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Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2

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Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2
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  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    replied to nostrildamus on last edited by Rapido
    #427

    @nostrildamus said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    @Higgins said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    @antipodean said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    1. A player who is offside at a ruck, maul, scrum or lineout remains offside, even after the ruck, maul, scrum or lineout has ended.

    To me the word "at" seems to apply to those not actually participating "in" the ruck ie the defensive line including guard dogs. If you are part of a ruck that you joined from behind the hindmost foot then you cannot be offside provided you are still bound

    I have no idea on the ruling. I'm just upset those of you who know the rules are just as confused as me.
    But on the English: to me at means connected to, on the spot.
    If they meant people not part of the ruck they should have said by, or next to. Not at.
    If you are at the hospital you aren't in the building next door.

    By at in this instance. They mean - at the time of, not at the place of.

    E.g. you are a winger a retreating after a failed kick chase. The kick receipt forms a ruck and you are still retiring 20m offside at the time of the ruck. You are still offside when that ruck finishes and the oppositon pass it to you while you are in their backline.

    Rules should be written in language, not English, with a smaller less vague vocabulary. English is great for poetry, terrible for ruby laws ....

    nostrildamusN taniwharugbyT 2 Replies Last reply
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  • nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamusN Offline
    nostrildamus
    replied to Rapido on last edited by
    #428

    @Rapido said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    @nostrildamus said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    @Higgins said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    @antipodean said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    1. A player who is offside at a ruck, maul, scrum or lineout remains offside, even after the ruck, maul, scrum or lineout has ended.

    To me the word "at" seems to apply to those not actually participating "in" the ruck ie the defensive line including guard dogs. If you are part of a ruck that you joined from behind the hindmost foot then you cannot be offside provided you are still bound

    I have no idea on the ruling. I'm just upset those of you who know the rules are just as confused as me.
    But on the English: to me at means connected to, on the spot.
    If they meant people not part of the ruck they should have said by, or next to. Not at.
    If you are at the hospital you aren't in the building next door.

    By at in this instance. They mean - at the time of, not at the place of.

    E.g. you are a winger a retreating after a failed kick chase. The kick receipt forms a ruck and you are still retiring 20m offside at the time of the ruck. You are still offside when that ruck finishes and the oppisiton pass it to you while you are in their backline.

    Rules should be written in language, not Engliosh, with a smaller less vague vocabulary. English is great for poetry, terrible for ruby laws ....

    I see. But it is not exactly intuitive.

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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to Rapido on last edited by taniwharugby
    #429

    @Rapido but the off-side line is determined by the place of the ruck, or more importantly, the last foot at the place of the ruck, not at the of time the ruck or the time of the foot being at the back...

    So more ambiguity?

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  • ACT CrusaderA Offline
    ACT CrusaderA Offline
    ACT Crusader
    wrote on last edited by
    #430

    @Crucial @antipodean this situation is problematic on several fronts because of how other the ruck is officiating more generally.

    He joins the ruck from an onside position. He leans on bodies in that ruck so that means he is part of the ruck / off his feet so can’t play the ball. He doesn’t play the ball but makes a play for the halfback in an attempted tackle (there’s no other way to describe that because he isn’t driving over the ball).

    In all my knowledge of the game a player needs to come from an onside position to make a tackle in that situation.

    antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
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  • antipodeanA Online
    antipodeanA Online
    antipodean
    replied to ACT Crusader on last edited by
    #431

    @ACT-Crusader said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    @Crucial @antipodean this situation is problematic on several fronts because of how other the ruck is officiating more generally.

    He joins the ruck from an onside position. He leans on bodies in that ruck so that means he is part of the ruck / off his feet so can’t play the ball. He doesn’t play the ball but makes a play for the halfback in an attempted tackle (there’s no other way to describe that because he isn’t driving over the ball).

    In all my knowledge of the game a player needs to come from an onside position to make a tackle in that situation.

    I believe I covered that earlier - he's always onside. What I find contentious is the perception he can't play the ball which is out of the ruck.

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
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  • StargazerS Offline
    StargazerS Offline
    Stargazer
    wrote on last edited by
    #432

    alt text

    B Billy TellB 2 Replies Last reply
    3
  • B Do not disturb
    B Do not disturb
    bayimports
    replied to Stargazer on last edited by bayimports
    #433

    @Stargazer said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    alt text

    insert Bill Cosby meme here ^^^^

    after searching rugby laws all morning and failing, I have no energy to find a meme lol

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • chimoausC Offline
    chimoausC Offline
    chimoaus
    wrote on last edited by
    #434

    If its legal I'm surprised we don't see more of this, having someone join the ruck and just hang out until the halfback lifts the ball. I guess that is why you need cleaners but then if you clean too hard like DP you get penalised.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • chimoausC Offline
    chimoausC Offline
    chimoaus
    wrote on last edited by
    #435

    What is the law about not playing the ball he is referring too? If the ruck is over, and he is onside then why can't he go for the ball?

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
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  • Billy TellB Offline
    Billy TellB Offline
    Billy Tell
    replied to Stargazer on last edited by
    #436

    @Stargazer said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    alt text

    I’ll have what she’s having. Oh wait, wrong meme.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • C Offline
    C Offline
    cgrant
    wrote on last edited by
    #437

    Despite TJP's slow delivery, the MABs have created enough opportunities to win this game by +20. At this level, when you miss so many opportunities, a win is not conceivable. Don't blame Dickson's very poor refereeing for this defeat, the Maoris should have won this one easily. I am among those who think that Zarn Sullivan and Suafoa's absences did not help their cause.

    HigginsH Billy TellB 2 Replies Last reply
    1
  • HigginsH Offline
    HigginsH Offline
    Higgins
    replied to cgrant on last edited by
    #438

    @cgrant Twenty points, that's interesting. Could you point out the opportunities where the NZ Maori team blew those those twenty six points that you say they fell short of your claim thanks?

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  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to antipodean on last edited by
    #439

    @antipodean said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    @ACT-Crusader said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    @Crucial @antipodean this situation is problematic on several fronts because of how other the ruck is officiating more generally.

    He joins the ruck from an onside position. He leans on bodies in that ruck so that means he is part of the ruck / off his feet so can’t play the ball. He doesn’t play the ball but makes a play for the halfback in an attempted tackle (there’s no other way to describe that because he isn’t driving over the ball).

    In all my knowledge of the game a player needs to come from an onside position to make a tackle in that situation.

    I believe I covered that earlier - he's always onside. What I find contentious is the perception he can't play the ball which is out of the ruck.

    What constitutes being part of the ruck? Isn't he "unbound" therefore offside? Or is that only mauls?

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • Billy TellB Offline
    Billy TellB Offline
    Billy Tell
    replied to cgrant on last edited by
    #440

    @cgrant said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    Despite TJP's slow delivery, the MABs have created enough opportunities to win this game by +20. At this level, when you miss so many opportunities, a win is not conceivable. Don't blame Dickson's very poor refereeing for this defeat, the Maoris should have won this one easily. I am among those who think that Zarn Sullivan and Suafoa's absences did not help their cause.

    The MAB looked more dangerous but they played dumb rugby and as already posted did not play territory and force Ireland to create something.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to chimoaus on last edited by
    #441

    @chimoaus said in Māori All Blacks v Ireland 2:

    What is the law about not playing the ball he is referring too? If the ruck is over, and he is onside then why can't he go for the ball?

    I thought the ruck is only over once the ball is picked up by the "halfback".

    1 Reply Last reply
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