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Adam Freier: The beauty of our game is in the contest

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RugbyFuture

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ADAM FREIER
January 31, 2010

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-union/u...our-game-is-in-the-contest-20100130-n5dy.html

The Sun-Herald's new rugby columnist, Adam Freier, says the code is moving on from the folly of the ELVs and is still the game they play in heaven.

Attractive rugby. It is a piece of sporting terminology that has been thrown around very loosely in the past year or so. Some people might speculate if 15 grown men cutting around a green pitch wrestling 15 more grown men could ever been defined as attractive, but the debate continues anyway.

The argument on whether modern-day rugby is boring could be stretched further to look at whether professional sport has become more about entertainment than the actual contest. Are we buying a ticket to the circus or a rugby match?

Our game has suffered over the past two years not because it is ''boring'', but its inability to settle from the dust the Experimental Law Variations created. We tried to adopt a free-flowing game with less interruption and less kicking. Has it worked? Probably not.

I don't blame the people who sat together and proposed the ELVs. It was the rugby community who demanded changes that would take our great game to the new heights. Somewhere in the experiment, something has gone a little awry.

It is interesting to look at other sports that have not tinkered with rules despite calls at times that they are boring. Take soccer, or football to be sport-politically correct. Take nothing away from the ''world game''; to have three-quarters of the planet following it, it deserves great praise. But ask me to take 90 minutes to watch a game any level, and I really struggle to find a 1-0 victory that invigorating.

As a whole, the entire match is not entertaining. However, in watching a player go left, shimmy right, then guide the ball to a teammate's forehead to put the ball in the back of the net … that is something I can appreciate and a skill worth watching for any sports fan.

Cricket is Australia's national sport, and in summer Test cricket can be a religion. A match can go for five days, 30 hours of play, and in the end sometimes there isn't even a result. Entertaining? There are some people who will take five days off work to watch a Test match. Some think these people are mad. But a cricket enthusiast can appreciate a player battling away in 35-degree heat, evading 150km/h bouncers aimed accurately at their head, even if they bat out the session with only a handful of runs. They appreciate the fast bowler who sprints 20 metres towards the pitch, wrenches their shoulder ball after ball, over after over, sometimes for little or no reward other than the rare hope they're maybe one delivery closer to an elusive wicket. It takes a special athlete to have the skill and will to do that over and over again. The appreciation of that effort is entertaining.

Which brings me back to my sport. Rugby is unique. The game is designed around the contest for the ball, the contest for possession, the contest for physical supremacy.

The laws of the game have been designed so that for 80 minutes, every kick, scrum, lineout, tackle, ruck and maul can be contested by both teams. Every facet of the game is a contest, and the team that takes the greater ascendancy will see the result on the scoreboard and at the full-time whistle. Is there any other sport which has so many players of different shapes and sizes on the field at the same time? Any other sport where the fleet-footed male model winger holds equal billing with the fat, stumpy anchor of the forward pack? Get an NFL offensive lineman to cover the kilometres that Benn Robinson or Al Baxter cover in a match and he'll be calling for the oxygen just so he can walk over and hear the quarterback send him away.

It makes me wonder: have we lost an appreciation for the contest? An appreciation for the game? An appreciation for everything it is that makes rugby great? Look at Phil Waugh's eyes on the big screen as he lines up for a lineout with five minutes left, trailing by six points. Look at David Pocock as the clock winds down, making the Cliffy Young shuffle look like Usain Bolt's warm-up. Look at George Smith who cops punch after punch at every breakdown, but like a great boxer continues to get back up to fight again. Watching the will, passion, commitment and individual skill of these players is entertaining.

You can't tell me the good people of Newtown dished out their hard-earned to watch Tommy Raudonikis's skill and brilliance. They paid to see the little Trojan play his heart out. Are we entertained by Lleyton Hewitt because his skills are better than anyone else? Absolutely not. We love him because he has a never-say-die attitude, and will push through any obstacle to put his best foot forward.

