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Doctors call for ban of tackling in Schools Rugby

13

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,372 ✭✭✭LorMal


    OldRio wrote: »
    Loony left wing agenda strikes again. Surely you could have mentioned saving the planet in that post. Gender equality and hugging trees missing as well.


    I hunt foxes regularly with the local hunt. Great fun on horseback. One should try it. Great fun.


    Many health care professionals would be happy to see an end of all contact sports. I see an agenda here.

    It's politickle currectness goin mad Joe, so it is.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,035 ✭✭✭Yeah_Right


    sydthebeat wrote: »
    thats not exactly correct

    they grade by age..... but if kids are above certain weight bands, they will move up to the next age grade

    http://playerwelfare.worldrugby.org/?subsection=64

    and this is there for ethnic reasons amongst others

    In Auckland and a lot of the North Island, it's slightly different. It's split by age AND weight. This is from U6 year olds and goes right up through high school. Obviously you need numbers to be able to do that.

    I know that the kids' safety and wellbeing is the number one concern. Proper technique is taught again and again. Anything slightly dangerous is penalised and the game stops so that the offender gets an explanation of what was wrong. Chest high tackles are considered high. I'm talking about the grades below high school here.

    Mouth guards are compulsory at all levels.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,372 ✭✭✭LorMal


    Yeah_Right wrote: »
    In Auckland and a lot of the North Island, it's slightly different. It's split by age AND weight. This is from U6 year olds and goes right up through high school. Obviously you need numbers to be able to do that.

    I know that the kids' safety and wellbeing is the number one concern. Proper technique is taught again and again. Anything slightly dangerous is penalised and the game stops so that the offender gets an explanation of what was wrong. Chest high tackles are considered high. I'm talking about the grades below high school here.

    Mouth guards are compulsory at all levels.

    This approach seems very sensible. The game is changing and getting more attritional - players are getting bigger. I dont believe player safety is the number one concern in World Rugby.
    There is a certain machismo in the game which ignores dangerous play - anything goes as long as it's within the rules. Mike Brown boots Conor Murray in the face multiple times but there is no citing.
    Discouraging big 'hits' and encouraging innovative passing rugby at underage level will improve the game and increase the skills levels while keeping kids safer.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,713 ✭✭✭✭thebaz


    The nanny staters won't be happy until our kids only play chess and playstation rugby and soccer for there recreation , that way no one gets hurt - then go moaning to the press that our children don't get eneogh exercise - life is full of ups and down and dangers - reduce serious risk absolutely but let our children live , there is eneogh other serious dangers out ther , such as hard drugs and binge drinking , without banning rugby as we know it


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    Ach I dunno. There's plenty of other sports they can play that provide the health and team building experience that rugby offers. But without the serious injury downside. Just because there are worse things they could be doing does not justify it. There are better things they could be doing - so why not do those ?
    Life's a risky business, but you dont have to go down a route that is now clearly recognised as particularly dangerous when you dont have to.
    (and hey, I played rugby and chess for my school).


  • Subscribers Posts: 41,831 ✭✭✭✭sydthebeat


    Ach I dunno. There's plenty of other sports they can play that provide the health and team building experience that rugby offers. But without the serious injury downside. Just because there are worse things they could be doing does not justify it. There are better things they could be doing - so why not do those ?
    Life's a risky business, but you dont have to go down a route that is now clearly recognised as particularly dangerous when you dont have to.
    (and hey, I played rugby and chess for my school).

    I have yet to see a definitive study that shows rugby at amateur club level is anymore riskier for catastrophic injuries as other popular team sports in ireland.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,902 ✭✭✭✭Realt Dearg Sec


    Ach I dunno. There's plenty of other sports they can play that provide the health and team building experience that rugby offers. But without the serious injury downside. Just because there are worse things they could be doing does not justify it. There are better things they could be doing - so why not do those ?
    Life's a risky business, but you dont have to go down a route that is now clearly recognised as particularly dangerous when you dont have to.
    (and hey, I played rugby and chess for my school).

