The proposed law changes - And
they are radical
Recently there was a workshop on
the laws of the game from which there emanated a series of proposals
which could have a radical effect on the way the game is played.
Laws make the game. They are what
makes the game distinct from other games. Change the laws and you
change the game.
It was significant that the
experiment took place in Stellenbosch, South Africa, as it was there,
in the ardent rugby played between the university's residences, that
Danie Craven did much experimentation with the laws, often impatient
with the slow pace of change.
His statue with a pointing finger is
near the ground where these experiments were taking place, and he
would have approved. For he believed that rugby football was in a
process of evolution, which was a sign of life.
In 1951 AJ Pienaar, the president of
the then South African Rugby Board, said: "Rugby football is a living
game. Consequently there will always be changes, development in one or
other directions otherwise it would perish."
These changes look innocent but they
are radical and could make the game simpler for everybody involved.
The "guinea pigs" in this experiment
were two teams from the University of Stellenbosch - their first team
and their second team who are known as the Victorians from the days
before Victoria College developed into Stellenbosch University. The
university's first team are the national club champions. One of their
coaches is Ian Kirkpatrick, the Springbok centre who was at one stage
the Springbok coach and a Craven disciple.
The men conducting the experiment
were the IRB's referees' manager and former famous Test referee Paddy
O'Brien and top coaches of the recent past in Rod Macqueen
(Australia), Pierre Villepreux (France), Richie Dixon (Scotland) and
Ian McIntosh (South Africa).
The wording of these proposals, which
could be adopted after the 2007 Rugby World Cup as Experimental Law
Variations, needs to be refined but the ideas are clearly intended to
make for an even faster game than at present and one with fewer
technicalities and difficulties for the players and the match
officials and less predictability.
These suggestions will go to the
IRB's council. There will be further experiments. some may be
accepted. In fact there are experiments with other aspects - such as
moving the Under-19 scrum laws to senior level to avoid the tedium of
resets and to make the scrum safer, and with the use of goal judges as
being more flexible than the television match official.
The following are the suggestions
that emanated from a hot week in lovely Stellenbosch:
1. Posts and flags around the
field
Corner post, and post at
corner of touch-in-goal and dead-ball line are moved back two metres
for consistency of touch along the entire length of the touch-line and
touch-in-goal-line.
At present the only place where the
touch-line keeps travelling upwards is at the corner post and the flag
marking the corner of the dead-ball line.
2. Inside the 22-metre line
When a defending player gets
the ball outside his 22-metre line and passes, puts or takes the ball
back inside the 22 the following can occur.
a. If the ball is then kicked
directly into touch the line-out is in line with where the ball was
kicked.
b. If a tackle, ruck or maul
is subsequently formed and the ball is then kicked directly into
touch, the line-out is where the ball crossed the touch line.
3. Line-out
a. On a quick throw in, the
ball can be thrown straight or backwards towards the defenders'
goal-line, but not forward towards the opposition goal-line.
b. A player peeling off at
the front of the line-out may do so as soon as the ball leaves the
thrower's hands.
c. The receiver in a
line-out must stand two metres from the line-out.
d. The non-throwing hooker
does not have to stand between the five-metre line and the touch-line.
He must conform to law wherever he stands.
e. There is no maximum number
of players in the line-out but there is a minimum of two.
f. No team determines numbers
in the line-out.
e. and f. mean that a team
may pack as many players as it can fit between five and 15 metres from
touch. Numbers are no longer a factor.
The short line-out, especially in
defence, may become a less desirable option.
g. Pre-gripping is allowed.
This de facto becoming de iure. At
present law 19.9 (j): Pre-grip below the waist. A player must not
pre-grip any team-mate below the waist.
penalty: Free Kick on the 15-metre line.
Pre-gripping means grasping a
team-mate before the ball is thrown in. It requires several sets of
eyes and excellent timing to police it at present.
4. Tackle/Post tackle area
a. Players entering the
tackle/post tackle area must do so through the gate.
This is to be rigidly applied. It is
existing law but in the change to penalties it becomes more important
than ever.
b. If the ball is unplayable
at the tackle/post tackle, the side that did not take the ball into
contact will receive a free kick which must be tapped to bring it into
play.
c. All free kicks are
required to be tapped first to bring the ball into play. After that
the ball may be kicked, carried or passed. This applies also if a
player receives a kick in general play and is swamped so that the ball
becomes available.
d. There are only two penalty
offences (not including dangerous play) at the tackle/post tackle.
(i) Offside for not coming
through the gate
(ii) Offside where defenders
are in front of the last man on their side of the tackle/post tackle.
What this does not say directly but
implies is that hands may be used to get the ball.
e. Touch judges can indicate
off-side at the tackle by raising their flag horizontally in the
direction of the offending team.
f. Repeated infringements can
be dealt with as per current law.
g. All Free Kicks are tap
kicks including the free kick at a mark. The kicker is required to tap
the ball before playing it. Taking a scrum instead of the kick remains
an option.
h. Dangerous play will not be
tolerated, e.g. diving over the post tackle
i. The halfback/scrumhalf
should not be touched unless he has his hands on the ball.
5. Maul
a. Defending players can pull
down the maul.
This is a huge change. It may well
change option-taking for penalties.
b. Players joining the maul
must do so through the gate.
This is to be rigorously applied.
c. Touch judges can indicate
offside at the maul by raising their flag horizontally in the
direction of the offending team.
d. There is no use it or lose
it.
This means that a maul may be
stopped and restarted and go sideways and so on.
e. The ‘truck and trailer’ is
no longer an offence.
If a maul splinters and is no longer
a maul the players who were in the maul were not be penalised if they
carry on moving forward.
6. The Game
Penalty kicks will be given
only for offside and foul play (Law 10). All other kicks will be Free
Kicks.
What are your thoughts? Do you think
that the Referee will have his work cut out trying to remember what all the
new Laws are? Will your average Front Row player be able to play
without first having to sit an IRB approved exam? E-mail your comments
to
webmaster@broughtonrugby.co.uk