The retained ELVs will create the new rugby era
By Spiro Zavos, 2 Apr 2009 Spiro Zavos is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- ELVs, Experimental Law Variations, International Rugby, IRB, Northern Hemisphere, rugby, Rugby Union
Related coverage
- Rugby Union news
- International Rugby Union - Six Nations, Heineken Cup, Rugby Championship news
- ELVs news
Before he went away to the IRB conference on the future of Experimental Law Variations (ELVs) as one of 60 rugby administrators, coaches, referees and players’ representative, a leading Australian told me that the likelihood was that most of the ELVs in operation during the current European season would be confirmed.
He conceded that there was no chance of the sanctions and free kicks reform being accepted because the hostile British and Irish unions, particularly, had torpedoed this reform by defying the IRB (once again) and refusing to allow any of their senior competitions to trial that particular variation.
So the fix was in against the spirit and practice of the ELVs despite the fact that they were the most analysised and trialled set of sports laws of any sporting code. Over 800 matches involving 3000 players from the highest levels of Test rugby to the muddied oafs of social players have participated in the trialling of the ELVs.
The same lobby of British and Irish unions (who have opposed every reform and modernisation of the laws of rugby since the 1890s), together with Italy whose game was based virtually entirely on rolling mauls (like the Queensland Reds before the ‘use-it or lose-it’ reforms in 1995) were instrumental in getting the ELV allowing the maul to be pulled down to be abolished.
Steve Hansen, the All Blacks forward coach, one of the 60 delegates, makes the point that this decision needs ‘a little bit of work’ on it: ‘Before the ELVs the rule was very stacked in favour of the attacking team. It was difficult to stop and to me was more like an illegal obstruction. I think they will look at ways to make it a more even contest.’
One change that comes to mind immediately is for the law to be strictly applied that if the maul stops a second time, the ball must be released or the defending side gets a tap penalty. In previous years referees have allowed the maul to stop up to five times and then penalised defending sides when it collapsed.
This made rolling mauls, as Hansen suggests, unstoppable. Hopefully he is right when he indicates that some sort of ploys will be made available, short of pulling the mauls down, to the defending sides.
Hansen is also disappointed, and rightly so, about the decision to require even numbers in the lineouts, dictated by the side throwing in.
As he said, the All Blacks and a number of other inventive sides had worked out clever attacking and defensive plays based around their freedom to juggle their lineout number.
So some of the cleverness has been taken out of rugby which is a pity.
The good news is that despite the rantings and predictions of all the ELVs possibly going under from The Usual Suspect, the IRB looks set to retain the bulk of 10 of them, dish 3 and review the two most contentious ELVs, the sanctions and free kicks ELVs and the matter of infringements at the tackle/ruck area.
The review will surely work out a simplified and effective system to be applied by referees at the tackle/ruck area which was the intention of the ELVs requirements.
So, presuming that in May the full board of the IRB will ratify the conference recommendations and also the clarifications to the tackle/ruck and the further examination and results of the sanctions and free kicks ELVs, we can claim that most of the best ELVs, one way or another, will become part of a new era of rugby.
The enthralling and thrilling Wales – Ireland Six Nations match, which was played with the retained ELVs (aside from the maul variation) showed how vibrant rugby can be if teams are allowed by the laws to play rugby.
The comparison between this fateful match, certainly Ireland’s most important since its last Grand Slam in 1948, and the dire and dreary 2007 World Cup final under the old laws, is very invidious to the case of those who have ranted against the ELVs as somehow taking ‘our game’ away from them.
With minutes to play and having drop-kicked his team into the lead, Stephen Jones, under Irish pressure kicked out on the full a ball that was passed back to him inside his 22. Ireland had a lineout inside the Welsh 22 and converted their lineout possession into a match-winning Ronan O’Gara dropped goal.
The point about this is that in 2007 Wales would have forced a lineout inside the Ireland half and the counter-attack to set up the winning kick would have been that much harder. Just as importantly, the old law rewarded teams like the Springboks in 2007, and England in every year (except 2003), who played the touchlines more than the middle of the field.
These team played football rather than rugby.
There are complaints that the non-ground kicking from balls played into the 22 ELV actually encourages kicking.