    I think we would lose a lot as a society if everyone playing rugby and hurling were told to take up ultimate frisbee tomorrow. I think the loss is far more profound than those happy to pull the plug on these sports really appreciates, and I suspect that those who would advocate abandoning these sports have no appreciation for the lived importance of the games themselves and their relationship to our lives. (I say this as primarily a hurling person who played a bit of rugby as a child, but I understand the anxiety of rugby people and I'm sensible enough to know that if they get their way with ye, they'll be coming for our hurls next)


  • Registered Users Posts: 101 ✭✭Blackclaret


    A number of years ago had the good fortune to attend a series of talks by a touring antipodean efucationalist, topic ,teenage boys and education. In an attempt to understand the low performance of boys in academia relative to a simmilary aged cohort of teenage girls.
    A central plank of his thesis was that adolecent boys and young men require loads of physical activity and in particular physical contact sports , one of the most personally destructive episodes a boy can experience is physical intimidation from his peers either intended or incidental, these feelings if regular can completely overtake the subject and contribute to disfunction elsewhere. Through rugby they become more familiar/comfortable with same.
    Boys benefit hugely from the mix of combative team sport and respect/discipline in rugby and find it an emotional vent at a time in their lives when poor choices and desicions can effect their latter lives.
    Will try trackdown and post a few links to source


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,372 ✭✭✭LorMal


    A number of years ago had the good fortune to attend a series of talks by a touring antipodean efucationalist, topic ,teenage boys and education. In an attempt to understand the low performance of boys in academia relative to a simmilary aged cohort of teenage girls.
    A central plank of his thesis was that adolecent boys and young men require loads of physical activity and in particular physical contact sports , one of the most personally destructive episodes a boy can experience is physical intimidation from his peers either intended or incidental, these feelings if regular can completely overtake the subject and contribute to disfunction elsewhere. Through rugby they become more familiar/comfortable with same.
    Boys benefit hugely from the mix of combative team sport and respect/discipline in rugby and find it an emotional vent at a time in their lives when poor choices and desicions can effect their latter lives.
    Will try trackdown and post a few links to source

    Sounds interesting and makes sense - it is a brilliant game for kids. I don't think anyone is arguing to ban Rugby in schools - rather that the high impact stuff ('winning the collisions) may not be essential to the other excellent benefits of playing the game. It can still be combative, disciplined, physical, respectful etc...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,257 ✭✭✭Hagz


    People are aware that these 'doctors' aren't actually doctors right? I mean, out of the 72 signatures, you could count the actual medical professionals on one hand.

    The majority of these 'doctors' are just people with a P.H.D in sociology etc. They're not actually doctors or medical experts.


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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Hagz wrote: »
    People are aware that these 'doctors' aren't actually doctors right? I mean, out of the 72 signatures, you could count the actual medical professionals on one hand.

    The majority of these 'doctors' are just people with a P.H.D in sociology etc. They're not actually doctors or medical experts.

    Easy to know they have PHD's because they keep telling you.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 108 ✭✭sjwpjw


    The choke tackle is a metaphor for trying to choke the release of the ball, not about choking a person.
    A choke tackle is when a player is prevented from going to ground with the ball to form a ruck, at which time the tackler must release the player and the player can feed the ball back.
    If a choke tackle is successful the ref will blow the whistle after it becomes obvious that the player can't get to ground or pass the ball back and then the tackler's team wins the put in to the resulting scrum.

    If you saw someone actually being choked around the neck then that would warrant at least a yellow card.

    Thanks JiJ

    I know what a 'choke tackle' is ok but I can see that my message maybe looked like I didn't. I have seen people being choked a fair bit with this sort of tackle. I think I remember someone passing out within the last two seasons because of one in an Ulster Game. I don't like the idea of it in rugby terms either. Killing the ball to get a scrum which takes loads more time...

    I would be interested to know if anyone can state any good reason why the tackle line should not be lowered from the neck down to say below the ribcage. I cannot understand why it is worth the risk of serious head contact just to be able to see the 'biog smash' on someone's chest with or without the wrap. The players are bigger and heavier and clearly on average hit harder and it maybe the neck tackle line is out of date.

    Cheers


  • Registered Users Posts: 101 ✭✭Blackclaret


    sjwpjw wrote: »
    Thanks JiJ

    I know what a 'choke tackle' is ok but I can see that my message maybe looked like I didn't. I have seen people being choked a fair bit with this sort of tackle. I think I remember someone passing out within the last two seasons because of one in an Ulster Game. I don't like the idea of it in rugby terms either. Killing the ball to get a scrum which takes loads more time...

    I would be interested to know if anyone can state any good reason why the tackle line should not be lowered from the neck down to say below the ribcage. I cannot understand why it is worth the risk of serious head contact just to be able to see the 'biog smash' on someone's chest with or without the wrap. The players are bigger and heavier and clearly on average hit harder and it maybe the neck tackle line is out of date.

    Cheers

    In South African youths rugby tackle line is solar plexis, also they play shoeless till U13 or so. It has proved to be very successful .


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 108 ✭✭sjwpjw


    In South African youths rugby tackle line is solar plexis, also they play shoeless till U13 or so. It has proved to be very successful .

    That sounds like a great idea to me.

    Not sure what the shoeless part is about though!


