Groucho
Greg Davis (50)
yep, and takes longer
fatprop, as a back I'm fascinated as always by the black arts. Why does it take longer?
yep, and takes longer
Because the 8 has to move the ball from the left side to the right and/or the ball has to travel a little further through a less clear path.fatprop, as a back I'm fascinated as always by the black arts. Why does it take longer?
fatprop, as a back I'm fascinated as always by the black arts. Why does it take longer?
Because the 8 has to move the ball from the left side to the right and/or the ball has to travel a little further through a less clear path.
It also involves the 8lifting 1 foot which was considered a disadvantage - although he probably had to do that anyway to stop the ball flying out the back of the scrum.
I dont think there's much in it but it requires the other 7 forwards to maintain concentration and to be prepared for a second shove. This was an issue and I think even under the laws played most recently the Wobblies pack had a habit of relaxing once they thought the ball had been won.
I reckon that if your scrum has parity you should this channel it because it prevents the other half from getting close enough to stuff your 9s pass.
In days of yore the teams I played in favoured channel 3 ball particularly on the left side of the field.
fatprop it occurs to me that the requirement for the other side to be back 5m at the scrum may tip the balance in favour of Ch 3 ball if a scrum has parity because the potential improvement in the quality of the ball is enhanced by the opposing backs having to travel 5m more than they did in the olden days.
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Channel 1 goes straight down the loose head channel and straight out between the LH lock and the openside, it is quick but closer to the opposing 9 (but the openside can stick his arse out making the opposing 9 go a long way around or just scrag his jersey to slow him)
The others (2 - the ball is channelled through the feet of the loose head and then to the eight man or 3 - The ball is channelled between the hookers feet ,and then exits between the tight head lock and 6's feet) move the ball diagonally through the scrum, with a good scrum 2 ball will sit under the 8 feet (like the Lions) for him to hold and play with, or be moved across well away from the opposing 9 as 3 ball.
The movement diagonally is the issue for a scrum under pressure, locks kick it back, the bad guys second push, there is too much pressure and the ball can't get back and the scrum collapses under pressure etc etc
I believe we need to go back to basics, assume the scrum on our ball will be under pressure (it will, it isn't that good) and just learn to crawl again on our ball, no f*cking around, just in and out. Let Genia be an old fashioned 9, and use the quick ball to set our backs off
I assume the law about flankers not being able to change their packing angle remains?
I assume the law about flankers not being able to change their packing angle remains?
The law of unintended consequences suggests that it won't be the perfect solution
Any professional prop (or lock) who assumes the mantle of parity, at ANY time during the execution of a scrum, should probably stop getting paid to play and go to league or darts or something.
Even when all you want is "steady" ball, the aim should be to demoralise your opponent at all times. I hate this scrummaging for penalties tactic and believe it detracts from the front rower's minor duty of providing possession to the backs so they can score tries. though most often they cock it up and you find yourself jogging back towards your own try line - at worst for another scrum, but sometimes for pointless things like lineouts.
Rather it should be an exercise in emasculating your foe for 80 minutes and once the ball is out of the danger zone (i.e. past your feet), you should be concentrating on how best to make your opponent never want to pack another scrum against you. The perfect time for this is after the ball has gone, and the jackals have detatched - then you get a free shot once the ref has pissed off.
Obviously, the props among us know there is nothing better on the planet than packing scrums (except the love of our fans), but it isn't always easy and sometimes you'd rather be at the bottom of a ruck when your opponent is a 130kg ex-NPC Maori who deadlifts diesel transmissions for a hobby.
I think Kearnsy says it well. I really do not like the new scrum laws. Crouch, Touch, Set is the best mode of scrimmaging in my mind. The hit=the scrum, take that away and it is nothing but a rubbish rugby league type push fest.