Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?
-
When tackled or ankle tapped you SHOULD have to place the ball on the ground then get up and pick it up - ala Ben Smith and Izzy Dagg of late.
You know that situation where they place the ball, scramble to feet and pick up again.
Not just get up still holding the ball as the tackler slides out of grasp or contact with the players leg.
Otherwise we have this farce where ol mate rabbits along or simply gets up as though he tripped himself with no intervention from defence.
It is particularly non-sensical when we enforce "tackler must relaease". Tackler does so and often the attacker just gets up and keeps going.
I hate that shit.
You get taken to the ground then you must have to release (even for a split second)
-
@Siam said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
When tackled or ankle tapped you SHOULD have to place the ball on the ground then get up and pick it up - ala Ben Smith and Izzy Dagg of late.
You know that situation where they place the ball, scramble to feet and pick up again.
Not just get up still holding the ball as the tackler slides out of grasp or contact with the players leg.
Otherwise we have this farce where ol mate rabbits along or simply gets up as though he tripped himself with no intervention from defence.
It is particularly non-sensical when we enforce "tackler must relaease". Tackler does so and often the attacker just gets up and keeps going.
I hate that shit.
You get taken to the ground then you must have to release (even for a split second)
Agree if tackler needs clear release to go for a turnover. Then attacker should have clear release before regaining their feet if not held.
-
@KiwiMurph said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Cool thread idea.
For me it is the charge down in play vs charge down in-goal. If you charge the ball down in the field of play and the ball goes dead in-goal/out in-goal it is a 22 drop out. If you charge the ball down from the in-goal area and the ball goes dead in-goal/out in-goal it is a 5 metre scrum. It doesn't happen all that often but it seems the outcomes are wildly different and doesn't reward a good defensive play (charge down in field of play, ball going dead).
Similarly with knock-ons. If there is a knock-on 1 metre out from the try line the result is a 5 metre scrum. If there is a knock-on inside the in-goal (from the attacking team) the result is a 22 metre drop out. At least with that one I suppose you are rewarding in-goal defence.
That last para: is that correct? Thought thst was changed (quite) some years ago.
-
@pukunui said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Grounding the ball against the base of the post to score is one i think is stupid.
Oh God. Can't believe I didn't start the thread with this one.
Talk about soft tries.
If the post (with its ever expanding padding) get in the way then diddums, no try. Aim for the other 69 and a half metres of post-free tryline next time.
-
@Damo said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@KiwiMurph said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Cool thread idea.
For me it is the charge down in play vs charge down in-goal. If you charge the ball down in the field of play and the ball goes dead in-goal/out in-goal it is a 22 drop out. If you charge the ball down from the in-goal area and the ball goes dead in-goal/out in-goal it is a 5 metre scrum. It doesn't happen all that often but it seems the outcomes are wildly different and doesn't reward a good defensive play (charge down in field of play, ball going dead).
Similarly with knock-ons. If there is a knock-on 1 metre out from the try line the result is a 5 metre scrum. If there is a knock-on inside the in-goal (from the attacking team) the result is a 22 metre drop out. At least with that one I suppose you are rewarding in-goal defence.
Bolded bit is not true. Both are 5m scrums and NOT 22m drop outs. See laws 12.1 (c) and (d) and also 22.13.
This is something that has been hotly debated - why should the defending team get the benefit of a 22m if the ball is kicked into ingoal and made dead, but if the ball is knocked on into ingoal and made dead it is a 5m scrum. Personally I am fine with the law as it stands, but that's not universal.
I definitely agree with your first point though. a chargedown resulting in the ball going dead should be a 5m scrum regardless of where the chargedown occurred.
Aahh ... already covered
-
It's a given that ruck clean outs is going to get a rule or interpretation change soon, with the focus on concussions. Remove the human missiles.
