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The Current State of Rugby

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Sports Talk
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  • CatograndeC Catogrande

    @stodders said in The Current State of Rugby:

    Any tackle above the sternum will become illegal. Can’t see how they can hold it off for much longer. The subjectivity of what constitutes a red or not is just too great. If you tackle above the sternum, you get sent off. Players have the choice to go low or have an early bath.

    K.I.S.S.

    Makes everything easier. Case in point is the forward pass rule (and I’m not saying it was better, just easier), if it is adjudged to go forward, end of story. No momentum, no backwards out of the hands. Simple to enforce. Still prone to errors of course.

    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    wrote on last edited by
    #1299

    @Catogrande thats the thing, any head contact should be ruled the same way, whether that is a YC or a RC with/without a time restriction.

    Shit, they give the TMO crew (whoever it is) <10 mins to make the decision, and given the inconstancies in the judicial process who have days to review it, <10 mins is not long enough to make a decision that will most likely affect the outcome of a match.

    Set a black and white standard on head contact.

    Was there head contact - Yes, then card
    Its from here we have decisions to make.
    Does that player get to come back on, can they be replaced?

    Let the judiciary then argue mitigation, change of angles etc.

    Crazy HorseC 1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • CatograndeC Catogrande

      @stodders said in The Current State of Rugby:

      Any tackle above the sternum will become illegal. Can’t see how they can hold it off for much longer. The subjectivity of what constitutes a red or not is just too great. If you tackle above the sternum, you get sent off. Players have the choice to go low or have an early bath.

      K.I.S.S.

      Makes everything easier. Case in point is the forward pass rule (and I’m not saying it was better, just easier), if it is adjudged to go forward, end of story. No momentum, no backwards out of the hands. Simple to enforce. Still prone to errors of course.

      RapidoR Offline
      RapidoR Offline
      Rapido
      wrote on last edited by
      #1300

      @Catogrande said in The Current State of Rugby:

      @stodders said in The Current State of Rugby:

      Any tackle above the sternum will become illegal. Can’t see how they can hold it off for much longer. The subjectivity of what constitutes a red or not is just too great. If you tackle above the sternum, you get sent off. Players have the choice to go low or have an early bath.

      K.I.S.S.

      Makes everything easier. Case in point is the forward pass rule (and I’m not saying it was better, just easier), if it is adjudged to go forward, end of story. No momentum, no backwards out of the hands. Simple to enforce. Still prone to errors of course.

      I'm with this. Except maybe on the momentum part.

      I'd like to see tried a must 'pass it behind yourself'. So it must go behind the plane of your own shoulders. This I think should pass the "eye test".

      It would seriously limit the Sonny_bill offload. But as I mention above in my veeeeery long post. The offload encourages high tackling response. So, no loss.

      It needs to be easy for a referee to judge reasonable accurately in real time with no TMO replays.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • M mooshld

        @canefan said in The Current State of Rugby:

        This might have already been posted, but here goes. Shag telling it like it is

        https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby-world-cup-2023/133225114/get-rid-of-it-out-of-our-game-sir-steve-hansen-wants-major-changes-to-rugby-rules

        He's not wrong but his timing sucks. Say this just after you've won because of a favourable ruling people may listen. But say it now it'll be seen as sour grapes.

        antipodeanA Offline
        antipodeanA Offline
        antipodean
        wrote on last edited by
        #1301

        @mooshld said in The Current State of Rugby:

        @canefan said in The Current State of Rugby:

        This might have already been posted, but here goes. Shag telling it like it is

        https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby-world-cup-2023/133225114/get-rid-of-it-out-of-our-game-sir-steve-hansen-wants-major-changes-to-rugby-rules

        He's not wrong but his timing sucks. Say this just after you've won because of a favourable ruling people may listen. But say it now it'll be seen as sour grapes.

        The only way this will change is if TMO interventions are clearly in favour of the All Blacks. Right now the rugby world still seems to watch us have our comeuppance.

        For me, I'm happy to have the TMO, but it needs to be applied to everything or nothing at all. And RCs need (outside of egregious foul play) need to go to judiciary. Right now cards are defining outcomes and ruining the game.

        Chris B.C 1 Reply Last reply
        2
        • taniwharugbyT taniwharugby

          @Catogrande thats the thing, any head contact should be ruled the same way, whether that is a YC or a RC with/without a time restriction.

