Watch Rugby Live

Watch Pumas vs Wallabies Streaming Live Rugby Championship Oct 6

Wednesday, October 3, 2012 · 0 comments

Watch Pumas vs Wallabies Streaming Live Rugby Championship at 23:00 GMT on Oct 6, 2012. Watch Argentina v Australia Rugby Live Streaming Online.

Pumas vs Wallabies: Match Overview

Date: Oct 6, 2012
Time: 23:00 GMT
Place: Argentina
Competition: Rugby Championship
Live/Repeat: Live (Link to Rugby Live Streaming)

Pumas Rugby Championship preview

THEY are the new boys in a new series. While big things are not expected they have the Pumas have the ability to sprig an upset or two.
The Pumas are proved to a strong outfit in recent years but as they say in horse racing, the South Americans are coming up several classes joining the former Tri-Nations. Up against the three top-ranked sides in the world, let’s set the Pumas a slightly more realistic goal than winning the inaugural Rugby Championship – taking some scalps at home. In the hostile environs of Argentina, they’re a formidable outfit; particularly with a very long flight for visiting teams. Australia have struggled touring South America, and the Kiwis have only got out of jail there as well. The Pumas have an awkward style that can trouble top sides. They use a combative, territory game that exhibits their huge numbers of players in France, a strong set-piece and sharp goal-kicking. Though not natural, they can use the ball wide as well and coaching consultant Graham Henry is currently pressing them to attack across the breadth of the field even more.
Getting up for one game is possible, but the intensity of playing New Zealand, Australia and South Africa twice each in two months will be a huge shock to the system. It is likely to take a few years before Argentina come to grips with it. The Pumas’ form has not been crash hot in recent times, either. A young side beat France in June but after the return of the French-based professionals, the team lost twice to Stade Francais in warm-up games. The vaunted Pumas scrum was reportedly ordinary in the June outings as well, and former skipper Felipe Contepomi has elected to not play in the Rugby Championships. They’ll miss his big-game experience.
Juan Martin Fernandez Lobbe, the new captain of the Puma, is an inspirational backrower who trucks the ball powerfully and dents people in defence. Lobbe is no stranger to playing among elite company; currently playing at the star-studded Toulon. A big man who can make a big impact.
Pumas Squad: Horacio Agulla (Bath Rugby), Patricio Albacete (Toulouse), Marcos Ayerza (Leicester Tigers), Marcelo Bosch (Biarritz), Martín Bustos Moyano (Montpellier), Gonzalo Camacho (Exeter Chiefs), Manuel Carizza (Biarritz), Agustín Creevy (Montpellier), Julio Farías (Tucuman Rugby), Juan Martín Fernández Lobbe (Toulon), Santiago Fernández (Montpellier), Juan Figallo (Montpellier), Alvaro Galindo (Racing Métro), Lucas González Amorosino (Montpellier), Eusebio Guiñazú (Biarritz), Juan Martín Hernández (Racing Metro), Juan Imhoff (Racing Metro), Martín Landajo (Los Pampas XV), Tomás Leonardi (Los Pampas XV), Juan Pablo Orlandi (Racing Metro), Martín Rodríguez (Stade Francais), Rodrigo Roncero (Stade Francais), Federico Nicolás Sánchez (Bordeaux Begles), Leonardo Senatore (Los Pampas XV), Tomás Vallejos Cinalli (Scarlets), Nicolás Vergallo (Stade Francais)

