Always a Wasp

Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Topics - backdoc

Pages: 1 [2] 3
16
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Matches on TV
« on: July 13, 2021, 12:10:19 PM »
It is back to 3 games per weekend for this season, one on each day friday-sunday.

The first 7 rounds:

Gallagher Premiership Round 1

Friday, 17/9/2021 - 19:45 ko - Bristol Bears v Saracens - BT Sport

Saturday, 18/9/2021 - 15:00 ko - Leicester Tigers v Exeter Chiefs - BT Sport

Sunday, 19/9/2021 - 15:00 ko - Newcastle Falcons v Harlequins - BT Sport

Gallagher Premiership Round 2

Friday, 24/9/2021 - 19:45 ko - Gloucester Rugby v Leicester Tigers - BT Sport

Saturday, 25/9/2021 - 15:00 ko - Wasps v Bristol Bears - BT Sport

Sunday, 26/9/2021 - 15:00 ko - London Irish v Sale Sharks - BT Sport

Gallagher Premiership Round 3

Friday, 1/10/2021 - 19:45 ko - Bristol Bears v Bath Rugby - BT Sport

Saturday, 2/10/2021 - 15:00 ko - Leicester Tigers v Saracens - BT Sport

Sunday, 3/10/2021 - 15:00 ko - Sale Sharks v Exeter Chiefs - BT Sport

Gallagher Premiership Round 4

Friday, 8/10/2021 - 19:45 ko - Harlequins v Bristol Bears - BT Sport

Saturday, 9/10/2021 - 15:00 ko - Saracens v Newcastle Falcons - BT Sport

Sunday, 10/10/2021 - 15:00 ko - Wasps v Northampton Saints - BT Sport


Gallagher Premiership Round 5

Friday, 15/10/2021 - 19:45 ko - Sale Sharks v Harlequins - BT Sport

Saturday, 16/10/2021 - 15:00 ko - Wasps v Exeter Chiefs - BT Sport

Sunday, 17/10/2021 - 15:00 ko - Bath Rugby v Saracens - BT Sport

Gallagher Premiership Round 6

Friday, 22/10/2021 - 19:45 ko - Northampton Saints v Worcester Warriors - BT Sport

Saturday, 23/10/2021 - 15:00 ko - Exeter Chiefs v London Irish - BT Sport

Sunday, 24/10/2021 - 15:00 ko - Saracens v Wasps - BT Sport

Gallagher Premiership Round 7

Friday, 29/10/2021 - 19:45 ko - Gloucester Rugby v Exeter Chiefs - BT Sport

Saturday, 30/10/2021 - 15:00 ko - Northampton Saints v Leicester Tigers - BT Sport

Sunday, 31/10/2021 - 15:00 ko - Harlequins v Saracens - BT Sport

17
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Lions
« on: July 03, 2021, 05:37:50 PM »
OK so far.

Is Jonny Hill really up to this standard?

18
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Semi-Finals
« on: June 19, 2021, 02:16:54 PM »
Enjoying the way Bristol are dominating Quins. Charles Piatau is such a weapon.

Someone said on the site that Bristol had 'kicked on' after the SF last season, but it is essentially the same Bristol team that we put to the sword in the autumn 2020.

My rather hopeful money was put on Sale a couple of months ago. Currently it looks like a Bristol Exeter final.

19
Wasps Rugby Discussion / England v France
« on: December 06, 2020, 02:17:33 PM »
France currently ahead with a beautiful try.

Allez les bleus

20
Wasps Rugby Discussion / France Top 14
« on: November 22, 2020, 04:17:45 PM »
Has anyone found a way of watching the games for this year's competition - ideally live?

Google is not my friend, and attempts to locate    http://usa.tv5monde.com/en/tv-shows/sports/rugby-top-14    say to contact your provider.


21
Wasps Rugby Discussion / England Team
« on: November 12, 2020, 11:12:09 AM »
Launchbury and Willis start, Robson bench.

As my glass is half full today, there are 5 Wasps Academy graduates in the starting 15.

England v Georgia is live on Amazon Prime and BBC Radio 5 Live.

