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| #Post#: 117639-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Brian Moore Article re Law changes (Daily Telegraph) | |
| By: deadlyfrom5yardsout Date: January 1, 2024, 3:25 am | |
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| The law changes I would make to rugby | |
| Tweaks to 50:22 law, and a willingness for referees to apply | |
| existing laws about kicking the ball away from a ruck, could | |
| transform rugby | |
| BRIAN MOORE | |
| 1 January 2024 � 7:13am | |
| Brian Moore | |
| Danny Care, box-kicking | |
| The box kick has become too effective � that needs to change | |
| CREDIT: Getty Images/Patrick Khachfe | |
| What do I wish for rugby in 2024? Let me start by endorsing | |
| Warren Gatland�s recent call for less kicking and rugby to be a | |
| more attacking spectacle. I think Gatland speaks for most rugby | |
| union fans on this topic, but how you achieve this is far from | |
| agreed. Indeed, Gatland�s solutions were indistinct and herein | |
| lies the problem. | |
| You cannot reduce the emphasis on kicking without attempting to | |
| disincentivise it as the most effective means of gaining | |
| territory and applying pressure to opponents. To achieve this | |
| end, World Rugby might have to make several attempts, as | |
| suggested changes might fail or have unintended consequences. | |
| However, if it does not take these risks there is no chance of | |
| changing what are presently successful kicking strategies. There | |
| needs to be a will to make positive suggestions, rather than | |
| sitting there and parroting �that won�t work.� | |
| I agree with Gatland�s call to allow the 50:22 to be made even | |
| when the ball is passed back into the attacking team�s own half. | |
| This might mean the defending back three having it back more | |
| often, making attacking space available out wide. | |
| I disagree with his call to remove the marking of a high ball in | |
| the 22. Under the old law, where the catcher had to be | |
| stationary and make a mark on catching the ball, the | |
| �up-and-under� was widely used. What stopped this happening was | |
| the change to allow a mark to be made when landing after | |
| catching the ball in the air. Removing it is likely to see a | |
| return to the former tactic. In fact, extending the mark zone to | |
| the 10-metre line might further disincentivise the high ball. If | |
| you supplemented this with a law that the marking player had to | |
| tap the ball and pass or run, you would speed up the restart and | |
| not allow time to be taken by kicking to touch. | |
| All this would go some way to removing the bane of many fans� | |
| matchday experience: the box kick. This type of kick has now | |
| become almost ubiquitous, not only as an exit from a team�s 22, | |
| but as an attacking option between the 22 and the opponent�s | |
| 10-metre line. | |
| It is not just its frequency that had become baleful, it is | |
| because it takes an age to set up. For no good reason, referees | |
| seem universally disinclined to enforce the so-called | |
| five-second time limit for kickers to use the ball after being | |
| told to do so. I can only recall one instance of this happening | |
| in the whole of 2023. | |
| To make matters worse, World Rugby have resiled from the | |
| outlawing of caterpillar rucks. We are again seeing the | |
| interminable spectacle of several forwards joining rucks and | |
| wasting yet more time as the ball is slowly rolled back through | |
| several extra feet before it is finally box-kicked. Once the | |
| ball is available at the back of a ruck the referee should call | |
| for it to be played and no player should thereafter be allowed | |
| to join the ruck. Yes, this would make the box kick more | |
| difficult � that is the point, and it would be the same for both | |
| sides. | |
| As said, you cannot guarantee the positive effects of such | |
| proposals and it could mean that teams revert to long kicking | |
| duels, but at least during those there is the chance of counter | |
| attacking because there is space into which players can run. | |
| Box-kicking is a suffocating tactic from which it is almost | |
| impossible to counterattack; that is why is used so much. | |
| While we are in wishing mood, referees should look at lineout | |
| formation. They seem to have stopped the papal conclave that | |
| used to happen before every lineout, but they are still allowing | |
| the throw-in to wait until the last second before entering the | |
| lineout. They already have the throw; they should not be given | |
| the further advantage of late entry which just wastes more time. | |
| It is the same at scrums. They are again starting to take an age | |
| to ready, form and complete. I understand referees not wanting | |
| to hasten the engage sequence, but they would be aided by a law | |
| stating that if the put-in team is not ready to engage by a | |
| stipulated time they lose the feed. If the other pack is not | |
| ready, a free kick is given. | |
| Lastly, I endorse Gatland�s call to reduce the number of | |
| voluntary substitutes. If we cannot agree to go back to only | |
| injury-related substitutions, at least drastically reduce the | |
| number of substitutions. The trend towards picking benches | |
| dominated by forwards is only going to grow, limiting fatigue | |
| from which attacking space becomes available. This is without | |
| considering the fact that it would make club squads smaller and | |
| possibly solvent. Wouldn�t that be a good thing after 2023? | |
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