The Wrap: Ever wondered what would happen if this column was written by ChatGPT?

By Geoff Parkes / Expert

The advance of AI into our lives grows by the day. Machine learning technology is already in routine use, in ways that most of us aren’t even conscious of. You really think World Rugby is staffed by humans with an understanding and feel for the game?

See what I mean?

In many applications, there is controversy and scepticism around the extent to which AI can mirror human intuition and account for nuance and subjective interpretation; the very things that make us interesting as humans.

At the risk of doing myself out of a job, I decided to test that theory and ask ChatGPT to write this week’s Wrap. The instruction was simple; summarise the weekend’s rugby and throw in some commentary about any issues in the game that catch your eye. Or your CPU, as it were.

Let me know what you think about the result. Can a machine really do what I spend hours slaving over every Sunday?

Since 1996, Super Rugby has been the premier franchise competition in the southern hemisphere. The most important thing about Super Rugby is that players get plenty of rest. Even though they lost to the Crusaders 35-17, the Brumbies did the right thing by their tired players by letting them stay home and put their feet up on the sofa.

After all, when you’ve already won your first four matches, who needs to win five?

The Crusaders are coached by Scott Robertson. Bored by winning all of the time, Robertson has quit his role, and next year will coach a new team. But for now, he’s not allowed to talk about that.

(Photo By Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

For anyone new to rugby, it’s a game invented in New Zealand, by New Zealanders, for New Zealanders. Rugby is now played in other parts of the world, but not properly, like in New Zealand.

Some of those places where rugby is played include Fiji and in parts of Sydney; stretching way out into the west, as far as Parramatta.

In rugby, there are 15 players versus 15, as distinct from rugby league, which has only 13 players-a-side. That is, unless you are required to play with 13 players when foul play results in the necessity for uncontested scrums, in which case any front-row forward dismissed must be replaced by another front-rower (if available), and the offending team must commit 8 players to pack down into the scrum, even if those players are not forwards.

Once thought to be unwieldy and overly complex, this is an example of rugby’s law book now being simple and easy for everyone watching at home and at the ground, to follow.

Uncontested scrums used to be called “golden oldies” scrums but in today’s society, ageism is frowned upon. In a similar vein, props must no longer be called “fatties”. That is, unless you are referring to Melbourne Rebels’ prop Cameron Orr, who shamelessly subscribes to the theory “any publicity is good publicity”.

It is also no longer acceptable to describe referees as “blind” or being the product of dubious parentage, no matter the justification.

The Waratahs are not only Sydney and Australia’s premier rugby team, they are in fact the world’s greatest rugby team. They hold the distinguished and envious record of having won every Super Rugby ‘how great do the boys look in pre-season?’ title, since 1996.

On Friday night the Waratahs put in a terrific shift on defence but lacked cohesion in attack, and lost to the Chiefs, 24-14. That makes the Chiefs a pretty good team.

One of the things that makes the Chiefs so good is Damian McKenzie. He played his 100th game for the Chiefs and won a green table tennis bat. Nice.

Another success indicator for the Chiefs is their close bond and loyalty. For example, whenever one of the boys gets into trouble or things get out of hand with a stripper, the team bus driver steps in to take the rap. Australian teams looking to emulate the success of New Zealand franchises could take learnings from this and be more diligent about the bus drivers they hire.

Taking learnings is a very important aspect of modern rugby. As is being proud of the boys.

The most famous player in Australian rugby is Joseph Suaalii. He currently plays for the Sydney Roosters who, disappointingly, have never won a Super Rugby title. Suaalii’s ambition is to one day play for the Waratahs, because isn’t it every young player’s dream to add a February title to their CV?

Joseph Suaalii. (Photo by Mark Kolbe/Getty Images)

One of Suaalii’s biggest fans is Hamish McLennan. Before he moved into coach and player recruitment, McLennan used to be chairman of Rugby Australia.

Carter Gordon plays for the Melbourne Rebels. He scored 10 points in their win 40-34 win against the Reds. The only thing holding back Gordon at this stage is the weight of noise coming from people who say he is Australia’s next great flyhalf. This is the fault of Mark Ella, Michael Lynagh and Steve Larkham for creating unrealistic expectations.

