The Current State of Rugby
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@NTA said in The Current State of Rugby:
My boss at work is a leaguie, and his comment was "If you send a guy off for an attempted intercept, your game is fucked"
i have been beating this drum for years! but its an example of a wide approach, you use to have to clothesline or punch someone to get a card...now it could be anything
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@mariner4life I wonder how many attempted intercepts occur in every game, you'd have to think, in the vast majority of them, the defender thought he had a genuine shot at getting it, went for it, got it, or didnt, and the latter means he very likely gets a 10 minute rest.
All for something that might occur once, maybe twice per 80?
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WR refereeing's dislike of intercepts is as baffling to me as NZ crowd's dislike of drop goals. Legitimate plays that add variety to the sport, in fact are good 'levellers' in a sport that produces few genuine upsets.
Intercepts are exciting game-turning events. Why the hate?
The Australian one on saturday was a 14 point plus a YC punishment for stuffing up a fairly easy one handed catch. Triple punishment. Isnt butchering a certain 7 points already punishment for his lack of handling.
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@NTA said in The Current State of Rugby:
My boss at work is a leaguie, and his comment was "If you send a guy off for an attempted intercept, your game is fucked"
Your average game of league is more fun to watch than your average game of Union these days.
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I had been playing and watching rugby for 10 years before I even knew a deliberate knockon existed as a penalisable offence.
From 1982 (when I first started watching) to the 1991 RWC final I never heard this discussed in commentary, by my coaches, or any ref in a game i played.
(1991 final Campese knocked on intercept attempt, and yes, even I think that could have been penalised as per the rules, it was a deliberate knock on).
What was a once a once-in-a-decade (but unpunished) occurence - is now a dime-a-dozen yellow card for every failed intercept . Who decided this? Who was asked about what problem needed solving?
Just dire refereeing administration IMO. Scarily, by the peak of the ref admin.
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@Rapido i like to apply the "school yard rule" approach, i dont remember anyone ever caring about it when you played at lunchtime
this is why football it so popular around the world, a ball, two goals (bags, jerseys a tree etc), dont break someone leg with a shit tackle and no one can use their hands except the keeper and they can only do it in a small area...those things make up 95% of the rules people care about
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In 40 years of watching I cant ever remember there being a plague of deliberate knockons that presumably prompted referees boss to decide there was a problem that needed to be solved.
I can only think of 2 in that 40 years. Campese as mentioned, and Keiran Reid v Scotland a few years ago. Both ironically unpunished or under-punished (Reid, who's offence occurred during the over-reaction era. But he was only penalised, not carded IIRC).
This is ignoring the unmemorable but innocuous pillar leaning over and slapping a ball out of hakfbacks hands. Which occurred and was usually punished.
Yet I've seen about 50 games impacted by yellows for innocuous miscalculations.
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@Rapido im on another forum that is predominantly NH people and they were all calling for blood for deliberate KNOCK ONS (you know who you are)...there is a growing divide between between north and south on what the game should look like
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@Rapido said in The Current State of Rugby:
I had been playing and watching rugby for 10 years before I even knew a deliberate knockon existed as a penalisable offence.
You could watch American Football for a long, long time before discovering it has a deliberate knock-on rule too. Doesn't mean it isn't a good rule, just that once it's in the books, certain plays are no longer used.
The rugby rules are fine regarding intercepts. If the player is genuinely trying to catch the ball, then it is not a knock-on. If they are just using the intercept as an excuse to knock the ball forward, then a card is in order. If they are knocking it back then it's all good. It's that the referees have got over-vigorous on the application, not the rules themselves.
My favourite is people who complain the rules of rugby are "too complicated" then watch NFL.
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@Chester-Draws on the surface youre right...but anything thats is subjective then you're asking for trouble...players diving to catch a ball theyve tried to intercept...YC...PT...how can anyone say they were trying to intercept it....but they do...an introduce the idea of "realistic chance"...so not the ref is deciding on intent and then deciding on likelihood
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Deliberate knock ons are stupidly reffed, for sure. The rule is there to prevent defenders standing in the line and waving arms deliberately blocking passing channels. If you come shooting up between players and get a hand on a ball in flight, then you're a chance to catch it, and honestly, why in fuck would you not be trying to catch it?