ENGLAND
15. Elliot Daly (Saracens, 43 caps)
14. Jonathan Joseph (Bath Rugby, 51 caps)
13. Ollie Lawrence (Worcester Warriors, 1 cap)
12. Henry Slade (Exeter Chiefs, 30 caps)
11. Jonny May (Gloucester Rugby, 57 caps)
10. Owen Farrell (c) (Saracens, 83 caps)
9. Ben Youngs (Leicester Tigers, 100 caps)
1. Ellis Genge (Leicester Tigers, 19 caps)
2. Jamie George (Saracens, 50 caps)
3. Will Stuart (Bath Rugby, 4 caps)
4. Charlie Ewels (Bath Rugby, 16 caps)
5. Joe Launchbury (Wasps, 65 caps)
6. Maro Itoje (Saracens, 39 caps)
7. Jack Willis (Wasps, uncapped)
8. Billy Vunipola (Saracens, 52 caps)

FINISHERS
16. Tom Dunn, (Bath Rugby, 1 cap)
17. Mako Vunipola (Saracens, 60 caps)
18. Kyle Sinckler (Bristol Bears, 36 caps)
19. Ben Earl (Bristol Bears, 4 caps)
20. Tom Curry (Sale Sharks, 24 caps)
21. Dan Robson (Wasps, 3 caps)
22. Max Malins (Bristol Bears, uncapped)
23. Joe Marchant (Harlequins, 3 caps)


22
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Wrigglesworth joins Tigers
« on: November 06, 2020, 08:34:28 PM »
As a player.

They may be better getting rid of [some of?] the coaches and putting him in charge.

23
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Our No.13
« on: October 08, 2020, 10:33:29 PM »
Daily Telegraph

Malakai Fekitoa exclusive interview: Hunting wild pigs, climbing palm trees, a devastating childhood accident... and key to Wasps revival
Since joining Wasps from Toulon, Tongan-born All Black Fekitoa has reinvented himself from a hot-stepping centre into a defensive general
By
Daniel Schofield,

Here are some things you may not know about Malakai Fekitoa: he can climb a coconut tree in 15 seconds, he is a dab hand at spearfishing and hunting wild pigs and he was forbidden from playing rugby by his parents after a devastating childhood accident nearly paralysed him.

What you probably do know about Fekitoa, if you have been following the Gallagher Premiership this season, is that the Wasps centre is the most destructive tackler in the league. Exeter wing Tom Wyatt discovered this point last weekend. No sooner had Wyatt received the ball than he was enveloped by Fekitoa, lifted up and driven two metres backwards, with Exeter duly conceding a penalty. For those who claim the “game has gone soft”, this was the perfect demonstration of how to hit hard and legally.

 
On Saturday, Fekitoa is set to face the ultimate test of his defensive abilities in his head to head with Bristol Bears’ Semi Radradra in the first of the Premiership semi-finals - immovable object, meet irresistible force. As former Toulon teammates, Fekitoa knows exactly how difficult it is to face Radradra. Go high and you risk being handed off. Go low and you leave yourself vulnerable to the offload.

“To be honest, I have no clue how to stop him,” Fekitoa told The Daily Telegraph. “He is one of the best players in the world and Bristol are very lucky to have him. I don’t have a plan. I think a lot of defence comes down to heart. Our defence coach Ian Costello tells us it comes down to you whether you really want to make that tackle and understand who you are making it for: yourself and your teammates. If he is my man then I have to take him down.”

Since joining Wasps from Toulon last summer, Fekitoa has reinvented himself from a hot-stepping, hard-running centre into a defensive general who provides a hard edge to a team overflowing with playmakers and broken-field runners. In the absence of a crowd, his big hits generate an atmosphere all of their own among his teammates and support staff.

“I don’t really go out to look to put those shots in,” Fekitoa said. “Within our system we are very aggressive. It is just timing. If you time it right then it flows. We talk a lot about creating our own atmosphere without fans and providing those momentum shifts. Boys get up when things like this happen. I may not talk a lot with the boys but I feel I lead by example. I feel if I put a marker down then the boys will follow. It is all about changing momentum. That’s really key, especially in big games.”