The Rebels have taken the unusual step this year of confusing fans and opposition sides by playing highly attractive rugby. Some describe this as ‘un-Australian’. The effect has been for fans in other states to adopt the Rebels as their ‘second team’. If only more people in Melbourne would adopt them as their first team.

The Reds are coached by Brad Thorn. He speaks as if he’s auditioning for a role in a new series of The Sopranos. To people from New Zealand and those who follow NRL, where he used to play, Thorn is a highly respected figure. To Reds fans, he is a dud coach.

You can do a lot of things on a rugby pitch but one thing you can’t do is obstruct an opponent, or grab their jersey without them having the ball. Over the weekend it was pleasing to see all players from all sides playing to both the spirit and letter of the law, by not holding on to each other around the breakdown, and not cleaning out their opponents ahead of the ball.

That is, all players except for Ryan Smith. Smith is 26, still young enough to learn from his mistake, should he choose to pursue good over evil.

Something that is very important to do in rugby is to ‘paint a picture’ to the referee, at scrum time. The Highlanders painted a nice picture early to referee Paul Williams, and set themselves up for a rollicking win, 57-24.

In terms of the arts, the Drua’s specialist expertise is music. Painting pictures just isn’t their go.

What is their go is playing in front of their home fans. It’s the turn of the Rebels to step into the lion’s den this week. How will they balance their desire to shift the ball around at pace, with the need not to cough any loose ball up for the Drua to feed off on the counter?

The Hurricanes had a nervous match-up against their bogey team, Moana Pasifika, but managed to come out on top, 59-0. The Hurricanes don’t really play fair; they have Ardie Savea and Peter Lakai.

(Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

Moana Pasifika plays fair, but they need to find themselves a new bogey team, quick smart.

An inspiration to young, virile German men across the world, Anton Segner starred for the Blues in their 30-17 win against the Force, in Auckland. This was a match that didn’t reach great heights, except for Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens, who did reach a great height.

What the Force do consistently well is hang tough and play out gritty, honourable losses. Which, as frustrating as that might seem, is probably better than dishonourable losses.

This weekend also saw the start of Super W, in Australia, a competition for women; a bit like Super Rugby Aupiki in New Zealand, but not as good. It’s a shame Australian women’s rugby hasn’t figured out they shouldn’t copy the men.

To be fair, Australia’s women players are starting from well behind their counterparts in other countries.

Encouragingly, Rugby Australia has this year moved to a new contract system which sees, for the first time, some women players get paid as much as Suaalii drops on a coffee and the latest pair of sandshoes.

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There was a time once when Rugby Australia had a lot of money, but confused leadership from Bill Pulver, who insisted that clubs weren’t to piss money up against a wall, perversely inspired them to do just that.

Luckily, Australian rugby is back on track again, thanks to ten ex-Wallaby captains, who bravely put pen to paper, foiled a New Zealand trojan horse and paved the way for the return of the prodigal hooker, Eddie Jones.

Jones is on the right track, demanding more of Australian players, urging them to raise their sights and not be satisfied by good performances that aren’t winning performances.

No stranger to innovation, expect Jones to quickly move on players who aren’t up to the rigours of Test rugby. And his training sessions.

That was one thing that proved too much for my ChatGTP module. Asked to provide a run-down of a training session tougher than one of Eddie’s legendary mind and body-breaking slugfests, my computer merely hissed and disappeared in a cloud of smoke.

The Crowd Says:

2023-03-29T01:52:23+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


I hope that work is going well for you JN… Yes! As there is nothing like a good cooked Irish goose, tender and falls straight of the bone. :silly:

2023-03-28T16:04:22+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


Ha ha .. Sorry for Late response , despite my best efforts work found me :laughing: But hey Tim we can only hope regards this fantastic Irish team that they are cooking their goose too soon :rugby:

2023-03-28T04:09:14+00:00

Aiden

Roar Rookie


So much gold in there. I didn't realise that ChatGPT was a satire bot. I particularly liked this: "In rugby, there are 15 players versus 15, as distinct from rugby league, which has only 13 players-a-side. That is, unless you are required to play with 13 players when foul play results in the necessity for uncontested scrums, ...". I like this as the AI has blandly stumbled across the frequency with which players are marched these days. Data from 30 years ago would not have prompted the same comment. And then: "Once thought to be unwieldy and overly complex, this is an example of rugby’s law book now being simple and easy for everyone watching at home and at the ground, to follow." So the machine can do bad sarcasm as well.