This disregards two main points: first, the worst kicking matches rugby followers have had to endure were those played before the ELVs came into force. That Australia – South Africa kickathon at Sydney, in John Connolly’s early career as the Wallaby coach, is a case in point. Also, in the RWC the teams that invariably kicked the ball rather than play rugby, South Africa and England, were the finalists in the tournament.
Second, under the ELVs the team with good systems to run the ball back (the New Zealand, Wales and South Africa) and a good defence against the high ball have done very well.
In this year’s Super 14, the South African and New Zealand teams are dominating the tournament (with the NSW Waratahs being the only other real threat), these teams have generally kept the ball in hand running it back and when they have kicked it has been skilful kicking.
It was always going to be an incredibly difficult task to modernise the rugby laws to take into account the growing size of the players and their speed and the desire of spectators to have a contest and a spectacle. The diehards, especially in the British unions, have always resisted making rugby a more accessible and skilful code.
Some of the ELVs were actually flagged in the 1890s and rejected by the Home unions but accepted by the new Northern Rugby League which broke away from the Rugby Football Union (the England union) in 1895.
The kicking directly into touch sanction against a team taking the ball back into its 22 was played in Australia and Auckland (two rugby league strongholds) throughout the 1920s. The rule was called ‘the Australian dispensation’ and was the generator of a generation of brilliant Australian and Auckland running backs.
I once had a discussion with Dr Danie Craven, arguably the most profound thinker about the laws of rugby who ever lived. He told me that the laws of rugby are ‘wrong’ because they are too complicated and there are too many of them.
‘How will know we have the right laws?’ he asked me, and then answered his own question: ‘We will know when we have the right laws when they can be written down on a piece of paper like the football rules.’
We are nowhere near Dr Craven’s right laws yet. But slowly (too slowly unfortunately) and not always surely, we are getting there. The IRB conference decisions was a step, small but significant, along this path to the right way for rugby to go.
IRB Announcement on ELVs
Top Rugby Stakeholders Agree ELV Recommendations
Senior stakeholders from the international Rugby community, including a number of the world’s top coaches, referees and administrators, met in London on Monday and Tuesday to review the Game’s Experimental Law Variations (ELV) programme. The four-year programme culminates in a decision in May by the IRB Council as to which ELVs might be accepted permanently into the Laws of the Game.
The aim of the Conference was to assess the impact of the global ELV trial and the additional variations being trialled by the SANZAR Unions, as well as to evaluate other ELVs being trialled by individual Unions. The Conference was hosted by the IRB Rugby Committee and Laws Project Group (LPG).
“We held a positive and constructive meeting at which all stakeholders were able to share their opinions on each of the ELVs. This was an important milestone for the ELV programme and it was crucial that robust discussion was entered into and that all positive and negative impacts of the ELVs were raised,” said IRB Chairman Bernard Lapasset.
“Naturally opinions differed in several areas of the ELV programme. The IRB regards this as a healthy and positive state of affairs as the Game’s Laws have always and should continue to allow coaches and players to interpret Law so that different styles of play can be employed.”
“The Unions tabled detailed research and analysis to support their views. Everyone had the opportunity to air their views. What was clear was that there was agreement on many aspects of the ELVs and a collective will to see a return to one set of Laws to govern the Game as soon as possible.”
“This conference was not a decision-making meeting but at the end of the day the conference provided a set of collective recommendations on the ELVs to assist the IRB Rugby Committee in formulating its final recommendations for the IRB Council meeting on 13 May. Council will then decide which ELVs, if any, should be fully integrated into Law,” added Lapasset.
The Conference was the latest step in the extensive global ELV consultation and evaluation process. Attendees were also presented with Game analysis and statistical surveys from over 800 matches, involving more than 3,000 players, coaches and referees at the Elite and Participation levels of the Game from 15 IRB Member Unions.
“It is has been a long road since the genesis of the ELV programme at the Conference on the Playing of the Game in Auckland in January 2004 when national coaches and administrators gathered following Rugby World Cup 2003 to debate the state of the Game,” said Lapasset.
