Torn Hammy
Johnnie Wallace (23)
I would like to see the defensive line moved back 5 metres from the last foot of the ruck and maul.
Not metrosexual enough. Players like Bieber would refuse to wear'em.What was wrong with the loose-fitting cotton jumpers back in the olden days? Props had no trouble getting a good handful of jumper then. And clubs seemed to have no trouble with one set per team.
We asked Nathan Sharpe on a podcast once. He had a good response. I'm pretty sure I uploaded the clip of it somewhere on the site.Lineout can only be ruled not straight if the opposition com[petes for the ball
Blue, the iRB have declared the new sequence will be "Crouch/Touch/Set". With pauses, of course, but no pause/Pause/pause before the final engagement. Nothing about the hand staying after Touch. Still like to see a much faster setting of scrums. Tahs, for instance, are tortoisely slow, Wallabies aren't much better.
IS that planned / new?The proposed "use it or lose it" ruck rule should keep it moving
IS that planned / new?
It's not often the IRB deserve credit for tinkering with the game, but here goes — the law change experiments to be brought in next season are actually founded on sound principles and common sense. How novel.
In a nutshell, the intention is to enhance the flow of matches, and the plans surely cannot offend even those who prefer stodgy, ‘arm-wrestle’ contests.
Top prize goes to the initiative designed to eradicate the grim spectacle of teams shielding the ball for an age at the base of rucks to prepare another pod of forwards for a close-quarters drive or, more often, to hoof it in the air and give chase in the quest for field position.
The experiment will require the ball to be used within five seconds or the defending team will be awarded a scrum. Hallelujah!
To speed the game up I would like to see all injured players taken over the sideline for treatment (frontrowers can be replaced for scrums only at this time). If a player can't be taken off under their own steam then they must be replaced as a duty of care.
I don't think it is a good step to take that an injured player's first thoughts are that they need to move to the sideline before they can receive treatment.
Players who are potentially seriously injured will still be trying to move themselves in the hope they can stay on the field.
It doesn't do anything for the players wellbeing to say that can only be treated once they move themselves off the field.
If a team takes a quick tap at a penalty or free kick the opposition can not advance. This guarantees that the team in possession will make ground and increase the chances of teams taking the tap option.
Not sure if the lineout one would work. There might be a grey area in terms of what defines competition. One guy in the air? A guy who competes directly with the player who takes the ball?
Yes I am aware of that but as thinking keeping the arm up could help the engagement to be more level and possible get ride of a lot of heads than hips calls? It also evens out the competition it. Some props are clever in how the touch and it gives them a slight edge when leading wit the shoulder especially looseheads.
I am with you scarfie - it also meant you had to get your big forwards into the ruck to push it over and grab the ball, so the backs generally had more spaceI'm not keen on the recent use of the crocodile roll in cleanouts.
And I'm just going to say it - I like hands in the ruck, ARC style. For me, it made the ruck a real armwrestle, and put the focus back on physicality rather than timing yourself against the ref's patience, which is what rucks have become. For me, it's the next best thing to bringing back rucking.