Bullrush
Geoff Shaw (53)
Ir depends if say, McCaw rips the ball back at the tackle and it drops behind him, is that knock on for the attacker or a drop backwards to McCaw
Why does the ref need to get involved in this situation??
Ir depends if say, McCaw rips the ball back at the tackle and it drops behind him, is that knock on for the attacker or a drop backwards to McCaw
Why does the ref need to get involved in this situation??
Because if one of McCaw's teammates then drops the ball, who feeds the scrum?
Why does the ref need to get involved in this situation??
Didn't read that one, i don't know if this is wise. The ref's have enough on their plate and thought process to go through, particularly if it is tight at the end of the game i can see a big game being decided by this.
In the same instance i don't think a player who 'rips' a ball off another player and the ball goes loose backwards should be awarded. He should have taken it off him clean also.
End of the day if you ever get yourself in a position to get your arms around the ball you should just get your arms around it and hold onto the ball and don't give it to anyone. You get awarded a scrum if you hold it up anyway.
I say play on unless the ball gets propelled forward after the contest. Too many stoppages already.
He doesn't.
If you look at the first video here. http://www.irblaws.com/EN/guidelines/
You can see what they are saying. I think it is fairly uncontroversial that it should have been play on, but a lot of refs (myself included) have been guilty of ruling that sort of thing as a knock-on.
In the weekend I had one like that and I called out "advantage", then I quickly changed my mind and said "no advantage, play on". No harm no foul; fortunately.
If an attcking player puts possession of the ball in danger then I don't see why they are rewarded for a soft carry.
And I would rip the ball out 10 times out of 10 if I have an opportunity as opposed to just holding on going for the scrum feed. It's the safest option and quick turn-over ball is usually the best to attck from.
This is the danger with law changes.
Look at the loop holes our little band of couch warriors are able to find.
Imagine what a wily bunch of full time coaches with nothing better to do could think up.
It will be good to talk about these matters because they keep us off the streets.
Bruce is a problem - he looks at young blokes' hamstrings walking down the street.Definitely. The last thing we want is you and Bruce Ross roaming the streets at night causing trouble.
Bruce is a problem - he looks at young blokes' hamstrings walking down the street.
PS - has the IRB addressed significant matters in this trial directive?
In my business life we had these head office guys organising conferences and some of them weren't too bad. The ones that were best were those which asked first: what are the significant issues facing our business? Part of that was asking: what do our customers want?
What do these paying people want? The first thing to do is to ask them.
I will not guarantee what a customer survey will say because I have been astonished in the past when customers thought differently to what management thought they should have thought. But I have a feeling in my bones that they want a better spectacle than what they are paying for.
If they have this idea as a beacon they will realise, deep down, that something different has to be done. Really different; not fiddling around at the margins of the problem..
["Something like" - don't take it as gospel.]
Please do not talk scrum solutions here; take this to the scrum talk thread. Neither talk about good crowd figures in the NH or elsewhere for their "product", scrum resets included. Those people want scrums fixed up too.
My point in this post is that the latest IRB directive addresses marginal matters only. It will not make the elephant in the room disappear.
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- Simplify the rules, particularly the scrum and at the breakdown...LG's ideas and others....help!!!!