          Shit, they give the TMO crew (whoever it is) <10 mins to make the decision, and given the inconstancies in the judicial process who have days to review it, <10 mins is not long enough to make a decision that will most likely affect the outcome of a match.

          Set a black and white standard on head contact.

          Was there head contact - Yes, then card
          Its from here we have decisions to make.
          Does that player get to come back on, can they be replaced?

          Let the judiciary then argue mitigation, change of angles etc.

          Crazy HorseC Offline
          Crazy HorseC Offline
          Crazy Horse
          wrote on last edited by
          #1302

          @taniwharugby said in The Current State of Rugby:

          @Catogrande thats the thing, any head contact should be ruled the same way, whether that is a YC or a RC with/without a time restriction.

          Shit, they give the TMO crew (whoever it is) <10 mins to make the decision, and given the inconstancies in the judicial process who have days to review it, <10 mins is not long enough to make a decision that will most likely affect the outcome of a match.

          Set a black and white standard on head contact.

          Was there head contact - Yes, then card
          Its from here we have decisions to make.
          Does that player get to come back on, can they be replaced?

          Let the judiciary then argue mitigation, change of angles etc.

          But what constitutes head contact for a card? That will be the grey area. There are multiple head contacts in every single game. We can't card them all otherwise it'll end up sevens. I have been saying it for years. Cards are ruining the game. We need less not more.

          taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • Crazy HorseC Crazy Horse

            @taniwharugby said in The Current State of Rugby:

            @Catogrande thats the thing, any head contact should be ruled the same way, whether that is a YC or a RC with/without a time restriction.

            Shit, they give the TMO crew (whoever it is) <10 mins to make the decision, and given the inconstancies in the judicial process who have days to review it, <10 mins is not long enough to make a decision that will most likely affect the outcome of a match.

            Set a black and white standard on head contact.

            Was there head contact - Yes, then card
            Its from here we have decisions to make.
            Does that player get to come back on, can they be replaced?

            Let the judiciary then argue mitigation, change of angles etc.

            But what constitutes head contact for a card? That will be the grey area. There are multiple head contacts in every single game. We can't card them all otherwise it'll end up sevens. I have been saying it for years. Cards are ruining the game. We need less not more.

            taniwharugbyT Offline
            taniwharugbyT Offline
            taniwharugby
            wrote on last edited by
            #1303

            @Crazy-Horse but thats the point, remove the grey area, a head contact is a head contact at tackle or ruck, let the judiciary look at mitigation, change of height direction etc without a half a dozen minute time constraint.

            You know I'm in the camp of less cards too, but I cant see any easy way around it, and as has been talked about for the past couple of years, cards are ruining the game, last weekend, was the biggest game a card has had an influence on the outcome, from the outside as a spectator you want a fair contest, cards suck as they alter this.

            I would also argue, if you are sending anyone off due to a head contact, then the person on the receiving end should have a mandatory HIA, seems ridiculous to send someone off for a head contact, yet the guy they supposedly contacted dangerously, isn't impacted (while this is the hope, surely isnt always the case)

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • S stodders

              Any tackle above the sternum will become illegal. Can’t see how they can hold it off for much longer. The subjectivity of what constitutes a red or not is just too great. If you tackle above the sternum, you get sent off. Players have the choice to go low or have an early bath.

              antipodeanA Offline
              antipodeanA Offline
              antipodean
              wrote on last edited by
              #1304

              @stodders said in The Current State of Rugby:

              Any tackle above the sternum will become illegal. Can’t see how they can hold it off for much longer. The subjectivity of what constitutes a red or not is just too great. If you tackle above the sternum, you get sent off. Players have the choice to go low or have an early bath.

              That's an excellent way to kill the game if WR went down that path. Imagine watching a Test to see some lock lumbering across in cover defence only to have a Kolbe or DMac step back inside. With no time to get low enough, you clip them in the jaw and the game is over for spectators with 70mins still left on the clock.

              1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • M Offline
                M Offline
                Machpants
                wrote on last edited by
                #1305

                https://media.giphy.com/media/xTcf1gUpg87E5lNK2A/giphy.gif

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • antipodeanA antipodean

                  @mooshld said in The Current State of Rugby:

                  @canefan said in The Current State of Rugby:

                  This might have already been posted, but here goes. Shag telling it like it is

                  https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby-world-cup-2023/133225114/get-rid-of-it-out-of-our-game-sir-steve-hansen-wants-major-changes-to-rugby-rules

                  He's not wrong but his timing sucks. Say this just after you've won because of a favourable ruling people may listen. But say it now it'll be seen as sour grapes.