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,147 ✭✭✭JPNelsforearm


    sjwpjw wrote: »
    Thanks JiJ

    I know what a 'choke tackle' is ok but I can see that my message maybe looked like I didn't. I have seen people being choked a fair bit with this sort of tackle. I think I remember someone passing out within the last two seasons because of one in an Ulster Game. I don't like the idea of it in rugby terms either. Killing the ball to get a scrum which takes loads more time...

    I would be interested to know if anyone can state any good reason why the tackle line should not be lowered from the neck down to say below the ribcage. I cannot understand why it is worth the risk of serious head contact just to be able to see the 'biog smash' on someone's chest with or without the wrap. The players are bigger and heavier and clearly on average hit harder and it maybe the neck tackle line is out of date.

    Cheers

    You are still at the same levels of risk, hit someones hip with the side of your head and its lights out.
    Also, its a contact sport, concussions, blows to the head are inevitable. Here are three different situations that even by lowering the "contact area", you could not prevent. One due to the nature of the game, another with a defensive player not anticipating the attacker lowering his center of gravity, another an attacking player running straight over the defensive player


    this has nothing to do with tackling, rucking etc, its just bad luck.




    Eg look at this, Collins is low to start and Charvis bows down into the hit and gets knocked out, you cannot remove this from the game without removing tackling.


    Then you arent even talking about what players with the ball can do





    You cannot stop this without fundamentally changing the game.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,967 ✭✭✭✭The Lost Sheep


    You are talking about replacing rugby with a completely inferior mock version of it, "for safety". I am saying you are better off playing a proper sport eg GAA, football, tennis etc and /or going to the gym, then you are playing tag rugby, nothing knee jerk about it. I would 100% advise someone anyone to hit the gym over playing tag rugby.
    I say that as someone who has played rugby since under 13's, through school and uni, now club(on occasion) as a 26 year old. I played GAA and football as a kid from about 5ish until I was 14, if someone said when I joined rugby at 12(my parents choice to wait until I was 12) that I'd have to play tag until I am 18, I wouldnt have joined.
    It isn't a completely mock version of it. Dismissing tag as not a proper sport is nonsense.
    Completely false, you dont go in for a hit with your arms outstretched, the technique for ripping the tag, angles, bodyshape etc you take are totally different then going in to hit someone.

    Also, you dont tackle someon at the hips, that is a surfire way to get boshed or knocked out if the person swings their hip into your head, the hip is probably the hardest spot on the torso lol
    The idea of going for tags and aiming at hips and following the hips helps with tackle tech. It helps with training people to pass out of contact rather than during contact. Its designed to take ball carrier and tackler out of game just like full contact.
    Tag rugby isnt rugby, you might as well suggest any number of sports, I dont know why its even a discussion that kids who dont exercise, should play tag rugby as opposed to rugby. Its bizarre. No kid is "thrown into full contact rugby", no adult is thrown into full contact rugby, it would be a complete waste of time and weaken the team as a whole in addition to turning of said person from the sport.

    I dont get your point, why replace rugby with tag rugby? why not replace it with tennis? Where does tag come into this at all? Because they have the same ball?

    There is nothing wrong with going to the gym as a kid. My younger brother does gymnastics and the coach(Eastern Euro) has two weights sessions/Calisthenics with them a week on top of their training. He's 11 and a half.

    your attitude and aversion to weightlifting is part of the problem. Helen Lovejoyism.
    Going "tag rugby isn't rugby" adds nothing to your argument. A huge amount of kids in Ireland are thrown into full contact rugby considering there is no alternatives. Tag has many benefits and it can be used(and is) as a stepping stone to full contact so I don't see why it should be discounted/discouraged to the extent that you're saying...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    How do you propose stopping it.

    I wasnt. But I am sure there is a way. The target is to make it an unattractive ploy for the team without the ball.

    I feel refs are often too quick to call it too - if the group does not move then it isnt a maul, yet refs seem to call maul when the ball holder is held up by the opposition even if they arent going anywhere.

    Maybe ruling that a maul can be formed only if the ball carrier and a team mate are moving towards the opposition goal line, i.e. the maul is an offensive weapon only for the team in possession. If they are going backward its not a maul so they can collapse and form a ruck. So winning a scrum input for winning a maul is only possible if the opposition with the ball try to maul you - if you dont have the ball, you cannot create a maul.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 108 ✭✭sjwpjw


    You are still at the same levels of risk, hit someones hip with the side of your head and its lights out.
    Also, its a contact sport, concussions, blows to the head are inevitable. Here are three different situations that even by lowering the "contact area", you could not prevent. One due to the nature of the game, another with a defensive player not anticipating the attacker lowering his center of gravity, another an attacking player running straight over the defensive player


    this has nothing to do with tackling, rucking etc, its just bad luck.




