BRISTOL BEARS DEEP DIVE: THE WORST GOOD TEAM IN RUGBY 🐻
Bristol’s stats for this season are crazy. The good ones are incredible, thrilling & record-breaking 🤩
The bad ones leave you with your head in your hands… Let’s use @OptaJonny to explain🧵
Bristol’s attacking statistics this season are nothing short of extraordinary 🤯
They set a new club record for a Premiership season with 95 scores, just one fewer than league leaders Bath 🥈
They scored on average 35 points/game & broke the record for try bonuses in a season!
Bristol have always been one of the most razzle dazzle teams in England but they’ve taken it to another level since Sean Marsden was promoted to head backs and attack skills coach last summer 🤝
So what characterises Bristol’s attacking approach under him? Well, it’s simple… 🧑🏫
In short: Bristol run absolutely everything 🏃
They exit their own 22 via carries a mental 46% of the time 🤪 9% more than any other club in the world
35% of their tries originate in their own half, again the most of any club in the world
Let’s break down 🧑💻 the shape of their game even more:
Bears go WIDE 🚛
• 2nd in the world for wide movement
• 2nd for passes per game
• 3rd for attacking the openside
• 4th for playing beyond 1st & 2nd receiver
• 2nd lowest for tight movement
• 4th lowest for short passes
When Bristol get a chance to score they make it count ✅
They were 4th in the world for 22 entries per game and 2nd in the world for turning 22 entries into tries
It’s interesting that Marsden is called an ‘attacking SKILLS coach’ 🙌
Bristol have 28% tackle evasion - they are the best team in the world at evading tacklers 😶🌫️
Dodging defenders 1 on 1 is clearly a skill they have worked on and have now mastered 🧠
Bristol are also masters of getting the ball to their best players in dangerous (for the opposition) situations 🫨
Winger Gabriel Ibitoye finished 2nd in the league for tries scored with 13
Scrum-half Harry Randall finished top overall for try involvements with 18 in 16 games…
Elsewhere, their lineout operated at 91% and their scrum at 95% meaning they had a solid platform from which to launch their attacks 🧱
In the first half of the season the results spoke for themselves: 6 wins from their first 8 Premiership games propelling them to top 2 in the league 📈
But then things started to go wrong. A 0-38 home loss to Sale in R9 was the start of Bristol’s issues being brutally exposed 🫣
Bristol’s defence is somewhere between bad and non-existent 😬
They conceded 80 tries in the premiership, AKA a mean average 🧮 of 4.4 tries against per game
Only bottom club Newcastle conceded more in England whilst in the URC only Dragons conceded more
However you measure Bears’ defence, it’s just bad… 🙈
• 5th worst tackle success in the world
• 2nd worst for missed tackles leading to tries
• 3rd worst for recovering missed tackles
• most 22 entries against in the world
• more tries conceded per game than any Top14 team
A lot of this is brought on by the high risk nature of playing out of your own half ⚠️
If you make a mistake and lose the ball, the opposition doesn’t have far to go to get to your try line
Bristol conceded 30+ points 14 times across Premiership and Champions cup this season 🤦
Following the Sale defeat, Bristol went on to win just 4 more Premiership games in their last 10, conceding at least 26 points in all but 1 match 🫠
They won just 1 Champions cup game - a narrow & controversial victory over Benetton at home 👀 - and failed to progress to the R16
Their season ended with a 50% senior win record: 10/18 in the Premiership & 1/4 in Europe 😕
However, their incredible 16 try bonus points out of a possible 18 ⚖️ got them 4th on the log despite having a the same wins & a worse points difference than Gloucester below them 🧐
It’ll be interesting to see if Bears’ approach changes next season 🤔
Generally, teams in any sport don’t tend to persist with the ‘you score 4 we’ll score 5’ approach for long 👎
BONUS: I asked Google about Bristol DoR’s approach to attack vs defence. Here’s what it said… 😝
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This season, many 🏴 fans are blaming the new salary cap for the regions performing poorly
It is definitely a factor, but it mightn’t be a scapegoat for current performances
This might be the most controversial 🧵I ever do...
Welsh fans are dismayed at the new funding model for the regions
What they may be surprised to learn, however, is that their South African rivals have been some of the most cash-strapped in the global game, yet All 4 franchises finished about all 4 regions last season
What are the Welsh Budgets?
This season the Welsh regions are operating to a salary cap of £5.2m, lowering again to £4.5m as of next year with a target squad size of around 40-45 players.
This is a significant reduction for some, but not all, of the 4 teams...
THE RISE OF DAN BIGGAR - WALES’ ULTIMATE COMPETITOR
Dan Biggar has played for Wales for the last time and my goodness do I miss him already.
He is one of the first players whose Wales careers I have watched from start to finish, and it was far from plain sailing…
A thread 🧵
Daniel Biggar arguably first came to people’s attention as part of the 2008 Wales U20s team
You may have heard of this team, it also included:
Rhys Webb
Leigh Halfpenny
Sam Warburton
Jon Fox
Justin Tipuric
Dan Evans
Scott Andrews
Josh Turnbull
Whatever happened to those guys?
Dan went on to win his first senior cap for Wales that Autumn when he came off the bench early to replace an injured james against Canada (in the ICONIC yellow kit)
It started shakily when he threw an intercept, but he recovered and kicked 9pts as Wales won 34-13
This is how Wales completely wasted a world cup cycle and totally screwed up the most important combination on the rugby pitch. This WILL make you angry… 🪡
First, a fact: research by @GLAnalytics shows that the level of cohesion required to make an effective centre partnership is higher than any other area of the team
These partnerships are built up over time and the longer they are together the better they usually get
Therefore, messing around with and constantly changing the centres is hugely detrimental to the performance of the team
Here is an superb podcast where Ben Darwin from GL analytics calls changing your centres at a world cup ‘basically suicide’ (14:48)