“Collectively the participants requested that the IRB look into the Laws of the Game and mandated it to undertake a major review in areas such as the lineout, maul and sanctions, including turning penalties for technical offences into free kicks. The Laws Project Group was subsequently conceived, as were the Experimental Law Variations with initial trials starting in 2005.”
“In the past Law changes were discussed in theory and implemented without on-field testing but importantly this ELV programme has included global practical trials. The entire process is now coming to an end and the IRB would like to sincerely thank its Member Unions for their participation in what has been an unprecedented review of the Laws of the Game,” added Lapasset.
Recommendations for the IRB Rugby Committee
The following is recommended to the Rugby Committee for adoption into Law:
Law 6 – Assistant Referees allowed
Law 19 – Kicking directly into touch from ball played back into 22 equals no gain in ground
Law 19 – Quick Throw permitted in any direction except forward
Law 19 – Positioning of player in opposition to the player throwing-in to be two metres away from lineout and the line of touch
Law 19 – Pre-gripping of lineout jumpers allowed
Law 19 – Lifting in the lineout allowed
Law 19 – Positioning of Receiver must be two metres away from lineout
Law 20 – Five-metre offside line at the Scrum
Law 20 – Scrum half offside line at the Scrum
Law 22 – Corner Posts no longer touch in goal
The following is not recommended to the Rugby Committee for adoption into Law:
Law 17 – Maul – Head and Shoulders not to be lower than hips
Law 17 – Maul – Pulling Down the Maul
Law 19 – Freedom for each team to determine Lineout Numbers
Sanctions and Free Kicks (subsidiary recommendation for further examination)
Tackle/Ruck Infringements (subsidiary recommendation for ruling in law to be sought by a Union to clarify interpretation of current Law)
Other Union-specific ELVs
Up to 15 minutes half time – recommended to Rugby Committee for adoption into Law
Rolling substitutions for Community Game – recommended to Rugby Committee for adoption into Law
Use of Under 19 variations at the scrum for Community Adult Game where agreed by the Union – recommended to
Rugby Committee for adoption into Law
Protocol to extend the remit of the TMO – not recommended to the Rugby Committee for adoption into Law
ELV Conference attendees: Bernard Lapasset (IRB Chairman), Bill Beaumont (IRB Vice Chairman and Laws Project Group), Mike Miller (IRB Chief Executive), Oregan Hoskins (IRB Executive Committee), Giancarlo Dondi (IRB Executive Committee), Peter Boyle (IRB Executive Committee), David Pickering (IRB Executive Committee), Jean Pierre Lux (IRB Rugby Committee), Geraint John (IRB Rugby Committee), Francis Baron (RFU), Rob Andrew (RFU), Kevin Bowring (RFU), Chris Cuthbertson (RFU), Roger Lewis (WRU), Joe Lydon (WRU), Bob Yeman (WRU), Phillip Browne (IRFU), Eddie Wigglesworth (IRFU), Owen Doyle (IRFU), Roy McCombe (SRU), Frank Hadden (SRU), Colin Thomson (SRU), Andre Watson (SARU), Johan Prinsloo (SARU), Peter de Villiers (SARU), David Nucifora (ARU), John O’Neill (ARU), Robbie Deans (ARU), Santiago Phelan (UAR), Ricardo Garcia Fernandez (UAR), Marcelo Toscano (UAR), Steve Tew (NZRU), Neil Sorensen (NZRU), Steve Hansen (NZRU), Nick Mallett (FIR), Francesco Ascione (FIR), Carlo Casagrande (FIR), Rene Hourquet (FFR), Jean Louis Barthes (FFR), Didier Retiere (FFR), Bill Nolan (Laws Project Group Chairman), Dr Syd Millar (Laws Project Group), Bruce Cook (Laws Project Group/IRB Development Manager), Ian McIntosh (Laws Project Group), Dr Mick Molloy (Laws Project Group/IRB Medical Officer), Graham Mourie (Chairman of IRB Rugby Committee & Laws Project Group), Paddy O’Brien (Laws Project Group/IRB Referee Manager), Pierre Villepreux (Laws Project Group), Richie Dixon (Laws Project Group), Rod Macqueen (Laws Project Group), Steve Griffiths (IRB Head of Technical Services), Corris Thomas (IRB Game Analysis), John Feehan (6 Nations), Derek McGrath (ERC Rugby), Ian McGeechan (British & Irish Lions), Lyndon Bray (NZRU Referee Manager), Nigel Owens (IRB Referee), Rob Nichol (IRPA), Damian Hopley (IRPA).
