Home > Rugby > Rugby Union > Why Northern Hemisphere rugby must adopt Super 14's new laws
Why Northern Hemisphere rugby must adopt Super 14's new laws
After just four weeks of the experimental laws, the Super 14 in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa is producing faster and more action-packed games. But the Northern Hemisphere - perhaps stuck in a style of rugby from 30 years ago - seems reluctant to adopt them.
by Hamish McBrearty on 13 March 2008
Email this Article (2) Comments
Free £10 bet when you register at
After watching the highlights - if they can be called highlights - of the England-Scotland game from the weekend, I was struck by how dull the action looked. And after an equally dull World Cup final, it seems obvious to me that changes are needed to promote more attacking rugby and more tries.
However, there seems to be a great deal of opposition to the Experimental Law Variations from both the media and from the clubs, who control the game up there. And that really begs the question: Why?
Are they worried the new laws favour more mobile forward packs and creative backs? Or do they genuinely believe that their product is superior?
From the media's point of view, it would appear to be the latter. take this comment from Sunday Times columnist Stephen Jones: "In Europe, where the sport has never been so popular and where rugby in many styles is thriving, we simply cannot see what is broken and needs fixing."
Perhaps Mr Jones is happy to politely applaud successful goal kicks all day long, but why would he not want to see the skilful breakouts, marvellous handling and brilliant support play that were on show during the Crusaders vs Force Super 14 game?. This was perhaps the best advert so far for the new laws. Watch Richard Brown's try for the Force and then tell me you'd rather see Jonny Wilkinson taking shots at goal.
Cricket has been able to shake off its 'boring' tag amongst casual fans by embracing the concept of 50-over matches - and more recently the Twenty20 version of the game which is attracting huge money from two competing Indian leagues. Rugby, it seems, has not quite grasped what makes an exciting product just yet.
And then, of course, there is the issue with players having to switch between the old and new laws within the season. Super 14 is being played under the new laws, while there will be Tests against visiting Northern Hemisphere teams under the old laws, possibly a switch to the new laws for the Tri-Nations, then back to the old laws for the end-of-year tours up north. Players could be forgiven for not knowing whether they are coming or going when dealing with that jumble of changes.
The IRB, who pushed for the Super 14 to trial the new laws, need to decide in which direction they intend to take rugby and either ratify the new laws this year, giving teams two or three seasons to adjust before the 2011 Rugby World Cup, or scrap them entirely.
Comments (2)
by Rob Monk on March 14, 2008
Really exciting games with 15-9 score lines when 8 penalty kicks are made!?! Big, fast and strong packs that can feed agile back lines who then can spin the ball out and score tries. That sure sounds like more interesting rugby. What is the northern hemisphere dominated IRB afraid of? They have the all the corporate sponsorship money and the numbers to control what happens in Dublin. They stuck in a time warp of 30 years ago but also with rose colored glasses if they think they their version of the game is a better game. They need to adopt the ELV's and catch up with the southern hemisphere nations or haven't they noticed yet that the top 4 ranked teams are all from the southern hemisphere. Maybe they just think that adopting rules that play into the style of those nations will just put them further behind. Yes, probably for a little while but they need to have the balls to do it for the long term health of the sport.
by Clive Rowland on May 05, 2008
Can you please explain the sense in allowing defending forwards to kill the ball in a maul and then get possesion? If this happens the attendance figures will plummet!
Add your comment here
PERSONAL ABUSE WILL NOT BE TOLERATED
First Name
Last Name
Email
Heading
Display your favourite sport or football team badge with your comment.
Sport
League
Team
Comment *
Please enter the text you see in the picture into the textbox below. *
How Graeme Smith cast agony aside and proved he is cricket's Captain Courageous
Manchester United v Chelsea: Stand by for drama at the Theatre of Dreams
Has Walter Smith finally lost the plot at Rangers?
Arsenal Champions League Chelsea Cricket news Euroleague Fantasy football Football news Formula 1 Liverpool Manchester United NBA Newcastle United Premier League Sports news Tottenham Hotspur Transfer rumours Twenty20 UEFA UEFA Champions League
© SportBuzz All rights reserved 2008 Sportingo- Sports News & Sports Articles site. Sportingo delivers fresh sports news and analysis by fans-Football News, Tennis News, Rugby Union News, Rugby League, Cricket News, Cycling News, Basketball News and other Sports TV. XML Sitemap 2008.