    Eg look at this, Collins is low to start and Charvis bows down into the hit and gets knocked out, you cannot remove this from the game without removing tackling.


    Then you arent even talking about what players with the ball can do





    You cannot stop this without fundamentally changing the game.

    Thanks for the reply.

    I agree that the risk of head injury cannot be prevented completely by lowering the tackle line. However would you not agree that it would reduce the risks considerably. There are many horrible videos of people getting smashed high...

    Are we not duty bound to try and reduce risks wherever possible whilst retaining the fundamentals of the sport? People can still tackle and who knows, we might even see a few more offloads perish the thought...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 108 ✭✭sjwpjw


    http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/opinion/77423260/super-rugby-sizzles-while-six-nations-fizzles

    I would argue that lowering the tackle line would reduce (not eliminate note) risk whilst encouraging more passing/offloading out of the tackle.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    sjwpjw wrote: »
    Thanks for the reply.

    I agree that the risk of head injury cannot be prevented completely by lowering the tackle line. However would you not agree that it would reduce the risks considerably. There are many horrible videos of people getting smashed high...

    Are we not duty bound to try and reduce risks wherever possible whilst retaining the fundamentals of the sport? People can still tackle and who knows, we might even see a few more offloads perish the thought...

    The letter refers to tackling in general, and not just protection from head injuries, although that has been a high profile topic in rugby for the last few years (even 10 years ago, I dont think we considered it an issue particularly - two weeks off (damn it!) and right as rain after that).
    They arent speaking about tinkering with the details - but banning collisions and contact. Much as I have, and continue to, enjoy the game, I think they are probably right.
    Yet hard to see the game exist without it. Which suggets maybe we are better without the game.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 108 ✭✭sjwpjw


    The letter refers to tackling in general, and not just protection from head injuries, although that has been a high profile topic in rugby for the last few years (even 10 years ago, I dont think we considered it an issue particularly - two weeks off (damn it!) and right as rain after that).
    They arent speaking about tinkering with the details - but banning collisions and contact. Much as I have, and continue to, enjoy the game, I think they are probably right.
    Yet hard to see the game exist without it. Which suggets maybe we are better without the game.

    It would be sad to see the demise of the game. I would much rather try to improve safety in the ways suggested before conceding defeat. I don't see what there is to lose by reducing risk by lowering the tackle line and possibly improving the excitement and appeal by increasing the opportunities to offload than the constant ruck ruck ruck we see now...

    Years ago when I played the object in the tackle was to bring the man to the ground. Nowadays not so much...


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,147 ✭✭✭JPNelsforearm


    sjwpjw wrote: »
    http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/opinion/77423260/super-rugby-sizzles-while-six-nations-fizzles

    I would argue that lowering the tackle line would reduce (not eliminate note) risk whilst encouraging more passing/offloading out of the tackle.

    But if you know as the ball carrier that the player can not tackle above X height, which means he has to constantly adopt a set body position you have a much greater advantage in terms of your own body position and the speed at which you can change direction and/or run over your opponent. Imo it puts defenders at a massive disadvantage.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,147 ✭✭✭JPNelsforearm


    It isn't a completely mock version of it. Dismissing tag as not a proper sport is nonsense.

    The idea of going for tags and aiming at hips and following the hips helps with tackle tech. It helps with training people to pass out of contact rather than during contact. Its designed to take ball carrier and tackler out of game just like full contact.

    Going "tag rugby isn't rugby" adds nothing to your argument. A huge amount of kids in Ireland are thrown into full contact rugby considering there is no alternatives. Tag has many benefits and it can be used(and is) as a stepping stone to full contact so I don't see why it should be discounted/discouraged to the extent that you're saying...

    Play tip in its many variations, fiji touch, league rules, etc etc, as a player I find tag to be the greatest waste of time, its completely artificial. It bears no resemblane in the way you play real rugby, touch rugby at least encourages proper defensive line, proper backline attack etc, tag doesnt.

    I completely disagree that it in any way aids tackling, if anything it makes people more likely to use their hands and get into bad habits/body positions, its an alien action to perform on a ball carrier. lining someone up to hit them is completely different to lining someone up to rob a tag, just look at the body positions in both actions.

    If anyone, kid or adult, is thrown into full contact rugby without numerous training sessions teaching proper tech, that coach should be fired.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 108 ✭✭sjwpjw


    But if you know as the ball carrier that the player can not tackle above X height, which means he has to constantly adopt a set body position you have a much greater advantage in terms of your own body position and the speed at which you can change direction and/or run over your opponent. Imo it puts defenders at a massive disadvantage.