While there will be no fans in the Ricoh Arena on Saturday, Wasps will be supported by Fekitoa’s family in the village of Faleoa on the Tongan island of Ha’apai. Growing up as one of 14 children, Fekitoa had little in the way of luxuries. They all slept on mats on the floor while the siblings shared a few pairs of shoes and were expected to pitch in on the family from an early age.

 
“My dad travelled for work and supported us through school and for shoes but not all of us had shoes,” Fekitoa said. “You didn’t really need them on a small island. You don’t go out for coffee. You grow on your own food. I think it was one of the best childhoods. I still did schooling but most of it was self taught living whether it was swimming, climbing trees and playing rugby.”

 
This idyllic vision of hunting wild pigs and catching fish with spears - Fekitoa became expert at both - was sharply punctured when he was six. Playing besides a church, an enormous wooden door collapsed on top of him, crushing his left hip. With few medical facilities on the island, Fekitoa was treated by traditional Tongan methods of herbal remedies and brute force over the course of eight agonising months. “I still remember the pain,” Fekitoa said. “The Tongan way of making it better is to apply more pain by adjusting your leg by pulling it out to straighten it out. Those are really vivid memories. It worked but you have to go through a lot of pain. It almost makes me cry to go back to that place.”

 
Even when he returned home, Fekitoa walked with a limp and was teased by other children as a “cripple”. As a result, his parents told him not to play rugby, a ban that lasted until Fekitoa went to high school on a different island. Of course, he started playing again but his secret came out when his parents heard radio reports of his exploits. “My mum was mad,” Fekitoa said. “She told me that there was no future in rugby and I needed to concentrate on my studies.”

 
Instead he won a rugby scholarship to Wesley College, the alma mater of Jonah Lomu in New Zealand, where he met Charles Piutau, another of Saturday’s likely opponents. Fekitoa arrived not speaking any English and so Piutau, a second-generation Tongan, took him under his wing.

Together their careers took off and just months after qualifying on residency Fekitoa made his All Blacks debut in the 2014 series against England. “I think it has been the happiest I have seen my family,” Fekitoa said. “It was also important to show the people back home that it was achievable. If you work hard at something you can achieve your dream. That’s the message I hoped I put out there.”

Fekitoa was part of the All Blacks squad that won the 2015 World Cup but he failed to truly nail down his place after the retirements of midfield totems Ma’a Nonu and Conrad Smith. So, in 2017, he signed for Toulon. The conventional narrative was that Fekitoa turned his back on New Zealand for the money, but his actions were the very opposite of selfishness.


“I realised my career would only represent a small part of my life,” Fekitoa said. “In my family, there are no savings or house to sell. I realised I had to look after my family. This was hard on my career that I had to sacrifice that dream to look after my family. That’s the thing people don’t get. It is easy for people to say he’s moving for the money like it is for me. It is for my family and that’s a lot of people.”

New Zealand’s loss has been Wasps’ considerable gain. Head coach Lee Blackett says that he is pivotal to the way Wasps play in both attack and defence, and Fekitoa himself feels he is a far better player now than when he was in an All Blacks shirt. “I understand a lot more things about rugby than when I was playing for the All Blacks,” Fekitoa said. “I knew I had more to give. My legacy is not complete.”

That starts on Saturday with the Bristol semi-final. Despite reaching the Premiership final in 2017, there is only a smattering of big-game experience in a relatively callow Wasps side. Much of that resides with Fekitoa, which is a responsibility he embraces. “I like to walk towards pressure,” Fekitoa said. “That’s why we play the game, to have that feeling of achieving something special.”

24
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Team for the week-end
« on: September 03, 2020, 02:33:50 PM »
I suspect I have this completely wrong, but here goes:

Miller
Odogwu
De Jong
Le Bourgeois
Basset
Gopperth
Vellacot
McIntyre
Cruse
Owlett
Rowlands
Edwards
Cardell
Morris
Vailanu

Harris B
Barbeary
Alo
TV3
Wolstenholme
Simonds
Sirker

25
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Sorry, but Saracens
« on: July 18, 2020, 03:49:40 PM »
As Saracens have re-signed all their Lions this week, we have been subjected to nauseating articles on why:

"The culture at Saracens is second to none, that's evident for everyone to see''

Note that all the recent batch except Daly [? - I think] have been involved in Estate Agency with Mr Wray.

