Trial: New scrum sequence
The IRB Pacific Rugby Cup 2013 will provide the backdrop for a revised scrum engagement trial featuring props binding on the "touch" call.
The move is part of what the IRB says is its "ongoing commitment to improving issues currently associated with the scrum in elite rugby while promoting the best-possible player welfare standards."
The annual IRB-funded development tournament, which features A sides from Fiji, Samoa, Tonga and Japan as well as development sides from the Australian and New Zealand Super Rugby franchises and national academy sides, will provide the necessary evaluation platform to address the revised sequence that is hoped will reduce the impact of the 'hit' while increasing overall scrum stability.
The "crouch", "touch", "set" engagement calls currently being trialled globally are maintained within the PRC trial but in a revision to the technique of engagement, props will be expected to bind using their outside arm after the referee has called "touch" in the sequence.
The front-rows will maintain the bind and the referee will then call "set" and the two packs will be permitted to engage. In this sequence, with the props bound, the "set" call is not a command to engage, but an instruction that the front-rows may come together when ready.
The trial process was identified by the specialist IRB Scrum Steering Group (featuring Union scrum experts) as a potential enhancement to the scrum mechanics after an extensive process of testing and analysis at all levels of the game within the unprecedented IRB funded Scrum Forces Project run by the University of Bath in conjunction with the RFU.
Key aims of the trial are to reduce the force upon engagement and therefore promote the best-possible player welfare standards at all levels, while delivering a more stable scrum to reduce the number of collapses and resets prevalent at the elite level. Early projections are that the force upon engagement could be reduced by some 25 per cent, enhancing player welfare and promoting a more stable scrum. However, the trial in a live competition will determine how successful the sequence can be.
"The scrum is a complex and dynamic area of the game and we are committed to working with our Unions to facilitate the best possible platform to enhance player welfare, stability and the contest itself," said IRB Rugby Committee Chairman and IRB Scrum Steering Group member Graham Mourie.
"The trial will be accompanied by a dedicated training and education programme for participating teams and match officials to ensure best possible practice and player welfare considerations. It should be remembered that this trial in the IRB Pacific Rugby Cup is not a fait accompli, but will be considered along with the current global trial of the crouch-touch-set engagement sequence."
"I would like to thank all the IRB Pacific Rugby Cup participating Unions for their support and enthusiasm in the lead-up to this trial. We are happy to continue to work with the expert groups to address any issues facing the scrum and this trial will hopefully give us more detailed information that will certainly help."
The trial will take place in the Australia and New Zealand legs of the IRB Pacific Rugby Cup, which kicks off on March 1.
Players, coaches and referees will form part of an extensive feedback and analysis process that will see every scrum monitored and assessed.
The outcomes of the trial will be considered by the IRB Rugby Committee and the IRB Scrum Steering Group alongside the current global trial before recommendations regarding further evaluation and consideration will be made.






Comments
andyharris says...
@gungehammer et al., Exactly this! I'm tired of Brian Moore et al. warbling on about "the Hit" being one of Union's great spectacles when, IMO, it's actually one of the primary contributions to the game making a "spectacle of itself". It would also go a long way to stopping those incredibly irritating penalty awards for collapses/binding infringements, etc..
Posted 18:48 21st February 2013
blod74 says...
If they want to eliminate the engagement, why not form the scrum with front row first, then second row, then back row, it takes away the hit, and concentrates purely on the push.
But I also agree that they need to sort out the scrum halves putting the ball in to allow a proper contest, it's just awful at the moment!
Posted 18:01 21st February 2013
fozza says...
Rugby Rockstar... I thought they were supposed to bind on the body not the arm...
Anyhoo, glad to see they're looking into improving it. I ain't a prop but will a pre scrum bind not lead to pulling opponents into the hit? Dunno, need to leave it to my larger breathren to debate this.
Posted 17:42 21st February 2013
bignoel says...
Make sure that the ball goes down the middle of the tunnel as well please!! Just as the law states!!
Posted 17:18 21st February 2013
gungehammer says...
Thumbs up. Remove the hit and get back to the push. Also will allow the props to get a proper bind, rather than having to make a desperate grab for their opponents skin tight jersey - which is sometimes missed in the cold/wet and then pinged. Watching old videos of classic matches shows how scums used to fold into one another, get them selves steady and what for the ball before pushing. God, we could even get back to the days when both hookers attempted to strike for the ball!
Posted 16:58 21st February 2013
lawynd says...
Excellent picture choice, PR - I've seen straighter politicians than those props.
Posted 16:56 21st February 2013
rugby_rockstar says...
just give 'em a baggy sleave for crying out loud. Bloody idiots.
Posted 16:34 21st February 2013
melkdave says...
At last ,perhaps now we will get old fashioned proper scrums,where a props srength,and technical nonce,counts ,rather than just getting the hit.
Posted 16:07 21st February 2013