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Lazy Runners, Obstruction

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Lazy Runners, Obstruction
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  • chimoausC Offline
    chimoausC Offline
    chimoaus
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    I posted these in the match thread but wanted to discuss this tactic a bit further to understand what people's thoughts were. It appears to me that it is a tactic for players to run directly at defenders with no intention of taking the ball. By obstructing defenders or even taking them out it creates gaps for the player with the ball. It reminds me of NFL with players creating a line in front of the ball. I understand all teams do it, but it just doesn't feel like it's in the spirit of the game and feels like clear obstruction, taking players out without the ball. Thoughts?

    The second French try was a clear move where the lock purposely runs directly at the defender and changes his line to obstruct the defender. The ball runner runs directly at the gap the lock has created.
    obstruct.jpg

    And another example where players never retreated after a ruck, instead just stood in the way obstructing defenders. Another lazy runner purposely runs directly into Akira without the ball leading to a gap and subsequent penalty.
    French.jpg

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  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    wrote on last edited by
    #2

    We've had this discussion lots before. Refs will only ever call clear blocking within reach of a defender not visual blocking or positioning blocking.

    There is another example in your pictures (lower left picture in the first sequence) of something that also goes unnoticed and that is players (usually forwards) well ahead of the ball drifting across and blocking the defending forwards.
    I know that it isn't expected that they run backwards behind the passed ball before coming forward but when they deliberately block or slow it shits me. They should certainly not be allowed to run forward ahead of the ball. You get penalised if you do it in other phases so why not in general play?

    chimoausC nzzpN 2 Replies Last reply
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  • chimoausC Offline
    chimoausC Offline
    chimoaus
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #3

    @crucial Yep the advancing into the defenders shits me also. The lock starts I think on the 10m line and advances maybe 5m forward towards the defenders.

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  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to Crucial on last edited by
    #4

    @crucial said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    I know that it isn't expected that they run backwards behind the passed ball before coming forward but when they deliberately block or slow it shits me. They should certainly not be allowed to run forward ahead of the ball. You get penalised if you do it in other phases so why not in general play?

    To open gaps. Get in front of someone, slow down, disrupt the defence. It's shit, but it's rugby.

    And that's kinda the point around obstruction; play to the ref and laws as they are interpreted. Same as mauls a few years ago - if we just invested in maul dominance, and scored off them regularly, laws would get changed. We shoulnd't grizzle, we should just exploit the loopholes

    chimoausC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • chimoausC Offline
    chimoausC Offline
    chimoaus
    replied to nzzp on last edited by chimoaus
    #5

    @nzzp well it worked perfectly for the French so clearly their coaching staff are playing to the rules and doing everything they can to exploit defences. Guess the onus is on us to do it better.

    mariner4lifeM 1 Reply Last reply
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  • mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4life
    replied to chimoaus on last edited by
    #6

    @chimoaus said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @nzzp well it worked perfectly for the French so clearly their coaching staff are playing to the rules and doing everything they can to exploit defences. Guess the onus is on us to do it better.

    ah, the Crusaders were experts at this more than a decade ago.

    It's not a case of "this is something we don't do, we should do it" we have, and do, do it

    It's a case that our attacking formation doesn't lend itself to this play because we play flat as fuck.

    KiwiwombleK DuluthD 2 Replies Last reply
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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to mariner4life on last edited by
    #7

    @mariner4life we dont do it well enough thou as that would help counter the rush defense, if you can legitimately cause some confusion as to where the ball is going we might not get swamped with two tacklers and a jackal

    mariner4lifeM 1 Reply Last reply
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  • mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4life
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by
    #8

    @kiwiwomble said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @mariner4life we dont do it well enough thou as that would help counter the rush defense, if you can legitimately cause some confusion as to where the ball is going we might not get swamped with two tacklers and a jackal

    players in motion? What a novel idea.

    chimoausC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • chimoausC Offline
    chimoausC Offline
    chimoaus
    replied to mariner4life on last edited by
    #9

    @mariner4life said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @kiwiwomble said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @mariner4life we dont do it well enough thou as that would help counter the rush defense, if you can legitimately cause some confusion as to where the ball is going we might not get swamped with two tacklers and a jackal

    players in motion? What a novel idea.

    This is probably what I noticed the most in the Irish and French games, they seem to play to a set structure, with everyone knowing the plays and their roles.

    We are experts at playing what is in front of us and using our talent and skill to exploit that. The problem is when teams stick to their structure and employ good D we look clueless as our structures just aren't up to it. We seem to run out of ideas very quickly and put up the 50/50 bombs.

    We almost need to move away from the counter attacking sevens style and move towards the very structured play of the NH teams. Once you get territory and build pressure then those skills become valuable.

    KiwiwombleK 1 Reply Last reply
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  • DuluthD Offline
    DuluthD Offline
    Duluth
    replied to mariner4life on last edited by
    #10

    @mariner4life said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    ah, the Crusaders were experts at this more than a decade ago.

    Or going back a little further, remember Woodward criticising Eddie Jones for this? In that instance I agreed with Woodward. However it's been part of the game for two decades now

    On this particular game - I thought the French got their timing wrong on 2-3 occasions. Particularly when a ball carrier cut back. I think they should've been called for accidental offside at least twice.

