--[ WW ]-- wrote:
I'm too young to remember the reaction to the introduction of limited tackles, the 10 metre rule, or summer rugby, but I imagine there were a lot of people decrying the end of rugby league as we know it, it'll never work, nobody wants to see it and so on. Those same people probably found something new to moan about after a few months or years and carried on watching the game like they always had
Out of curiosity I've just pulled up a game from 1993 on Wigan TV. There are a lot more tackles below the armpit in that game than we see today, and the ruck speed it ten times quicker. If this rule change takes the game in that direction then bring it on
You admit you don't remember the game before those big rule changes and in the same breath slate the people who didn't like them. As always, it's not the administrators' fault, it's just the usual suspect fans who like to have a moan.
Well, I do remember those rule changes, and I can assure you that they were nothing like as controversial as this. The plain fact is that we already have overzealous officials who penalise for the slightest contact with the head, even if it's accidental and light. The thought of those same men in charge of a rule whereby this also applies to contact with the shoulder is blood-curdling.
Just think about that. Is it possible to play a contact sport like RL under those conditions? Will there be a single set of six without a penalty incurred?
It's total nonsense.
Someone else made a comment that the game we older fans grew up with was 'barbaric' by modern standards. But that's an irrelevant point. Violent play has always been illegal. The same way dangerous tackles have always been illegal. The rules are there and can and should be applied by the game's disciplinary. We don't need to keep tightening them up to the point where non-dangerous play is also severely penalised.
This is a classic example of a bunch of little men with power, who are never happy unless they're imposing themselves further. Give them an inch and they will always take a mile.
If you think this is okay and that fans will just have to get used to it, fine ... that's exactly how the RFL are thinking. But at some point, these idiots are going to come unstuck (not least because half of them wouldn't even know to lift the toilet lid when they're having a wee if someone didn't tell them to). There's been lots of talk in the past of a SL breakaway. Personally, I think that's more likely than the fans just walking away in droves. But it may be that the fans need to walk away first. I fear that only when the clubs start losing money will they realise what an error this was.