I'm maybe not entirely with him, but I think most of us have been ill at ease with and even outright dismayed by the amount of time wasted re-setting the scrum. Ali Ekyn at BT also has a bee in his bonnet over this and mentions it a lot in comms.The Sale director of rugby, Steve Diamond, has called on the authorities to get rid of lengthy delays caused by scrums, which he believes are blighting the modern game, saying their entertainment value to rugby is “what King Herod was to babysitting”.
Diamond claimed Premiership clubs’ duty to entertain has been enhanced by the absence of crowds and he hit out at the amount of time wasted by preparing for and resetting scrums. One of the temporary law changes introduced by World Rugby in May was to eliminate reset scrums – a measure designed to reduce the risk of infection from Covid-19 rather than to speed up play – but the Premiership immediately rejected it.
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The first weekend of the Premiership’s restart included a number of stop-start contests – including Sale’s disappointing defeat by Harlequins – not helped by the increase in penalties as players grappled with the new interpretations of the breakdown laws. Diamond, however, feels that a time limit of 15 seconds to set for a scrum – and an immediate free-kick if it is not clean – would improve the game as a spectacle at a time when supporter engagement has never been more important.
“I’d put a time constraint on it. It beggars belief. It is not the referee’s fault, it is a directive from above,” said Diamond, whose third-place side host the leaders, Exeter, on Friday. “It is the King Herod of entertainment in sport. What King Herod was to babysitting, scrums are to entertainment in rugby – it is absolutely boring.
“For me there are far more important things in the game – get the lineouts quickly, get the scrums quickly, the bits that have no interest, really, to a lot of people. People want to see the ball in play, people want to see the ball in Chris Ashton’s hands or Denny Solomona’s hands or Manu Tuilagi’s hands. They want to see skill at high pace and they want to see collisions, end of story.
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“If you look at a lot of games over the weekend, the scrum timings of the setup are enormous. It’s minutes. It’s crazy. I got some footage from 1975, 1980, 1985, 1990 and measured the scrums. They were three times quicker than they are now. That’s ridiculous. Where [the authorities] need to spend their attention is sorting that area out – all the resets, not in the right position. [Award a ] free-kick it and give it to the other team.
“There’s no other sport in the world where you have something like a scrum, so either we take it out the game, which takes all the odd-shaped people out the game, or you’ve got 15 seconds to get your setup sorted and you get on it. How many clean scrums do we see? Not many.”
I think I'd alter Diamond's fix a little bit. 15 seconds to form up from the moment a reset is called seems reasonable, but the punishment for failing to set would be determined by the team responsible. if the team in possession doesn't set quickly enough then they'd cede the ball to the opposition as a free kick, if the team without the ball fails to set then it would be a pen to really dissuade fucking about when on the defensive.