Set piece magic
John Solomon (38)
Evening lads,
I haven't made this thread to have a good old ref bash and whine about the way the game is policed in relation to saturday night, rather analyze one particular key aspect of the way several referee's ref. And this is giving the attacking team the favour in terms of the laws.
I, like you, all watch a lot of rugby and thus know all the different referee's. Let's analyze how each of them referee, beginning with saturday's scape goat, Bryce Lawrence.
Lawrence loves the idea of flow in a game. He is pretty lenient on the rucks and what goes on, basically letting most teams get away with all but the most blatant offences. He's also pretty lenient on offside. This results in long spaces between "breaks in play" as such. However, Is Bryce really letting the game flow? The lack of policing in regards to offside means that teams regularly struggle to get over the advantage line, meaning their attack becomes stationary and doesn't go anywhere. I've got no statistics to back it up, but I swear 90% of the time that happens the team either shovels it wide and thus into touch (see: Auckland Blues), box kicks, kicks, or concedes a turnover. The other team gets the ball and again nothing much happens.
The other 10% of the time the team makes it over the gain line, but can't get quick ball as a result of the ruck turning into paris hilton's diarrhoea, meaning that that ten percent actually joins the 90% a phase or so later.
Now, Craig Joubert is a highly regarded referee, but I'm not afraid to question his ruck policy. In the past few matches he seems to have completely disregarded the key to attacking rugby refereeing, that is the "tackler release before going for the ball rule." This rule makes sure that teams running it out of their 22 have time and space to use the ball and gives them that extra 3 seconds for support to arrive - a key amount of time. When Joubert stops enforcing the rule, teams effectively CANNOT attack from inside their 22. It becomes very difficult to do so without conceding a penalty or turn over. Now when taken to the literal end of things, this rule costs tries. Everyone knows about a big dickhead called chris ashton who scored a 100m try last year. If you check out the phase before, will genia runs, is tackled by two, and NEVER released by them. He has no chance of playing the ball. Eventually Genia being the gentlemen he is, realizes he will get penalized if he doesn't and thus releases, knowing they will probably get the ball back. In the end Ashton scored. If It was me reffing, penalty to Aus plus team warning (5m out.)
Now I'm not trying to pick on these refs but they're ignoring these rules. Perhaps there worried the game won't flow at all if they do enforce penalties strictly. wrong.
Look at South Africa V Australia at Loftus Versfeld 2010. Nigel Owens the referee comes out with a very strong stance. That is a ZERO tolerance on people going off they're feet at the breakdown. Some people would call it extreme, I call It letting the game flow. There are four, five, maybe six extra penalties in the game as a result. However, after about 15 minutes, the teams realise they will get pinged to shit the instant they go off they're feet. So they let the team get quick ball altogethor, and when combined with the correct enforcement of offside, other ruck rules etc, we say a ridiculous game of 9 tries and endless attack.
The same happened the very next week when Englands Wayne Barnes made sure he enforced releasing the tackler- open running game.
To let the game flow, you've got to enforce every rule. Teams these days are cheats, and the only way to stop them is to let them know you've caught them. Then they will know next time.
Thoughts?
N.B.
What the All Blacks are good at doing is knowing each referee. They will play to the strengths he gives to whichever teams.
My response: Bring on Wayne Barnes or Nigel Owens for a Bledisloe Cup game.
I haven't made this thread to have a good old ref bash and whine about the way the game is policed in relation to saturday night, rather analyze one particular key aspect of the way several referee's ref. And this is giving the attacking team the favour in terms of the laws.
I, like you, all watch a lot of rugby and thus know all the different referee's. Let's analyze how each of them referee, beginning with saturday's scape goat, Bryce Lawrence.
Lawrence loves the idea of flow in a game. He is pretty lenient on the rucks and what goes on, basically letting most teams get away with all but the most blatant offences. He's also pretty lenient on offside. This results in long spaces between "breaks in play" as such. However, Is Bryce really letting the game flow? The lack of policing in regards to offside means that teams regularly struggle to get over the advantage line, meaning their attack becomes stationary and doesn't go anywhere. I've got no statistics to back it up, but I swear 90% of the time that happens the team either shovels it wide and thus into touch (see: Auckland Blues), box kicks, kicks, or concedes a turnover. The other team gets the ball and again nothing much happens.
The other 10% of the time the team makes it over the gain line, but can't get quick ball as a result of the ruck turning into paris hilton's diarrhoea, meaning that that ten percent actually joins the 90% a phase or so later.
Now, Craig Joubert is a highly regarded referee, but I'm not afraid to question his ruck policy. In the past few matches he seems to have completely disregarded the key to attacking rugby refereeing, that is the "tackler release before going for the ball rule." This rule makes sure that teams running it out of their 22 have time and space to use the ball and gives them that extra 3 seconds for support to arrive - a key amount of time. When Joubert stops enforcing the rule, teams effectively CANNOT attack from inside their 22. It becomes very difficult to do so without conceding a penalty or turn over. Now when taken to the literal end of things, this rule costs tries. Everyone knows about a big dickhead called chris ashton who scored a 100m try last year. If you check out the phase before, will genia runs, is tackled by two, and NEVER released by them. He has no chance of playing the ball. Eventually Genia being the gentlemen he is, realizes he will get penalized if he doesn't and thus releases, knowing they will probably get the ball back. In the end Ashton scored. If It was me reffing, penalty to Aus plus team warning (5m out.)
Now I'm not trying to pick on these refs but they're ignoring these rules. Perhaps there worried the game won't flow at all if they do enforce penalties strictly. wrong.
Look at South Africa V Australia at Loftus Versfeld 2010. Nigel Owens the referee comes out with a very strong stance. That is a ZERO tolerance on people going off they're feet at the breakdown. Some people would call it extreme, I call It letting the game flow. There are four, five, maybe six extra penalties in the game as a result. However, after about 15 minutes, the teams realise they will get pinged to shit the instant they go off they're feet. So they let the team get quick ball altogethor, and when combined with the correct enforcement of offside, other ruck rules etc, we say a ridiculous game of 9 tries and endless attack.
The same happened the very next week when Englands Wayne Barnes made sure he enforced releasing the tackler- open running game.
To let the game flow, you've got to enforce every rule. Teams these days are cheats, and the only way to stop them is to let them know you've caught them. Then they will know next time.
Thoughts?
N.B.
What the All Blacks are good at doing is knowing each referee. They will play to the strengths he gives to whichever teams.
My response: Bring on Wayne Barnes or Nigel Owens for a Bledisloe Cup game.