                  The only way this will change is if TMO interventions are clearly in favour of the All Blacks. Right now the rugby world still seems to watch us have our comeuppance.

                  For me, I'm happy to have the TMO, but it needs to be applied to everything or nothing at all. And RCs need (outside of egregious foul play) need to go to judiciary. Right now cards are defining outcomes and ruining the game.

                  Chris B.C Online
                  Chris B.C Online
                  Chris B.
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #1306

                  @antipodean said in The Current State of Rugby:

                  And RCs need (outside of egregious foul play) need to go to judiciary. Right now cards are defining outcomes and ruining the game.

                  As I've said before - Cyril Brownlie got a red card in 1925. Pinetree got the next one (for us) in 1967.

                  Now you have eight dished out in this RWC.

                  They've fundamentally changed the nature of the game, but not the penalty.

                  Instead of being called "red cards" maybe they should be called "the shit-coloured snitch".

                  As a brief re-cap, in JK Rowling's Quidditch - if you catch the snitch you win the game - regardless of whatever all the other players have been up to in regards to scoring goals and points.

                  It is a shit game (that would never be played as she envisages it).

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • No QuarterN Online
                    No QuarterN Online
                    No Quarter
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #1307

                    The obsession that WR has with cards is really insane. Thinking they can fix head knocks by ruining as many games as possible by carding players making errors of judgement in a fast paced game. Just madness.

                    Honestly, if I was taking WR to court over head knocks and early dementia etc, my angle wouldn't be that the refs didn't crack down enough, my angle would 100% be that all of the changes to the laws recently have been geared towards slowing the game down that massively benefits larger players. The larger the players, the larger the collisions, the larger the chance of serious head injury (among a host of other serious injuries). I know it's all been said before, but if they are actually concerned about head knocks they'd look to speed the game up big time, and there's some pretty obvious and easy changes they could make to the rules around the bench alone that would help.

                    M N 2 Replies Last reply
                    4
                    • No QuarterN No Quarter

                      The obsession that WR has with cards is really insane. Thinking they can fix head knocks by ruining as many games as possible by carding players making errors of judgement in a fast paced game. Just madness.

                      Honestly, if I was taking WR to court over head knocks and early dementia etc, my angle wouldn't be that the refs didn't crack down enough, my angle would 100% be that all of the changes to the laws recently have been geared towards slowing the game down that massively benefits larger players. The larger the players, the larger the collisions, the larger the chance of serious head injury (among a host of other serious injuries). I know it's all been said before, but if they are actually concerned about head knocks they'd look to speed the game up big time, and there's some pretty obvious and easy changes they could make to the rules around the bench alone that would help.

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      Machpants
                      wrote on last edited by Machpants
                      #1308

                      @No-Quarter said in The Current State of Rugby:

                      The obsession that WR has with cards is really insane.

                      Look at Ireland, 1 card this year I think, and a handful this cycle. It is not WR obsession only, it is the player's being shit and not accurate enough. You can talk dynamic game etc, but the world No1/2 most successful team this RWC cycle(*) did it with fuck all cards. Especially ABs and Oz, who play with refs who are lenient and rules that are lenient.

                      (*)until we smashed 'em in the quarters haha

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • Windows97W Offline
                        Windows97W Offline
                        Windows97
                        wrote on last edited by Windows97
                        #1309

                        Problems with world rugby - well 2 for me.

                        1. The TMO in their God-box minutely reviewing the game and over-ruling the ref - the technology should be there to help the ref make a decision or for the players to challenge a refs decision.

                        2. Having a squad of 23 effectively means you can sub over half the team, this can take the "fatigue factor" almost completely out of the game (something to their credit SA have recognized and exploited better than everyone else) . We should do something like football where there's a large number of available subs on the bench - but only allowed to use 4 or 5 tactical subs in the game.

                        This would help the game flow more (less interruptions) and also allow a freer, more expansive game (especially in the second half when fatigue sets in).

                        N 1 Reply Last reply
                        3
                        • Windows97W Windows97

                          Problems with world rugby - well 2 for me.

