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The Current State of Rugby

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The Current State of Rugby
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  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    replied to Victor Meldrew on last edited by
    #1525

    @Victor-Meldrew said in The Current State of Rugby:

    @Nepia said in The Current State of Rugby:

    Cards are ruining the game, not in and of themselves but because of the interpretation of them which can often be baffling and guesswork. The 20 minute red card minimises their impact while still punishing the offender and their team.

    I think 20 minute Red cards are just turd-polishing - though an improvement. There's just too many cards in the game, full stop.

    Keep Red cards as they are but limit them to deliberate dangerous and foul play - e.g. kicking someone in the head, stiff-arm and deliberate spear tackles - and not for failing to lower your body enough.

    Make stuff like failing to wrap your arms around the ball carrier enough a Yellow and tweak the thresholds for yellows so stuff like deliberate knock-ons are more biased towards become penalties.

    Oh yeah, I agree 100% reds should be for deliberate foul play only, I was just discussing it in terms of those options in the article.

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  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    wrote on last edited by
    #1526

    I was quite enjoying the France U20 game. A penalty with about 6 minutes to go needed to get in front, drama, tension....but no, TMO says "can we just go back, etc". Moment ruined. Fast forwarded to see who won after that. Fortunately I did stop just in time to see the real last minute penalty kick, and waited to see if he actually got to take the shot. He did. It went over but wasn't awarded. Then it was. At least in the end they got that right.

    Point being that it is hard to get excited about a try (or anything else) when it is likely to be called back or changed.

    nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
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  • nzzpN Online
    nzzpN Online
    nzzp
    replied to Snowy on last edited by
    #1527

    @Snowy said in The Current State of Rugby:

    Point being that it is hard to get excited about a try (or anything else) when it is likely to be called back or changed.

    Schrodinger's score. It's like in cricket - celebrate ... but you're waiting for confirmation. It sucks ... but it's the price for better decision making (generally).

    I do not know how to fix this.

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  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    wrote on last edited by
    #1528

    It feels very different in cricket because at least you have seen what happened. In rugby it can be for something that was unnoticeable when watching it yourself (or some bullshit call by a pedantic knobhead that thinks he's watching tiddlywinks). Cricket is all in slow motion or replay anyway, the actual action is about 0.5 seconds long for the ball to get from one end of the pitch to the other, plus the few seconds after that. It is also designed to take 5 days to complete (which is why the shorter versions get progressively more shit as they get shorter).

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  • mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4life
    wrote on last edited by
    #1529

    Reason number, i don't know, shit loads, why our rugby season structure sucks.

    We have these huge gaps where absolutely nothing happens. And not in summer, in the middle of fucking winter. Rugby's main competitors are charging at the moment, League coming off Origin and running in to finals, AFL at the pointy end.

    What's rugby doing? Jack shit. And won't for a couple of weeks yet. Then we'll play for a couple of weeks, then we'll have another 3 weeks off. There is just no momentum. And any casual that watches a test and thinks "oh that was pretty cool, maybe I'll watch some more" has nowhere to turn.

    KiwiwombleK 1 Reply Last reply
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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to mariner4life on last edited by
    #1530

    @mariner4life agreed, obviously ideal would be pro competitions running all season but they powers that be could do SOMETHING

    why wasnt the club comp pushed back a week or two, cant imagine it having a great influence on anything...and then have a big push for poeple to get down and watch finals

    taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by
    #1531

    @Kiwiwomble I think NPC pre-season starts this weekend, so you dont want club finals overlapping that with provinces likely pulling some players from teams?

    But agree with @mariner4life big old gap of nothing really, more so when you consider the exhibition game last weekend too.

    KiwiwombleK 1 Reply Last reply
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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by
    #1532

    @taniwharugby i guess, sounds pretty lame though "pre season" for a competition largely ignored. kind of feel those guys involved in finals could just roll in to the NPC team next week

    I'd personally prefer that over another exhibition game

    Thereal thing is why didn't we role straight into the RC?

    taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by taniwharugby
    #1533

    @Kiwiwomble but for the club guys, club finals and playing for thier province is the highlight, pre-season might be thier only provincial run for some?

    KiwiwombleK 1 Reply Last reply
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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by
    #1534

    @taniwharugby said in The Current State of Rugby:

    @Kiwiwomble but for the club guys, club finals and playing for thier province is the highlight, pre-season be thier only run for some?

    might be right

    i guess more an indictment of there is always going to be the lulls when transitioning between competitions and so it kind of sucks for those of us that follow club>NPC>Super>international

    most other sports players kind of only play one of the first 3 and then maybe the last and so the competitions are designed to last the whole "season"

    taniwharugbyT 1 Reply Last reply
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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by
    #1535

    @Kiwiwomble I think as @mariner4life has alluded to plenty of times, particularly about the NRL how everything is concurrent, whereas Rugby has thier seperation of comps.

    Although do we usually have a gap like this prior to TRC? Does seem unusual?

    KiwiwombleK 1 Reply Last reply
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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by
    #1536

    @taniwharugby i think its most sports, rugby in NZ is the only one i can think of that fits different levels at different times and has players playing in all of them

    it does feel unusual....but it also feels like it slightly different every year

    M 1 Reply Last reply
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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    mohikamo
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by
    #1537

    @Kiwiwomble

    Yes. Is unusual.
    An AB is actually a member of 4 teams at 4 different levels club/province/super/national. And could play at every level in one season.