Make no mistake, rugby is as much a competition of skill as it is of will. And when the will of the players matches their collective skills for 80 minutes, it is truly impressive.

There has been a commitment from all Australian rugby teams to exhibit both of those this year. When the Super 14 kicks off, every player knows that it is game on. And when it does, I for one, will be entertained.

one of the most articulate, best written article on rugby (and why its better than everything else) ever (in my opinion)
 

Lee Grant

John Eales (66)
Re: awesome article by adam frier: The beauty of our game is in the contest

"Hass" is a good man and he makes many good points.

Despite his not being eligible to play for the Melbourne team in 2011 because he'll still be contracted to the Tahs, I'm punting that he'll be realeased to play there and unless Rocky and somebody of that stature don't move there too - he'll be the skipper.
 

naza

Alan Cameron (40)
Re: awesome article by adam frier: The beauty of our game is in the contest

Just read it, then came here to see if anyone had commented on it. Fantastic article & bang on the money.
 

spectator

Bob Davidson (42)
Re: awesome article by adam frier: The beauty of our game is in the contest

Yes it was a great read.
 

en_force_er

Geoff Shaw (53)
Re: awesome article by adam frier: The beauty of our game is in the contest

Terrific article.

I somehow think this man has more to offer the rugby world, after his playing days are over, than he has been able to as a player.

His passion can't be faulted. I remember a couple of years ago I chatted to him after wallaby training and he ran me through the drills he does at home to work on his throwing. It was inspiring.
 

Blue

Andrew Slack (58)
Re: awesome article by adam frier: The beauty of our game is in the contest

There you go. It took a player to write a decent bloody rugby article in this country. I wonder if the rugby journos read it? You know, the fat guy who talks crap and gets paid for it and all his mates (yah that one).

Once Freier retires they can fire the whole bloody lot at the morning rag and give him the job.
 

fatprop

George Gregan (70)
Staff member
Re: awesome article by adam frier: The beauty of our game is in the contest

Great Article
 

Moses

Simon Poidevin (60)
Staff member
Good read, well thought out piece and great comparrisons to the other sports in our landscape.

Though, you'd think they could have found a picture of the 'Tahs front row where Freier wasn't on the bench
 
P

PhucNgo

Guest
This may be the answer that Australian Rugby has been looking for. Move over Growden!
 

Gagger

Nick Farr-Jones (63)
Staff member
Nicely written and love the passion.

Didn't most of us back the ELVs though?
 

Lindommer

Simon Poidevin (60)
Staff member
Re: awesome article by adam frier: The beauty of our game is in the contest

en_force_er said:
I remember a couple of years ago I chatted to him...

I had a similar experience with Adam at the Tahs' trial match with the Brumbies at Wollongong in early 2007, that disastrous one which finished Al Kanaar's career and Tucky's season. Adam was injured at the time but put in the effort to travel down to the 'gong be with his team mates and made a point of mixing with the crowd and having a good chinwag.

Very sincere, classy bloke. Couldn't believe how short he was, I'm 5'11" and I towered over him. Years ago I worked with Phil Kearns (who's 6'0') and I thought all international hookers would have to be at least that size.

Yeah Growden, you can bugger off in a couple of years.
 

Aussie D

Desmond Connor (43)
Re: awesome article by adam frier: The beauty of our game is in the contest

Lindommer said:
en_force_er said:
I remember a couple of years ago I chatted to him...

Yeah Growden, you can bugger off in a couple of years.

Does he have to wait that long as the sooner he goes the better it will be for rugby in Oz IMHO.
 

Pfitzy

Nathan Sharpe (72)
Gagger said:
Nicely written and love the passion.

Didn't most of us back the ELVs though?

Not in the format they were eventually presented. Must remember that when WE talk about the elves, we're talking all of them generally. When the players and higher echelons do, they're talking about the faeces-covered abortion that the NH allowed to come into play.
 

Biffo

Ken Catchpole (46)
NTA said:
Gagger said:
Nicely written and love the passion.

Didn't most of us back the ELVs though?

