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The light hearted history of rugby!

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Troy

Jim Clark (26)
Yes I played Full back !!!!!

It is largely unknown to players and followers of the modern game that rugby started off purely as a contest for forwards in opposition in line-outs, scrums, rucks and mauls. This pitted eight men of statuesque physique, supreme fitness and superior intelligence in packs against one another.

In those days, the winner was the pack that won the most set pieces. The debasement of the game began when backs were introduced. This occurred because a major problem was where to locate the next scrum or line-out.
Selecting positions on the ground for these had become a constant source of friction and even violence.

The problem was resolved by employing forward rejects, men of small stature and limited intelligence, to run aimlessly around within the field of play.
Following a set piece, the ball would be thrown to one of them, who would establish the next location either by dropping it or by throwing it to another reject for dropping. Very occasionally, a third reject would receive the ball before it would be dropped, and crowds would wildly cheer on these rare occasions. Initially these additional players were entirely disorganized but with the passing of time they adopted set positions.

For instance, take the half-back. He was usually one of the smallest and least intelligent of the backs whose role was simply to accept the ball from a forward and to pass it on to one of the other rejects who would drop it, providing the new location for the forwards to compete. He could easily (given his general size) have been called a quarter forward or a ball monkey but then tolerance and compassion are the keys to forward play and the present euphemism was decided on.

The five-eighth plays next to the half-back and his role is essentially the same except that when pressured, he usually panics and kicks the ball.
Normally, he is somewhat taller and slightly better built than the half-back and hence his name. One-eighth less and he would have been a half-back, three-eighths more and he might well have qualified to become a forward.

The centres were opportunists who had no expertise but wanted to share in the glamour associated with forward packs. After repeated supplication to the forwards for a role in the game they would be told to get out in the middle of the field and wait for instructions. Thus, when asked where they played, they would reply "in the centre". And they remain to this day, parasites and scroungers who mostly work as lawyers or used car dealers.

You may ask, why wingers? The answer is simple. Because these were players who had very little ability and were the lowest in the backline pecking order, they were placed as far away from the ball as possible. Consequently, and because the inside backs were so diligent in their assigned role of dropping the ball whenever they received it, the main contribution to the game made by the winger was not to get involved. Their instructions were to run away as quickly as possible whenever trouble appeared, and to avoid tackles at all costs. The fact that the game was organised so that the wingers didn't get to touch the ball led to an incessant flow of complaints from them and eventually the apt description "whingers" was applied. Even though the "h" dropped off over the years, the whingeing itself unfortunately has not.

Lastly, the full-back. This was the position given to the worst handler, the person least able to accept or pass the ball, someone who was always in the way. The name arose because the forwards would understandably become infuriated by the poor play invariably demonstrated by that person, and call out "send that fool back". He would then be relegated well out of everyone's way to the rear of the field.

So there you have it. Let's return to the glory days of a contest between two packs of eight men of statuesque physique, supreme fitness and superior intelligence. The rest can go off to where they will be happier, playing soccer.
 
C

Cave Dweller

Guest
Elite level a centre has to have a range of skills like a great defence, great hands, distribution skills, pace, at inside centre a kicking game to rival the fly-half, at outside centre a devastating outside break but how many have it.

This is todays centre.

He has tunnel vision and like a magnet runs straight into the opposition number.
Great lateral drift by not knowing the concept of straight running and runs towards the furthest touchline then popping it to a wing who gets rammed into touch. Back row forwards just love him.
Thinking he is fly half by kicking every piece of possession away without knowing where the ball will go 9/10 down the opposing fullbacks throat.
They have a neat kit. Socks always up shirts tucked in neatly and have the greatest and neatest hairstyles. They look impressive until they get the ball.
 

The Red Baron

Chilla Wilson (44)
Elite level a centre has to have a range of skills like a great defence, great hands, distribution skills, pace, at inside centre a kicking game to rival the fly-half, at outside centre a devastating outside break but how many have it.

This is todays centre.

He has tunnel vision and like a magnet runs straight into the opposition number.
Great lateral drift by not knowing the concept of straight running and runs towards the furthest touchline then popping it to a wing who gets rammed into touch. Back row forwards just love him.
Thinking he is fly half by kicking every piece of possession away without knowing where the ball will go 9/10 down the opposing fullbacks throat.
They have a neat kit. Socks always up shirts tucked in neatly and have the greatest and neatest hairstyles. They look impressive until they get the ball.

I think you might have missed the point.....
 

emuarse

Chilla Wilson (44)
Its much the same today - the pack are forward thinkers and the others are way back:p
 

Lee Grant

John Eales (66)
It was written by Ockie Oosthuizen who played prop for Northern Transvaal and the Springboks – he was on the 1981 Tour to NZ.

You knew the writer had to be a front rower.



The real history of the evolution of rugby positions at the Rugby School to later when old boys formed teams and had to compromise on the laws to get games against teams formed by old boys of other schools, who had their own codes of football, is interesting. Later still these clubs had to compromise with new clubs and clubs from other parts of the country.

The changes wrought on the game by this process saw the ball emerge more from the pack of players contesting for the ball up front. [One hesitates to use the words "ruck" or "maul" least folks impute a modern definition to what the forward fellows were doing, though if you take the meaning of those words in an everyday sense, it would be apt.]

The ball used to be kicked along the ground in the pack or dribbled forward at the feet. Opponents used to try to hack at the ball, or to get physical dominance, the shins of opponents. Players had to push the other side backwards whilst doing this to get to the other team's in goal where the ball could be grounded. Then a "try" was scored; this gave the right to try to kick at goal from opposite the place the ball was grounded. No points were scored from "tries."

In the early days of rugby there was a fellow or two posted behind whose job it was to get the ball back to the pack when it squirted out, but with the ball emerging more because of the law compromises, running the ball forward became the norm. More "tries" could be scored that way and thus more goals which earned points.

The game changed. Instead of the forward players kicking the ball or dribbling it forward within the pack, they began to heel it backwards to those at the back. The fellow between the players forward and back, the half back, would then dish the heeled ball out.

This was anathema to rugby traditionalists who thought the changes to be unmanly. Later, to their consternation, hacking at the shins of opponents was outlawed.

With the ball coming out more than ever the backs became more specialised, but that is another story.
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matty_k

Peter Johnson (47)
Hasn't it been posted before? Under "How the backs got their names" or something.

Not complaining it would be a bitch to search for.
 

Scott Allen

Trevor Allan (34)
If you want to know more about the history of the game, I suggest a book called "A Game For Hooligans - The History Of Rugby Union" by Huw Richards.

It gives you all the detail as summarised by Lee and much, much more. I learnt so much and it was a great read.
 

boyo

Mark Ella (57)
"Soccer is hooligans acting like gentlemen, Rugby Union is gentlemen acting like hooligans and Rugby League is hooligans acting like hooligans."
- Sergeant Pascoe in Dalziel and Pascoe
 

Rassie

Trevor Allan (34)
The New Zealanders in 1905 became the ‘All Blacks’, the 1906 South Africans were given ‘Springboks’ (from their badge).

In 1908 news reached England that the Australian team had adopted ‘The Rabbits’. English postcard makers issued team postcards with that nickname on it. The team’s captain ‘Paddy’ Moran said: “We dropped considerable cold water on ‘Rabbits’— we could not labour under an appellation borrowed from an English imported pest. For a brief day we, who for six weeks had been ‘Rabbits’, were ‘Waratahs’, but that was emblematic of NSW. All were agreed that any name would be preferable to ‘Rabbits’.” The ‘Wallabies’ was adopted instead.
— Hooligans & Gentlemen
 
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