I think there's a fair bit of grumpy old menitis (GOM) in this thread. No one complained about Ben Tune's aeroplane celebration back in the day.
I was going back further than Tuney; that was just the other day for me. But read my disclaimer in the first post.
Agree with a lot of what you are saying there Lee but like you said. We enjoy watching the game as a whole more now. I guess these few things are the bad we have to take with the good.
That is true, and it's why I wrote the preface on the first post in the thread. Rugby is much better now to watch (it was always good to play), but I reckon it can be made better, even without changing the laws of the game.
The rugby I watched as a young bloke was a horrible spectacle but we didn't know any better. People watching videos of test matches before 1970 may wonder why players kicked out the ball so much; but in those days you were allowed to kick the ball out on the full from anywhere on the park and gain ground. The exception was in Oz domestic rugby in which you had to kick the ball out from behind your 25 yard line in order to gain ground - a dispensation from the IRB, which was made universal later. This saw the advent of the running fullback; it set them free.
Folks watching real old matches (before 1958) may wonder why they didn't have specialist fetchers and why players hacked the ball through, or dribbled the ball forward at their feet on muddy pitches. It was because of the old tackled ball law which prohibited picking up the ball directly from a tackle (you had to at least tap it on the ground with your foot first). This old law went back to the early days of rugby and was a pain in the arse for flankers like me. Even then I couldn't understand the reason for it. Repeal of that law sped the game up more than any other law change in the history of the sport.
Those two law changes revolutionised rugby union.
There seems to be a consensus that folks want what is now called rucking to come back. [Rucking used to be the advancing of the ball up the field with the ball on the ground. When you were held, even standing up, you had to release the ball. Players tried to get the ball on the ground quickly yet still advance - think of a maul except the ball is at the players feet. It was also called a loose scrummage and believe it or not, was quite scientific.]
But TV has not only given rise to outlandlish try celebrations and posturing for the camera, but also allowed the general public to see slow motion video clips of shoeing players. This so-called "rucking" of players, deserved most of the time, has become anathema to rugby officials and will never come back. Whilst we can be wistful about it we should not expect it to return.
PS: I must admit to liking Ioane's turtle.
PS 2 - On "dribbling" mentioned above: in my young days we had to practise dribbling. Folks on this forum may conclude that I got it down to a fine art.