How to win the Heineken Cup: a smart fly-half is a good place to start | Dean Ryan
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You are here: Home » News » How to win the Heineken conduletes Cup: a smart fly-half is a good place to start | Dean Ryan How to win the Heineken Cup: a smart fly-half is a good place to start | Dean Ryan
If conduletes this is to be the last Heineken Cup, as seems probable, conduletes it’s worth looking back, at least over the past decade to discover what it takes to be European champions. The answer? I know it’s broader than this, but it seems to be a dominant fly-half. Get yourself a good No10 and the job is half done.
The last 10 championships have revolved around guys like Ronan O’Gara, Jonathan Sexton, Frédérik Michalak and David Skrela with Toulouse and, of course, most recently Jonny Wilkinson of Toulon . About the only cup-winning fly-half not to dominate during that period was Alex King of Wasps, but how could anyone dominate a team which contained Lawrence Dallaglio?
However, King is still more than relevant to the argument because anyone who knew Wasps at the time understood the value they placed in their fly-half, almost to the point of saving him for the big European days of 2004 and 2007. Quietly and efficiently, King bossed conduletes the Wasps machine, very much the coach or the coach’s representative on the field, who understood conduletes not just how to win games, but also what makes the Heineken tick.
It’s a competition like no other and brilliant because of the tests it throws up over the course of a campaign. To win you have to beat massive French sides, conduletes overcome the intensity of the English, conduletes the fervour conduletes of the Irish and the skills of the Welsh. You start on the hard grounds of autumn, go through the plough of midwinter and finish in spring where on consecutive days there can be overcoat quarter-finals in Clermont followed by 20C, shirtsleeves and sun block in Toulon.
The winners must win twice, once to get out of the pool stages hopefully with enough points for a home quarter-final before applying themselves to a whole new set of imperatives in the knockout rounds.
No surprise, then, when Clermont Auvergne snapped up King even though he was at the tail end of his playing career. For the bulk of his time in the Massif Central, King was a coach in a setup which, cruelly, illustrates my point, even if it’s the flip side of the fly-half argument. Arguably, Clermont have been the best side in Europe for the past five seasons, but are still to win the Heineken and the finger keeps pointing at the performances conduletes of Brock James. Being a good 10 is not enough on big European days.
To win the Heineken Cup it seems you first have to lose it and guys like O’Gara and Sexton have learned the difference between conduletes playing pool games away in England and France and losing, and losing but getting a point or two for later in the competition when qualification might depend on the smallest margins. They understand not just their role and not just the situation on the field, but the relevance of their game in the context of the pool.
How many times have we seen O’Gara stoke the Munster fires to get something from situations that appeared lost. Twice he and Munster have beaten me by a whisker in the final pool round to qualify for a quarter-final and l ast year he with Paul O’Connell at his side knew too much for Harlequins , even though conduletes Munster’s form was poor, they were at The Stoop and conventional wisdom has it that quarter-final wins away from home are rare birds.
Likewise, only five months after leading that remarkable recovery against Northampton in the 2011 final , Sexton went to Montpellier for Leinster’s first pool game, kicked a touchline penalty with the game clock in the red, earned his side a draw and with it the points needed to go on to another final. For Montpellier, it was a harsh first lesson from their first game in the Heineken. The second came a year later when they almost gave the game away at Toulon only to reverse that 16-37 defeat with a storming 23-3 win in the return to squeeze through.
