Joe Schmidt regularly makes reference to the value of having a relatively injury free, settled side in the Six Nations. He did so again yesterday, and the stats back him up. In naming an unchanged side for the first time since round three in his first, title-winning campaign of 2014, Ireland will have used only 19 players in their starting line-up, and 28 in their match-day squads, after four rounds.
This compares to the 18 and 20 in the five run-on sides in those 2014 and 2015 titles, and the 29 used in match-day squads, and indeed the figures of 19 and 23 in the Grand Slam of 2009. By contrast, Schmidt was obliged to pick 22 players in his starting line-ups last season, and 34 in total, akin to the figures of 23 and 33 in Declan Kidney’s last campaign of 2013.
Schmidt, as forecast, has made only one enforced change to his match-day 23 by recalling Tommy Bowe to the bench in place of the injured Andrew Trimble in naming an unchanged starting XV for the first time in the Six Nations since round three in 2014.
It can’t be often that a player who is omitted from a match-day squad after an undistinguished cameo off the bench, as was the case with Bowe in Murrayfield, is then recalled ahead of a player, Gilroy, who scored a hat-trick in his last offering from the bench in Rome.
In this Schmidt cited how Bowe has "trained the house down" and his knowledge of one-time former Ospreys team-mates. It was put to him that former Irish right-winger Shane Horgan has described Bowe's selection against Scotland as a "nostalgia call".
“Shane hasn’t spent any time in our environment, so he’s never seen Tommy train, so I think it’s a typically external opinion that is purely opinion based. We try to base our decision on how a player is performing.
"I've coached Shane and there's probably been times when people have questioned my selecting him in the past," added Schmidt with a smile. "There's always going to be people questioning selection. I feel that we're best placed. There's no way I'd say we get it right every time, because there's a human factor in coaching, just as there is in playing, as I referred to earlier with George North. I think he's a super player, and if somebody has a slightly off day, there's no guarantee that off days continues, in fact it's potentially going to be the reverse, they're going to revert to type and be outstanding in their next performance.
“I’m not sure whether, over the last three and a half, four years, how many nostalgic decisions I’ve made. But I can’t really remember many.”
Bowe decision
Bowe’s appearance against Scotland was his first Test since the World Cup, and Ireland’s second highest try scorer of all time thus has had little opportunity to add to the brace he scored in the pool game against Romania – prior to which his last try for Ireland was a dozen game ago against Australia in November 2014.
But Schmidt cited Bowe’s last two performances for Ulster – he was particularly impressive in an all-action try-scoring display against Glasgow three weeks ago – as evidence that the 33-year-old can recapture the glories of old.
"I think if you look at his last two Ulster performances, you can see his ability to read the game, to run a good line, to be in the right place at the right time, his aerial game, is a real strength for him, and for us, that's where they came after us last time with Dan Biggar; and Liam Williams and George North are such big men, Leigh Halfpenny got a couple of good aerial takes early in the game.
“Therefore, you cut your cloth, you account for how somebody’s training, you calculate what they bring to the game, and then you make decisions. That’s where I’d challenge anyone to do as much work looking at how people are preparing themselves, and then make decisions. The caveat of all that, is I’m not claiming that we’ve got it right, we’ve just worked hard to try to make the best decisions.”
Unchanged
Rob Howley
has gone further than Schmidt in naming an unchanged Welsh match-day squad for the first time since
Graham Henry
did so for the two autumn internationals against South Africa and Argentina in 1998. The Irish starring XV has 715 Test caps between them, compared to Wales’ 714.
Discussing the notion of attacking North, based on his defensively off-colour display against Scotland, Schmidt clearly subscribes to the theory that lightning is unlikely to strike twice in a response which also highlights the unpredictability of sport.
“I think the human factor in any sporting occasion means that the human factor is unknown, despite favouritism, despite conditions potentially favouring one side or another, or one specific athlete or another. That’s why people love it, because there is that sense of the unknown.
“So I think he will have a big one unfortunately. And I’m sure he’s highly motivated to have a really good game, as are the rest of the Welsh XV.”
Noting the chances they let slip against England and Scotland, Schmidt described Wales as “very dogmatic, they’re very hard to beat back and beat down, they’ll always come back at you.” He added that they are “playing with a little more freedom” while retaining traditional virtues.
“They keep that ball and they keep the pressure on because they are very much a gain line team, and it’s very hard to stop them getting that gain line when the big runners get involved.”