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RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C)

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RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C)
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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to MrDenmore on last edited by
    #289

    @MrDenmore said in RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C):

    @chimoaus Exactly. It’s about protecting the World Rugby board safe from litigation. It makes me laugh when I read all these naive idiots thinking it’s about player welfare.

    When you have to resort to calling someone who opposes your argument a naive idiot you've lost the argument.

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  • sparkyS Offline
    sparkyS Offline
    sparky
    replied to Billy Tell on last edited by
    #290

    @Billy-Tell
    Some of the guys who were so good for the Jaguares in the Super season now look knackered and in need of the off-season.

    MiketheSnowM 1 Reply Last reply
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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to sparky on last edited by MiketheSnow
    #291

    @sparky said in RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C):

    @Billy-Tell
    Some of the guys who were so good for the Jaguares in the Super season now look knackered and in need of the off-season.

    Definitely.

    And there was a French no fucks given attitude for lots of the match unfortunately.

    They scored the best try of the match, could have had more.

    Interestingly the Japanese Sunwolves players look as fresh as daises

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  • C Offline
    C Offline
    cgrant
    wrote on last edited by
    #292

    England had to win five successive hard fought games to win the RWC. Actually, it's only four. They played slowly and saved their energy all game long. The issue was never in doubt. Let's hope France give them a real test. An England loss would be great for the All Blacks.

    MiketheSnowM westcoastieW 2 Replies Last reply
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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    wrote on last edited by
    #293

    Just watching the highlights on ITV4

    Red card incident seen from more angles than a dodecahedron.

    English charge down which should have been a YC at least?

    What English charge down? No mention of it.

    Or Tuilagi hitting the man in the air.

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to cgrant on last edited by
    #294

    @cgrant said in RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C):

    England had to win five successive hard fought games to win the RWC. Actually, it's only four. They played slowly and saved their energy all game long. The issue was never in doubt. Let's hope France give them a real test. An England loss would be great for the All Blacks.

    Billy hurt.

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  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to MiketheSnow on last edited by
    #295

    @MiketheSnow said in RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C):

    Just watching the highlights on ITV4

    Red card incident seen from more angles than a dodecahedron.

    English charge down which should have been a YC at least?

    What English charge down? No mention of it.

    Or Tuilagi hitting the man in the air.

    ITV playing to their audience. Probably didn’t expect a random Taff to watch the game live AND the highlights😉

    Watching live, including the replays I thought the coverage was more balanced. I also thought that Owens did pretty well, the Tuilagi and Lawes incidents could have gone either way and he explained his decisions vey well in both instances. As he did when England were infringing close to the line early on.

    MiketheSnowM 1 Reply Last reply
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  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    wrote on last edited by
    #296

    On the red card discussion, there was, I thought, a very good rationale by one of the pundits. Basically saying that the coaches and the players don’t give a fuck and if it takes a metric fuckton of red cards to get the current poor technique addressed then that’s the way to go. Until there is a perceived cost to the “dominant tackle” ideal then things will not change. Sound reasoning imo.

    nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
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  • kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelb
    wrote on last edited by
    #297

    On the send off . sin bin rule, I follow AFL which has none, and the players get harshly dealt with at a tribunal ,

    like anything , there are positives and negatives,

    you dont get games decided by the send off which is probably better from a spectacle point of view,

    but you could argue the team on the receiving end of the foul play doesnt receive enough compensation , particularly if they have lost a player through that foul play , the team that plays them next it could be argued benefits , because of the suspension,

    And it does open a window for a player in a big game to go a bit nuts knowing he wont be sent off

    you could change it but i dont think it fixes everything

    westcoastieW 1 Reply Last reply
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  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #298

    @Catogrande said in RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C):

    On the red card discussion, there was, I thought, a very good rationale by one of the pundits. Basically saying that the coaches and the players don’t give a fuck and if it takes a metric fuckton of red cards to get the current poor technique addressed then that’s the way to go. Until there is a perceived cost to the “dominant tackle” ideal then things will not change. Sound reasoning imo.

    I get that, but if they are serious about lowering the tackle then they need to be serious about supporting that in law. Not trying for dominant tackles at this level hurts you - and your team probably loses.

    If they are serious about taclking around the waist, then strict enforcing of 'no standing up after hitting the ground while even vaguely held', and stop offloading as soon as a body part (elbow or knee) is on the ground. Simplify the fark out of it, reward tacklers chopping players down

    SnowyS 1 Reply Last reply
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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #299

    @Catogrande said in RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C):

    @MiketheSnow said in RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C):

    Just watching the highlights on ITV4

    Red card incident seen from more angles than a dodecahedron.

    English charge down which should have been a YC at least?

