nice videos mxy
my thoughts
are a collection of defensive-crouch snark that neglects the very criticisms your own code is having meetings about. Consider what you say more carefully before firing off a response, or you'll make us think you don't really watch either code.
For instance, for some reason, you still think scrum halves just relax at the back of the ruck and take their sweet time, even though we've already shown union scrum halves regularly get the ball out of the ruck faster than league a play-the-ball. Laws were introduced after the last union world cup to limit how much time they could sit back there -- that's also why the ref is pointing. And I didn't include the footage before the ruck, just the 4-second Beast-Warburton stuff, so how the hell would you know how long it's taking?
Kicking is useful. Mindlessly criticizing kicking without knowing why it's there is not. It's like criticizing a hammer because you don't know what to do with a nail. You might as well criticize every kick after the 5th tackle.
If you don't see that NRL tackle as your very definition of men aggressively hugging each other, you're just being wilfully blind. Todd Greenberg sees that. And what they're doing is directly
on the ball to slow playing the ball, not action around the ball that facilitates play. That's less than optimum play, even if you think it's perfect. Again, every NRL coach just sat through a presentation of stats on that. But you can't see it. FFS.
Trust me, you don't want to get into a discussion about American styles of wrestling and what's being used in an Aussie code. There's no "American" style; we compete in every style, at every level, very successfully. (What we do at the NCAA level used to be the freestyle competed in the Olympics.) What the Storm are doing in that tackle wouldn't even be allowed in wrestling because it's negative action and would be penalized -- in greco, freestyle and collegiate, all styles Americans compete in (like hanging on the head too long, two hands on the head, etc.). So even from a wrestling perspective, it sucks because it stops action. They wouldn't be penalized in jujitsu or grappling matches, but there's a reason those are still niche sports.
Let that sink in: The manner in which they employ those wrestling techniques are considered negative
in wrestling and would be penalized.
From a functional perspective, the NRL have been employing jujitsu coaches to work on wrestling. That's about locks, chokes, moves that tie up and subdue your opponent. By contrast, take England and the B&I Lions -- their S&C coach Paul Stridgeon competed in freestyle for Great Britain, and that's much more focused on takedowns and opening up action for points (he was recently poached by Toulon). So even the kind of grappling each code utilizes is different -- one about stopping action, one about creating action.
League currently uses wrestling in a negative way (and incorrectly from a wrestling perspective) to slow play down. There is no question about that, even if you question it. The NRL just had an an annual meeting about it, and the league press have been decrying how it's killing the game. Union uses wrestling far more selectively to facilitate play. If they used any more it wouldn't be useful -- and not really necessary, since there's no advantage to be gained by slowing down the ball carrier like it's done in league. In union, if the tackler doesn't release immediately, it's a penalty; in league, the ball carrier hip-thrusts the grass while the tacklers barnacle him.
I could go through a union game and an NRL game and compare how many times wrestling techniques are employed, but that sounds dull. Besides, we already know how often techniques are employed in a league game -- at NEARLY. EVERY. TACKLE.
It's not about liking it or wanting to see more wrestling, it's about using it in a positive way where appropriate. I don't watch either code for the wrestling. I'm just a rugby fan with a lot of experience in this other sport, so I can't
not see it when it happens, and I can't
not see it when it's used positively or negatively.
(And feel free to drop the weird homophobia. It's about as classy as Todd Carney.)
Bored now.