Andy Gilder wrote:
I'm guessing that at that level there's very little force going through the engagement, and little separation between the touch and engage calls?
Go back to allowing both props to have hold of each other before coming together, and you'll have a much more stable scrum to put the ball into.
I used to play front row when I played, and the biggest problem was that the referee would vary the speed of the difference between the pause and engage calls, so you'd be second guessing trying to get an advantage.
At international level there's such a long pause between the crouch and the actual engage calls that packs are unbalanced at engage so the scrum's always going down.
Decent game this morning, although I'm not sure about Halfpenny being man of the series, sure he's kicked his goals, but in the first two games he literally just caught and kicked the ball, there was no other contribution.