AngrySeahorse
Peter Sullivan (51)
I need some advice from Flankers/Back rowers, or really anyone who’s played, or/& refereed plenty of Rugby. I’ve been playing for a while and I do my own thing come second phase play & open play but at set piece time I’ve always seemed to just do as our fly half/scrum half has told me to do. Now I’m thinking more for myself.
I am going to talk to my coach but I’m interested in getting as many views as possible, we have knowledgeable people on this forum so I was thinking it would be worth posting this in here. There are a few things I’m a bit iffy with & the lack of clarification is making me hesitate a bit which is no good.
This is the scenario:
Opposition is in their own 22 with their throw in to the line-out. I stand at the back of our line-out as Flanker, no lifting or jumping from me.
Tactically this is what I noticed the opposition doing every time they were in that situation:
They throw the ball into the line-out, the opposition jumper at the pod mid way who is lifted catches it then throws the ball down from off the top to the scrum half (so not bringing it down) who passes back to their full back who is close to the side line behind the line-out then does a clearing kick. They did this many times, it appears that although their fly half is a good kicker they doubt her under pressure in their 22 or back beyond that in their own goal line.
This is what my team tells me (or what my Fly half or Scrum half yells at me) to do:
Mark the opposition fly half.
Now this is what I would like to do:
The ball is caught by the opposition jumper, as soon as the ball leaves the hands of that jumper to go to the scrum half I’m off immediately to take out the scrum half, I don’t wait for it to get to the scrum half before I move I look to arrive to hit the scrum half as the ball reaches them.
I have to come in at an angle as the scrum half doesn’t stand in line with where I am as I’m at the back.
At the start of the line-out before the ball is thrown I don’t overstep the line of touch, nor do I cross the offside line that’s through the ball once it has been thrown. I don’t over run the ball when the opposition jumper has caught the ball or when the scrum half has caught it. I stay on my teams’ side of the ball. When I hit the scrum half I’d be at best in line with the ball. I believe this has me covered for most if not all laws governing 19.14 “Offside when taking part in the lineout”.
Why I want to do this is I figure it would prevent a clearing kick & keep us down their end. Even better I may be able to release her, get to my feet then get the ball back or force a penalty from her if she holds on if her forwards are slow to support her & her backs are too far back to do anything.
I did this in a game a while back & either it’s legal or the ref missed it & it is illegal as I got away with it. I thought “this is awesome but it’s so easy, it’s got to be illegal…”.
So, my Questions are:
Is what I am proposing to do in said scenario legal? Looking at laws I cant see anything that says I cant.
I know when the ball is thrown, knocked or kicked out of the lineout, the lineout ends. I take this as when the ball leaves the hands of the jumper not the scrum half – is my interpretation right there? I seem to get confused as the law book has ‘line-out players’ & ‘line-out participating players’ the latter includes the scrum half, the similar terminology makes it a little confusing.
Phew! I thought when I started this post it wouldn’t take much to explain. Wrong!
I am going to talk to my coach but I’m interested in getting as many views as possible, we have knowledgeable people on this forum so I was thinking it would be worth posting this in here. There are a few things I’m a bit iffy with & the lack of clarification is making me hesitate a bit which is no good.
This is the scenario:
Opposition is in their own 22 with their throw in to the line-out. I stand at the back of our line-out as Flanker, no lifting or jumping from me.
Tactically this is what I noticed the opposition doing every time they were in that situation:
They throw the ball into the line-out, the opposition jumper at the pod mid way who is lifted catches it then throws the ball down from off the top to the scrum half (so not bringing it down) who passes back to their full back who is close to the side line behind the line-out then does a clearing kick. They did this many times, it appears that although their fly half is a good kicker they doubt her under pressure in their 22 or back beyond that in their own goal line.
This is what my team tells me (or what my Fly half or Scrum half yells at me) to do:
Mark the opposition fly half.
Now this is what I would like to do:
The ball is caught by the opposition jumper, as soon as the ball leaves the hands of that jumper to go to the scrum half I’m off immediately to take out the scrum half, I don’t wait for it to get to the scrum half before I move I look to arrive to hit the scrum half as the ball reaches them.
I have to come in at an angle as the scrum half doesn’t stand in line with where I am as I’m at the back.
At the start of the line-out before the ball is thrown I don’t overstep the line of touch, nor do I cross the offside line that’s through the ball once it has been thrown. I don’t over run the ball when the opposition jumper has caught the ball or when the scrum half has caught it. I stay on my teams’ side of the ball. When I hit the scrum half I’d be at best in line with the ball. I believe this has me covered for most if not all laws governing 19.14 “Offside when taking part in the lineout”.
Why I want to do this is I figure it would prevent a clearing kick & keep us down their end. Even better I may be able to release her, get to my feet then get the ball back or force a penalty from her if she holds on if her forwards are slow to support her & her backs are too far back to do anything.
I did this in a game a while back & either it’s legal or the ref missed it & it is illegal as I got away with it. I thought “this is awesome but it’s so easy, it’s got to be illegal…”.
So, my Questions are:
Is what I am proposing to do in said scenario legal? Looking at laws I cant see anything that says I cant.
I know when the ball is thrown, knocked or kicked out of the lineout, the lineout ends. I take this as when the ball leaves the hands of the jumper not the scrum half – is my interpretation right there? I seem to get confused as the law book has ‘line-out players’ & ‘line-out participating players’ the latter includes the scrum half, the similar terminology makes it a little confusing.
Phew! I thought when I started this post it wouldn’t take much to explain. Wrong!