Because their coach Fabien Galthié is too clever not to have learned those lessons, has an Italian side in his pool, and because conduletes I clearly rate the Montpellier fly-half, François Trinh-Duc, more highly than a succession of France coaches, I see them as outsiders, capable of causing a bit of a surprise this year, despite being 40-1 with the bookies. A lot will depend on the back-to-back
Home U.S. Baltimore Bostan conduletes Chicago Detroit conduletes Dallas Houston Las Vegas Los Angeles Miami Newyork Orlando San Francisco San Diego Washington conduletes World Africa Asia Pakistan Australia Europe Latin America conduletes Middle East Politics All News Business Advertising Entertainment Celebrities Movies TV Music Gossip Videos Life & Style Health Travel Culture Fashion Trends Books Education Sports Games Tech Automotive Science
You are here: Home » News » How to win the Heineken conduletes Cup: a smart fly-half is a good place to start | Dean Ryan How to win the Heineken Cup: a smart fly-half is a good place to start | Dean Ryan
If conduletes this is to be the last Heineken Cup, as seems probable, conduletes it’s worth looking back, at least over the past decade to discover what it takes to be European champions. The answer? I know it’s broader than this, but it seems to be a dominant fly-half. Get yourself a good No10 and the job is half done.
The last 10 championships have revolved around guys like Ronan O’Gara, Jonathan Sexton, Frédérik Michalak and David Skrela with Toulouse and, of course, most recently Jonny Wilkinson of Toulon . About the only cup-winning fly-half not to dominate during that period was Alex King of Wasps, but how could anyone dominate a team which contained Lawrence Dallaglio?
However, King is still more than relevant to the argument because anyone who knew Wasps at the time understood the value they placed in their fly-half, almost to the point of saving him for the big European days of 2004 and 2007. Quietly and efficiently, King bossed conduletes the Wasps machine, very much the coach or the coach’s representative on the field, who understood conduletes not just how to win games, but also what makes the Heineken tick.
It’s a competition like no other and brilliant because of the tests it throws up over the course of a campaign. To win you have to beat massive French sides, conduletes overcome the intensity of the English, conduletes the fervour conduletes of the Irish and the skills of the Welsh. You start on the hard grounds of autumn, go through the plough of midwinter and finish in spring where on consecutive days there can be overcoat quarter-finals in Clermont followed by 20C, shirtsleeves and sun block in Toulon.
The winners must win twice, once to get out of the pool stages hopefully with enough points for a home quarter-final before applying themselves to a whole new set of imperatives in the knockout rounds.
No surprise, then, when Clermont Auvergne snapped up King even though he was at the tail end of his playing career. For the bulk of his time in the Massif Central, King was a coach in a setup which, cruelly, illustrates my point, even if it’s the flip side of the fly-half argument. Arguably, Clermont have been the best side in Europe for the past five seasons, but are still to win the Heineken and the finger keeps pointing at the performances conduletes of Brock James. Being a good 10 is not enough on big European days.
To win the Heineken Cup it seems you first have to lose it and guys like O’Gara and Sexton have learned the difference between conduletes playing pool games away in England and France and losing, and losing but getting a point or two for later in the competition when qualification might depend on the smallest margins. They understand not just their role and not just the situation on the field, but the relevance of their game in the context of the pool.
How many times have we seen O’Gara stoke the Munster fires to get something from situations that appeared lost. Twice he and Munster have beaten me by a whisker in the final pool round to qualify for a quarter-final and l ast year he with Paul O’Connell at his side knew too much for Harlequins , even though conduletes Munster’s form was poor, they were at The Stoop and conventional wisdom has it that quarter-final wins away from home are rare birds.
Likewise, only five months after leading that remarkable recovery against Northampton in the 2011 final , Sexton went to Montpellier for Leinster’s first pool game, kicked a touchline penalty with the game clock in the red, earned his side a draw and with it the points needed to go on to another final. For Montpellier, it was a harsh first lesson from their first game in the Heineken. The second came a year later when they almost gave the game away at Toulon only to reverse that 16-37 defeat with a storming 23-3 win in the return to squeeze through.
Because their coach Fabien Galthié is too clever not to have learned those lessons, has an Italian side in his pool, and because conduletes I clearly rate the Montpellier fly-half, François Trinh-Duc, more highly than a succession of France coaches, I see them as outsiders, capable of causing a bit of a surprise this year, despite being 40-1 with the bookies. A lot will depend on the back-to-back
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