Wallabies Rugby Championship preview

They won the Tri-Nations last year but then bombed out in the World Cup. They haven’t won the Bledisloe for 10 years. How will Australia fare in the new Rugby Championship?
The series whitewash against Wales in June showed the Wallabies had developed something they’d rarely applied consistently over the last few years: composure. The Welsh arrived with high hopes as Six Nations champions, and believed they were a real chance to knock over the Australian side on home soil. They came close three times but couldn’t get the job done against a determined Wallabies, who secured their wins in the final stages of each Test.
Twice Australia dropped behind with single digits left on the clock but they held nerve, scored the final points and closed it out. Such composure under pressure is a quality only the best sides possess, and Australia have been guilty of crumbling under the strain against New Zealand in recent years.
Led by David Pocock and the rising star of Scott Higginbotham, the Wallabies’ backrow has the potential to be destructive in the Rugby Championship, while Will Genia’s ability to get his men out wide into space – notably Kurtley Beale – is another key asset. The Wallabies proved in winning the Tri-Nations last year that could win away from home, too. They knocked off the Springboks in Durban and backed it up with victory in a decider over New Zealand in Brisbane.
The Wallabies have shown a tendency to start slowly (Scotland, Samoa, cough, cough) so the fact they have New Zealand first-up is a tricky encounter. The All Blacks are, let’s not forget, recently-crowned world champions and aren’t likely to drop many games. The Wallabies will need to beat New Zealand at least once, as they did last year, to be a chance of hoisting silverware and their best chance is at home in Sydney. So there’ll be no room for rust.
The loss of James O’Connor for the first few games is a blow for Australia as well. The blond dynamo was the Wallabies’ best back at the World Cup last year, and is a genuine linebreaker. Not only that, but O’Connor is the best goalkicker in Australia, and nervelessly kicked the Wallabies to their two biggest wins of recent times – against the All Blacks in Hong Kong, and over the Boks in the RWC quarter-final.Being without skipper James Horwill isn’t great news either. Australia are light-on in the locking department and Horwill is a key plank to the Wallabies pack. Nathan Sharpe and Sitaleki Timani will have to find and maintain top form.
Honourable mentions to Kurtley Beale and David Pocock but the man with his hands on the steering wheel for the Wallabies is halfback Will Genia. The star halfback is the man who strikes fear into the hearts of rival teams, with his ball-playing skills and running threats from the base of the ruck quite often the decisive element of a game in which Genia plays. Superb form in the second half of the Super Rugby season. Will need quick, go-forward ball by his forwards and adequate protection from the inevitable harassment.
Wallabies Squad: Ben Alexander, Adam Ashley-Cooper, Berrick Barnes, Kurtley Beale, Quade Cooper, Dave Dennis, Kane Douglas, Anthony Faingaa, Saia Faingaa, Will Genia, Liam Gill, Mike Harris, Scott Higginbotham, Michael Hooper, Rob Horne, Digby Ioane, Sekope Kepu, Drew Mitchell, Stephen Moore, Nick Phipps, David Pocock (capt), Tatafu Polota-Nau, Benn Robinson, Radike Samo, Jake Schatz, Nathan Sharpe, Rob Simmons, James Slipper, Sitaleki Timani, Nic White

Pumas vs Wallabies: Watch Live Online

 

Watch Springboks vs All Blacks Streaming Live Rugby Oct 6

· 0 comments

Watch Springboks vs All Blacks Streaming Live Rugby Championship at 16:00 GMT on Oct 6, 2012. Watch South Africa v New Zealand Rugby Live Streaming Online.

Springboks vs All Blacks: Match Overview

Date: Oct 6, 2012
Time: 16:00 GMT
Place: South Africa
Competition: Rugby Championship
Live/Repeat: Live (Link >>> Rugby Live Streaming)