Not in the format they were eventually presented. Must remember that when WE talk about the elves, we're talking all of them generally. When the players and higher echelons do, they're talking about the faeces-covered abortion that the NH allowed to come into play.

Smack on the dot. A little aside is that I have been enormously impressed with the bearing of the experts who went to Stellenbosch and compiled the set of ELVs. They were admirably restrained, almost silent, during the trials ... and the non-trials. :angryfire:
 

Gagger

Nick Farr-Jones (63)
Staff member
NTA said:
Gagger said:
Nicely written and love the passion.

Didn't most of us back the ELVs though?

Not in the format they were eventually presented. Must remember that when WE talk about the elves, we're talking all of them generally. When the players and higher echelons do, they're talking about the faeces-covered abortion that the NH allowed to come into play.

Is he saying that? The only bit that tells me what he's referring to is at the top of his article:

  The Sun-Herald's new rugby columnist, Adam Freier, says the code is moving on from the folly of the ELVs and is still the game they play in heaven.

Sounds to me that he's saying the whole ELV effort was a fuck up, and that we should never have tried to make the game more open.

I have to say that I don't think every ruck should be an equal contest either, which is why we're currently trying to re-advantage the attacking team

I do otherwise agree with what he says it is that's special about rugby and how we need to keep it.
 
P

PhucNgo

Guest
Ok, slightly off subject, but we've run on again about the ELV's and the ambush up north. But did anyone see the Leicester v Ospreys HC game? That had to be THE BEST game i've seen in ages. Two teams throwing kitchen sinks at each other for the full 80. Well worth (more than) the admission. And the funny thing was, they did it last year too. I think this was what AF was on about in his Herald blog, its all about the passion and the contest. (Although Lote was crap - but you knew that didn't you.)
 
C

CanadianRugby

Guest
I think AF (and others) make good points about the ELVs. People think making the game more open would make it better. But what you really want is a good show, which means passion and skill. Kicking doesn't have to be boring, a good kick followed by a good chase can cause just as much havoc as anything else. Its just when players start walking around the pitch and waiting for something to happen that it gets unwatchable. I think the idea to make games more contestable through actually enforcing some rules is a good move (things like feeding straight in scrums, making people ahead of the kicker actually wait to be onside etc...). This lets the game be a contest and way better. Good for everyone who realized this and pointed it out.

In a side note, the eloquence of people like Frier is one of my favorite things about Rugby. The number of players who get uni degrees, becoming lawyers, doctors or some other type of professional is one of the best things about rugby off the pitch. Being stuck in North America and listening to athletes who can't be bothered, or are incapable, to string a decent sentence together. Like this crap that happened a few days ago: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DabmENJkRJA (wait for the second question). I can actually read interviews with rugby players because rugby players still have BRAINS!!!! Its fantastic. Out of the blue I know, but something I really enjoy.
 

Jethro Tah

Bob Loudon (25)
I agree with your side note, Canadian. I also enjoy the multi-facet nature of the game, as compared to one dimensional league. It is one of the reasons why mungos sometimes mostly struggle at union due to the higher level of intelligence required to excel at the game. The Footy Show? - I rest my case. I went to a mungo high school (not by choice) and was happy to see the back of it due to all the meatheads. When the time comes, I expect Frier will join the likes of Eales, Farr-Jones, Little, etc and forge a decent career after hanging up the boots.
 

Blue

Andrew Slack (58)
Actually that Turkoglu interview makes the interviewer look like an idiot. He asked him the same question twice. Second tiem hHe just said they had balls. Interviewer replies "balls in the hand". :lmao:

I've heard much worse from many rugby players, unfortunately. Listen to your average rugby player interview and you wonder whether they teach basic grammar in school these days. And I am not referring to boganball.
 
C

CanadianRugby

Guest
That's fair. Most immediate post-game interviews are kinda dumb anyway. The players are either tired and want to leave, or pumped up about winning and want to hang out with their teammates.

Still, I think it you would be hard-pressed to find a sport with more post-graduate degrees in active players....definately a positive I think.
 
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