I personally think we have much less respect for the wing position than the Aussies although we have more respect for it than we used to. The days when (internationally) we'd throw a big name player out of position on the wing rather than an actual winger.
In school the players that weren't as good used to get shoved out wide or would stand out there out of choice to stay out the way of the rough and tumble. And I think sometimes there are people who think you can just shove anyone out there to do a job
Fact is, the wing position is extremely demanding in defence, decision making, reading the game, positional sense, great hands, speed, courage etc etc A poor inexperienced winger will be exploited.
So in my opinion, you can't just shove a fullback on wing in a high intensity, demanding game against an experienced opposite winger, facing the likes of Sneyds and Pryce's kicks and not expect to look out of place.
The Aussies turned the winger into an irrelevance decades ago.
Which makes it all the more surprising that Warrington decided to fritter away the kind of money they desperately need to invest in a playmaking role on someone who is entirely dependent on a playmaker if Warrington are to see the full benefit of his talents.
I personally think we have much less respect for the wing position than the Aussies although we have more respect for it than we used to. The days when (internationally) we'd throw a big name player out of position on the wing rather than an actual winger.
Fact is, the wing position is extremely demanding in defence, decision making, reading the game, positional sense, great hands, speed, courage etc etc A poor inexperienced winger will be exploited.
So in my opinion, you can't just shove a fullback on wing in a high intensity, demanding game against an experienced opposite winger, facing the likes of Sneyds and Pryce's kicks and not expect to look out of place.
Australia's first choice wingers are Brett Morris, a fullback, and Darius Boyd, a fullback. One of their wingers in the Four Nations was Alex Johnston, who plays wing for Rabbitohs because of GI. However, he is a fullback, hence the Roosters wanted to sign him to replace RTS, a fullback who started first grade on the wing and got moved because he gained experience and was wasted on the wing. There was also Mata'utai, who is a fullback/centre. Josh Mansour was the only true winger in their squad. Josh Dugan, a fullback, also played on the wing for Australia in the Anzac Day test.
QLD's wingers are Will Chambers, a centre, and Darius Boyd, a fullback. NSW's wingers are Will Hopoate, a centre/fullback, and Brett Morris, a fullback.
It's much harder to play fullback than winger, so the NRL teams use winger as a place to play fullbacks/centres until they get a bit more experienced. RTS started on the wing, GI started on the wing, Brett Morris started on the wing, Jarryd Hayne started on the wing, Darius Boyd started on the wing - in first grade. These were all fullbacks/centres coming through who it was felt would find those positions harder to cope with at the start of their career than the wing.
Australia's first choice wingers are Brett Morris, a fullback, and Darius Boyd, a fullback. One of their wingers in the Four Nations was Alex Johnston, who plays wing for Rabbitohs because of GI. However, he is a fullback, hence the Roosters wanted to sign him to replace RTS, a fullback who started first grade on the wing and got moved because he gained experience and was wasted on the wing. There was also Mata'utai, who is a fullback/centre. Josh Mansour was the only true winger in their squad. Josh Dugan, a fullback, also played on the wing for Australia in the Anzac Day test.
QLD's wingers are Will Chambers, a centre, and Darius Boyd, a fullback. NSW's wingers are Will Hopoate, a centre/fullback, and Brett Morris, a fullback.
It's much harder to play fullback than winger, so the NRL teams use winger as a place to play fullbacks/centres until they get a bit more experienced. RTS started on the wing, GI started on the wing, Brett Morris started on the wing, Jarryd Hayne started on the wing, Darius Boyd started on the wing - in first grade. These were all fullbacks/centres coming through who it was felt would find those positions harder to cope with at the start of their career than the wing.
Fullback is a specialist position...so is centre, and so is a winger. They're all difficult positions to play and some top quality players have the skill set and intelligence to play in all of them as you've used as examples above. Who's to say what position is hardest...different positions require a certain set of skills. You could have a fantastic scrum half but stick him on wing or in the centres and he won't look as good...every position is vitally important. What's the point in having a brilliant half back/hooker/full back etc when you're winger's letting try's in on his side and bombing chances
As soon as you disrespect the wing position you start to lose matches.
It's a complete joke. I've been playing The Witcher 3 on the Xbox a lot recently and I think this bears all the hallmarks of a curse inflicted by a wraith. We're going to have to use our witcher senses to find what it is binding the curse to the team. We'll start with some blood letting on the Wigan populace, just in case.