My suggestion would be players entering a ruck must come to a stop (as a ruck, unlike a maul is a stationary beast) before entering the ruck. Eg come to a stop, 2 feet stationary then join ruck binding with arms. Rugby goes back to being a pushing sport rather than a collision sport.
Means we will get more scrums probably? Or maybe not, maybe more actual turnovers? But they won't let actual rucking with your feet (and sprigs) come back.
If we get more scrums. Then we'd need to address the gear-grindingly perverse incentives of the penalty generating scrum.....
-
@Damo said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
I don't like the law that allows a tackler to come from any angle to play the ball at a tackle.
I don't mind the law in principle, it's just that it's so difficult to referee even the top referees get it wrong as often as they get it right.
The ref has to make a split second decision on:
(1) is the person a tackler?
(2) has he entered the tackle before a ruck has formed?
(3) is he trying to play the ball (OK) or is he just standing up to get in the way of the halfback (not OK)I swear even the top referees cock this up on a regular basis - both to allow tacklers to play the ball when they should be PK'ed and to PK tacklers who were entitled to play the ball. Honestly I think the best policy is to just scrap the law altogether and say everyone has to come from their side regardless.
Disagree. They used to have this law but Brumbieball ... it made it just too easy for teams to retain possession to they eased it back tiwardscthe okder law.
-
Not a rule change.
But need to address the head patting plague that has infested the game.
You pat someone's head and mock them, decision reversed, unsportsmanlike behaviour- free kick.
A "no dickheads rule".
-
@antipodean said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@Rapido said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Dummy runners is another bugbear of mine.
Agreed. There's a lot of dummy runners who continue moving into the defensive line as the defence drifts, actively hindering the defenders from being able to place themselves in a good position. These attackers are all violating law 11.1
The other, and everyone complains about it, is not enforcing a proper feed at scrums. I don't like teams the scrums for penalties, but a strong scrum should be rewarded for its dominance. Not having a scrumhalf feeding into the backrow as his forwards go skating backwards.
I'd also change scrum penalties to freekicks unless it's dangerous play.
Like specifically for the second para.
Don't disagree on first para.
But less of a fan of third as they'll just reset the scrum (and if really strong keep going for the same result until the ref penalises them).
-
@jegga said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Slightly off tangent, I was reading Norm Hewitts book and and the end he talks about the future of the game. It was written at the time brumbieleague was very effective and he suggested that rugby should bring in a rule that the team should be 10 m back from the halfback at rucktime. Yeah nah. Not quite as odd as Martin Devlin wanting to bring in the 40/20 rule.
40/20? Nah
In league I believe the idea of that is to try and force the wingers to hang back thus creating space to actually try and run the ball late in the tackle count.
-
@RVader said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Mauls is technically legal obstruction
Mauls are awesome.
Back (spit)
-
@Nepia said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Two goes at a maul for me. I hate how a maul can stop dead/move sideways/move backwards and the attacking team gets another go. If it stops dead/goes completely sideways/and goes backwards and stops then that maul should be over.
I don't know why we have any law allowing a stop in play and re-start when the maul already has a law allowing players in front of the ball.
FYI - I don't mind the maul with one stoppage, how it used to be.
I'll say it again. Removing the maul remives the abilitybto concentrate defenders and create space wider. Mauls are great.
They brought back the ability to restart a maul albeit only once as this aspect of play was lost and defenders were just able to fan across the field stifling play.
-
@pukunui said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
The maul is my main gumble but i have talked about that plenty of times so won't go on about it again.
Grounding the ball against the base of the post to score is one i think is stupid.
Drop goal attempts that miss and go dead being a 22 restart instead of a scrum back where the kick was attempted from i think should change.
Diving on an emerging ball or something similar was something that Richie got for a couple of times late in his career. Stupid law. If the ball is out then you should be able to dive on it.
Im sure there are more. Plenty of ones where i think interpretation should be changed to make it more consistent.
Disagree with paras 1 2 and 3.