*At the conclusion of the Conference the FFR tabled its proposal to deal with the issue of uncontested scrums. This will be further discussed by the Rugby Committee and Unions will be able to give further feedback before the May 13 Council meeting.
Recommend this story.


April 2nd 2009 @ 9:37am
van der Merwe said | April 2nd 2009 @ 9:37am | Report comment
So basically, Spiro comes to the conclusion that the 22 rule is a good one based on Stephen Jones’ moment of forgetfulness? What about the mindless up and unders? Do people enjoy watching those? In the proper, old non-ELV rules, a team could pass the ball back into the 22 and either 1. kick for a lineout, 2. kick up the field, 3. run. Under these new ones, a team can now only do two of those. In other words, limiting the options a team can use. I though rugby was supposed to be like chess, Spiro? Why do you want to limit the tactics a team can use? Why does everyone have to play the same generic style?
April 2nd 2009 @ 10:18am
Brett McKay said | April 2nd 2009 @ 10:18am | Report comment
Pothale, it is funny to see the different interpretations of the outcomes from the ELV conference, especially with regard to the “further investigation” of the free-kick/sanctions ELV. Some see it as a positive that it wasn’t scrapped completely, others see it as being a polite stay of execution now for what will be a quiet death for this ELV later.
On RH-NZ today, Steve Tew is quoted with an almost Switzerland-like premise, in suggesting/hoping that the further investigation and review of the sanctions might lead to something of a rejink of the breakdown interpretations (which to be honest, was one of the objectives of the sanctions in the first place).
I think Tew could be on to something when he says, “Hopefully we can improve the contest and give the referee more discretion if we allow that player to hang on to the ball and finish the act he had started.”
Duncan Johnstone writes “Tew indicated there were hopes the IRB could find some middle ground and initiate a more literal interpretation of the current law to allow the first tackler to continue working for the ball with his hands irrespective of whether a ruck is formed.”
Surely this idea is worth inclusion and discussion in the sanctions review/investigation.
Full story is at http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby/news/2307950/ELVs-need-to-tackle-rugbys-grey-area
April 2nd 2009 @ 10:39am
Dimebag said | April 2nd 2009 @ 10:39am | Report comment
van der Merwe, I HATE this mindless kicking but around my part of sydney those kicks are called Matt Burke specials as he seems to have been te one to start it (although not EVERY TIME)
April 2nd 2009 @ 11:55am
Rah Rah Rasputin said | April 2nd 2009 @ 11:55am | Report comment
What was the problem with law 19 re freedom for each team to determine lineout numbers. Was it simply to preserve short line outs? Though it wasn’t actually a blight on the game I thought the law overcame the pedantic infringements for numbers in the lineout. If your short in the lineout then have an extra man in the backline which would presumbly be to your benefit in attack or defence. While, if you have an extra man in the lineout your had an obvious advantage with numbers.
Short lineouts were becoming something of a rarity and were only used for two purposes.
Firstly, when the team with the throw had a lineout on their own 5 metre line in order to limit the other teams number in the lineout and therefore ability to challenge the throw. Teams would also use this ploy to throw over the back to a forward running from the goal line. It could be argued that this is something of a let off and fails to award teams who are able to accurately kick for the corners.
Secondly, they are used to stand a big ball running forward, presumbly a no.8, to run headlong into some helpless flyhalf. Personally, I have no problem with this, the opposing side is equally compensated with there own man presumbly marking up in defence, but wasn’t one of the main criticisms of 5 metre offside at the scrums that encouraged the no. 8 the to pick and run at the flyhalf and the therefore was not encouraging enterprising backline play.
I therefore find it questionable why one of these laws got through and the other didn’t. Any insights, Spiro?
