His halfback is the one to blame for this, not the other way around, and his defense last year was very, very good!I'll combine a few answers here - His defence until this year has been poor. His ball handling at times is poor and he doesn't often run good lines off his Halfback like the best Second Rowers do. He also looks awkward as **** when he runs.
His halfback is the one to blame for this, not the other way around, and his defense last year was very, very good!
There is a huge difference between Gillett under Hook and Gillett under Bennett in terms of defense.
He does have a dropped ball on occasion, but mostly in attacking position, which while not ideal, is not as bad as putting your team under defensive pressure.
That's the point... this is NOT happening.So you'd say that a Halfbacks job is to create an angle somehow for the Second Rower to run to? I'm not sure I understand how this works. I've always thought the outside running players job is to read the defensive line, and run at where you think a weakness might be, whether it be in between 2 defenders, at a smaller defender, or to a weakness of a particular defender. The Halfbacks job is to deliver the ball at the right time and pick the right player to throw the ball to. If you could explain this one to me would be good.
Gillett's defence last year was much improved, I agree 100%. It's even better this year. I guess the old Hook days are hard to forget.
That's the point... this is NOT happening.
Yes, that is exactly what I am saying. Seen it plenty of times.Okay, I understand that. But, what does that have to do with Gillett not running good lines? Or are you saying that perhaps Gillett IS running good lines, but Hunt isn't finding him at the right time?
Yes, that is exactly what I am saying. Seen it plenty of times.
In fairness, I have seen Gillett butcher a few ones as well.
I think it is because he has made a habit of making errors that have put the team on the back foot at crucial times.
Gillett is a line or angle-runner, not a hole-hitter. And there is a distinct difference. He works best attacking the line when he's running back across the 'grain' of the defence or has at least 5 metres or so to use his fend or the little step-shimmy that a lot of players do before the line.
95% of his drops come when we throw crash balls or those short passes where he hits the line nanoseconds after the ball touches his hands and thus he drops it. He needs more time and space than we currently give him. Because so far it's mostly either what happens above or he's flat-footed and makes about 5 metres trying to fend and crab his way to a gap to try and get through