    If it helps reduce risk that would be fine. So, if we accept what you say the attacking team might have an advantage - great. As long as the same rules apply to both teams then both will have this advantage so there is nothing unfair but it might be safer. We might even see more tries instead of so many penalties. Not the main reason (being player safety) but a bonus.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,951 ✭✭✭frostyjacks


    This sounded like an April fool's story, but sadly no, people really are advocating this silly idea.

    Some of the 'experts' who signed the letter are sociologists, gay rights campaigners and other assorted loony lefties. They'll do more harm than good if they have their way.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3474062/What-rugby-balls-Experts-demanding-ban-tackles-18s-rugby-reveal-motley-scrum-lefties-gender-obsessives-gay-campaigners-worryingly-insidious-agenda.html


    Mod: Do not post this rubbish again. Debate the topic, not the politics or sexuality of people involved.

    I made no mention of the sexuality of people involved. I pointed out, as have others, that many of the signatories of this letter have no background in either medical science or rugby. That is quite relevant to the topic.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 157 ✭✭jeamimus


    sfbdqc wrote: »
    If some doctors had there way, contact sports would be banned.


    If some people had their way, everything would be banned, including doing nothing because everything else was banned...

    I dont believe its doctors in general behind this, its the risk avoidance industry, which is riding high at the moment. Anything with a risk is bad... One night recently, on the BBC news, all five items consisted of 'scientists warn' and 'doctors warn' type of stories. Most were scare stories and several had 'charities' or NGOs pushing them.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    Why would you believe that? In this case the letter to the relevant public officials is written by medical people. Not 'the risk avoidance industry'.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,147 ✭✭✭JPNelsforearm


    Why would you believe that? In this case the letter to the relevant public officials is written by medical people. Not 'the risk avoidance industry'.
    eh, not quite
    "The list of signatories includes two sociologists whose academic subjects are sexuality and sport.
    Another specialises in sport and race, still another studies homophobia, two concentrate on children's rights, and there's an expert in environmental pollution as well as a specialist in masculinity.
    As for the letter's two main signatories, neither are experts in broken bones and spinal injuries. First, let us look at Allyson Pollock. Yes, she's a professor of public health research at Queen Mary University, London. But she specialises in attacking the Government's NHS reforms, particularly any suggestion of the private sector intervening in the hallowed NHS.
    To be fair to Professor Pollock, her son was injured on the rugby field — a shattered cheekbone — which must be distressing for any parent. But does that really give her the authority to try to emasculate the game for children across the country?
    Not according to Dr Ken Quarrie, Senior Scientist (Injury Prevention & Performance) for the New Zealand Rugby Union. Five years ago, when Professor Pollock called for 'high tackles and scrums to be banned in schools', he accused her of wilfully misrepresenting research about schoolboy injuries to prove her case.

    Professor Eric Anderson of the University of Winchester. He is an American sociologist and sexologist, 'specialising in adolescent men's gender and sexualities'.
    Until now, he's been most prominent for getting into a row with Alan Titchmarsh, the Chancellor of Winchester University, who wasn't happy with Professor Anderson's views on having sex with young men.
    Several of the signatories specialise in gender and sexuality issues in sport. Step forward, Dr Adi Adams, a sociologist at the University of Bath, and author of I Kiss Them Because I Love Them: The Emergence of Heterosexual Men Kissing in British Institutes Of Education.
    It's hard to avoid the conclusion that this letter is more about political views than medical science and children's safety. Rugby is a sport often associated with public schools, grammar schools and the middle classes — although try telling that to the rugby players of Wales, where the sport is a national religion.
    It's a sport associated, too, with old-fashioned male aggression — and salty jokes in the rugby club bar after too many pints of lager.
    All this is anathema to the gender neutral, politically correct views of so many Left-wing lecturers on today's college campuses.
    They're intent on the feminisation of sport despite the fact that competitive exercise is an extraordinarily effective way of diverting male testosterone away from violence and thugishness on the High Street.
    "


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,951 ✭✭✭✭2smiggy


    sjwpjw wrote: »
    http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/opinion/77423260/super-rugby-sizzles-while-six-nations-fizzles

    I would argue that lowering the tackle line would reduce (not eliminate note) risk whilst encouraging more passing/offloading out of the tackle.

    more tries does not always mean better entertainment, and i'd imagine the weather is a fair bit better over there at the moment


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,967 ✭✭✭✭The Lost Sheep


    Play tip in its many variations, fiji touch, league rules, etc etc, as a player I find tag to be the greatest waste of time, its completely artificial. It bears no resemblane in the way you play real rugby, touch rugby at least encourages proper defensive line, proper backline attack etc, tag doesnt.

    I completely disagree that it in any way aids tackling, if anything it makes people more likely to use their hands and get into bad habits/body positions, its an alien action to perform on a ball carrier. lining someone up to hit them is completely different to lining someone up to rob a tag, just look at the body positions in both actions.

