Grit and determination hallmarks of the Azzurri

Tommaso Benvenuti of Italy slips the tackle of Ireland's Stephen Ferris during the RBS Six Nations match between Ireland and Italy at Aviva Stadium. photograph: jamie mcdonald

Tommaso Benvenuti of Italy slips the tackle of Ireland's Stephen Ferris during the RBS Six Nations match between Ireland and Italy at Aviva Stadium. photograph: jamie mcdonald

Fri, Feb 1, 2013, 00:00

   

If Italian three-quarters’ play fails to evlove then the side will be doomed to one-off, if notable, victories

The condescension is inadvertent, not meant as a calculated slight, but Italy’s rugby team and management must be tired of being patronised when it comes time to talk turkey on an annual basis ahead of the Six Nations Championship.

There is a common vocabulary employed by their opponents to describe the prospect of facing the Italians; commentators share that tone. Italy have a formidable set piece, a powerful scrum that can destabilise, are very physical at the breakdown and aggressive in the collisions.

Words that won’t pepper any discussion on the Azzurri include subtlety, flair and vision.

It’s not so much an image problem just an honest appraisal on the way the Italian rugby team has largely performed in 13 Six Nations tournaments to date. A succession of coaches may have approached the position determined to expand on sterile patterns but quickly realised that they lacked the personnel to do so.

In the last five seasons, Italy have won a single game, in four tournaments – the highlight was a 22-21 victory over France in 2011 – and a whitewash on the other occasion. Scotland are the most frequently ambushed, Wales occasionally susceptible.

In November 2011 the Italian Rugby Federation (FIR) appointed a Frenchman and former coach at Perpignan, Jacques Brunel as head coach. He quickly appreciated that to try and seriously change the national team’s fortunes, they needed to develop a more rounded approach.

Italian pack

The statistics back up that assertion. In the 13 Six Nations tournaments to date, the Italians have managed a less than grand total of 77 tries, three more than Scotland but a whopping 118 tries behind England. By way of comparison France have scored 169, Ireland 167 and Wales 133. Italy do not score enough tries and the majority shareholders in that particular franchise is the pack.

The Italian pack provides the steel backbone but an overreliance on this unit leads to overall vulnerability. England and France have the physique to match the Italian eight, Wales too, while Ireland and Scotland must rely on superior skill sets to offset ferocious pressure in the scrum and at the breakdown. Think of the number of times Irish players have refereed to the bruising nature of matches against Italy.

Italian back play is muscular, based on aggressive running, something to which Brunel has been trying to add variation. Since the days of Diego Dominguez and more latterly Alessandro Troncon the Italians have been searching out a half-back combination that would bring direction and variety behind the scrum. For the most part it’s been a fruitless crusade.

Brunel wants his team to speed up their game and to this end has singled out scrumhalf Edoardo Gori as the man to provide the quicksilver service.

The 22 year old looks a balanced player, with a decent kicking game, quick across the turf and willing to challenge the fringe defence.

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