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The Perese yellow was one that summed it up nicely I thought.
He was in a realistic position to attempt an intercept. He threw his hand out to try and catch it, but couldn't drag it in and it went forward off his hand. England were hot on attack but the attempt wasn't cynical and it was not on the back of repeated infringements.
You could maybe make the case that it was a penalty, but I'm not sure I'd agree with you. But to give him a yellow card (after the usual 55 replays and an hour of deliberations) was ridiculous. It's not what yellow cards are for.
And then it created the situation where Smith did something similarly innocuous later in the game and had to be sent for 10 just to maintain consistency.
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@barbarian and the thing that gets me...is there is already a "punishment" for the knock on in the books...but we've introduce the idea of judging intent...something that is specifically ignored elsewhere in the laws, we'll happily punish negative intent...but never reward positive, ie accidents....that's what is coming across to me as actually looking for ways to penalise people
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@Crucial said in The Current State of Rugby:
Then they should change the laws instead of conjuring up an interpretation that is well removed from laws that have been designed to create a game.
There is no rugby law that says a failed intercept gets carded. The law clearly says that an intentional knock forward has a sanction of a penalty. Not a card, a penalty. If deemed a professional foul i.e you have intentionally infringed to take away an advantage from the opposition, then cards come in. Apply those laws and the YCs we saw are wrong. IMO both cases don't even meet a threshold of being an intentional knock forward at all. One was clearly an intercept attempt and one was a player trying to get to the ball and pulling his hand back when he realised that he wasn't going to make it.I consider most failed intercepts as unbelievably negative play and as such I'm happy to see them harshly penalised. Perese was not a realistic attempt in my opinion (backed up by what happened to the ball after he touched it) but at least he was running forward into the path of the ball and made an attempt to gather. From what I recall of Marcus Smith's attempt, he was in no man's land defensively, basically flat footed and simply stuck his hand into the path of the pass. I'm happy to see that shit harshly dealt with.
The reason I say that is a mere penalty does not often result in the opportunity that was presented prior to the foul play.
And for anyone who says "instinct", that's bullshit and we all know it. I've played enough footy over decades to know when I can and can't retrieve a ball with one hand outstretched.
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@mariner4life said in The Current State of Rugby:
And i absolutely do not blame the referees even one bit.
True, they seem terrified to make a game altering mistake for fear of getting it wrong when their employment depends on adjudicating the impacts of law interpretations dictated to them. Not helped at all by a judiciary staffed by clones of Helen Keller. overruling what every man and his dog saw and expects.
Then there's the gin soaked geriatrics at
the IRBWorld Rugby who think it's the same game as when they were amateurs. Utterly ignorant to the law of unintended consequences of their daft decision making when evidence and alternatives abound.But for all that, I blame the fans. The loud ones who bleat about perceived transgressions from the other team and howl for the most draconian punishment, oblivious to their hypocrisy should the referee do the same to their team. And on the internet, no country appears worse than the Irish. It seems as soon as they got good, they've been inundated with jonny come latelys, or at least that's how it seems on reddit.
At least the arm band brigade can feel aggrieved we prevented them from playing for a while.
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For me the big problem isn't the number of cards or times the ARs & TMO get involved, though it's an issue.
The problem is that getting carded has become a lottery.
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@Kiwiwomble said in The Current State of Rugby:
@Rapido im on another forum that is predominantly NH people and they were all calling for blood for deliberate KNOCK ONS (you know who you are)...there is a growing divide between between north and south on what the game should look like
this comment had me thinking back to playing in the UK - could not get over the non stop constant whinging to the ref about every single farking thing rather than getting on with it.
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I think the issues we are seeing in our shop window flow through from the shitshow at the governance level of the game.
Robinson seems to have made shit call after shit call since he has been at the helm, from the issues with the Aussies and SA to Silverlake, that may turn out to be his saving grace but it may also be the dagger through the heart of NZR.
Support seems to be there still for our shop window, super rugby is up and down, NPC support has been a battle for 10+ years, schoolboy rugby and club rugby still seems to attract people, but small scale so smaller numbers.
NZR is teetering on the edge, the ABs are what will tip the balance, if we cant keep them up, it makes the rest of the game that relies on thier money that much tougher.