I think that is very likely to be the case, Huge. The power engage has transformed scrummaging from an opportunity for the exercise of great skill to something of a lottery. It is little wonder that referees find such difficulty in adjudicating scrums.
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Exactly right. It has also disadvantaged dominant scrummaging because the luck of getting the start right in the power hit sprint often masks a lack of real scrummaging ability.
People new to the game (in the last ten years) may argue that the power hit is a skill that should be kept in the tradition of the game.
When we old-timers picked ourselves off the floor after laughing hard we would point out that it's a relatively new thing that was spawned by a few lurches a while back but was developed more in the professional era when players were paid to be in the gym and could deal with the physical consequences of such an activity.
They never found out a way to strengthen the discs in the neck though.
It became an arms race and in doing so the problems you mentioned arose.
The scrum tunnel gradually deteriorated forcing players to feed the ball behind the hookers' left foot, and the referees allowed it to happened because the IRB was silent even though they could see the death of the hooking contest.
I'd better stop - I'm winding myself up and have to go to the school matches today.
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