Dave Beat
Paul McLean (56)
Yep no doubt, and at times it can simply come down to game management.Experts like international front rowers and scrum coaches might give you the same answer as this.
Yep no doubt, and at times it can simply come down to game management.Experts like international front rowers and scrum coaches might give you the same answer as this.
If I was a SS coach I would seriously consider coaching my pack not to keep giving penalties away for early engagement. Adjusting to the referee's interpretation would seem to be the smart way to deal with the complexities of our game.At the Woods v Parra game last week the ref took this scrum farce to a new level - awarding free kicks on both the first and second scrum (against the scrum feed on both occasions) for early engagement and I would estimate that over half the scrums in the match were penalised for early engagement (there was hardly any collapses). The dominant Eastwood scrum was largely neutralised. If I was a SS coach I would seriously consider playing extra breakaways as props as the refs are too pedantic on engagement and have no idea who is responsible for scrum collapses.
This blatant disregard of the superior wisdom of people on "the clubhouse verandah" is a perennial problem at Milner. I think there must be a localised problem with the acoustics there. Referees don't even seem to be able to hear the constant chant in unison of "Get 'em onside, ref" whenever the locals are in possession of the ball.I expressed this view to the referee during the game from the clubhouse verandah but he didn't seem to pay any attention.
Rob, the current approach to early engagements is to take puntitive action (free kick or escalate to penalty). Managing the situation is not an option. Therefore if the players infringe at the first scrum, there will be a free kick. For mine, I would ask why the players infringe at the first scrum when they know what will happen. Therefore the players are either infringing or the referee is making a judgment error and I know which is more likely.
Referees do consider scrum dominace in their decisions but not in relation to early engagement, so I think the dominace of the Eastwood scrum is irrelevant in this situation.
The referee in this game is a Super Rugby referee so there should be consistency with the Super Rugby approach.
I did not see this game but I have heard that this was a good performance from the referee at scrum time where the players were the problem.
Therefore I would ask you whether you think the problem is the approach rather than the referee performance and how you think that the referee could have handled the scrum differently.
The 4th grade game between Wicks and Penrith on Saturday featured lots of scrums which suited the 4 or 5 very big but very unfit Penrith forwards who dominated the scrums, but held the game up every time a scrum or lineout was called whilst they trudged from the place the last set piece was held. A very boring game to watch.
The less scrums the better !!!
You don't happen to have a spare tape of the game by any chance, tc?
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You must have heard it from the referee himself!
The referee in question may be a Super Referee but I have watched him at SS level on many occasions and consider him to be poor- particularly at scrums. It needs to be remembered that each pack normally weighs upward of 850kg. Timing engagement, particularly the first one is difficult as the timing of the refs calls is unknown. Scrums are being called for early engagement for the minutest (excuse the spelling) timing differences undiscernible to the naked eye.
The way he and others could improve their performance, is to make the calls quicker and reserve free kicks for the obvious infractions.
No, not from the referee himself. I take your point that there are too many marginal calls.
In terms of timing, the speed is determined by the readiness of the players to proceed. After several years, players should have adjusted to waiting for the referee's call rather than trying to predict the speed of the call as the calls are not necessarily supposed to be consistent from scrum to scrum.
The speed is an interesting area. Despite the heavy cirticism of the slower calls, they have actually reduced the number of re-sets and the removal of "Pause" seems to have helped even further. At the elite level, I think there have been some studies into the timing that creates the best results. Chris Pollock is particularly goood at it and I wouldn't have called his a quick call.
While there is blame on both sides, I still think it is more of a player issue than a referee one.
IMO many of the calls for an early engagement are totally unnecessary as no advantage has been gained, especially given the fractions of a second we are talking about. Sure it's a breach, but if no advantage why not play on. The referee could always signal an advantage but play on anyway, instead of that they blow the whistle immediately. To make it more frustrating for the spectators the non-offending team then very frequently calls for another scrum anyway.
The referee could always signal an advantage but play on anyway, instead of that they blow the whistle immediately. To make it more frustrating for the spectators the non-offending team then very frequently calls for another scrum anyway.
IMO many of the calls for an early engagement are totally unnecessary as no advantage has been gained, especially given the fractions of a second we are talking about. Sure it's a breach, but if no advantage why not play on. The referee could always signal an advantage but play on anyway, instead of that they blow the whistle immediately. To make it more frustrating for the spectators the non-offending team then very frequently calls for another scrum anyway.
Disagree, getting a good early hit under the current rules allows them to take a step and the 9 just puts the ball in and it appears at the back.
On their feed, they are going backwards under a decent hit = pressure = collapses = penalties or tight heads
Now if you take away the penalty sanction "some (Eddie Jones influenced)" coaches with shit scrums will just play for giving the free kick and keep moving.
Are the Argentinean players missing this round?
Des, I know your post was a positive idea and I hate being negative on it however I'd have some concerns as per below,
So another form of recruitment is it, quality stays, rest return to the west?
I don't have answers, but a different thought you have put forward.
Along way to travel, cost, even more so with work commitments, peak hour etc.
Why not send Uni Players out west to train etc. for a couple of training sessions, our hours each week, I think that may have more success as it would be a team environment.
Is there varying facilities out west still in operation were money got spent with the Olympics.
I'd love to see the west developed, I do think there is potential. Yes, BUT, why aren't the other codes succeeding out their either?????
Huge potential, BUT, Penrith haven't been in finals contention for a while, GWS is in line for the spoon, I ask, where is the talent going then?
There we go, even HJ made reference to raiding parties - at least I wasn't first.
Dave - he was genuinely concerned that without assistance in some way Penrith players would rightfully get very disheartened. This was evidenced by Penrith only having 12 players on the paddock in two's for at least all the 2nd half against Uni (only arrived at 1/2 time). Not sure what facilities are out west these days but Uni certainly don't need more players.
It is my experience that players are attracted to Sydney University Rugby for what it has to offer as a club and that does NOT include poaching off other clubs.