The first thing I noticed in the first scrum I saw (that broke the Force LHP's shoulder) was the change in the binding of the Reds LHP at the time (Slipper?). I mean he bound and began the push then changed his bind from the long bind to an under/short bind then drove through the Force THP. which sheered sideays and collapsed on the Force LH side. Was the change in binding responsible? I don't know but, I was of the belief that it is illegal to change the bind.
I was amazed that the Reds could be awarded a penalty try with Daley doing all of his pushing on his knees!
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By the letter of the law it should have been reset, but as with so many parts of the scrum, the team going forward is going to get the benefit of the doubt.
We've seen it time and again with the Wallabies.
At pro level, given the string of scrums that preceded it, that's going to be a penalty try under most refs.
Agree with all of that - but....They haven't been made to contest the ball, they've committed the first infringement - why are they rewarded with a penalty or penalty try.
Agree with all of that - but..
In this case it was actually a force feed, and a tight head - making it even more likely a reds penalty and PT.
"ARs are pillocks" is your answer.
My argument is that if we're going to decide matches on scrum penalties, we need to police the scrum feed in the same way. In many of these penalty/penalty try situations the first infringement is an incorrect scrum feed - from that point onwards the team which has incorrectly put the ball into the scrum should not received a penalty at all. They haven't been made to contest the ball, they've committed the first infringement - why are they rewarded with a penalty or penalty try.
While I agree wholeheartedly with this viewpoint, I have to remark that as far as I could see, Will Genia actually fed the ball right into the tunnel in that sequence of scrums (at least more so than the vast majority of scrum feeds we see otherwise). He really didn't roll the ball in though, rather placed it in front of the LHP. So, I would say there was no infringement relating to a crooked feed, but is there a requirement to make sure the ball reaches the competing hookers?
Simplest solution in my mind to fix the modern scrum: remove any possibility of penalties at scrum time (with the exception of foul play). Free kicks only for every scrum infringement, and no upgrading them to penalties. The reward for a dominant scrum should be a) a strong platform to attack from on your own ball, and b) disruption of the oppositions ball and the occasional tighthead.
The scrum is now basically a contest to win penalties, rather than a restart of play. That's what leads to so many of the collapses and messing about.
The laws weren't designed for scrums to be like this and the NH scrum afficianados have been allowed to give the scrum an importance in the game above any historical precendent.
Agreed. But the argument becomes invalid from any Wallabies supporter, because we suck come scrum time.
The law book states "The purpose of the scrum is to restart play quickly, safely and fairly, after a minor infringement or a stoppage.", yet it is allowed to become a 3 point generator. For a minor infringement.
That's a hell of a responsibility your asking of an old man. I'm honoured, but the travel would kill me.(I'd like to see all penalties taken by drop kick, but that's for another thread)
That's the answer to quite a few questions.
the body and feet of each front row player must be in a normal position to make a forward shove
I say this with the full knowledge that I just did my certification online again. So for the next few years I'm fully qualified to hold up a flag and get told by the ref that he doesn't need help despite his clear shortcomings.