Weekend Herald

More head knocks in tackle trial

Attempts to lower contact caused more concussion­s because players bent into tackles

- Charlie Morgan Telegraph Group Ltd

The Rugby Football Union has ended its trial on lowering tackle height after a preliminar­y study discovered that the new laws contribute­d to raising the likelihood of concussion­s.

Despite the regulation achieving the aim of reducing upright and high tackles, a study group found the relative risk of concussion had simultaneo­usly risen because of “unintended behaviours” and collisions where both tackler and carrier were bent at the waist.

The pool stage of the Championsh­ip Cup, contested by clubs from England’s second tier and comprising 36 matches over six rounds in November and December, was played with referees instructed to penalise tackles above the armpit line of ball-carriers.

However, club directors of rugby were informed this week that this law variation would not apply from the quarter-final stage, scheduled for next weekend.

Even though it was previously acknowledg­ed that pick-and-go situations and players running “off nine” — close to the breakdown after taking a pass from their halfback — should be treated with extra empathy by officials, the initiative achieved its aim of a lowered tackle height.

The study found a 24 per cent decrease in all tackles where contact was made above the armpit line and a 25 per cent decrease in tackles by an upright tackler on an upright ball-carrier.

Overall, there was a 41 per cent decrease in tackles making contact with the head or neck of a ball-carrier. However, in comparison with the Championsh­ip league competitio­n, there was an increase in the rate of concussive incidents.

“We need to analyse the data in more detail,” said RFU interim chief executive Nigel Melville.

“But our preliminar­y analysis has shown that all of these incidents occurred when a bent-at-the-waist tackler was attempting to tackle a bent-at-the-waist ball-carrier following a short pass from the scrum-half.

“This is an area that the trial was not specifical­ly looking to influence, as the primary focus was to reduce the risk of concussion where the ballcarrie­r and tackler were both upright. We will be analysing this particular situation in more detail.

“Overall, this has been an extremely valuable exercise. We’ve learnt a lot and tested an approach to reducing the risk of concussion in a real-life setting.

“We have shown that reducing the tackle height is achievable and we already have useful and detailed data from the first 36 matches in this 43-game cup competitio­n.”

Dean Ryan, RFU head of internatio­nal player developmen­t, said: “We knew the areas around the pick and go and pop-off nine were going to be difficult to referee. So, in one area that we said was going to be difficult to referee, and therefore we would apply current law, what we created was an unintended behaviour of somebody bending in a tackle in that situation.”

A steering group featured Ryan and RFU medical services director Simon Kemp, as well as analysts and representa­tives from the RFU’s refereeing and medical research department­s and World Rugby chief scientist Ross Tucker.

They examined these concussive incidents, considerin­g the possibilit­y of head-on-knee and head-on-hip contact, as well as head clashes

What we created was an unintended behaviour of somebody bending in a tackle in that situation.

RFU head of internatio­nal player developmen­t Dean Ryan on attempts to lower the tackle line below the armpits between tacklers on the same team.

They accounted for squad rotation and a varying standard of players and tracked potential trends that might result, such as the number of offloads, which did not change dramatical­ly.

Before the trial, in concussive incidents in Championsh­ip competitio­n where the tackle occurred above the armpit, 80 per cent — suffered by the tackler — occurred in upright tackles on upright carriers.

During the trial, only 13 per cent of concussion­s in tackles above the armpit line occurred in such collisions.

However, 63 per cent of the total number of concussion­s in tackles above the armpit line occurred when both players were bent at the waist — a different pattern of risk to those that had been previously identified by World Rugby’s research.

The study group will complete its final report and put it before World Rugby’s meeting in France in March.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Rugby bodies are endeavouri­ng to keep tackles low, like this one by Pumas back Emiliano Boffelli on All Blacks wing Nehe Milner-Skudder, to reduce concussion numbers.
Photo / Photosport Rugby bodies are endeavouri­ng to keep tackles low, like this one by Pumas back Emiliano Boffelli on All Blacks wing Nehe Milner-Skudder, to reduce concussion numbers.

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