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Hadden accentuates the positives but much harder analysis will be needed



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Published Date: 17 March 2008
THE word 'progress' buzzed between Frank Hadden and the Scottish players as they strived to remain positive in the wake of another demoralising RBS Six Nations Championship, but much harder analysis will be required for the rest of us to discern the same optimism from this tournament that Hadden has uncovered.
The win over England was a step forward and there was hope in Rome of his side beginning to find a threat with ball-in-hand and off-loading, but, though it led only to defeat this week, that was enough to encourage Scotland's coach that he was on the
right lines, and there was reason for optimism.

Hadden said: "Considering the start of the competition, and how far we appeared to have regressed since the World Cup ... we were in a pretty dark place at that stage and had to work incredibly hard to make the progress I feel we have in this championship.

"To lose Nikki Walker (to injury last week] was obviously a bit of a blow and then to lose Simon Danielli in the first five minutes was another blow. But then to go down to a penalty try after ten minutes ... I thought the side showed incredible character to recover.

"It was a remarkable strength of will that managed to get them to a position where I felt we not only dominated and controlled the game, but had we scored in the second half from some of the opportunities we created, we could have gone on to record our best performance ever over here in Italy.

"Sadly, it wasn't to be and credit to Sergio Parisse, a top-quality player, taking a huge gamble and picking out an interception – such are the tiny margins on which games are won and lost; although you normally get forward passes when they're thrown over the line, it wasn't to be for us.

"The penalty count was a big frustration for us, but we were especially gutted for our supporters who came over here and obviously wanted us to do well and we thought we were very close to giving them a memorable performance in Rome."

Last year, Hadden was in a similar position of praising his team's character in coming back from a 21-0 deficit after just six minutes to put themselves in the position to win the game, and similarly regretted the fact they didn't then do so.

But, for all the relatively brief moments of improvement, Scotland again lost four from five Test matches, totally deflating the confidence which circled Scottish rugby at the turn of the year.

So, where exactly did Hadden see progress? He said: "Where we started against France – the quality of that performance – was a bit of a shock to everybody. We didn't win a set-piece in the last half-hour of the game, so there was a lot of work needing to be done on that, and once we solved the set-piece problem against Wales we discovered that our attack wasn't exactly a well-oiled machine and we weren't asking enough questions.

"We made some progress as far as that was concerned against Ireland, but we gave them too many opportunities from turnovers. So, we knew we had to up the quality against England and we did, and we felt confident that we were going to really up the quality and raise the bar once more (against Italy] and I felt we were very, very close to doing that. This is a very tough place to win; they are a very good side full of players who play for the finest clubs in Europe and it was always going to be a difficult afternoon. No-one finds it easy over here."

That much is a given – this was Scotland's fourth defeat in six Tests in Italy – but the question then for the head coach was why his team had regressed so much after the World Cup. He responded by stating: "The preparations just weren't good enough. We had IRB regulation nine issues (English clubs would not release players for an extra training session], trained in extremely difficult weather conditions, had illness, and a constant stream of injuries and unavailability, which meant that the preparations were not as I'd have wanted them to be. In those circumstances, we fought our way back to making some progress.

"Obviously, the side is constantly evolving and we have had to respond to changes in personnel, and we tried to be pragmatic about what the best way for the team to perform is. But I have a lot of optimism for this side. In this championship we've blooded a significant number of young players who have outstanding futures ahead of them and I'm extremely optimistic about the quality of this squad.

"I think we're not far away from making a serious impact and punching well above our weight in future competitions."

As a lesson in accentuating the positive, this was a master-class from the head coach. The questions now move to SRU chief executive Gordon McKie and whether he shares those views.

• Simon Danielli's ankle ligament injury will be assessed further this week. Mike Blair, Allan Jacobsen and Euan Murray all took knocks in Rome.





