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Ruck No Hands

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The most contentious facet of our game both on and off the field! ... To be really effective, Referees have to maintain total concentration. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ruck No Hands


1
Ruck No Hands
  • Chris Henshall
  • USA Rugby National Panel Referee

2
Ruck
  • The most contentious facet of our game both on
    and off the field!
  • Most prolific penalty generator
  • If you can get the tackle right and the ensuing
    ruck you will surely be a C1 or better

3
Ruck - Definition
  • A ruck is a phase of play where one or more
    players from each team, who are on their feet, in
    physical contact, close around the ball on the
    ground. Open play has ended
  • Rucking. Players are rucking when they are in a
    ruck and using their feet to try to win or keep
    possession of the ball, without being guilty of
    foul play.
  • FORMING A RUCK
  • Players are on their feet. At least oneplayer
    must be in physical contact with an opponent. The
    ball ison the ground.

4
MIND THE GATE
  • Zero tolerance to be applied to players who do
    not enter through the gate and who have a
    material effect on play. Gate is as wide as the
    last person at the end of each side of the tackle
    or ruck

5
PLAY THE BALL
  • Unplayables are acceptable if the referee is in
    doubt as to the offender or there is no offence.
    Unplayables should be whistled quickly. A number
    of unplayables should indicate there is a problem

6
JUDGE
  • Zero tolerance to players who charge into rucks
    and mauls, without Binding
  • Zero tolerance to players who clear out
    opponents not involved in ruck or maul

7
WE DONT READ MINDS
  • Referees to judge on fact/law, not intent. Intent
    is for the judiciary to rule on, not the referee

8
BEST PRACTICE COMMUNICATIONAT THE TACKLE /
RUCK
9
The verbal communication that is being observed
will be listed as either
  • Direct
  • A player that is clearly defined
  • Eg. Black 7 release and roll away
  • Indirect
  • Non specific communication
  • Eg. Hands away
  • Non verbal communication
  • Communications used without voice, (eg. Use of
    hand signals)

10
Communication is Key
  • It has been demonstrated that your communication
    as varied as it comes, could determine your
    ultimate success or your downfall

11
RuckThe most contentious facet of our game
both on and off the field!Communication will be
paramount at this breakdown, your knowledge and
interpretation will be yourultimate success.
12
ITS A RUCK HANDS OUT RED!now
simplyRuck said as early as possible
How things change
13
Your Mental Checklists!
  • Identify the ruck
  • Communicate early
  • Don't get too close post tackle decisions
  • Look for Guards?
  • Be
  • 1. -Positive, Specific, Preventative
  • 2. The cleanout
  • - must use arms
  • - close proximity
  • 3. When its over
  • - players in an offside position

14
END
15
  • RUCK
  • Identify the ruck
  • Ruck hands off let go
  • Not too close
  • Guards?

16
Ruck and Maul
  • Joining the Ruck and Maul
  • Cleaning out
  • Rucking, no feet on bodies
  • Players offside at ruck/maul pillars and posts
  • Obstruction at mauls
  • Ball out
  • Lazy runners
  • Stationary mauls
  • Mauls moving sideways
  • Consistent calling of ruck (only when one exists)

17
Key Points Ruck
  • Ball Carrier
  • Body position
  • Dynamic contact, hit onto and past side of
    defender, power steps, body before ball
  • Good presentation, body at right angles to touch
    line, place or pass ?
  • Support players
  • Effective support
  • Effective wipe / Body position / my wipe
  • Assess situation / am I needed ?
  • Maintain depth / Communicate / attacking options
    ?

18
CONTINUITY
  • LETS ALL BE ON THE SAME PAGE

19
CONTINUITY
  • As a referee, one of our prime responsibilities
    is to create a continuous game flow, by means of
    managing situations that occur throughout the
    duration of the game.

20
CONTINUITY
  • To be really effective, Referees have to maintain
    total concentration.
  • Be pre-emptive in managing each incident of play
    as it happens.

21
CONTINUITY
  • If as a referee you can learn to manage the
    Tackle/Ruck situation, then you will have
    overcome the most prolific phase in a game that
    prevents continuity.

22
CONTINUITY
  • The timing between a Tackle a Ruck formation
    can be very short.
  • Sometimes the ruck forms as soon as the ball
    carrier hits the ground.
  • In this case there can be no Poaching of the
    ball, it would be hands in the ruck.

23
CONTINUITY
  • In other cases the ruck may form seconds after
    the tackle.
  • This makes it legal for the tackler to get on his
    feet Poach the ball.
  • The tackled player must release that ball
    immediately may not Play or Pass it.

24
CONTINUITY
  • The tackle/ruck transition requires equal
    management skills.
  • The referee ensures the tackled player releases
    the ball, notes when poaching players has
    possession, and if a ruck forms thereafter.
    Allow the poaching player to to continue his
    efforts to produce the ball for his team.

25
CONTINUITY
  • Conversely, if a ruck forms immediately after the
    tckle, the referee has to prevent hands in, and
    achieve equal opportunity for both teams.
  • You may sometimes find youself penalizing hands
    in the ruck too frequently. This is a tackler
    v. tackled situation.

26
CONTINUITY
  • You have to observe very closely the tackled
    players actions. If he is trying to release the
    ball, but is being prevented by the tackler, deal
    with the tackler.
  • If the tackler is releasing and the tackled
    player holds onto the ball just a fraction of a
    second, and a legal poaching player loses his
    opportunity to poach because a ruck forms,
    penalize the tackled player for not releasing.
  • A technique to better manage the tackle is to
    watch how the tackle is executed before it goes
    to ground. The clues are offered in the formative
    stage of the tackle. If you wait to sort it out
    after the tackle is complete, you can easily get
    it wrong because of the pace of the play.

27
CONTINUITY
  • We also get problems with continuity when too
    many bodies are on the ground. The ball gets
    obscured, players are unsure where the ball is
    and they dont know if they are involved in a
    ruck or a muck.
  • Penalties are awarded, and more often than not,
    for some offense that would never have happened
    if players had stayed on their feet.
  • If you set a standard in your mind that says
    players may drive, not dive the right offender
    will be penalized and create the continuity for
    all subsequent tackle/ruck situations.
  • A driving player goes into the tackle/ruck with
    the intention of lifting and driving an opponent
    of the ball or tackled Ball carrier.

28
CONTINUITY
  • This action is positive and produces the ball for
    continuity, but this action can also result in
    the driving player falling to the ground, often
    after having successfully cleared the way for
    another player to pick up the ball.
  • In this case, we have bodies on the ground for
    legal reasons, and they are not penalized. The
    diving players have only one purpose, kill the
    ball, prevent the opposition, and stop
    continuity.
  • These get an immediate penalty, and it is the
    referees opportunity and responsibility to ensure
    the offending players understand, and are clear,
    that future infractions of this nature will be
    dealt with severely.

29
CONTINUITY
  • To sum up, each referee needs to arm themselves
    with a vocabulary of words and phrases to prevent
    destructive play and use them constantly and
    consistently.
  • Roll away tackler, release the ball, play
    the ball, ruck formed, hands away, hands
    off, stay on-side, stay behind the back
    feet, stay on your feet, dont pull it down,
    stay bound, and join from behind.
  • Any player who doesnt understand these phrases
    should face a firing squad of his own teammates.
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