If one front row is driving square and straight, it (the scrum) can only go through and past 90 degrees if the other front row breaks binds. It is not physically possible to have a square front row and a 'wheeled' back 5 without binds being broken first.
I thought the Brumbies scrum tactics were dumb, they quickly should have realised they weren't getting anywhere holding the ball at the back and played some rugby instead
What you're describing is not a wheeled scrum. A wheeled scrum is when both front rows remain properly bound, but have rotated 90 from their starting position such that the line between the front rows is parallel to the touchline.
Both front rows can be square and straight and the scrum can still wheel. If this wasn't possible, there would be no point in the IRB even having laws about wheeling. They would just regulate front row binding and be done with it.
Wheeling can occur legally in two ways:
The only time wheeling is illegal is when one of the two props pulls his opposing prop back towards himself, so that the opposing scrum drives through out of control on that side. This is not what happened on Saturday, and at any rate not what the original post of this thread describes.
- A big shove through the loose head side, which will naturally rotate the scrum due to the two packs being laterally offset.
- When a force is applied tangentially to the scrum's axis (ie. back row crabbing).
Apologies. You and Pfitzy were trying to educate me on what's physically possible. I was just trying to make it clear that I don't have any serious deficiencies on this subject, given that I live under those constraints every day as you do.I am aware of what constitutes a 'wheeled' scrum but appreciate that may not have been obvious from my post. What you have said in your first paragraph was kind of my point. Kind of.
This is where we disagree. I think it's pretty clear from the video and corresponding time stamp that I posted that the Brumbies front row wheeled around along with the Chiefs and then subsequent to the whistle, turned back around and drove straight to influence the umpire's decision. Joubert didn't fall for it and correctly ruled a wheeled scrum (as opposed to a lost bind).What happened on the weekend is that the Brumbies front row at all times were driving straight (parallel to the touchline).
I'm no expert either, but I've read the Laws and I can't find anything explicitly ruling this out as a legitimate tactic. There are plenty of extremely nebulous refereeing guidelines that may or may not cover it, but it's very subjective and every referee is within his rights to interpret as he pleases.I am no expert on the laws, so won't claim to be. I base my opinion on my experience of locking in too many scrums than is probably healthy. But almost every time I was involved in a wheel of this variety, it was when we were the weaker scrum. We were nearly always penalised for 'stepping sideways'. Summary: I don't think this type of wheeling is legal.
Wheeling is legal. The whip wheel is illegal.Apologies. You and Pfitzy were trying to educate me on what's physically possible. I was just trying to make it clear that I don't have any serious deficiencies on this subject, given that I live under those constraints every day as you do.
This is where we disagree. I think it's pretty clear from the video and corresponding time stamp that I posted that the Brumbies front row wheeled around along with the Chiefs and then subsequent to the whistle, turned back around and drove straight to influence the umpire's decision. Joubert didn't fall for it and correctly ruled a wheeled scrum (as opposed to a lost bind).
I'm no expert either, but I've read the Laws and I can't find anything explicitly ruling this out as a legitimate tactic. There are plenty of extremely nebulous refereeing guidelines that may or may not cover it, but it's very subjective and every referee is within his rights to interpret as he pleases.
But again, the more important point here is that defensive wheeling is a self-defeating tactic anyway as long as the 8/9 knows what he's doing. If the Wallabies are aware of the tactic, it will actually be to our advantage, so whether or not it's illegal is immaterial.
Its the same referee with the same interpretation. The post I replied to mentions incidents of previous games so how come I get the lecture when really asking to go look at previous games and say how Joubert interpret the scum.It is possible that he ruled erroneously in this match, as opposed to another.
I'm not sure what the previous match has to do with this one.
People are talking about THIS scrum, in THIS match.
I thought the Brumbies scrum tactics were dumb, they quickly should have realised they weren't getting anywhere holding the ball at the back and played some rugby instead
No, your post implied his rulings were all the same in both matches, but the complaining was different because the Brumbies lost.Its the same referee with the same interpretation. The post I replied to mentions incidents of previous games so how come I get the lecture when really asking to go look at previous games and say how Joubert interpret the scum.
He is neutral so he will not look for one teams specific mistakes that we pick up. We miss our own teams mistakes because we are bias and we already made up the result in our minds. His interpretation stayed the same with all the games. That what makes him a good referee. He is consistent.
That is what teams want. They do not want the referee to change his whole dynamics from game to game.
There is no such thing as ‘rewarding a dominant scrum’. Both teams are to scrum technically correctly and within the laws. (If a scrum is dominant then there is no reason for it to scrum illegally – or is the scrum dominant because it scrums illegally?)
That is the first principle referees apply to a scrum.
Please read thisNo, your post implied his rulings were all the same in both matches, but the complaining was different because the Brumbies lost.
The discussion was around one scrum, not all of them, and whether that decision may have been wrong or inconsistent. I'm not sure you can prove your sweeping statements that all his interpretations were exactly the same, unless you are Craig Joubert, and the rest of your post is the usual filler you apply to most of them, i.e. irrelevant obfuscation. Nobody was arguing he is a poor ref, just that he might have made a mistake. Unless you have a large series of near-identical scrums, your argument is unproveable.
I can't wait for the mini-GIFs, explaining it all, to follow.
Seems similiar to a post I quoted which you included its irrelevant as that was a past game? A SA supporter not happy with a SA team getting penalized? Pointing out the faults of Alexander?Great, a blog article about scrum laws referring to the inconsistency of their application, including by Craig "The Consistent" Joubert, and amazingly how that dudded the Bulls because Ben Alexander scrummed poorly against the British and Irish Lions.
Quod erat non demonstrandum.
So what we had on Saturday was exactly the same thing that happened in the Australia vs Lions series. There was plenty talk about the Bulls scrumming woes in the build up to the game, much like there was plenty talk about the Lions’ scrumming prowess in the build up to that series. And instead of judging the scrums on their merit at Loftus, Joubert penalised the perceived weaker scrum.
Wheeling can occur legally in two ways:
The only time wheeling is illegal is when one of the two props pulls his opposing prop back towards himself, so that the opposing scrum drives through out of control on that side. This is not what happened on Saturday, and at any rate not what the original post of this thread describes.
- A big shove through the loose head side, which will naturally rotate the scrum due to the two packs being laterally offset.
- When a force is applied tangentially to the scrum's axis (ie. back row crabbing).
Many times, in tests as well as S15, refs have penalised a scrum for "walking around". Can you enlighten me as to what they mean? I was under the impression it meant precisely that the back row was crabbing sideways to wheel the scrum, but you say above that that is legal. What is the difference?