1 person

  41. Dab's avatarDab

    SA deserved that.

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  42. Oof, Eben’s power.

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  43. tichtheid2's avatartichtheid2

    Far penalised for being a wee shite there

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  44. ClydeMillarWynant's avatarClydeMillarWynant

    Good refereeing there.

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  45. tichtheid2's avatartichtheid2

    Faf even

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  46. Haha, the ref wise to Faf’s shithousery.

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  47. How did Penaud get that pass away?

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  48. Borderboy's avatarBorderboy

    Shame we can’t have another ‘half’ of this.

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  49. Dab's avatarDab

    So. England. Pride of the Northern Hemisphere. Whodathunk?

    Like

  50. sunbeamtim's avatarsunbeamtim

    Fuck, robbed by a dodgy decision at the breakdown. Thats rough. Why take off Jalibert ?

    Like

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