The full article contains 886 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 16 March 2008 10:57 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Six Nations
 
1

Robinski,

17/03/2008 02:06:08
John Beattie would be a great leader for the Scotland team. Comon John, set up to the plate
2

Aligator,

17/03/2008 02:41:31
Progress has to be measured against our peers and primary competitors (6 Nations, Argentina, Pacific Islands) - like for everyone else in life. So the 'goal-posts' are constantly moving. Saying we are making progress for motivational reasons or personal self-belief is a completely different subject and should be kept (mostly) private. Giving lame excuses is more a comment on the individual giving these excuses. In world rugby terms, Scotland is slowly but steadily slipping backwards. Can anything be done about this? IN MY VIEW THIS WILL DEPEND ENTIRELY ON THE LEADERSHIP THAT IS GIVEN BY THE SRU AND ITS CHOSEN MANAGEMENT TEAM (COACHES). It is not primarily a question for the players, as this is a team sport and team sports need a completely different dynamic to succeed than more individual sports.
3

parks is colin nish,

cape town 17/03/2008 05:18:31
dan parks has put hadden in a corner with his enept displays. FH blames the media for being harsh, but we (fans)are not stupid and all can see that parks is not up to it, carrying on picking parks, who lets be honest nobody wants in the team, is not fair even on parks.Since FH picked a b team to play nz in the world cup he proved then that his 'goal' was to achieve the minimun required to save his job.
if the Sru has any guts(which i doubt)it should be filling in some p45's this morning
4

Stoo,

17/03/2008 08:19:18
BYE BYE HADDEN.
5

Red Dykes,

Highland 17/03/2008 08:32:52
As an excercise in self delusion, Hadden's comments are unbelievable, the guy lives in a bubble - progress!! You don't need to be a world class no 8 to intercept Parks passes - a 4th XV prop could pick them out, and probably charge down his kicks. We made "progress" against France and Ireland?? And got humped!! I trust the SRU will "progress" Frankie Boy to a suitable jobcentre queue.....
6

Upandunder,

17/03/2008 09:31:13
5-1 thrashing against a poor Ireland side. Failure to nail a team 17-10 down which had lost four from four. A woeful narrow win over a desperately pedestrian England side. A gubbing by an experimental France side at a cold Murrayfield.

Progress? Ha!

Haddock's having a laugh.
7

GrahamH,

Edinburgh 17/03/2008 10:31:12
Hadden said before the championship that "want to go into final game with it meaning something to outcome of the championship".

It did - at the wrong end of the table.

He expected more, he was not talking about progress then. To win a home game against the worst England performance for years is not progress.

Hadden is the guy stuck by Di Rollo before, now Parks get's chosen when all knowledgable fans say drop him.No excuses left for Hadden, not even his bad bounce of the ball ones - he must go.
8

Haddenough!!!,

Edinburgh 17/03/2008 11:10:33
Frank Hadden is only espousing the SRU mantra of putting a positive spin on a poor performance. For evidence of this you should all visit the SRU website and read the match report. No mention of Dan Parks' intercepted passes there!!!

Some harsh talking and a dose of reality is needed at Murrayfield. Frank and Dan are just not good enough!!!
9

Bordererinengland,

17/03/2008 12:23:25
Please Mr Hadden .....get into the real world. This guy almost has specs which are more rose tinted than Gordon Brown.

Parisse "taking a huge gamble"? Given Park's past form (not only in Saturday's game) it was an odds on bet to go for the interception!

The rest of what he has said just beggars belief!
10

Tired runner,

Edinburgh 17/03/2008 16:01:03
Clearly Scotland is a few players short of having a top squad, but we do have several excellent players who have performed well and a couple more who emerged in the tournament. The coaches are giving people the chance and a number of them are taking their chance well.
However, its not on the players side that Mr Hadden concentrates; its on some tactical road map which none of us have seen. I doubt it exists.

I was at the France game and was very disappointed - especially as they proved in later games to be nothing special at all.

But I was most disappointed in losing to Italy. They have a powerful pack and play a tight game, but they are nothing special. Scotland should be beating Italy 8 times out of 10; we shouldn't be scared of a trip to Rome. The phrase "find a way to win" was used a lot during the world cup, and sadly it was Italy and not Scotland who did just that. We seemed a bit clueless in that last quarter.
So for me it isn't all bleak, but the amount of "sunny side up" management that we are hearing isn't justified by what we see on the park.
11

Aubrey W,

Fyfe 17/03/2008 20:33:33
Frank believes that if he keeps being positive, good things will happen.

His team won one game in five: at home and without a try.

I find his creative positive spinning insulting in the wake of an awful campaign. He should join the team of No 10.

Scotland has won a 'recent' GrandSlam - more than Ireland can boast. But it will be a few year before another. And it will need a new coach.


 

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