Really hoping Speight get's a look in for the Wallabies this year. Always beats the man and knows how to score a try or eight.
Watching the reply was really impressed with Ben Mowen's ruck work. Constantly smashing the ruck and hurting the reds protecting the ball. Bakkies/Vickers style. Good to see and slowed the reds and left a few bruises I'd say. Brumbies 6 was also in on the act.
This view is shared by a few punters, including how the wobs are selected/play.Can't believe he's not a wallaby (Mowen)
Can't believe he's not a wallaby (Mowen)
Case in point, Rob Horne. Told to bulk up to reduce chance of injury. Now he is injured just as frequently, is not particularly stronger but notably less agile.... A lot of guys gain those few extra kg's only to have a massive decrease in mobility. Others gain the kg's with no loss anywhere else. I know he's a back so it's a bad comparison but when Giteau bulked up that is exactly the point where his agility and elusiveness took a downward slide. ...
I have been to a number of pre-season sessions with Super referees present and they have been instructed not to call Set until they are satisfied the packs are still.
There is to be no set cadence to the call and the referee will wait as long as necessary for the packs to become still before they call Set. The onus is on the two packs to get steady - all the teams know this.
Have they been instructed to very quickly escalate to penalty for early engagements as well?
Noticed that Lees called a penalty against the Reds for their second early engagement, which was a full fourty minutes after the first. However, the way he did it was almost an afterthought (as he actually signalled a half arm then quickly changed), which implied it was a directive that a just remembered at the last second.
Curious to see if this will be applied in other games or not. Another poster mentioned that it's already being done elsewhere.
No longer up to the ref to escalate - it is now set that you only get one short arm in a match for early engagement, then it's full arm penalties from then on.
Geez, I'm not sure I like that. That was a gift 3 points for what is a very subjective (at times) call. The next scrum we got a half arm for the Brumbies early engage and at the time I thought that was a get square for a harsh call from the ref because I certainly didn't think the Brumbies went earlier than the Reds in that scrum.
I have been to a number of pre-season sessions with Super referees present and they have been instructed not to call Set until they are satisfied the packs are still.
There is to be no set cadence to the call and the referee will wait as long as necessary for the packs to become still before they call Set. The onus is on the two packs to get steady - all the teams know this.
.....it is now set that you only get one short arm in a match for early engagement, then it's full arm penalties from then on. This is a direction to all of the referees so we should see it in all matches.
As a former referee and now spectator I think it's reprehensible referees engineer any sort of penalty at scrum time due to their vocal instructions. I couldn't give a shit about the SANZAR referees' guidelines on crouch/touch/set, especially they "mustn't set any sort of cadence about their calls". How about they consider getting on with the game and facilitating a quick and fair contest for the engagement they're supposed to be adjudicating?
BTW, nothing against you, Scotty.