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by powa

Even when the ref is k*k you can’t say so

May 9, 2013 in currie cup, rugby, sport, super 15

Wellington – A complaint of “match day misconduct” against the Stormers was under investigation following the Super Rugby team’s win over the Hurricanes, SANZAR said on Wednesday.

via Stormers face misconduct case | Sport24.

Lately I have watched a couple of soccer games and I soooo wish the soccer bosses would become as strict as rugby.

The mob of players that gang up on the ref to express their disgust or argue a point after he has blown the whistle, is a disgrace. I have never seen a referee change his mind and reverse his decision. The way they back away from the mob to avoid being pulled and pushed around is ridiculous. I would also love to see off field cards, handed out by TV match officials for diving and outright cheating to get freekicks and penalties. (David Luis) over the weekend. To still lie writhing on the ground play acting, then smile at the camera is not clever it’s cheating and should be stamped out of the game. What are we teaching our kids? Is it clever and OK to cheat now?

Refs are not infallible and make mistakes – they don’t have slow mo replays. Accept the k*k decisions for and against. Complain via the correct channels after the game and get on with the game.

 

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by powa

Expert calls for ban on school rugby

April 18, 2013 in rugby, sport

Cape Town – A leading South African sports scientist has called for a ban on pre-primary and primary school rugby, arguing that early exposure to the sport can harm children emotionally.

Professor Cilas Wilders, a biokineticist at North West University, has been conducting observational research on children who play this form of rugby – also known as “bulletjie rugby” – for the past 18 years.

via Expert calls for ban on school rugby – IOL Rugby | IOL.co.za.

What are the feelings of parents with “bulletjies”, do you agree with the Prof or do you think his talking nonsense?

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by powa

Rolling Away at the Breakdown

April 3, 2013 in rugby, sport, super 15

Rolling Away at the Breakdown

rugby

In the Bulls v Brumbies game the Bulls were robbed by poor refereeing after the siren had gone and that because of a questionable penalty where Brumbies players were off their feet and clearly lying all over the ball. This was ignored and the Bulls were penalised. It was a decision that decided the game, as Brumbies proceeded to kick the match-winning penalty in the last minute.

A breakdown interpretation, this season, that seems to put the player in an impossible situation, is the crackdown on the tackler rolling away towards the opposition halfback, ‘McCaw’s law’ as Phil Kearns calls it. I agree with it to a degree, stopping players from intentionally slowing down and disrupting the opposition ball, but there are instances where it cannot be helped. Now you can see the predicament: if the player does not roll he will be penalised for not rolling away, but if he does roll he will be penalised for disrupting the opposition ball. But the intent of the player should be the key thing here and is what needs to be looked at.

There are times when a player is trapped and the only way they can get out is to roll towards the opposition side of the ruck.. An impossible situation that sometimes cannot be prevented.

I personally feel that in years gone by, the scrums and rucks were less of an issue than they are today. I remember the days that players raked transgressors out of the rucks and scrums if they were lying on the wrong side and even before that when forwards would ruck over players on the ground sometimes mountaineering over the top. Very few guys collapsed a maul or pulled down a lineout for fear of being trampled or raked or just plain stamped on.

Call me a traditionalist, but I often wonder why all of these new laws and different applications and interpretations have been brought into a game that was functioning perfectly well enough.

Why fix what ain’t broke. The game is becoming a problem to police. One ref has been superseded by four, plus TV and off field cards and penalties. What happened to the scrums and rucks where players or hookers hooked the ball and whoever could dig in the rucks and come up with the ball is the one who won it. Scrums collapsed but the ball still came out and those that infringed in the scrums got dealt with by the players.

There were fewer restarts by far and I don’t think injuries were any higher then than they are now. Strong Chubbies for front rows, tall skyscrapers for locks and speed and fitness for flanks and eights with the flashy fast players in the backline. It worked —– so who stuffed it into the “almost rugby league” box.

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From beauty to beast

April 2, 2013 in rugby, sport, super 15

worry

I watched some great rugby and some poor rugby this weekend. The two standout games for me were the Chiefs v Blues game (Great entertaining match played in true NZ style with brilliant handling and running with the ball).

Then came the Stormers, who lost the plot almost from the get go. Whitelock (Can’t remember which one it was) outthought and outjumped Bekker by a country mile. After the first lineout loss the communication between Bekker and Fourie fell apart with Bekker getting more rattled as the game progressed. The Saders coaches did their homework on Bekker and nullified him from the start. Disruption seems to really rattle him and once he loses his cool he seems to lose the plot with the resultant worsening of communication between himself the other jumpers and Deon Fourie. Fourie loses confidence and his throw ins become worse the harder he tries.

Vermeulen lost his cool and did something stupid which earned him 10 min in the bad boys chair. I honestly think that the card was a bit heavy and that a penalty would have sufficed but either way the Saders succeeded in getting the majority of the Stormers to get rattled by the niggle on and off the ball.

The Stormers played the wrong gameplan by defending themselves into a corner instead of playing the same gameplan that won them the games against the Chiefs and Brumbies. Stormers coaches and the breakdown at the set pieces plus the players loss of composure lost them the game. Once the hole was dug there was no way they could get out of it.

