Herald on Sunday

NRL: Simply best hype but the jury is out on new rule

- Paul.lewis@nzme.co.nz

It was fortunate the Parramatta Eels-Brisbane Broncos NRL game had an entertaini­ng first half because, boy, did the Aussies and Fox Sports whip up the hype.

All that was missing in this, the first NRL game for 67 days, was a billboard proclaimin­g The Second Coming. Someone in Fox Sports had probably dreamed that up (they would say “conceptual­ise”) before the public relations department checked the term, realising it might offend some to refer to a game of league in the same vein as the return of the Messiah.

In the studio before the game, superlativ­es flew round the room and stuck on the walls. Host Yvonne Sampson (“Vonny” to the “boys” — former players Cooper Cronk, Michael Ennis and Gorden Tallis) whooped it up with a greeting to this sporting “world first” and a barely comprehens­ible intro.

“All of the challenges and disbelief have made no difference to the relentless way rugby league has got this premiershi­p back in business,” Sampson honked. The phrase “the greatest game of all” was prominent, with one billing of “the most elite sporting competitio­n on the planet”.

Righty-ho, then. Barely had we brushed all this spatter from our shirt fronts than they ran the little video package showcasing the skills, hits and drama of the NRL in days past. The best of these has always been Tina Turner and her Simply the Best (now 30 years old) and What You Get Is What You See videos, something the NRL has never come close to re-creating.

This one started with a voiceover telling us league is a simple game. It then soared into stratosphe­ric hype: “Imagine being able to fly without wings,” he swooned, “to be as brave as a wild bull — and as menacing.”

It was a relief to get to the match itself and the rather more measured tones of commentato­r Andrew Voss — and dead interestin­g watching the first NRL comeback game played in front of an empty stadium in Brisbane.

Here, you have to take your hat off to Fox. They filmed the game tightly, few wide or panned shots to the non-existent crowd — and it worked. But wait — who was that cheering and clapping? Ah, that’s the new invention, the Virtual Crowd Audio which, when you are watching the action and can’t see the crowd, seems appropriat­e.

There’s a way to go, though. Two of the biggest phony cheers of the night came when someone played the ball, one of the most common sights in league.

Clearly, VCA timing is as important as it is on the field.

You wonder, too, in these fan-less stadiums, whether the lack of a home crowd — baying at the ref — and the linesmen might be telling and change hometown advantage.

Coach Brad Arthur said after the match the Eels had been “quite comfortabl­e” travelling to the Broncos’ Suncorp Stadium.

They now have five games in a row at home but Arthur downplayed it, saying: “We are

You wonder how many other matches will have one-sided second halves when players run out of puff

comfortabl­e playing there but there is no 20,000 or 30,000 fans. Whatever team comes there to play [the Eels], I think they are going to be comfortabl­e there, too.”

The stats on home wins at season’s end will be interestin­g. So will those on the NRL’s new “six again” rule for offences at the playthe-ball, replacing penalties with quickfire running and passing for six more tackles. The game, particular­ly in the first half, was fast and furious with fewer penalties and the ball in play a long time.

Maybe the jury’s out on the new rule — designed to stop teams from slowing down play by deliberate­ly infringing, gaining time to reset their defensive line.

Upside: League has always been strong on defence and an attacking side with an extended time with the ball tires defenders.

Downside: League has always been strong on defence — it wins plenty of games. That’s become a problem for some; not enough entertainm­ent, too many lowscoring matches.

“Six again” could swing things too far the other way. Two of the Eels’ first three tries in their 34-6 win came after such rulings.

The Broncos, who suffered in terms of field position, possession and too many errors, also had three line dropouts (which also led to an extra set of six against them).

You wonder how many other matches will have one-sided second halves, as this one did — when players run out of puff after prolonged defence. Still, that could be fixed as teams learn not to infringe at the ruck.

The Cowboys also ran away from the Titans in the second half — although it was the Titans’ 14th straight defeat — while the back-toback premiers the Roosters beat the Rabbitohs 28-12, with the new rule not influencin­g the result.

It could, however, lead to a certain inevitabil­ity. You could see the Eels would score as they enjoyed their flood of possession and that’s a problem.

It’s like rugby’s yellow cards. You know, nine times out of 10, the opponents will score when a player is yellow-carded. If that same inevitabil­ity applies to the “six again” rule, much of the immediacy and spontaneit­y of a touchdown could be lost. It could become boring, predictabl­e.

There were other takeaways from this match. The Eels are genuine contenders and they have what the Warriors must long for — a big, settled and imposing pack. They could always do with some wild bulls who can fly without wings.

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Paul Lewis

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