The Times Sport - UK (2020-09-12)

(Antfer) #1
JOHN WALTON/PA

McConnochie
has returned to
his tryscoring
best for Bath in
recent weeks

the Saracens director of rugby, and
two charities Farrell works for were
considered by the panel in mitigation.
That made it sound like glowing
character references had been
significant in the halving of the ban
from ten matches to five. In reality, it
was a minor factor. The panel’s
decision to cut the ban was made in
accordance with the checklist:
Farrell’s immediate remorse, his guilty
plea and his good disciplinary record.
I do feel however, this was an
accident waiting to happen. Farrell’s
upright technique and desire to make
a dominant tackle makes him liable to


go high, so if it goes wrong it goes
very wrong. But the lynch mob who
wanted the book thrown at him were
wrong to mention the two tackles
from the autumn of 2018, against
South Africa and Australia.
World Rugby has acknowledged
they should have been yellow card
offences and therefore would not
have been considered by the panel.
I do not agree that players should
be able to have their bans halved but I
do understand why the option is
there. Players were challenging every
decision and the judicial system
wanted them to acknowledge

the ludicrous disciplinary system


Sport


the times | Saturday September 12 2020 2GS 17


Sport


Explained


LINEOUTS


Rory Best
Former Ireland
captain and hooker

unacceptable behaviour on the field,
so brought in higher mitigation to
encourage them to plead guilty.
It should not be down to me to
explain this.

Don’t forget to punish the punchers
How can we be at a stage where a
punch to the head, a deliberately
illegal act, is now punished less
severely than a tackle that went
wrong? Siale Piutau and Andrew
Kitchener were banned for three
games this week for punching each
other in the head.
They were heat-of-the-moment
acts but deliberate attempts to cause
harm. Farrell’s dangerous tackle was
reckless, not deliberate, and yet
people think a five-match ban was too
lenient.
I thought Farrell would get a longer
ban but five games remains a heavy
punishment. Think back to the World
Cup, where it was almost standard for
players guilty of a dangerous tackle to
receive a six-match ban reduced to
three on mitigation.
In that context, Farrell’s suspension
is severe, and rightly so. It was a
horror tackle. Farrell accepted in the
hearing that he had set a bad
example.
It is proven that sanctions are one
of the most effective ways of changing
player behaviour. It worked for
punching. We hardly see any of it in
the game any more — but that does
mean we should go easy on it.

Kitchener, centre, and Piutau, right, only got three-match bans for punching


Setting up


Lineout numbers are determined by the type of set piece the fly half and
lineout leader chooses in the pre-lineout huddle. During that huddle, the
hooker goes to the mark to get the ball dry and ready to throw, before the
loose-head prop comes over to inform him of the call. The easiest way to
win a lineout is to go as soon as the forwards hit the line: the later you come
in and the faster you go, the less time the opposition has to read and defend
the situation.

The calls


For Ireland we used a double digit to determine which jumper is thrown to:
the front jumper was number ten, the second was 20, third 30, and so on. The
second digit of that number dictates the type of set piece that will be run. An
11 ball, for example, means the ball is thrown to the front jumper and a maul
follows.

Some teams have two calls: they arrive at a lineout with an 11 and a 32 call, for
example, then the lineout leader puts a finger up to relay which call will best
compete with the opposition’s defensive alignment. Many teams also have a
trigger word used to bail out to the back of the lineout.

The best teams have dummies integrated into their calls. A certain number
will mean a particular jumper runs and feints to jump to trick the opposition
into committing to the wrong lift.
Meanwhile you take a step
forwards or backwards and
lift in the free space.

Practice


Midfield: A good time to use more
numbers and go quickly off the top
because it gives the backs space to
run a move.

In the opposition’s 22: The maul is the
best ploy when in the opposition’s 22
because it offers the best chance of
getting over their line. Go with a five
or six-man lineout and swap a forward
into the halfback position so he can
get straight on the ball and drive.

Varying the numbers


Inside your 22: Use three or four
players when under pressure as it
gives your jumpers more space, which
is harder for the opposition to mark.
Either maul or hit the ground quickly
after the lift so you can set up a
position to kick clear and regain
territory.

I would throw to Iain
Henderson, the forwards coach,
on a platform, who would crouch
then stand to replicate a lineout jumper’s
movement. Simon Easterby would stand on
a ladder in front of him to act as an opponent so
if I underthrew, he would steal it. It helps to make
yourself uncomfortable also: I would practise throwing
blindfolded to hone my muscle memory, or stand with
one foot on a mat. Jamie George, the England hooker, I know
sometimes throws wearing a boxing glove.

Direction of attack

Channel 4 joins


Amazon to air


autumn games


England’s Autumn Nations Cup match
against Ireland is one of three games
from the tournament to be broadcast
on free-to-air television as part of a
rights deal involving Channel 4 and
Amazon Prime.
Eddie Jones’s team will bounce
around the channels this autumn.
Their game against the Barbarians on
October 25 will be on Sky and their
2020 Six Nations title decider against
Italy on October 31 will be on ITV.
The RFU had no television deal in
place for England’s November series,
which was cancelled due to the pan-
demic. Channel 4 already owned the
rights to Ireland’s autumn schedule and
will broadcast all three of their Autumn
Nations Cup pool matches.
Ireland open the new tournament
with a game in Dublin against Wales on
Friday, November 13 before tackling
England at Twickenham on November
21 and Georgia in Dublin on November
29.
Amazon Prime has been confirmed
as the tournament’s main broadcast
partner and will show 12 matches,
including England v Ireland and the
finals weekend on December 5-6. The
deal was brokered by the Six Nations
and is reported to be worth £15 million.
It is Amazon’s first foray into inter-
national rugby. The streaming service
already has Premier League football
and US Open tennis in its sports rights
portfolio. The deal is a one-off but
indicates a willingness of the Six
Nations to consider taking the flagship
tournament behind a paywall when the
present broadcasting deal with the BBC
and ITV expires in 2021.
Channel 4 will also broadcast the
Champions Cup final on October 17.

Alex Lowe
Deputy Rugby Correspondent

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