    But the ref missed it.. the refs miss lots of things in a game

    taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to chimoaus on last edited by
    #11

    @chimoaus said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @mariner4life said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @kiwiwomble said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @mariner4life we dont do it well enough thou as that would help counter the rush defense, if you can legitimately cause some confusion as to where the ball is going we might not get swamped with two tacklers and a jackal

    players in motion? What a novel idea.

    This is probably what I noticed the most in the Irish and French games, they seem to play to a set structure, with everyone knowing the plays and their roles.

    We are experts at playing what is in front of us and using our talent and skill to exploit that. The problem is when teams stick to their structure and employ good D we look clueless as our structures just aren't up to it. We seem to run out of ideas very quickly and put up the 50/50 bombs.

    We almost need to move away from the counter attacking sevens style and move towards the very structured play of the NH teams. Once you get territory and build pressure then those skills become valuable.

    i wonder what they actually do in training....we dont have "moves" like other teams...and we dont do a lot of the old school basics (passing and tackling) as has been mentioned

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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to Duluth on last edited by
    #12

    @duluth Woodward made a huge deal of it prior to the ABs touring in 2002 as well.

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  • NTAN Offline
    NTAN Offline
    NTA
    wrote on last edited by
    #13

    Make it a black and white picture and assume the jerseys belong to anyone.

    Been in the playbook of basically everyone since Brumbieleague.

    Next.

    chimoausC boobooB 2 Replies Last reply
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  • chimoausC Offline
    chimoausC Offline
    chimoaus
    replied to NTA on last edited by
    #14

    @nta I'm curious to hear from someone who recently played and how much of this you train for. Does each player have a certain role to obstruct etc? Do you have a role to target specific players? What is the best way to defend against this tactic?

    KiwiwombleK NTAN 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to chimoaus on last edited by
    #15

    @chimoaus said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @nta I'm curious to hear from someone who recently played and how much of this you train for. Does each player have a certain role to obstruct etc? Do you have a role to target specific players? What is the best way to defend against this tactic?

    we train it at club level, not to obstruct a specific runner but for the passing to happen behind pods so its visually obscured, seed that doubt on where the ball is going, we also train to counter it, defenders running for the space behind the front attacking line as you can assume thats where something is going to happen

    so to be clear, not trying to physically obstruct defenders

    chimoausC 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • chimoausC Offline
    chimoausC Offline
    chimoaus
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by
    #16

    @kiwiwomble said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @chimoaus said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @nta I'm curious to hear from someone who recently played and how much of this you train for. Does each player have a certain role to obstruct etc? Do you have a role to target specific players? What is the best way to defend against this tactic?

    we train it at club level, not to obstruct a specific runner but for the passing to happen behind pods so its visually obscured, seed that doubt on where the ball is going, we also train to counter it, defenders running for the space behind the front attacking line as you can assume thats where something is going to happen

    so to be clear, not trying to physically obstruct defenders

    Thanks for that, I guess by the very nature of pods getting in the defensive line it will at times lead to obstructing defenders and perhaps this is what the coaches want.

    The skill I assume is in confusing the defender and doing everything you can to "not obstruct" the defender whilst still obstructing them lol.

    KiwiwombleK 1 Reply Last reply
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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to chimoaus on last edited by
    #17

    @chimoaus yes, to some degree we're just trying to pick up the kind of players that only have eyes for the ball, those that cant anticipate where it going and run into those holes. So the dummy pods dont move, dont drift into the way of defenders, but if a defender only has eyes for the ball and runs into a stationary pod then all good

    as i say we also train to defend it,

    first defender on the halfback
    second defender on the first receiver
    third defender runs for the space behind the first receiver looking for a roaming fullback or blindside wing
    forth defender goes for the second receiver

    and so on

    boobooB 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • NTAN Offline
    NTAN Offline
    NTA
    replied to chimoaus on last edited by NTA
    #18

    @chimoaus said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @nta I'm curious to hear from someone who recently played and how much of this you train for. Does each player have a certain role to obstruct etc? Do you have a role to target specific players? What is the best way to defend against this tactic?

    I'm a prop. We don't worry about such nonsense 😉

    At our level it is mainly decoy runners well off the ball. The precision is different, but you get one player to come in at an angle to hold the defence, releasing it behind them to go wide per @Kiwiwomble 's post.

    Setting up pods is a lot harder as a rule, because the chances of getting called for it are higher (more bodies = different picture for the ref), and if you turn it over you've got less resources to recover.

    Additionally, a lot of our guys are league-trained so single decoy running is what they do best.

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  • boobooB Offline
    boobooB Offline
    booboo
    replied to NTA on last edited by
    #19

    @nta said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    Make it a black and white picture and assume the jerseys belong to anyone.

    Been in the playbook of basically everyone since Brumbieleague.

    Next.

    Still shits me.

    As someone pointed out above (@Crucial ?) it should be illegal to advance into the defensive line if you are in front of the ball

    Difficult to write the law as i have no issue with forwards running a line to an anticipated breakdown (or up the fat man's track ... have no idea if that's still a thing ... )

    canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #20

    @booboo said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    @nta said in Lazy Runners, Obstruction:

    Make it a black and white picture and assume the jerseys belong to anyone.

    Been in the playbook of basically everyone since Brumbieleague.

    Next.

    Still shits me.

    As someone pointed out above (@Crucial ?) it should be illegal to advance into the defensive line if you are in front of the ball

    Difficult to write the law as i have no issue with forwards running a line to an anticipated breakdown (or up the fat man's track ... have no idea if that's still a thing ... )

    Don't league know how to rule against this?

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