Re: Convocati per il Sei Nazioni 2022
Inviato: 25 gen 2022, 20:19
Io arriva fino ad un certo punto e poi non ce la fa più, per esempio non capisco gli atei e gli uomosessuali...
cit. Checco Zalone.
cit. Checco Zalone.
Link?Leinsterugby ha scritto: 25 gen 2022, 21:56 Cristo santo squidge rugby ci vuole un bene dell anima. Nel prossimo video ci dedica uno speciale
Esce lunedìoldprussians ha scritto: 25 gen 2022, 22:35Link?Leinsterugby ha scritto: 25 gen 2022, 21:56 Cristo santo squidge rugby ci vuole un bene dell anima. Nel prossimo video ci dedica uno speciale
E tut come lo sai?SilverShadow ha scritto: 25 gen 2022, 22:41Esce lunedìoldprussians ha scritto: 25 gen 2022, 22:35Link?Leinsterugby ha scritto: 25 gen 2022, 21:56 Cristo santo squidge rugby ci vuole un bene dell anima. Nel prossimo video ci dedica uno speciale


Lo ha annunciato lui su Twitter
Offerto gentilmente da Rete Biblioteche Vicentine:Coach8 ha scritto: 26 gen 2022, 8:48 https://www.therugbypaper.co.uk/latest- ... al-losers/
Can Crowley revive Italy’s serial losers?
Beh, Brex mi sembra in buona compagnia, atleti che nessuno mette in discussione, mi sembraCoach8 ha scritto: 26 gen 2022, 9:35 Interessante articolo sugli offload in cui figurano anche gli Azzurri nel bene ( Riccioni) e nel male (Brex)
Almeno è la prova che ancora ci considerano nel gruppo delle Tier 1
La statistica apparentemente negativa di Brex potrebbe derivare dalla sua tecnica di placcaggio? Placca sempre bassissimo, alle gambe, dà sempre l'impressione di essere uno dei placcatori più efficaci nel mettere giù il giocatore ma ovviamente lascia spazio per un offloadCoach8 ha scritto: 26 gen 2022, 9:35 Interessante articolo sugli offload in cui figurano anche gli Azzurri nel bene ( Riccioni) e nel male (Brex)
Ottima interpretazione che condividoSilverShadow ha scritto: 26 gen 2022, 10:52La statistica apparentemente negativa di Brex potrebbe derivare dalla sua tecnica di placcaggio? Placca sempre bassissimo, alle gambe, dà sempre l'impressione di essere uno dei placcatori più efficaci nel mettere giù il giocatore ma ovviamente lascia spazio per un offloadCoach8 ha scritto: 26 gen 2022, 9:35 Interessante articolo sugli offload in cui figurano anche gli Azzurri nel bene ( Riccioni) e nel male (Brex)
Lettura consigliata per il riminese che potrebbe capire perché Lamaro è stato scelto come capitano (sottolineo il condizionale...)SilverShadow ha scritto: 26 gen 2022, 9:58
Offerto gentilmente da Rete Biblioteche Vicentine:
Which is why the selection of Michele Lamaro as Italian captain is important and possibly instructive even though, with just seven caps to his name, Lamaro’s nomination as captain last autumn caught some by surprise.
His job is arguably the toughest in all rugby. Italy are massive underdogs every Six Nations game they ever play, the pressure for a win builds with every match but the likelihood of such a triumph recedes as the defeats clock up. Talk about groundhog day. As if we need reminding, Murrayfield 2015 is the last time Italy tasted victory in the Championship. That must be crushing to your confidence.
The trouble is Italy dine only
at the top table and signs of progress are obscured and opinions become warped. As big a supporter of Georgian rugby as I am and all the incredible effort the Lelos are making to break into the top flight, I still reckon that if Italy played Georgia ten times they would win eight of those contests. Italy aren’t rubbish as some claim – they are the ultimate awkward gauche inbetweeners.
Which brings us to Lamaro who to these eyes is a terrific flanker, an 80-minute tackling machine who leads by example. I first clocked him a few years back when he was playing for Italy U20 and Benetton as a young permit player from Petraca and even when they were taking a beating his head never went down. He kept tackling and competing. That used to be hard-wired into the better Italy teams but has been sorely missing in recent years.
He’s a bit different from the Italian stereotype. He’s not from the Italian rugby heartland of the north, he is the proud son of Rome and the sunkissed south. His dad Gianluca was an Olympic yachtsman who skippered the Italians Soling boat at the 1984 and 1988 Olympics and Michele was born almost within shouting distance of the Olympic Stadium in Rome.
He learned his rugby with Lazio 1927 who used to compete in the European Cups in their ‘glory’ years and which the national side still frequent. Their small ground is right under a bridge on the Via de Foro Italico on the city outskirts. You may well have driven past it on international weekends without knowing.
He now plays for Benetton because if you want to be a full time professional in Italy you play for either Benetton or, to a lesser extent, Zebre. But he is the product of neither. He has no baggage in that respect, he would seem like a good man to oversee adaptation and change on the field.
Crowley adds: “Michele captained every Italy side he played for right up through the age groups so I knew of his captaincy qualities and I saw them again the moment he joined us at Benetton. With the usual caveats of staying injury free and maintaining form, I see him as a long term appointment, one of the important pillars we need to put in place as we look for Italy to kick on and improve.”
...
Io avrei detto 9supermax ha scritto: 26 gen 2022, 11:28 Interessante la parte dove riconosce che, pur essendo un fan del rugby georgiano, l'Italia attuale batterebbe la Georgia 8 volte su 10...![]()