    This does not happen in any other pro football code. They play in 2 at most. Usually their club and national team.

    The spanner in the works is Super Rugby. For those who dont know, it was originally a preseason comp for the PUs. And that is why it is played at the start of the season, not at the end, where you'd think it naturally would fit.

    SR was controversial right from the start! It didn't include all the PUs. Organised by the Auckland/Wellington/Canterbury PUs (not the NZRU) it shut out all the others. Who were pissed off, and right to be as it turned out.

    When they game went pro in 95 it was used by the establishment (led by Jock Hobbs) as an alternative to a non-establishment comp being organised (by Kerry Packer if I remember correctly).

    In retrospect.....probably better off if we went with Packer. Would have had a full season Super comp, with regular national team breaks.

    NepiaN KiwiwombleK 2 Replies Last reply
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  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    wrote on last edited by
    #1538

    It could be a lot less unusual if they just played the Rugby Championship straight away. Not sure why on earth there needs to be a break. Rugby is a squad game these days.

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  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    replied to mohikamo on last edited by Nepia
    #1539

    @mohikamo said in The Current State of Rugby:

    SR was controversial right from the start! It didn't include all the PUs. Organised by the Auckland/Wellington/Canterbury PUs (not the NZRU) it shut out all the others. Who were pissed off, and right to be as it turned out.

    That was a completely different competition than the pro Super Rugby that started in 1996.

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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to mohikamo on last edited by
    #1540

    @mohikamo Super 10 and Super 6 are different to Super 12 etc.....fundamentally different organisation...just similar name

    M 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • M Offline
    M Offline
    mohikamo
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by
    #1541

    @Kiwiwomble

    What I recall happened was....

    Before 1996 SR was sanctioned by the NZ/SA/Aus NUs, but the PUs organised it themselves.

    In latter 1995, after the World Cup, there was a battle between the establishment and outside investors over who was going to control the new pro rugby game. The outsiders proposed a super comp combining the Currie Cup and NPC with some Aus teams. The Establishment led by Hobbs won.

    After the rugby war was over, the national unions took the SR comp over. The amateur SR comp has never been seen since.

    The only real difference being 2 extra NZ teams, with all the NZ PUs were now involved. Which has echos down the decades with the current struggle for the control of rugby in NZ.

    AND THE PLAYERS WERE BEING PAID!

    I have not checked, but the actual team lists from 95 season to 96 season would probably have been very similar. SA and Aus teams would have been nearly indentical.

    For example, the amateur Auckland/Wellington/Canterbury PU teams of 95 would have been very similar to that of the pro Blues/Hurricanes/Crusaders 96.

    NepiaN mariner4lifeM 2 Replies Last reply
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  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    replied to mohikamo on last edited by
    #1542

    @mohikamo said in The Current State of Rugby:

    @Kiwiwomble

    What I recall happened was....

    Before 1996 SR was sanctioned by the NZ/SA/Aus NUs, but the PUs organised it themselves.

    In latter 1995, after the World Cup, there was a battle between the establishment and outside investors over who was going to control the new pro rugby game. The outsiders proposed a super comp combining the Currie Cup and NPC with some Aus teams. The Establishment led by Hobbs won.

    After the rugby war was over, the national unions took the SR comp over. The amateur SR comp has never been seen since.

    The only real difference being 2 extra NZ teams, with all the NZ PUs were now involved. Which has echos down the decades with the current struggle for the control of rugby in NZ.

    AND THE PLAYERS WERE BEING PAID!

    I have not checked, but the actual team lists from 95 season to 96 season would probably have been very similar. SA and Aus teams would have been nearly indentical.

    For example, the amateur Auckland/Wellington/Canterbury PU teams of 95 would have been very similar to that of the pro Blues/Hurricanes/Crusaders 96.

    Before pro Super Rugby there was the Super 10s, the Super 6, the SPC, and the CANZ series.

    There's a clear dividing line between those comps and the pro Super 12 introduced in 1996 - unless you're a Queenslander or Transvaalian and want some extra wins in your column.

    The Blues team of 1996 would likely be similar to the 1995 Auckland team, I daresay not so much the Crusaders and Canterbury.

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  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    wrote on last edited by
    #1543

    The amateur Super 10 did include 'theoretically' all 27 PUs. It ran for only 3 years from 93 to 95.

    The top 3 NZ npc qualified for it.

    The predecessor to that. The South Pacific Championship which later changed its name to Suoer 6. Was a closed shop outside of the NZRU's remit. With Auck, Wgtn, Canty permanent entrants.

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  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    wrote on last edited by
    #1544

    I recall fondly through late 1995, Ritchie Guy getting annoyed at media lazily labeling the new proposed professonal rugby competition to atart the following year as the Super 12.

    It had a 'working name' as the 'International Provincial Championship' (IPC) when Sanzar thrashed out their new Murdoch deal.

    Then a few months later once the marketing consultants had been engaged to come up with a brand for the IPC, they gifted us the totally left field name of 'Super 12'.

    1 Reply Last reply
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