So they presumably had two options: sign up, or give the house back to Mr Wray.

I do not want to see any of these frauds as Captain of the England rugby team, including Itoje.

26
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Wasps do a Riverford
« on: March 18, 2020, 08:06:57 AM »
From the Telegraph"

Meet the rugby club delivering food to the needy during the coronavirus crisis
As Covid-19 puts a stop to sporting fixtures, clubs are using their free time to help deliver goods to the vulnerable
By
Luke Mintz
17 March 2020 • 6:15pm

As cases of the coronavirus began to surge across Britain last week, members of the Wasps Rugby club in Coventry realised that the days of watching their beloved team play might soon come to a temporary halt.

Sure enough, on Monday evening, Premiership Rugby cancelled all of its matches for the next five weeks, adding that “the safety of our fans is our first priority”. It came hours after the announcement of drastic measures by Boris Johnson, who advised against all “non-essential travel” and told members of the public to avoid gathering in crowds.

The prospect of five weeks without rugby has left Wasps fans “gutted”, says Tom Vale, 31, the club’s head of communications and a lifelong fan of rugby. It is a disappointment likely to be shared by fans across the world, following mass cancellations of sporting fixtures; this summer’s Euro football competition has been postponed, while the Tokyo Olympics hang in the balance.

But the Wasps, a professional rugby union team, decided not to wallow in their disappointment. Instead, a member of the community team - the volunteering group attached to the club, which organises summer camps for aspiring players and builds sensory rooms for disabled children - noticed uneaten fruit and vegetables at the Ricoh Arena, the stadium at which the club plays.

With many of their events cancelled, they concluded, it would probably all go to waste: what if it could go to the vulnerable instead?

 
“It’s a unique situation that pretty much none of us have ever experienced,” says Vale of the impact of Covid-19 on rugby union. “I have friends and family who’ve got asthma and breathing difficulties. We just thought, ‘How can we look after supporters out there in the current climate, and who’s most in need?’.”

They posted a message to their fans on social media, appealing for help for those confined to their homes. They were overwhelmed when they receive dozens of responses. “We’ve been inundated with requests.”

The goodwill also poured in on Twitter. Lifelong fan Steve Skillin said the initiative made him “proud to be a Wasp.”

Yesterday, a team of three Wasps volunteers embarked on their first mission, delivering bags of fruit and vegetables to about 75 houses in the local area. Most of those receiving help were elderly, who have been advised to self-isolate for at least 12 weeks.

The Wasps are not the only sports club using the absence of matches to boost their outreach efforts. Yesterday, Dundee Football Club announced the creation of a new online portal which will allow fans to re-watch old matches from the comfort of their living room. It will be of particular use to their older fans, most of whom may be confined to their homes for months.

Vale says the club will have to “wait and see” whether the Wasps scheme becomes permanent. “It’s just us as a club trying to help our supporters really.”

27
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Why do they do it?
« on: February 01, 2020, 06:05:42 PM »
If you place the ball on the ground gripping it in two hands, you will reliably score a try.

I nearly had a coronary when Robson put the ball down with one hand last week, successfully as it happens.

Hogg dropped the ball today playing as captain for his country.

If I was the coach, I would fine the player a months wages for ballsing it up when over the try line.

[Yes I do want Scotland to win]

28
No reviews yet, but the autobiography season is upon us and Warren's is out on thursday.

Hopefully there will be a significant section on Wasps.

29
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Japan
« on: September 28, 2019, 10:11:33 AM »
What a performance. How a defence should play at the top level. As effective in the 80th minute as in the first.

A QF awaits them surely

30
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Premiership Sevens
« on: September 07, 2019, 08:28:28 AM »
Will Wasps go for speed, or a more controlled game like Sarries last year. As if we needed to ask.

Odogwu
Sirker
Vellacott
Cardell
Kibirige
James
Spink
Porter
Wilson
Anderson

Any other forwards? Marcus Watson? Jacob Umaga?

Pages: 1 [2] 3