    If anyone, kid or adult, is thrown into full contact rugby without numerous training sessions teaching proper tech, that coach should be fired.
    Ive been coaching for few years now and tag has many benefits especially at lower grades and tag encourages proper defensive line, backline attack and it does aid tackling. It helps tackling through aiming for hips but instead of wrapping you simply pull the tag. Going for both tags at the one time is like going for a tackle.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,413 ✭✭✭✭Trojan


    Tag rugby is not rugby. It's a different sport with its own set of injury problems.

    It has a totally different set of rules that is mostly a small subset of one aspect of rugby union. No tackles, rucks, mauls, lineouts or kicking. It's closer to rugby league or even to basketball than rugby union.


  • Subscribers Posts: 41,831 ✭✭✭✭sydthebeat


    It helps tackling through aiming for hips but instead of wrapping you simply pull the tag. Going for both tags at the one time is like going for a tackle.

    it doesnt help in preparing for full contact tackling as it rewards a "reaching out" action (especially diving tags) and not the "lead foot in the hoop" which is vital for a driving tackle.

    Id go so far as to say it promotes bad tackling habits.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    eh, not quite



    Quote:
    "The list of signatories includes two sociologists whose academic subjects are sexuality and sport.
    Another specialises in sport and race, still another studies homophobia, two concentrate on children's rights, and there's an expert in environmental pollution as well as a specialist in masculinity.
    As for the letter's two main signatories, neither are experts in broken bones and spinal injuries. First, let us look at Allyson Pollock. Yes, she's a professor of public health research at Queen Mary University, London. But she specialises in attacking the Government's NHS reforms, particularly any suggestion of the private sector intervening in the hallowed NHS.
    To be fair to Professor Pollock, her son was injured on the rugby field — a shattered cheekbone — which must be distressing for any parent. But does that really give her the authority to try to emasculate the game for children across the country?
    Not according to Dr Ken Quarrie, Senior Scientist (Injury Prevention & Performance) for the New Zealand Rugby Union. Five years ago, when Professor Pollock called for 'high tackles and scrums to be banned in schools', he accused her of wilfully misrepresenting research about schoolboy injuries to prove her case.

    Professor Eric Anderson of the University of Winchester. He is an American sociologist and sexologist, 'specialising in adolescent men's gender and sexualities'.
    Until now, he's been most prominent for getting into a row with Alan Titchmarsh, the Chancellor of Winchester University, who wasn't happy with Professor Anderson's views on having sex with young men.
    Several of the signatories specialise in gender and sexuality issues in sport. Step forward, Dr Adi Adams, a sociologist at the University of Bath, and author of I Kiss Them Because I Love Them: The Emergence of Heterosexual Men Kissing in British Institutes Of Education.
    It's hard to avoid the conclusion that this letter is more about political views than medical science and children's safety. Rugby is a sport often associated with public schools, grammar schools and the middle classes — although try telling that to the rugby players of Wales, where the sport is a national religion.
    It's a sport associated, too, with old-fashioned male aggression — and salty jokes in the rugby club bar after too many pints of lager.
    All this is anathema to the gender neutral, politically correct views of so many Left-wing lecturers on today's college campuses.
    They're intent on the feminisation of sport despite the fact that competitive exercise is an extraordinarily effective way of diverting male testosterone away from violence and thugishness on the High Street.
    "



    The extend and selective nature of that blatant ad hominem would make it look like there really is little genuine case for rebuttal of the substance of the missive itself.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,147 ✭✭✭JPNelsforearm


    The extend and selective nature of that blatant ad hominem would make it look like there really is little genuine case for rebuttal of the substance of the missive itself.
    Why are proponents of pseudoscience involved in a campaign of a medical nature?


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Why are proponents of pseudoscience involved in a campaign of a medical nature?

    Trying to be relevant and attention seeking.

    Throw in some axe grinding and I'd imagine skewed perception of the participants.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,372 ✭✭✭LorMal


    Why are proponents of pseudoscience involved in a campaign of a medical nature?

    You seem determined to attack the man, not the ball (an apt analogy in this case).
    Doesn't matter who they are. They have a point - the game may be dangerous to younger kids whose bodies and brain tissue have not yet developed to cope with the type of collisions expected in rugby today.
    Or maybe not. But definitely worth considering. No sport is worth long term damage.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 1,951 ✭✭✭frostyjacks


    LorMal wrote: »
    You seem determined to attack the man, not the ball (an apt analogy in this case).
    Doesn't matter who they are. They have a point - the game may be dangerous to younger kids whose bodies and brain tissue have not yet developed to cope with the type of collisions expected in rugby today.
    Or maybe not. But definitely worth considering. No sport is worth long term damage.

