Scott Allen
Trevor Allan (34)
Overnight the IRB confirmed that the new scrum laws that have been trialled this year in the Pacific Rugby Cup will come into place in a twelve month global trial commencing at the start of the season in each hemisphere.
The changes can be summarised as follows:
Because the props are required to bind before they engage this will necessitate the packs starting closer together. Whilst there will still be a hit, it will be reduced as a result of this.
I've seen the new laws in use in Pacific Rugby Cup games and it does promote better stability during the engagement - there were definitely less scrums going to ground as props were no longer struggling to make their bind.
With less distance between the packs before the engage and the fact that the ball does not have to be fed until the scrum is stationery the emphasis will be less on the hit and more on the push once the ball is fed.
I think this will see a massive improvement in scrummaging and turn the scrum back into a real contest.
There is nothing in the announcement about the laws that will apply when southern hemisphere teams play in the northern hemisphere at the end of the year but you'd imagine those matches will have to be played under the existing laws as southern hemisphere teams will not have played under the new laws at that time.
http://www.irb.com/newsmedia/mediazone/pressrelease/newsid=2066642.html
The changes can be summarised as follows:
- The packs will still crouch as they do now;
- Instead of a touch the props must bind on their opposite prop and maintain that bind;
- There will still be an engagement but with a reduced hit;
- The ball does not have to be fed until the scrum is stationery and square;
- Feeding the ball straight into the scrum will be enforced.
Because the props are required to bind before they engage this will necessitate the packs starting closer together. Whilst there will still be a hit, it will be reduced as a result of this.
I've seen the new laws in use in Pacific Rugby Cup games and it does promote better stability during the engagement - there were definitely less scrums going to ground as props were no longer struggling to make their bind.
With less distance between the packs before the engage and the fact that the ball does not have to be fed until the scrum is stationery the emphasis will be less on the hit and more on the push once the ball is fed.
I think this will see a massive improvement in scrummaging and turn the scrum back into a real contest.
There is nothing in the announcement about the laws that will apply when southern hemisphere teams play in the northern hemisphere at the end of the year but you'd imagine those matches will have to be played under the existing laws as southern hemisphere teams will not have played under the new laws at that time.
http://www.irb.com/newsmedia/mediazone/pressrelease/newsid=2066642.html