Gareth Edwards was my Grandad's favourite player, he was Welsh, and whenever I visited him and my Nan we always watched the clips of try scoring brilliance from that man
I feel like as much as runny has evolved in so many ways with quicker and faster athletes, the exciting factor has also been a bit lost from what it was in the old days, playing with skill and less to do with a game plan. These were HARD men, nowadays there’s so much complaining to the referee, diving, milking penalties in break downs etc. I love rugby and always will, but the old days were amazing.
Great selection, and lovely to see extended clips…
Gareth Edwards was my Grandad's favourite player, he was Welsh, and whenever I visited him and my Nan we always watched the clips of try scoring brilliance from that man
Thats brilliant! I have similar memories of being shown that game when I was younger!
I have watched rugby for 53 years, (Played for 36) I have yet to see a better player than Gareth.
Great video! Would be ever better if the subtitles appeared for a little longer to read them with no rush
I am really glad you enjoyed it and thank you for the suggestion. I am always looking for ways to make my videos better
That last pass to Gareth Edwards was surely forward.
To watch the best tries you need to watch from the start to 05:14 To watch the try that gave me the most joy it starts at 10:32.
That was an amazing moment! What a try and what a result for Japan! 🇯🇵
Salviac/ Albaladejo meilleur duo de commentateurs français...Toute ma jeunesse!
I feel like as much as runny has evolved in so many ways with quicker and faster athletes, the exciting factor has also been a bit lost from what it was in the old days, playing with skill and less to do with a game plan. These were HARD men, nowadays there’s so much complaining to the referee, diving, milking penalties in break downs etc. I love rugby and always will, but the old days were amazing.
For "that try", there were two separate incidents of attempted homicide on the BaaBaas #15 in about 30 seconds...
Ha ha, I know! JPR demonstrated that he had a very strong neck many times over his career!