Springboks Rugby Championship preview

South Africa have lost a host of experience post-World Cup but have a brilliant young crop of players ready to shine on the international stage.
The Boks are renowned for their physicality and tenacity – two vital traits for any tournament-winning side. What they lack in flair can be accommodated for with grit, particularly in defence. It has proved enormously difficult to penetrate the defensive line of the Boks, modelled on the stingy Stormers pattern that barely leaks one try per game. In round-robin tournaments like this, momentum can swing on the back of one performance and the Boks get to play newcomers Argentina twice to start. Two solid wins would breed confidence and potentially set up a roll against Australia and New Zealand. South Africa had three of the six Super Rugby finalists, and their players are primed following last year’s World Cup disappointment.
Consistency has been a problem since they won the World up in 2007. And since last year’s Cup they have suffered the heaviest losses, with skipper John Smit, Victor Matfield, Fourie du Preez and Danie Rossouw all gone, while Schalk Burger, Heinrich Brussow and Juan Smith are injured. You can’t cover for the loss of that much experience in one year. The new Boks coach, Heyneke Meyer, has a brilliant Super Rugby record but is already facing questions in South Africa over selections and tactics.
Bismarck du Plessis. One of the most damaging ball-runners in world rugby, du Plessis had an outstanding year for the Sharks and is relishing his guaranteed place now John Smit has departed. The hooker can change the flow of a game in an instant and his set-piece work is flawless. When the Boks need late points to win games, they will look to du Plessis to lead them into the right position.

Springboks Squad:

Backs: Patrick Lambie, Zane Kirchner, Bryan Habana, Lwazi Mvovo, JP Pietersen, Jean de Villiers (captain), JJ Engelbrecht, Frans Steyn, Mornaacé Steyn, Elton Jantjies, Francois Hougaard, Ruan Pienaar, Jano Vermaak. Forwards: Pierre Spies, Keegan Daniel, Willem Alberts, Marcell Coetzee, Juandraacé Kruger, Siya Kolisi, Jacques Potgieter, Andries Bekker, Eben Etzebeth, Flip van der Merwe, Jannie du Plessis, Dean Greyling, Tendai Mtawarira, Adriaan Strauss, Pat Cilliers, Bismarck du Plessis, Chiliboy Ralepelle.

All Blacks Rugby Championship preview

They are the all-conquering world beaters and will start clear favourites for this year’s inaugural Rugby Championship. Will they avoid a World Cup hangover?
Absolute strength across the park, top players in form, and a squad filled with big-match experience coming off a World Cup win. Add to that their strong recent records against their three rivals and the All Blacks will be a mile in front as tournament favourites. It would be a major surprise if they do not hoist the Bledisloe and Rugby Championship trophies this year, particularly as they are the only side in world rugby that regularly wins abroad, while being virtually unbeatable at home. The individual brilliance of Israel Dagg and Aaron Cruden mixed with the hard edge of Keiran Read and Richie McCaw offer a potent mix that will be hard to stop.
If their older players (Richie McCaw, Dan Carter, Keven Mealamu) suddenly start struggling or their youngsters (Aaron Smith, Julian Savea, Brodie Retallick) get the shakes on the big stage the All Blacks can be exploited. No team is unbeatable and the Kiwis have the added strain of being the game’s biggest targets – no player will lack enthusiasm and fire when playing them. The losses of Brad Thorn and Jerome Kaino from the pack are significant, while a post World Cup-hangover has been experienced by all the previous winners of the Webb Ellis trophy.
Aaron Smith. The dynamic halfback has slotted into the All Blacks No.9 jersey with alarming ease and offers a speedy, slick service to the fleet of Rolls Royces outside him. Smith gives the side a dangerous scrum-base running option and under the protection of a hardened pack he can wreak havoc. Quick ball to Carter, Cruden and Dagg will see plenty of line breaks.

All Blacks Squad:

Backs: Israel Dagg, Cory Jane, Hosea Gear, Julian Savea, Ben Smith, Conrad Smith, Tamati Ellison, Ma’a Nonu, Dan Carter, Aaron Cruden, Piri Weepu, Aaron Smith. Forwards: Kieran Read, Victor Vito, Richie McCaw (captain), Sam Cane, Adam Thomson, Liam Messam, Sam Whitelock, Brodie Retallick, Luke Romano, Tony Woodcock, Owen Franks, Ben Franks, Charlie Faumuina, Wyatt Crockett, Andrew Hore, Keven Mealamu.

Springboks vs All Blacks: Watch Live Online

 

 

Copyright © 2011 Mixx Blogger Template - Blogger Templates by BloggerReflex

Sponsored by: Trucks | SUV | Cheap Concert Tickets