Lprhino wrote:Yes, barnes is easily the best referee about. Be nice if we had that same confident authority in our refs. I think the other factor was NZ just had better scrummagers than England.
The majority of my friends are union fans, slowly they are coming across the league, however the one factor they don’t like it the ruck and the slowing down. To an untrained fan it looks like wrestling to intentionally slow the game down. Tackle and move away is simple and I think that’s what the league ruck should look at moving towards.
On injuries, i agree it isn’t always intentional. I think it is a cultural shift from up right tackling, the talk of bending your back and being in a more controlled position is the bit I like. If you are never in a position to make a good tackle and unintentionally whack somebody in the head then I don’t think it’s enough to just say oh sorry I didn’t mean to. If you are in a position to make a good tackle and something changes and you hit high then usually it appears you will be okay.
On your last point, both tackling and ball carrying in the two codes is fundamentally different. First point of contact in league has generally been higher in modern times both because players carry more upright (because there’s less risk of being turned over) and defenders need to control the player and stop the offload. With that in mind I understand why our interpretation is different.
I disagree on the knock down as it’s interpreted in union, there’s many a gamble/one handed intercept that are worth watching. I think another set of six is more than enough benefit in league if I a player doesn’t get it right. Granted doesn’t work in league as the scrum is contested.
The bit I absolutely do not like in union, despite understanding it’s rooted in the current climate/player safety, is when a head on head clash leads to a card. No player I’ve ever known goes in to headbutt someone in a tackle. As others have said we can’t completely take out the risk and I’d like to see something more sensible be taken into account for that.