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31st May 2016
10:44am BST

"I do think in the Test arena it is another level up and it doesn’t always mean that you can play the way that you’d like to play."Schmidt clearly remains irked by accusations from Warren Gatland and Eddie Jones that Ireland are grinders; a team that kicks ball away and seeks territorial gains over possession.
For the third season in a row, he said, Ireland passed the most ball. Scoring the most tries or making the most line-breaks would be nice but, as we saw with France against Wales, offloading is not the skeleton key it is often made out to be. Schmidt continued:
"We’re trying to get better at all of those things on a regular basis. One of the things is that in 10 days it’s quite hard to suddenly get a season’s worth of progression. "It’s probably one of my greatest frustrations having come from a provincial or club background into international rugby – you are very, very contained in how much time you have with the player, particularly if you want the player to demonstrate a skill that they don’t already have on arrival. "t’s very hard to suddenly generate that in 10 days because it takes a lot of repetition and you just don’t have time for that. "You’ve got to cut your cloth a little bit and we will do that, try to come up with what best suits Rory [Best] and the lads in preparation for South Africa and then try to deliver the best we can in what we’ve acknowledged will be a cauldron."Schmidt also name-checked two of Connacht's best players of this season as reasons why they have been so successful - Tom McCartney and Bundee Aki. You can throw back-row Jake Heenan into that mix too. Connacht will soon have a greater representation in the Irish squad - Matt Healy is expected to debut on tour - but, for now, we may have to settle for gradual change at a gradual pace.

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