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Messages - Mikeuk56

Pages: [1] 2 3 ... 11
1
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: The endless thread
« on: October 05, 2021, 02:28:14 PM »
pancakes

2
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: SH tickets for next Sunday
« on: October 04, 2021, 12:25:51 PM »
Thank you

3
Wasps Rugby Discussion / SH tickets for next Sunday
« on: October 04, 2021, 11:32:29 AM »
Morning

Has anyone heard what is happening with SH tickets for next Sundays game.
Will the smart phone entry be working, will existing membership cards be reactivated or will  printed tickets sent out?

4
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Email
« on: January 22, 2021, 02:55:20 PM »
Just being nosey has anyone else had this email?
It just looks a bit suspect to me

5
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Season Tickets On Sale
« on: November 30, 2020, 12:19:31 PM »
Went to book online and when I tried to pay just over £250 added to the correct cost. So  didn't proceed now my season tickets have disappeared. Going to have to call the ticket office and wait  >:( >:( >:(

6
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Coaching Team
« on: November 16, 2020, 05:21:43 PM »
Wasps are delighted to announce that our coaching team have signed contract extensions with the Club...
✅ Head Coach Lee Blackett
✅ Defence Coach Ian Costello
✅ Forwards Coach Richard Blaze
✅ Assistant Attack Coach Martin Gleeson 
✅ Transition, Skills and Breakdown Coach Matt Everard

Thank you It wouldn't copy for me

7
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Coaching Team
« on: November 16, 2020, 05:09:00 PM »
On Instagram

Coaching Team have all signed Contract extension

8
All the money I saved on petrol during Lockdown1 is sitting there to pay for my season tickets.

9
It would make my life easier, My boss is a CC fanatic  ::)

10
“Our focus now is to ensure we have a plan in place to take the club forward,” Wasps chief executive Stephen Vaughan said in the wake of Dai Young’s departure back in February. Wasps were in a rut when Young left, no question, but the prospect of a future without him felt so alien.

Young had been in charge for an entire decade and seen the club through the most difficult period of their history when they faced financial oblivion, before their rebirth in Coventry. A change was obviously necessary, but that did not mean the transition would be easy.

What Wasps have done, therefore, is pretty extraordinary. It’s Wasps who have finished the season in second place - not Bristol with their heavy investment, or rejuvenated Bath, or Sale after purchasing every available Springbok international.

The team in second place is the same team who at the start of December had lost four of their opening five matches. Their record after that? Thirteen wins, four defeats. Wasps were also the only side to defeat a similarly firing Bath outfit since the restart with their impressive win at The Rec, despite losing both of their hookers that day.

Perhaps their rise from the ashes comes as even more of a surprise because the change at the top came from within, with Lee Blackett taking over with spectacular effect during his interim period before lockdown and then, quite rightly, being appointed on a permanent basis.

The numbers contrasting the two periods under Young and then under Blackett are fascinating. Wasps are scoring a ton more points and conceding far less, and the numbers behind that point to a side who since Young departed have opted to play with less possession, and have thrived off turnovers, led by their supreme jacklar Jack Willis.


Wasps under Blackett are scoring 14 points more per game and conceding almost 10 points less, which is a remarkable transition, crossing for almost two more tries per game on average.

Carries are notably down - as, curiously, are defenders beaten - but everything else attack wise has increased; metres, clean breaks, offloads, suggesting Wasps are doing a lot more with less ball. Young’s Wasps passed and kicked more on average per game and their possession per game under Blackett has dropped from 17:46 to 16:56.

Young’s Wasps also made more tackles on average, about 17 more in fact, yet under Blackett, Wasps miss about six fewer tackles per game, lifting their tackle success rate to 88 per cent.

But the key metric is turnovers. Wasps might be more penalised as a result of their adventurousness at the breakdown, up by almost two per game, but their number of turnovers conceded has dropped, and their turnovers won are up to 7.7 from 5.8.

That change of philosophy to wait for their opponents to open themselves up at the ruck and the pounce, before letting a backline marshalled by Dan Robson and Jacob Umaga thrive behind a mobile pack, has served Wasps well in recent months, and given them a shot at winning a first Gallagher Premiership title since 2008.

11
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: In 4 words
« on: September 07, 2020, 05:05:27 PM »
Playing as a squad

12
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Morning All
« on: August 25, 2020, 05:04:32 PM »
 As roads are quiet should only miss the first quarter but thanks for the information

13
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Morning All
« on: August 25, 2020, 04:27:09 PM »
Stressed as I don't finish work till 5.30 :(

14
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Worcester to stream matches
« on: August 04, 2020, 12:41:58 PM »
198 Download 32 Upload and I get BT Sport in my package

What are you running to get those speeds?

Virgin?

Yes. Had cable for over 30 years, started with Birmingham Cable and through lots of mergers ended up with Virgin

15
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Re: Worcester to stream matches
« on: August 03, 2020, 05:16:36 PM »
198 Download 32 Upload and I get BT Sport in my package

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