    What English charge down? No mention of it.

    Or Tuilagi hitting the man in the air.

    ITV playing to their audience. Probably didn’t expect a random Taff to watch the game live AND the highlights😉

    Watching live, including the replays I thought the coverage was more balanced. I also thought that Owens did pretty well, the Tuilagi and Lawes incidents could have gone either way and he explained his decisions vey well in both instances. As he did when England were infringing close to the line early on.

    We just want consistency

    far.jpg

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
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  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to MiketheSnow on last edited by
    #300

    @MiketheSnow

    Consistency would be good but not easy when you have different instances, different refs, TMOs and interpretations. Trial by a single frame shot is not really supportive of consistency either. I’m assuming the second shot was the Piers Francis thing? If so, I’d say he was lucky but also that it was nowhere in the same league as the Quill one or the Argie today.

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  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    replied to nzzp on last edited by
    #301

    @nzzp said in RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C):

    If they are serious about taclking around the waist, then strict enforcing of 'no standing up after hitting the ground while even vaguely held', and stop offloading as soon as a body part (elbow or knee) is on the ground. Simplify the fark out of it, reward tacklers chopping players down

    I like that. It worked for Dan Carter.

    Go further and and make it place the ball immediately once on the ground - get rid of "not held" altogether. I've never liked that law as it can easily go one of two ways - penalty to defending team as ball carrier didn't immediately place ball while held, or penalty to attacking team as tackler tries to pilfer ball without a clear release. It's almost contradictory - got to let him go to steal the ball, or not let him go and he can get up and run again.

    Passing off the ground is a more recent (several decades ago - I'm getting old) law change anyway, but does increase the speed of the game and the scoring opportunity so I'd leave that and would be considered "placing" or releasing the ball.

    It can also be quite simple if you make it the "one knee" law like a maul becoming a tackle.

    Probably heaps of unintended consequences in some of that so I will appreciate the criticism and ridicule and say GFYs in advance.

    voodooV 1 Reply Last reply
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  • voodooV Away
    voodooV Away
    voodoo
    replied to Snowy on last edited by
    #302

    No dominant tackles, nothing above the waist, pass immediately when you're on the ground. Might as well ban the ruck and cleaning out also, and voila, we have have touch rugby ladies and gentlemen!

    SnowyS 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    replied to voodoo on last edited by
    #303

    @voodoo How is that touch? Still dominant tackles, say below the rib cage - ball carry area.

    Rucks weren't in there at all.

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  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    replied to voodoo on last edited by
    #304

    @voodoo I don't think you actually read or understood the whole thing?

    voodooV 1 Reply Last reply
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  • voodooV Away
    voodooV Away
    voodoo
    replied to Snowy on last edited by
    #305

    @Snowy said in RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C):

    @voodoo I don't think you actually read or understood the whole thing?

    Clearly I'm exaggerating for effect. But I think the "tackle below the waist" thing is a game wrecker. Losing the dominant tackle will totally change the game. And I still haven't figured out how you tackle a forward running with perfect body height. Imagine trying to tackle Keew Meeuws 1m out from the line!!!

    Does run cage v waist make a difference? Maybe, I dunno

    SnowyS 1 Reply Last reply
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  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    replied to voodoo on last edited by
    #306

    @voodoo said in RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C):

    Clearly I'm exaggerating for effect. But I think the "tackle below the waist" thing is a game wrecker.

    Which is why I mentioned in my clarification below the ribs. Hit Kees in the belly he still stops, and don't let them get that close because it gets harder to defend, for sure. Maybe more close to the line tries for props. They need the help, don't score too many now.

    Yeah I think a little higher makes a difference, it is the ball carry area and you can still knock a guy over, knock the ball out, rather than just cut him down.

    voodooV 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • voodooV Away
    voodooV Away
    voodoo
    replied to Snowy on last edited by
    #307

    @Snowy

    Yep, a bit higher def helps. I'm just concerned withbthe general direction and think we are losing sight of what we are solving for.

    Player safety is obviously paramount, and things like tip tackles that can cause neck injuries and paralysis had to go. Likewise no-arm tackles and head contact that can massively increase concussion occurrences.

    But tackling below the shoulders, where a possible mistake can lead to a high shot which is rightly penalised (let's not open that again), I just don't know that we need to solve further for that

    SnowyS 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    replied to voodoo on last edited by
    #308

    @voodoo I guess that is why they are trying the "nipple line" at lower levels. Just trying to get players to attack lower without too much end result on the game. It's certainly not touch.

    Have another look at what I said about the tackle laws, rather than height. It was a more valuable comment I think.

    voodooV 1 Reply Last reply
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RWC: England v Argentina (Pool C)
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