T
TOCC
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There seems to be a perception that the Northern Hemisphere and that England specifically love the scrum and current scrum laws, but the below videos show that there are issues with the scrum across the globe.
There seems to be a perception that the Northern Hemisphere and that England specifically love the scrum and current scrum laws, but the below videos show that there are issues with the scrum across the globe.
Your comment about the NFL in the other thread makes me wonder - do we need a different camera angle for scrums at pro level?
Something like the view behind the line of scrimmage might do a better job of showing what's going on at scrum time because no matter what the laws are at the moment what refs are seeing and penalising just doesn't come across for the TV viewer.
A rule to limit halfbacks saying "Sir,Sir" to the referee for only 5 times in a game with no other discussion allowed from them . Sounds like cruel punishment for the halves but the referees would be in some kind of nirvana .
2 points instead of 3 point for a penalty goal
People want to watch free flowing attacking rugby not to see who has the best goal kicker
2 points instead of 3 point for a penalty goal
People want to watch free flowing attacking rugby not to see who has the best goal kicker
Just eliminate the shot at goal option for scrum penalties. Refs have no idea what is going on at the scrum. We have to accept that to some degree but they shouldn't be essentially awarding points to one side based upon their misunderstanding of the scrum.
As with the downside for lowering the points value of penalties the downside here is that teams will just infringe at the scrum. Better education for refs and use of technology will assist. It is never going to be perfect but that is the nature of the game.