Agree with para 4. However i think there is or at least was a law that prevented you going off your feet within a metre of a tackled ball , and this may apply to a ruck as well. Which prevents pile ups. Remember those from the and 70s and 80s?
-
@Rapido said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Not a rule change.
But need to address the head patting plague that has infested the game.
You pat someone's head and mock them, decision reversed, unsportsmanlike behaviour- free kick.
A "no dickheads rule".
This! And backs rushing in to "congratulate" their forwards for winning a scrum penalty.
-
@booboo said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@pukunui said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
The maul is my main gumble but i have talked about that plenty of times so won't go on about it again.
Grounding the ball against the base of the post to score is one i think is stupid.
Drop goal attempts that miss and go dead being a 22 restart instead of a scrum back where the kick was attempted from i think should change.
Diving on an emerging ball or something similar was something that Richie got for a couple of times late in his career. Stupid law. If the ball is out then you should be able to dive on it.
Im sure there are more. Plenty of ones where i think interpretation should be changed to make it more consistent.
Disagree with paras 1 2 and 3.
Agree with para 4. However i think there is or at least was a law that prevented you going off your feet within a metre of a tackled ball , and this may apply to a ruck as well. Which prevents pile ups. Remember those from the and 70s and 80s?
No, im not old like the rest of you b*stards
I don't agree that a maul is used to suck in defenders and spinning it wide. They are largely used to play for repeated penalties or push over tries.Not sure why you disagree with the base of the post thing. It is a stupid loophole that changes the try line for a LINE to a line with little undefendable sections jutting out towards the attacking team.
Don't see why the restart from a missed drop goal should be any different to a kick. Often long range drop goals are a speculative tactic that has gone wrong. Much like a touch finder that has gone lobg. Why should they be treated like a penalty kick?
-
@antipodean said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@Rapido said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Dummy runners is another bugbear of mine.
The other, and everyone complains about it, is not enforcing a proper feed at scrums. I don't like teams the scrums for penalties, but a strong scrum should be rewarded for its dominance. Not having a scrumhalf feeding into the backrow as his forwards go skating backwards.
On a similar note (agree that the scrum feeds are getting ridiculous), but I don't see a problem with a quick heel as the forwards go skating backwards.
i hate the tendency for a penalty to the attacking team even though the ball comes out on the inferior side - Peyper did this a while ago and it was fucked
You're getting shit ball in that situation and that's a big disadvantage.
Also it encourages a game built solely around dominant scrums to earn penalties regardless with what happens to the ball. - The fucken game is all about the ball and possession, not who can push best at a restart.Might be an injury issue (ok) but we've all played in teams with weak scrums and you understand that you get shit ball form that but that's up to you - not to be losing penalties for it unless you can't get the ball out.
Equivalent would be a penalty everytime you retrieved a messy tap back from a lineout from your braindead forwards (Just for you Boo )
-
Yeah a try for the base of the posts was ok (ish) when we had hessian sacks filled with old socks stapled to the posts for padding but not with these 1 metre pansy pads they have nowadays.
always wanted to see a runaway intercept dotted at the base as a fuck you to the lawmakers - leave the ball there, (not having crossed the line) for the goalkicker and jog back to halfway
-
@Siam said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Yeah a try for the base of the posts was ok (ish) when we had hessian sacks filled with old socks stapled to the posts for padding but not with these 1 metre pansy pads they have nowadays.
always wanted to see a runaway intercept dotted at the base as a fuck you to the lawmakers - leave the ball there, (not having crossed the line) for the goalkicker and jog back to halfway
I wouldn't want to do that in a tight game though - you know, ref's interpretation and all that.
-
@Catogrande said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@Siam said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Yeah a try for the base of the posts was ok (ish) when we had hessian sacks filled with old socks stapled to the posts for padding but not with these 1 metre pansy pads they have nowadays.
always wanted to see a runaway intercept dotted at the base as a fuck you to the lawmakers - leave the ball there, (not having crossed the line) for the goalkicker and jog back to halfway
I wouldn't want to do that in a tight game though - you know, ref's interpretation and all that.