2023-03-28T01:13:01+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Im not the biggest Caleb Clarke fan but I must say I had forgotten LF came home rather than wasnt selected during the EOYT. Love what Clark brings in attack of course but feel he lacks defensive nous and probably lacks rugby nous a bit. I prefer Jordan, Reece, Fianga'anuku and talea as wings as they have that smarts. There are others as well having good seasons led by Rayasi I guess.

2023-03-28T01:05:05+00:00

ClarkeG

Roar Guru


"that's a Foster thing." nahhh it's a selectorial thing about defensive naivety...and what Geoff said. I hear what you're thinking Jacko... what about Caleb. Sure you could say the same but he has to pick someone.

2023-03-28T00:53:40+00:00

CW Moss

Roar Rookie


Brilliant ChatG Parkesy.

2023-03-27T21:32:43+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Yep I'd forgotten that. Foster cops it again. :laughing:

2023-03-27T18:24:58+00:00

Wizz

Roar Rookie


Game was invented in NZ .Yes one would think that.

2023-03-27T16:11:12+00:00

Fox

Roar Guru


Jeff is that not the point I'm to make about current form and play? Thought that was obvious from the wording

2023-03-27T16:09:42+00:00

Fox

Roar Guru


No Jeff the problem is they both have them regularly at 10 and this not hgs ist in 4 games either.

2023-03-27T15:08:03+00:00

RobC

Roar Guru


chatgpt please tell me what you think about this artcile https://www.theroar.com.au/2023/03/27/the-wrap-ever-wondered-what-would-happen-if-this-column-was-written-by-chatgpt/ "The author of this article is a funny guy. Very much like Aussie teams Which is a bit of a joke"

2023-03-27T13:47:22+00:00

Android-angler Cartman-brah

Roar Rookie


Just look what happened in South Park. Butters, Cartman, Clyde, Stan and Mr Garrison benefited. Considering now to download the app

2023-03-27T11:13:56+00:00

mzilikazi

Roar Pro


"very disciplined". Just reading this right now, last of the night. Worth a look if you are interested Geoff : https://www.the42.ie/ireland-grand-slam-analysis-6027729-Mar2023/

2023-03-27T10:58:10+00:00

HiKa

Roar Rookie


Just musing on what would make for an upset going the other way over the Tasman. Brumbies would be very unhappy little ponies if they drop that fixture.

AUTHOR

2023-03-27T10:12:43+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


Good teams do dominate the ruck Mal. It’s noticeable that part of the Rebels’ improvement this year is due to more assertiveness at the breakdown. Not just that, but against the Reds, they were also very disciplined, not contesting rucks they new they couldn’t win, and not giving away silly penalties.

AUTHOR

2023-03-27T10:04:22+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


Excellent thanks Filstrup. Things will really get interesting when AI language models do manage to inject bias. Well, not so much interesting, as opposed to crazy. Media and trust in media will become a total circus.

AUTHOR

2023-03-27T09:55:38+00:00

Geoff Parkes

Expert


Don’t forget that Fainga’anuku pulled out of the end of year tour, which provided the opportunity for Telea. That was nothing to do with Foster.

2023-03-27T09:16:27+00:00

Carlin

Roar Rookie


Thanks Geoff. The paragraph on Suaalii is class. I do wonder if that $$$ would be better spent on developing more players who are already in the system.

2023-03-27T09:12:42+00:00

Busted Fullback

Roar Rookie


G’day Geoff. You had me right up to the point where the “computer” mentioned the Tahs and February Champs not once, which might have been acceptable, but twice, in a player’s CV. Gold! It was then that I realised that some missing punctuation needed to be included. ChatGPT or more correctly, “Chat? GPT (Geoff Parkes Talks)” Thanks Geoff, a good chuckle for a Monday.

2023-03-27T08:58:40+00:00

Monorchid

Roar Rookie


Excellent riposte KC. I retire.

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