Pfitzy
Nathan Sharpe (72)
Having witnessed nearly every technique in the lower half of Subbies over five years, it is interesting to see how things have changed.
The day i played against Tony Daly (him loose head, me tight head), he had his left foot well advanced - this stops the scrum collapsing in the days when the ref rightly kept his nose out of the whole damn situation and let the men sort it out. A few older props do this to a greater or lesser degree, and adjust during the game depending on the opponent. It also makes boring in easier
The young guy who was at my coaching course (First XV at school and rep level I'm told), under instruction from the head of NSW referees during one of the demo sessions, had his feet parallel in the modern style, where refs control the hit, and scrums collapse a heel of a lot more often.
I've seen everything in between and wonder which will be the more dominant style in the new age.
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I hate autocorrect ...
The day i played against Tony Daly (him loose head, me tight head), he had his left foot well advanced - this stops the scrum collapsing in the days when the ref rightly kept his nose out of the whole damn situation and let the men sort it out. A few older props do this to a greater or lesser degree, and adjust during the game depending on the opponent. It also makes boring in easier
The young guy who was at my coaching course (First XV at school and rep level I'm told), under instruction from the head of NSW referees during one of the demo sessions, had his feet parallel in the modern style, where refs control the hit, and scrums collapse a heel of a lot more often.
I've seen everything in between and wonder which will be the more dominant style in the new age.
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I hate autocorrect ...