Lee Grant
John Eales (66)
Some people have argued that a try should be worth more points, and/or penalty and drop goals should be worth fewer. That would result in more tries being scored; it was a no-brainer.
Others, like yours truly, have warned folks to be aware of unintended consequences. At present some teams are happy to give up 3 points instead of 5 or 7 near their goal line by being cynical; so if a penalty kick was worth only 2 points they would do it a lot more. It would be different if the referees had a good record of dishing out yellow cards, this argument went, but they didn't.
Likewise increasing the points for a try should see goal line shenanigans escalate. Giving up 3 to save 6 or 8 would see cynical play on the increase and giving up only 2 would cause an epidemic.
Professional referees demonstrated their failure to issue yellow cards in the 2008 Super14 when the free kick ELV was trialled. That ELV failed as people said it would. This was frustrating because amateur referees in the 2007 Shute Shield and ARC gave out cards like Las Vegas card dealers and the free kick sanctions worked.
One didn't want to see another law change that depended on soft cock pro referees dishing out yellow cards.
Point changes for the 2012 Varsity Cup in the RSA
Organisers of the Varsity Cup have received dispensation from the IRB to change the points for kicks. These are the same folks who a few years back trialled an innovation wherein captains were allowed to get a few TMO reviews of incidents, as they could in the NFL.
In the 2012 VC trial, penalty kicks and drop goals will be worth only 2 points, but a conversion will be worth 3. On paper the goal line shenanigans should escalate but further out you could see teams kicking for touch rather than for goal.
I am all for trialling law changes because it's the only way you can see the practical effects of them. On the other hand, as we found out in the 2008 Super14, professional referees do not give out as many yellow cards as there should be, and knowing already what professional coaches will instruct their players to do near their goal line, we will have to see a trial in a pro season before we can form an opinion of the merits of the points change.
There is an article on the matter here:
http://www.varsitycup.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4644:varsity-cup-rugby-points-the-way-forward&catid=27:varsity-cup-news&Itemid=5
.
Others, like yours truly, have warned folks to be aware of unintended consequences. At present some teams are happy to give up 3 points instead of 5 or 7 near their goal line by being cynical; so if a penalty kick was worth only 2 points they would do it a lot more. It would be different if the referees had a good record of dishing out yellow cards, this argument went, but they didn't.
Likewise increasing the points for a try should see goal line shenanigans escalate. Giving up 3 to save 6 or 8 would see cynical play on the increase and giving up only 2 would cause an epidemic.
Professional referees demonstrated their failure to issue yellow cards in the 2008 Super14 when the free kick ELV was trialled. That ELV failed as people said it would. This was frustrating because amateur referees in the 2007 Shute Shield and ARC gave out cards like Las Vegas card dealers and the free kick sanctions worked.
One didn't want to see another law change that depended on soft cock pro referees dishing out yellow cards.
Point changes for the 2012 Varsity Cup in the RSA
Organisers of the Varsity Cup have received dispensation from the IRB to change the points for kicks. These are the same folks who a few years back trialled an innovation wherein captains were allowed to get a few TMO reviews of incidents, as they could in the NFL.
In the 2012 VC trial, penalty kicks and drop goals will be worth only 2 points, but a conversion will be worth 3. On paper the goal line shenanigans should escalate but further out you could see teams kicking for touch rather than for goal.
I am all for trialling law changes because it's the only way you can see the practical effects of them. On the other hand, as we found out in the 2008 Super14, professional referees do not give out as many yellow cards as there should be, and knowing already what professional coaches will instruct their players to do near their goal line, we will have to see a trial in a pro season before we can form an opinion of the merits of the points change.
There is an article on the matter here:
http://www.varsitycup.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4644:varsity-cup-rugby-points-the-way-forward&catid=27:varsity-cup-news&Itemid=5
.