Not desperate yet but they are getting there fast.

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CAN YOU HELP? IF SO CONTACT YOUR NEAREST SOUTH WALES POLICE STATION

March 23, 2013 in rugby, sport

CAN YOU HELP? IF SO CONTACT YOUR NEAREST SOUTH WALES POLICE STATION
South Wales Police have asked for witness’s to come forward regarding a brutal crime against 15 English men on a recent visit to Cardiff who were robbed of a Grand Slam they had come to collect and also had their chariot badly vandalised during the visit to the Welsh capital?

… Apparently this heinous crime was carried out by a gang of 15 Welsh guys dressed in bright red shirts in broad daylight in front of 75,439 people who gathered around the gang attack and just stood there cheering, clapping and singing hymns and arias as if they were encouraging the gang.

A police spokesmen for the South Wales force said this “This sort of attack is just sickening……..One of the victims was a young lad called Owen Farrell who was on his first trip to Wales and has been traumatised by the whole shocking experience and to make matters even worse his father was forced to watch the entire crime from start to finish and could not lift a finger to protect his son from the sickening and relentless battering meted out by the conspicuously dressed red shirted gang”.

The police spokesman continued, “We are following a number of leads and believe this crimson shirted gang may be linked to a similar attack in Twickenham a year ago”.

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Joost’s battle with paralysis

March 19, 2013 in re-blogs, rugby, sport, springboks

 

 

Joost’s battle with paralysis

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iol spt mar17 Joost

AFP

Former Springbok captain Joost van der Westhuizen suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a terminal motor-neurone disease characterised by slurred speech and creeping paralysis.

Joost van der Westhuizen is barely intelligible but extraordinarily expressive. He is physically diminished yet spiritually enriched. On this, rugby union’s showpiece weekend in the northern hemisphere, he redefines notions of heroism and encourages his successors to pause and recalibrate.

The former Springbok captain suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a terminal motor-neurone disease characterised by slurred speech, breathing problems and creeping paralysis. Victims rarely live longer than five years beyond diagnosis.

In the two years since Van der Westhuizen was diagnosed he has revealed the courage enshrined in the definitive moment of a storied career, the tackle which stopped Jonah Lomu in his tracks during Nelson Mandela’s World Cup final in 1995.Joost’s battle with paralysis | Living With Myositis.

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Kings you beauties

February 24, 2013 in rugby, sport, super 15

What a turn up for the books. Played better . Than the stormers

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by powa

Smith: It feels like death

February 12, 2013 in rugby, sport, springboks, super 15

 

It is so sad that Juan had to hang up his boots even though he still wants to play. Severe injury is a real downer.

Even if he carried on trying I have my doubts that he would ever wear the Bok jersey again. It would be too difficult for him to regain his top form after such a long layoff. I have similar thoughts about Rathbone at the Brumbies. I somehow don’t think he will see the season out. What a pity that such great players are sidelined.

Smith: It feels like death | Sport24.

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by powa

Rugby union must innovate or die- Good read!

December 1, 2012 in rugby, sport

Interesting read go to article

 

Brands such as Under Armour are now taking on Nike, GoPro is taking on Nikon. Google has created self-driving cars. Apple, once almost bankrupt, is now worth more than Sweden, Saudi Arabia and Belgium!

Professional sports are no different. Consider Mixed Martial Arts, underpinned by the UFC promotion, which has come to dominate combat sport.

Conversely, sports such as baseball are experiencing declines in its participation, with many are arguing that it could move from America’s pastime to a niche sport in the future.

In other words, in today’s always-evolving landscape, where the attention from the average consumer is more competitive and difficult than ever – the need to remain relevant and ahead of the curve is paramount.

Professional sports can end up like companies that have failed to see oncoming change (Kodak, Nintendo and Sony). Innovate or die.

In my opinion, there is no sport which does not understand this concept more than rugby union. Some of you may be surprised with this statement. After all, union seems to be undergoing tremendous growth worldwide.

The inclusion of Sevens in the Olympics seems to have been the catalyst for tremendous growth in countries such as the United States, China and Russia. Statistics are showing that more people are playing rugby than ever before.

via Rugby union must innovate or die: Part I | The Roar.

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by powa

‘Lambie must stick to flyhalf’

November 20, 2012 in rugby, sport, springboks

OR NOT

Koen feels the match against Scotland saw the Boks deliver their finest out of hand kicking performance of the year so far.

“In that first half we kicked 14 times and 12 of the kicks had successful outcomes. That is the best stat of the year so far. Of course in the second half it went the other way, and we had only two successful kicks in 10. I believe that the guys are now starting to understand better when we should kick and when we should play the ball. There is much greater accuracy in that regard.”

via ‘Lambie must stick to flyhalf’ – SuperSport – Rugby.

SO having 14 successful kicks from 24 “IS MUCH GREATER ACCURACY IN THAT REGARD” and ‘ their finest out of hand kicking performance of the year so far.’
EISH !!!! We must have been really shit before. C’mon Louis think of something better to say.

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