goodNumber10
International
ok, so i know these kind of things come up a lot, but if by some miracle the two codes aligned overnight to create some new Hybrid game, what would you keep about each code (no 100% of one code)?
Quite like goal-line dropouts.
Also wouldn't be completely against rolling subs.
Ah, I hadn't considered that side of it.Sean Edwards was, he said it would lead to larger players with less aerobic fitness...
Sean Edwards was, he said it would lead to larger players with less aerobic fitness...
It would be fascinating to see what would have happened if rugby had gone pro instead of dividing into union and league. I.E there would be no League or Union just Rugby Football or Rugby.
- Would it have evolved into league with no possession because of the messiness in union at the time?
- Would it truly rival football as the world's 2nd sport.
- How many nations would be competitive?
- It's interesting because union has only stayed the same precisely because of amateurism. Games like Gridiron football and league evolved because at the time union was too dangerous and not entertaining enough
- Also important to note that the game of rugby football that they were playing in the US and Canada was not the codified version from Oxbridge as we know it.
- Lancashire and Yorkshire would probably still be dominant in England
- Australia would probably way better than they are now
- Australia would probably also have a massive league
A cleaner more skill based game with a vast increase in excitement. Football is the world's biggest sport mainly due to these elements. Folk are open mouthed at Zidane, Ronaldo, Messi and co...if Rugby tried to increase the emphasis on skill it would certainly become much bigger as a result. I used the example of an O'Driscoll dummy pass getting over 1 million hits on YouTube...imagine if Rugby had more skillful moments such as this. More kids would take up the game and want to emulate such moves, and more folk would watch (evidently).
Not wanting to get into a right and wrong argument here and I really don't want this thread to become a series of criticism of the "other" code, but scrummaging, lineouts, the play the ball and the like ARE skills, just not ball in hand skills.
Not wanting to get into a right and wrong argument here and I really don't want this thread to become a series of criticism of the "other" code, but scrummaging, lineouts, the play the ball and the like ARE skills, just not ball in hand skills.
Yes I am Rats. I've been consistent on this.
Those are basic elements that anyone can do..hence when such incidents occur it doesn't draw much/any special attention. Kicking a ball is basic....manipulating the ball is something else entirely.
Skills are what draw the most attention... be it handling, passing, evading tackles etc etc in the case of Rugby. Lomu, Jason Robinson, Campese, O'Driscoll...what was Drico's greatest moment in a Lions shirt?....the side step on Burke that left him for dead. You increase the emphasis on such attacking, remove the elements that bog down the game, the outcome is obvious.
Again, not meaning to be rude or condescending but I don't think you really understand what a skill is.