                          1. The TMO in their God-box minutely reviewing the game and over-ruling the ref - the technology should be there to help the ref make a decision or for the players to challenge a refs decision.

                          2. Having a squad of 23 effectively means you can sub over half the team, this can take the "fatigue factor" almost completely out of the game (something to their credit SA have recognized and exploited better than everyone else) . We should do something like football where there's a large number of available subs on the bench - but only allowed to use 4 or 5 tactical subs in the game.

                          This would help the game flow more (less interruptions) and also allow a freer, more expansive game (especially in the second half when fatigue sets in).

                          N Offline
                          N Offline
                          Nevorian
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #1310

                          @Windows97 said in The Current State of Rugby:

                          Problems with world rugby - well 2 for me.

                          1. The TMO in their God-box minutely reviewing the game and over-ruling the ref - the technology should be there to help the ref make a decision or for the players to challenge a refs decision.

                          The Ref should be able to over rule the TMO also, pretty sure he can. Case in point would be Smiths disallowed try where TMO went back several phases of play earlier

                          taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • N Nevorian

                            @Windows97 said in The Current State of Rugby:

                            Problems with world rugby - well 2 for me.

                            1. The TMO in their God-box minutely reviewing the game and over-ruling the ref - the technology should be there to help the ref make a decision or for the players to challenge a refs decision.

                            The Ref should be able to over rule the TMO also, pretty sure he can. Case in point would be Smiths disallowed try where TMO went back several phases of play earlier

                            taniwharugbyT Offline
                            taniwharugbyT Offline
                            taniwharugby
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #1311

                            @Nevorian yes he could, but imagine the uproar then too..."I agree, there was a knock on, but you arent actually meant to go back that far, so try stands"

                            Which is why they need to tighten the rules about what and when they can look at things, then there isnt the awkward situation when the TMO provides something to the ref to ignore.

                            Right now, seems a free for all with TMO pretty much having free reign to call what they want, when they want, choosing when to call things or not.

                            M antipodeanA 2 Replies Last reply
                            0
                            • No QuarterN No Quarter

                              The obsession that WR has with cards is really insane. Thinking they can fix head knocks by ruining as many games as possible by carding players making errors of judgement in a fast paced game. Just madness.

                              Honestly, if I was taking WR to court over head knocks and early dementia etc, my angle wouldn't be that the refs didn't crack down enough, my angle would 100% be that all of the changes to the laws recently have been geared towards slowing the game down that massively benefits larger players. The larger the players, the larger the collisions, the larger the chance of serious head injury (among a host of other serious injuries). I know it's all been said before, but if they are actually concerned about head knocks they'd look to speed the game up big time, and there's some pretty obvious and easy changes they could make to the rules around the bench alone that would help.

                              N Offline
                              N Offline
                              Nevorian
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #1312

                              @No-Quarter

                              This may sound absurd but could it be possible that attacking players could intentionally go into a situation where a defender is likely to make a head high tackle to milk a card. For instance, the Sam Cane example, could Kriel have seen that Cane is standing upright and had no chance of tackling low and would most likely receive a penalty or card? Kriel knows the impact is going to be high because he uses his arm to minimise the impact.

                              This is pure speculation but the frequency of cards being dished out could actually increase head knocks

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • taniwharugbyT taniwharugby

                                @Nevorian yes he could, but imagine the uproar then too..."I agree, there was a knock on, but you arent actually meant to go back that far, so try stands"

                                Which is why they need to tighten the rules about what and when they can look at things, then there isnt the awkward situation when the TMO provides something to the ref to ignore.

                                Right now, seems a free for all with TMO pretty much having free reign to call what they want, when they want, choosing when to call things or not.

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                Machpants
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #1313

                                @taniwharugby said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                @Nevorian yes he could, but imagine the uproar then too..."I agree, there was a knock on, but you arent actually meant to go back that far, so try stands"

                                Which is why they need to tighten the rules about what and when they can look at things, then there isnt the awkward situation when the TMO provides something to the ref to ignore.

                                Right now, seems a free for all with TMO pretty much having free reign to call what they want, when they want, choosing when to call things or not.

                                It's also just guidance, not law. So the ref team can ignore guidance

                                antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • taniwharugbyT taniwharugby

                                  @Nevorian yes he could, but imagine the uproar then too..."I agree, there was a knock on, but you arent actually meant to go back that far, so try stands"

                                  Which is why they need to tighten the rules about what and when they can look at things, then there isnt the awkward situation when the TMO provides something to the ref to ignore.