    If they are citing medical grounds, then it does matter who they are. The science doesn't support their conclusions, as this doctor articulates in a debate.

    http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/mar/02/rugby-union-debate-tackling-banned-schools

    He is a medical professional, and the pro-ban debater is a professor of masculinity, Eric Anderson. He was one of the main signatories and if you read some of the stories about him you would take everything he says with huge buckets of salt.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,372 ✭✭✭LorMal


    You seem to be deliberately missing my point. I don't care if it was Fr Dougal's letter.
    Is there an argument for considering adapting rugby in schools to avoid serious injury?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    If they are citing medical grounds, then it does matter who they are. The science doesn't support their conclusions, as this doctor articulates in a debate.

    http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/mar/02/rugby-union-debate-tackling-banned-schools

    He is a medical professional, and the pro-ban debater is a professor of masculinity, Eric Anderson. He was one of the main signatories and if you read some of the stories about him you would take everything he says with huge buckets of salt.

    I find his arguments very weak - to the point of, if this is the best that can be done to counter the claims of the 70, then it looks like the 70 have a very strong case.

    The 'No' doctor arguments can be summarised as :
    - significant work has been done to improve player safety : that does not say they have reached a safe level
    - should you ban all sports if there is a risk of death or injury : clearly no, but that does not mean you should not ban rugby if its risks are high. On the contrary, if there are safer sports, then the case to ban it is even stronger, since you can retain the benefits of sport by playing a safer one
    - it develops confidence in learning, confidence, discipline, self esteem and exercise : this is relevant to team sport and not exclusive to rugby
    - 'I' and other parents are happy for our children to play it : thats about as weak and removed from science an argument as you can get.
    - one of the signatories used hyperbole on a radio show debate with me : come on now....
    - sport is good : again, not in dispute. The point is for rugby the risks out weigh the good, and there are lots of alternative sports, without the collission risk, that bring benefits of fun, exercise, development, team building, discipline, etc,
    - we are working on treating concussion : so there are issues, as yet unsolved

    Very weak isnt it ?


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,147 ✭✭✭JPNelsforearm


    LorMal wrote: »
    You seem determined to attack the man, not the ball (an apt analogy in this case).
    Doesn't matter who they are. They have a point - the game may be dangerous to younger kids whose bodies and brain tissue have not yet developed to cope with the type of collisions expected in rugby today.
    Or maybe not. But definitely worth considering. No sport is worth long term damage.

    I have no doubt that repeated heavy impacts from a young age can have detrimental effects on ones cognitive ability. Im not decrying medical professionals who are only looking out for people . Im not decrying education on the potential dangers of high impact sports from a young age, Im not decrying campaigns on the dangers of concussion etc etc

    I do, however, have a massive problem with pseudoscientists with an obvious bias, and possible loathing of of a game like rugby and the people who play(or rather, the people who they perceive to play rugby) sticking their oar in with calls for a ban on the sport.

    If you cant see a problem with a campaign to ban rugby that numbers sociologists and gender studies folk, who see problems with masculinity and traditional male pursuits, well, you are being deliberately ignorant. I wouldnt trust them to lace a pair of shoes, never mind lobby "in the name of safety", I would be inherently suspicious of those types of people using Helen Lovejoy tactics to ban something they dont like, or to suit an agenda.

    As for "no sport not being worth the damage", show me the studies performed on the hundreds of thousands, probably millions of men who have been playing rugby for the past twenty years. The data does not support the calls for an outright ban.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,372 ✭✭✭LorMal


    I have no doubt that repeated heavy impacts from a young age can have detrimental effects on ones cognitive ability. Im not decrying medical professionals who are only looking out for people . Im not decrying education on the potential dangers of high impact sports from a young age, Im not decrying campaigns on the dangers of concussion etc etc

    I do, however, have a massive problem with pseudoscientists with an obvious bias, and possible loathing of of a game like rugby and the people who play(or rather, the people who they perceive to play rugby) sticking their oar in with calls for a ban on the sport.

    If you cant see a problem with a campaign to ban rugby that numbers sociologists and gender studies folk, who see problems with masculinity and traditional male pursuits, well, you are being deliberately ignorant. I wouldnt trust them to lace a pair of shoes, never mind lobby "in the name of safety", I would be inherently suspicious of those types of people using Helen Lovejoy tactics to ban something they dont like, or to suit an agenda.

    As for "no sport not being worth the damage", show me the studies performed on the hundreds of thousands, probably millions of men who have been playing rugby for the past twenty years. The data does not support the calls for an outright ban.

    Again you are deriding the person, not the point.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    LorMal wrote: »
    Again you are deriding the person, not the point.