Rules a rule Cato. But i know what you mean as I too have seen Wayne Barnes at work
-
The 22 restart after a missed drop goal that goes dead is one that O would change. A scrum from where the attempt is taken should be an option. Getting the ball back for not executing isn't in the spirit of many other facets of the game.
-
@ACT-Crusader said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
The 22 restart after a missed drop goal that goes dead is one that O would change. A scrum from where the attempt is taken should be an option. Getting the ball back for not executing isn't in the spirit of many other facets of the game.
Great idea. Brings it in line with the overkicked kickoff as well (dead in goal or touch on full) where the receiving team has an option of a scrum restart at the centre
-
@ACT-Crusader said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
The 22 restart after a missed drop goal that goes dead is one that O would change. A scrum from where the attempt is taken should be an option. Getting the ball back for not executing isn't in the spirit of many other facets of the game.
I used to be all for that but have moderated my stance on it with the proclivity of scoring tries, i.e. not so many droppies now are there? And DC's WRC final monster!
-
@Siam said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Yeah a try for the base of the posts was ok (ish) when we had hessian sacks filled with old socks stapled to the posts for padding but not with these 1 metre pansy pads they have nowadays.
always wanted to see a runaway intercept dotted at the base as a fuck you to the lawmakers - leave the ball there, (not having crossed the line) for the goalkicker and jog back to halfway
How young are you blokes? This has been done loads...heard of a guy called Tana Umaga?
-
"how the fuck was he supposed to roll away" - you will no doubt hear me say this from time to time - so i guess that mine, where the rule needs to be a bit more pragmatic.
-
@Bones said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@Siam said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Yeah a try for the base of the posts was ok (ish) when we had hessian sacks filled with old socks stapled to the posts for padding but not with these 1 metre pansy pads they have nowadays.
always wanted to see a runaway intercept dotted at the base as a fuck you to the lawmakers - leave the ball there, (not having crossed the line) for the goalkicker and jog back to halfway
How young are you blokes? This has been done loads...heard of a guy called Tana Umaga?
Then give Steve Walsh a high five. So good.
Back in the days when pumping Auckland at Eden Park was a big deal.
-
@JayCee said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
"how the fuck was he supposed to roll away" - you will no doubt hear me say this from time to time - so i guess that mine, where the rule needs to be a bit more pragmatic.
That one should possibly have the option to the ref of a free-kick for the times when a players is truly trapped by opposition players and unable to move. It wouldn't get used much but would be good to have a second option.
In those situations a penalty can be really harsh and concede points for no fault. -
The ball isn't thrown straight into the lineout, but the non-throwing side win the ball anyhow. They spin it out wide where the centre spills the ball. The refs calls it back for a scrum "no advantage". They won a lineout they weren't expecting to, that is advantage enough for me.
-
The ball gets kicked into the in-goal and close to the deadball line. I don't like that you can put a foot over the deadball line and pick the ball up (while still moving) and earn a scrum back where the ball was kicked.
That's excessively punishing the kicker for what is actually a bloody good kick (if it's stopping a foot short of the deadball line).
-
@Chris-B. said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
The ball gets kicked into the in-goal and close to the deadball line. I don't like that you can put a foot over the deadball line and pick the ball up (while still moving) and earn a scrum back where the ball was kicked.
That's excessively punishing the kicker for what is actually a bloody good kick (if it's stopping a foot short of the deadball line).
That has changed this season hasn't it?
-
@booboo Re-read my post again, I didn't say anything about removing the maul, just the removal of the arbitrary start after it has been stopped. I don't think you need the re-start for your reasoning. If the mauls going well it's going to barrel down field sucking in those defenders anyway without this stop start bullshit. The worst ones are when the attacking teams go backwards, stop, restart and power back up the field. That's just wrong.