April 2nd 2009 @ 12:24pm
Sam Taulelei said | April 2nd 2009 @ 12:24pm | Report comment
Jimmy
The IRB urged its members to trial all the ELV variations prior to presenting their findings at the Lensbury meeting but a few of the home unions either chose not to or barely assessed them yet presented their findings for rejecting them based on what exactly? – so if that’s what you refer to as being part of the decision making process then its tantamount to being tried in a kangaroo court. Criticise the SH unions for having the temerity to actually trial the variations all you want but at least our findings are based on fact.
Personally I wasn’t convinced with the intended impact of the ELV’s and will be glad for the whole thing to go away. Following the All Blacks from 2004 – 2007 they certainly weren’t inhibited in playing attacking rugby under the old laws in comparison to other countries, and SA played thrilling rugby at times in the World Cup as well. Perhaps as True Tah mentioned earlier coaches need to look at themselves first rather than laying blame at the laws for how their teams can play the game. Our biggest problem remains the breakdown and the greatest tragedy is that rucking is still outlawed.
April 2nd 2009 @ 12:34pm
Sam Taulelei said | April 2nd 2009 @ 12:34pm | Report comment
There’s also a lot of hysteria from this neck of the woods about rugby returning to a dour, forward oriented game dominated by penalty kicks point scoring instead of tries following the rejection of the free kick sanctions.
What a load of BS!!!
Like I and others have already stated, there was a lot of good and crap rugby played before the ELV’s and during the ELV’s, what does that tell you???
April 2nd 2009 @ 12:48pm
Who Needs Melon said | April 2nd 2009 @ 12:48pm | Report comment
Sheek,
I have to take you to task for this observation:
“the continuous battle for possession could be a good thing, if the rugby play has become stagnant & predictable”.
(not sure if there is maybe a typo in the above?)
And:
“For example, while both rugby league & American football might be ’stop-start’, when it’s “game on”, both sports provide terrific action.”
You seem to be saying that it’s ok to be stop-start as long as the game isn’t bornig and predicatble when it’s actually being played. I can kind of understand that logic BUT…
I’ve been to an NFL game and was absolutely BORED STIFF. Minutes of absolutely nothing would go by followed by a few seconds of “action” – usually a guy picking up the ball and making a yard or two – a bit like a froward picking the ball up from the base of a ruck. Maybe a few tmies a game would anyone go for one of those long touch-down passes so romanticised in US movies.
To me rugby league is better by a mile… but that’s actually not saying that much. For me league is also too much a guy getting the ball and trucking it up hard and straight into a group of opposition players. Very occaisonally you’ll get someone attempt to offload. And then, a few times each game, you’ll actually get some enterprising play (as opposed to kicking away position on your last tackle).
Better still is rugby union… but I don’t want to turn this into another league vs. union debate.
I’m sad to hear you have lost your love of rugby.
April 2nd 2009 @ 12:51pm
AndyS said | April 2nd 2009 @ 12:51pm | Report comment
Can’t help but wonder what would have happened if the IRB had had the foresight to say, day one “If you don’t trial a law, you cannot be involved in the discussion of that law”….?
April 2nd 2009 @ 1:00pm
Who Needs Melon said | April 2nd 2009 @ 1:00pm | Report comment
Sam Taulelei I agree with you.
If you stuck with the same laws for 100 years you would see all sorts of styles come and go.
When you are changing the laws you tend to draw a cause-and-effect relationship between changing styles and the changing laws. Sometimes incorrectly.
I have a lot of sympathy for the Dr Danie Craven view that the laws are “too complicated and there are too many of them”. This tends to be the case with all sports and all laws in general – you start with the ten commandments but over time you end up with laws so complex that it takes a professional to actually know them all. For example: How about that rule that if you pick the ball up in goal, while it’s still rolling and have your foot on the sideline then etc. etc… Do they play this rule in sub-professional comps? Honestly how many PLAYERS would know this one, let alone spectators?
I’m sick of these discussions on laws. I’m hoping we now get a few years where no-one stuffs with anything. Perhaps in that respect I am now seeing eye-to-eye with our northern brethren.
April 2nd 2009 @ 2:31pm
simon said | April 2nd 2009 @ 2:31pm | Report comment
Ironically perhaps, but some of the best rugby I’ve seen of late was during the ARC. My question is, was that because of the full use of the ELV’s (as opposed to the S14) or something else?