What you experienced there was the textbook definition of "cause & effect"....When I saw my reflection in the telly watching Parra lose yet another game, I noticed my dome was looking very thin and shiney up top so I turned to Ashley and Martin.
What you experienced there was the textbook definition of "cause & effect"....When I saw my reflection in the telly watching Parra lose yet another game, I noticed my dome was looking very thin and shiney up top so I turned to Ashley and Martin.
I wonder when the turning point was exactly?
He thinks there was only one momentum shift in the game and somehow I’m the special needs guyYou must watch the games in a very "special" way... fixated only on the scoreboard and after match stats - rather than detecting any nuances, shifts, momentum.
No wonder you were a Brad Arthur fanboy - he was also one dimensional, couldn't adapt or help the team adapt either .
There was only one apparentlyI wonder when the turning point was exactly?
No he thinks our second half attack was a factor in why we lost just as much as our second half defence.He thinks there was only one momentum shift in the game and somehow I’m the special needs guy
They can both be valid reasons. If you don’t score more points than the opposition then your attack wasn’t good enough.Nobody’s patting themselves on the back. Just stating the fact that we lost because of our defence, not because our attack wasn’t good enough.
No, it just might've been that your defence wasn't good enough. The Bulldogs don't concede a lot of tries (fewer than three per game), but against us they have conceded seven tries in two games. Of course two games isn't a big sample, but that means it's not a sufficient sample to say our attack isn't good enough. The larger sample of 13 games is better, but then it is skewed by missing our most important player for most of those games.They can both be valid reasons. If you don’t score more points than the opposition then your attack wasn’t good enough.
Well we’ve had our most important player back for the last two games and we’ve failed to ice them despite having more possession. The data seems to be trending in the direction I’m pointing to rather than yours.No, it just might've been that your defence wasn't good enough. The Bulldogs don't concede a lot of tries (fewer than three per game), but against us they have conceded seven tries in two games. Of course two games isn't a big sample, but that means it's not a sufficient sample to say our attack isn't good enough. The larger sample of 13 games is better, but then it is skewed by missing our most important player for most of those games.
Instead of cherry picking a couple of games against top six sides, compare our results with Moses vs without him.Well we’ve had our most important player back for the last two games and we’ve failed to ice them despite having more possession. The data seems to be trending in the direction I’m pointing to rather than yours.
I’m not cherry picking. I’m looking at the data as a whole. I acknowledge that Moses makes us a better team. I’m saying if our attack is so dandy then we shouldn’t be losing games despite dominating possession with him back in the side.Instead of cherry picking a couple of games against top six sides, compare our results with Moses vs without him.
His kicking and composure are part of why we are able to dominate possession. But the Roosters have the most attacking talent in the NRL and we couldn't stop them. Without 55% of the ball, it would've been over by half time.I’m not cherry picking. I’m looking at the data as a whole. I acknowledge that Moses makes us a better team. I’m saying if our attack is so dandy then we shouldn’t be losing games despite dominating possession with him back in the side.