-
@Chris-B. said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@pukunui I don't know. Someone will.
Good if it has.
It has at least for normal in touch. Not sure about in goal though. I like the change because it encourages player to attempt to keep the ball in play.
-
@Chris-B. said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
The ball gets kicked into the in-goal and close to the deadball line. I don't like that you can put a foot over the deadball line and pick the ball up (while still moving) and earn a scrum back where the ball was kicked.
That's excessively punishing the kicker for what is actually a bloody good kick (if it's stopping a foot short of the deadball line).
Didn't they change that?
-
@Nepia said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@booboo Re-read my post again, I didn't say anything about removing the maul, just the removal of the arbitrary start after it has been stopped. I don't think you need the re-start for your reasoning. If the mauls going well it's going to barrel down field sucking in those defenders anyway without this stop start bullshit. The worst ones are when the attacking teams go backwards, stop, restart and power back up the field. That's just wrong.
No I read it. I just disagree. I think one chance to restart is the correct balance.
A go backwards reset then go forwards scenario should be the one chance. I don't think that's always ruled that way though.
-
@booboo said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@Chris-B. said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
The ball gets kicked into the in-goal and close to the deadball line. I don't like that you can put a foot over the deadball line and pick the ball up (while still moving) and earn a scrum back where the ball was kicked.
That's excessively punishing the kicker for what is actually a bloody good kick (if it's stopping a foot short of the deadball line).
Didn't they change that?
I can see I'm slow replying ... someone already has ...
-
@booboo said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@Nepia said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
@booboo Re-read my post again, I didn't say anything about removing the maul, just the removal of the arbitrary start after it has been stopped. I don't think you need the re-start for your reasoning. If the mauls going well it's going to barrel down field sucking in those defenders anyway without this stop start bullshit. The worst ones are when the attacking teams go backwards, stop, restart and power back up the field. That's just wrong.
No I read it. I just disagree. I think one chance to restart is the correct balance.
A go backwards reset then go forwards scenario should be the one chance. I don't think that's always ruled that way though.
I disagree with your disagreeance. Why should a team be allowed to restart once the ball has stopped moving? I find it silly.
-
@Billy-Tell said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
The ball isn't thrown straight into the lineout, but the non-throwing side win the ball anyhow. They spin it out wide where the centre spills the ball. The refs calls it back for a scrum "no advantage". They won a lineout they weren't expecting to, that is advantage enough for me.
Refs that let the halfback effectively roll the ball under the hookers feet but call a line out not straight when it's heading a gnats pube in the direction of the team throwing in.
-
@jegga said in Rugby rules (or lack there of) that grind your gears?:
Refs that let the halfback effectively roll the ball under the hookers feet but call a line out not straight when it's heading a gnats pube in the direction of the team throwing in.
This would require a bigger change than just a straight feed though. Current scrums can't physically hook a straight feed.
I'd be ok with a total re-assessment of scrums, though.
As I find the choice of; concede penalty or risk paralysis to be disgusting.
Sort out scrums, and the perverse incentives - which now require 3 specialists and 3 specialists subs for safety reasons.
Bring it back that a reserve hooker can safely prop when required - with the worse consequence being a tighthead. Not penalty or paralysis.
It's just a restart. We've turned a contested posesion restart into a technical penalty generating / avoiding phase. With consequences far outweighing the offence (by the offender) . Nothing makes my blood boil more that a watching a 'good' modern scrum where both teams are giving it there all until one finally breaks and gets penalised. With the 'winner' making no attempt to get the ball out. So cynical. Worse than cynical, it's borderline malicious.
Think of the ripple down flow of this change:
- to amateur teams that can't scrape enough front rowers together to form a team.
- to entrepreneurs in Texas pondering a Major League Rugby franchise, wondering whether a 23 man sport with 6 specialist front towers is just too damning expensive
Post 53 of 196