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Rugby questions thread
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<blockquote data-quote="T and A Man" data-source="post: 682583" data-attributes="member: 2316"><p>The video started of with a scrum, but then on the 23:50 we had a line out which formed into a rolling maul.</p><p></p><p>As long as the ball carrier remains bound to the maul, its legal, even if bound to the very back of the maul and out of reach of the defenders. </p><p></p><p>The defence has to resist by pushing back the forward progress of the maul, as once it ceases forward progression it must eject (i.e. pass the ball out) from the maul.</p><p></p><p>Also, defenders can only join the maul at an imaginary line between his side and the most forward of their side, they can't run around to the back of the maul to grab the call carrier.</p><p></p><p>England under Clive Woodward were famous for this. They took the rules if bind to the extreme, Richard Hill was notorious as part of the "tractor/trailer".</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="T and A Man, post: 682583, member: 2316"] The video started of with a scrum, but then on the 23:50 we had a line out which formed into a rolling maul. As long as the ball carrier remains bound to the maul, its legal, even if bound to the very back of the maul and out of reach of the defenders. The defence has to resist by pushing back the forward progress of the maul, as once it ceases forward progression it must eject (i.e. pass the ball out) from the maul. Also, defenders can only join the maul at an imaginary line between his side and the most forward of their side, they can't run around to the back of the maul to grab the call carrier. England under Clive Woodward were famous for this. They took the rules if bind to the extreme, Richard Hill was notorious as part of the "tractor/trailer". [/QUOTE]
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