                                  Right now, seems a free for all with TMO pretty much having free reign to call what they want, when they want, choosing when to call things or not.

                                  antipodeanA Offline
                                  antipodeanA Offline
                                  antipodean
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #1314

                                  @taniwharugby said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                  @Nevorian yes he could, but imagine the uproar then too..."I agree, there was a knock on, but you arent actually meant to go back that far, so try stands"

                                  Which is why they need to tighten the rules about what and when they can look at things, then there isnt the awkward situation when the TMO provides something to the ref to ignore.

                                  If the rule about two phases still exists, then a competent TMO shouldn't be raising it with the ref to begin with.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • M Machpants

                                    @taniwharugby said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                    @Nevorian yes he could, but imagine the uproar then too..."I agree, there was a knock on, but you arent actually meant to go back that far, so try stands"

                                    Which is why they need to tighten the rules about what and when they can look at things, then there isnt the awkward situation when the TMO provides something to the ref to ignore.

                                    Right now, seems a free for all with TMO pretty much having free reign to call what they want, when they want, choosing when to call things or not.

                                    It's also just guidance, not law. So the ref team can ignore guidance

                                    antipodeanA Offline
                                    antipodeanA Offline
                                    antipodean
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #1315

                                    @Machpants said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                    @taniwharugby said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                    @Nevorian yes he could, but imagine the uproar then too..."I agree, there was a knock on, but you arent actually meant to go back that far, so try stands"

                                    Which is why they need to tighten the rules about what and when they can look at things, then there isnt the awkward situation when the TMO provides something to the ref to ignore.

                                    Right now, seems a free for all with TMO pretty much having free reign to call what they want, when they want, choosing when to call things or not.

                                    It's also just guidance, not law. So the ref team can ignore guidance

                                    That's not what the protocol says.

                                    nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
                                    1
                                    • antipodeanA antipodean

                                      @Machpants said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                      @taniwharugby said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                      @Nevorian yes he could, but imagine the uproar then too..."I agree, there was a knock on, but you arent actually meant to go back that far, so try stands"

                                      Which is why they need to tighten the rules about what and when they can look at things, then there isnt the awkward situation when the TMO provides something to the ref to ignore.

                                      Right now, seems a free for all with TMO pretty much having free reign to call what they want, when they want, choosing when to call things or not.

                                      It's also just guidance, not law. So the ref team can ignore guidance

                                      That's not what the protocol says.

                                      nzzpN Offline
                                      nzzpN Offline
                                      nzzp
                                      wrote on last edited by Duluth
                                      #1316

                                      @antipodean said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                      @Machpants said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                      @taniwharugby said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                      @Nevorian yes he could, but imagine the uproar then too..."I agree, there was a knock on, but you arent actually meant to go back that far, so try stands"

                                      Which is why they need to tighten the rules about what and when they can look at things, then there isnt the awkward situation when the TMO provides something to the ref to ignore.

                                      Right now, seems a free for all with TMO pretty much having free reign to call what they want, when they want, choosing when to call things or not.

                                      It's also just guidance, not law. So the ref team can ignore guidance

                                      That's not what the protocol says.

                                      went to find it. Some extracts.
                                      first sentence!
                                      The referee remains the lead decision-maker of the refereeing team

                                      and then
                                      Where match officials believe a Clear and Obvious infringement may have occurred in the immediate two phases of play leading to a try being scored

                                      the next section is clear that foul play has no two phase limit. So it's very very clear, and shouldn't have been breached.

                                      I have seen arguments that there were tackles rather than 'phases' - but I am not sure that stacks up. https://resources.world.rugby/worldrugby/document/2022/06/14/2a158fb7-ab69-4136-a4ef-ba4a5646e3a8/2022-TMO-protocol-Approved-by-Council-May-2022.pdf

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      2
                                      • M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        Machpants
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #1317

                                        Is protocol law, though?

                                        antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • M Machpants

                                          Is protocol law, though?

                                          antipodeanA Offline
                                          antipodeanA Offline
                                          antipodean
                                          wrote on last edited by antipodean
                                          #1318

                                          @Machpants said in The Current State of Rugby:

                                          Is protocol law, though?

                                          A system of rules and accepted behaviour? Yes, otherwise why bother mentioning 'the immediate two phases of play'?

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