Manly Monday💪🏻🧔🏻💪🏻
Los Jaguares Have Made It To The Final. Can They Slay The Crusaders?🐆⚔️☩🇦🇷🇳🇿
Bring It On, Baby!🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌

seen from Indonesia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Ireland
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Tunisia
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
Manly Monday💪🏻🧔🏻💪🏻
Los Jaguares Have Made It To The Final. Can They Slay The Crusaders?🐆⚔️☩🇦🇷🇳🇿
Bring It On, Baby!🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Egg Chasing
Bam Bam And The Brumbies Get Set To Chase Some More Eggs In Another Round.
Woof, Baby!
Este es el nuevo diseño de Nike para la camiseta titular de Los Pumas. Se estrena el sábado en el debut del Sanzar TRC!! Mirá los detalles de nuestra nueva piel
Manly Monday
As Many Placards In Port Elizabeth Proclaim, Chris Cloete Is A Beauty!
Woof, Baby!
Testosterone Thursday
The Force Was With Kane Koteka And His Mates Against The Reds.
Woof, Baby!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Slip Him The Tongue!
Michael Hooper May Want To Slip James slipper The Tongue!
Get A Room, Guys!
New Post has been published on http://lastwordonsports.com/2016/07/22/chiefs-super-rugby-season-hangs-in-the-balance/
Chiefs Must Be Wary Of Hungry Stormers
%EXCERT%
Aaron Cruden, Dave Rennie, Robbie Fleck, Rugby Union, SANZAR, Seta Tamanivalu, Stephen Donald, Super Rugby, Waikato Chiefs, Western Stormers
Super Rugby’s Slow Road to Redemption
To ask where Super Rugby has gone wrong in recent times is a question that poses a multitude of answers, not unlike asking where Batman v Superman went wrong as a piece of cinema.
The new format is almost totally incomprehensible, many teams are woefully out of their depth, and the idea of the home final and the advantages this brings still makes me cringe. Yet, for all its guffaws, it remains the most exciting and arguably best club rugby competition in the world, and I think Super Rugby can still salvage itself from the peculiar depths it has somehow fallen to.
Firstly, the recent expansion from 15 to 18 teams has to be lauded. It’s high time Argentina had a franchise in the competition, and the Jaguares have started their campaign valiantly, with a win and a few tight defeats that could have gone either way. I think it would make sense to have two more teams in the tournament as it would round the groups off evenly, as opposed to the currently unfathomable grouping, and that one of these new teams should definitely be another Argentine franchise. The fact that almost their entire national team plays for the Jaguares means the quality of rugby is great, but Super Rugby has varying teams of varying qualities, and it would not hurt the Argentines to field these players evenly over two teams, giving 15 more kids the chance to play every week, further strengthening the depth of talent in the country. Super Rugby has made it clear they seem to be all about ‘development’ with the inclusion of the Sunwolves and Kings, and that it’s more about the long term plan, and it would only benefit Argentinian rugby as a whole to have another franchise. (Note: It goes without saying the Kiwis should have another franchise too, it would continue to drive TV revenues through the roof and they would undoubtedly field a competitive side.)
The haters will protest and moan that the standard of rugby is dropping as a result of the expansion – the Sunwolves’ and Kings’ recent drubbings will attest to this, but there are success stories that have already come from previous expansion teams, most notably the Reds’ incredible title win back in 2011, and the coming of age of Genia, Cooper et al which greatly aided the Wallabies as a result.
The Lions, similarly, were ridiculed when they first came in, but their recent form is remarkable. After their three-win tour of Australasia last year (the most wins ever by a South African side on the road) they stunned the Chiefs in Waikato in week two leaving the general New Zealand public in shock and horror. They can also be credited as the franchise who gave us the most entertaining game of all time in their 65-72 shootout with the Chiefs in Joburg back in 2010, and they have proven that the expansion teams can be an asset to the competition.
The Southern Hemisphere’s growing concern in recent years has been the migration of some of its finest players to the Top 14, with the money obviously a huge incentive. The departures of Genia, Cooper (et al) have left the Reds roster in disarray, and other star names like Habana and Louw now apply their club trade exclusively in Europe.
While the short-term effects of this are a slight dip in standards, I don’t feel this is quite the ‘epidemic’ certain people have made it out to be. Fans of the competition shouldn’t be worrying about whether New Zealand, Australia or South Africa can produce world class young talent, they have proven this for years and this is why they have dominated world rugby for the past decade. If more players decide to leave, Super Rugby franchises will just have to get savvier in terms of drawing fans to the game – take for instance the Reds’ record signing of Ayumu Goromaru and the number of Japanese fans who will be buying tickets because of this.
The overlying point here is that Super Rugby must be given time to grow, in terms of the competition, teams, and players. The kinks that exist can all be worked out in time, and it will undoubtedly continue to produce super heroes for any country involved.