Scoey
Tony Shaw (54)
A mate of mine and I often discuss Rugby, where it's headed and how to make it better. How do we show the masses what they are missing? How do we show them how great our beloved sport is?
We are both very passionate about Rugby and both agree that the product we have already is very close to being spot on, but my mate has put some thought into what he thinks could be changed to make the game that little bit better. He's not a member here and is worried that if he joins he will spend every waking moment here, so he has asked that I post it up on his behalf so see what the other like minded folk think.
We are both very passionate about Rugby and both agree that the product we have already is very close to being spot on, but my mate has put some thought into what he thinks could be changed to make the game that little bit better. He's not a member here and is worried that if he joins he will spend every waking moment here, so he has asked that I post it up on his behalf so see what the other like minded folk think.
I've been thinking about what we are potentially facing by keeping Deans on for another couple of years. I just don’t think rugby in Australia deserves or can afford to go through a couple more years of Deans style of defensive rugby. Its just not pretty and it certainly is not going to attract any new fans or new sponsors and therefore any chance of increasing player salaries and warding off foreign raiders. A talent like Gill should and deserves to have a wallabies contract plain and simple. So to me the truth is that the games problems stems from the fact that rugby is at times wayyyy to inconsistent.
To grow the game, rugby needs to eliminate the concept of, its better to play without the ball than with it. This is the crux of the problem as a punter turning up to watch a rugby match should reasonably be able to expect if they are going to be paying money for 1. kick-a-thon or 2. ball in hand scintillating rugby. The years between 2005 and 2009 where horrendous to be a rugby fan. Defence had become so organised that every player on the field had the pilfering and rucking ability of a specialist number 7. This in effect removed all contest from the ruck and heavily favoured the defending side and was not in the spirit of the game. Negative rugby was the best way to play the game and force them back was all rugby fans were able to see. The introduction of the ELV's was the first sign that the contest needed to return to rugby. However I do believe this was an extreme step to improve the rugby spectacle. Evidence of good law making is the recent laws requiring tacklers to release the player to allow the attacking side a better chance to play the ball. This slight change has been a revelation for super rugby. We now have all the top teams at super level well rounded rugby sides that enjoy holding and working the ball instead of kicking it. Even the Waratahs have shown what running rugby is about and can win games with ball in hand. So the change is there and super rugby has certainly become a spectacle again and you know what type of rugby the top teams will work into their game plan. This adds to consistency which rugby fans want to see. A genuine contest with the ball in play is a far greater spectacle than rugby league, afl or soccer. If we attract new fans to the market that know they will get good rugby, sponsors and money will flow onto our game and allow us to retain players and maybe even attract big name internationals.
While super rugby is doing well, it’s the Wallabies which are the face of rugby to the new Australian market. As our only free to air product, the wallabies need to be showing rugby for what it truly is. A contest of whoever holds the ball and scores the points should win. A game were it doesn't matter if your team is on the attack or staunchly hanging on in defence… the ball is always alive and at any moment your team can be back in control. That’s what makes the game so good and will bring in the new fans. But there is this inherent problem with test match rugby that continues to allow a coach to decide on a negative game plan and hope the other team makes more mistakes than you do. This is not in the spirit of the game and so I believe rugby needs some further tweaking to increase its consistency for teams to want to hold the ball to win the game.
The rules behind controlling the ruck is a genuine contest at the moment. So this is not the problem (we finally have specialist 7's again). The problem is….. teams deliberately slowing down ruck ball and allowing well drilled defences to have time to reset and therefore allowing teams to use this tactic as the foundation of their game plan. I believe to finally return the game to a consistent spectacle, penalty goals need to be reduced to one point. To balance this, negative play that may be considered to increase as a result of reduced penalty points, will have greater consequences by have a sin binning of 2mins. Refs will only give a team one warning for a type of infringement and a repeated infringement by the team is 2min in the bin. Negative play is not in the spirit of the game and should have consequences accordingly to benefit the team playing rugby. The 2mins will not start until the player is off the field. A separate stopwatch will be held by an official to control this aspect. This will allow the game to play on and prevent players dawdling off the field. The attempt is to increase the pace of a penalty and the resulting advantage to the team. The speed and model may be something like you see in ice hockey. An extra player off the field and no longer being able to take 3 points will encourage teams to recycle the ball and kick for the corner or pack a scrum. Just look at the Reds vs Brumbies game in Brisbane, it had desperation on both the offensive and defensive side of the ball because the reds continued to play the ball…. And the fans were going ape over it. And everyone came out of the match praising the defensive staunchness of the Brumbies. All fans took something out of that match and rugby was the better for it. The ball in play is what gets the spine tingling whether you’re on attack or in defence. To attract new fans to the game rugby needs to eliminate negative rugby and make the game the consistent spectacle that teams playing in the spirit of the game deliver. The money will flow and a new rugby market will emerge because rugby truly is the greatest sport to watch on its day. The rugby ball in play is what creates the contest.