    I see what you are getting at, but at the end of the day - this thread is about that specific article. Furthermore it's a distinctly medical issue so I'm not sure what there is to discuss unless there happens to be experts on here that are willing to get into it.

    The contents of the article merit discussion sure. But the authors of the article are probably not best placed to be on either side of that discussion, nor for that point am I.

    Anything and everything else is armchair speculation.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,296 ✭✭✭FortySeven


    My uncle, who is a doctor. Played rugby throughout his childhood and into his adult years. He eventually had to stop playing when he suffered a catastrophic back injury while bending over to pick up a plantpot in his greenhouse. I say we ban gardening. Terrible, dangerous pursuit!

    His son plays rugby, he is also now a doctor.

    Both of these highly qualified individuals are much more concerned about the effects of refined sugars than cuts and scrapes while playing sports.

    We can heal most collision injuries fairly easily. There will always be those exceptions but if we were to ban a sport because of the few then we should also ban driving.

    Diabetes, obesity and food related behavioral disorders are not so easy to deal with and these pontificating PHDs should perhaps grasp the nettle in front of them instead of seeking out a subject too small to mount a proper defence. I'm sick to death of these seemingly daily assaults on our way of life from people who have based their lives around gender studies. Absolute waste of learning, ridiculous, meaningless tripe used to justify an attempted temporal castration on the male species.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    FortySeven wrote: »
    My uncle, who is a doctor. Played rugby throughout his childhood and into his adult years. He eventually had to stop playing when he suffered a catastrophic back injury while bending over to pick up a plantpot in his greenhouse. I say we ban gardening. Terrible, dangerous pursuit!

    His son plays rugby, he is also now a doctor.

    Both of these highly qualified individuals are much more concerned about the effects of refined sugars than cuts and scrapes while playing sports.

    We can heal most collision injuries fairly easily. There will always be those exceptions but if we were to ban a sport because of the few then we should also ban driving.

    Diabetes, obesity and food related behavioral disorders are not so easy to deal with and these pontificating PHDs should perhaps grasp the nettle in front of them instead of seeking out a subject too small to mount a proper defence. I'm sick to death of these seemingly daily assaults on our way of life from people who have based their lives around gender studies. Absolute waste of learning, ridiculous, meaningless tripe used to justify an attempted temporal castration on the male species.

    Whataboutery, and personal attacks.

    This letter certainly seems to be attracting a lot of very weak and desparate sounding attack.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,536 ✭✭✭former total


    I'm at a loss as to why a medical doctor's opinion should carry more weight than anyone else.

    The only medical questions are:
    - is it good for the health of children to get exercise?
    - does rugby cause injuries?
    and we don't really need a doctor to answer either of those.

    After that, you're into sociology and psychology.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,440 ✭✭✭The Rape of Lucretia


    The only medical questions are:
    - is it good for the health of children to get exercise?
    - does rugby cause injuries?
    and we don't really need a doctor to answer either of those.

    Yes.
    No.

    Which makes it a slam dunk for, the banning of rugby for kids.


    But I dont think its quite so simple. But certainly worth a serious examination.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,147 ✭✭✭JPNelsforearm


    LorMal wrote: »
    Again you are deriding the person, not the point.
    Because he is a quack relying on partial research, if he was an actual medical professional I would say "you are a medical professional relying on incomplete research due to misplaced concern", come back with a heap of research papers backing up your letter.

    In his case I am saying he is a quack relying on incomplete research to further a political agenda, he is actually dangerous, damn right I'll play the man before I play the ball when his motives are so blatant.

    Why should you not call out a snake in the grass, because he's using kids health as a protection for his own agenda? Nonsense.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,978 ✭✭✭✭irishbucsfan


    Whataboutery, and personal attacks.

    This letter certainly seems to be attracting a lot of very weak and desparate sounding attack.

    If you try to use the letters after your name to further an argument then you can't cry when they are criticised or called into question.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,257 ✭✭✭Hagz


    Reading over the last few pages, tag rugby certainly seems to be getting a bad rap. Personally I think it can be of real benefit to young players. Of course it offers little in the way of defence, but it's a great platform to develop passing, footwork and cardio. I would absolutely encourage any young school or club player to try it out.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,372 ✭✭✭LorMal


    Because he is a quack relying on partial research, if he was an actual medical professional I would say "you are a medical professional relying on incomplete research due to misplaced concern", come back with a heap of research papers backing up your letter.

    In his case I am saying he is a quack relying on incomplete research to further a political agenda, he is actually dangerous, damn right I'll play the man before I play the ball when his motives are so blatant.

    Why should you not call out a snake in the grass, because he's using kids health as a protection for his own agenda? Nonsense.

    Yep, same again.


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