Gulf News

Six Nations braced for new guidelines

England hooker working to change his technique ahead of next month event

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England hooker Dylan Hartley has been working to change his tackle technique as he returns next month to a game where new guidelines to cut out high tackles are expected to produce a slew of yellow cards in the Six Nations.

Hartley was sent off and banned for six weeks for a high, swinging arm tackle in a club game in December and since then World Rugby has introduced guidelines that heavily penalise a tackler for contact above the shoulders, however unintentio­nal.

Having spent more than a year of his career serving suspension­s, Hartley is more aware than most that players need to adapt quickly on the internatio­nal stage.

“We’re seeing a lot more cards and penalties in club games so we just have to adapt as players,” Hartley told reporters at the Six Nations launch on Wednesday when he was also confirmed as captain for England’s opener against France on Feb. 4.

“I’ve been working hard on my much-documented tackle technique. For me it’s a question of bringing my arms tighter to my body, a few technical things.” England coach Eddie Jones was part of the working group behind the new directive, but stressed that nothing fundamenta­l had changed.

“It’s always been illegal to attack the head but now if you touch the head it’s a penalty,” said the Australian, who looked as if he had been on the end of a high hit himself, sporting a huge black eye that he said came from a bathroom fall.

“It (the guidelines) will take some getting used to but it’s English Rugby Union bosses say the sport’s most recent anti-doping statistics prove the game is clean after only four positive tests were found last season.

In total 1,001 tests were taken, which represents a significan­t rise in the number of blood and urine samples at all levels of the game — 282 more than in 2014-15 and almost double the figure from 2013-14.

Most of this increase came at the elite end of the game — England’s internatio­nal players were tested 360 times last term, up from 135 a season before — because of the Rugby World Cup in 2015 and build-up to last year’s Olympic Games. like when you put a new speed camera in and thousands of people are caught, but a year later the fines have decreased.

“The next three months will probably see a proliferat­ion of cards until players learn to drive safely.

“We don’t want parents to be worried about the safety of their kids and this is good for the future of the game.”

That safety concern was behind World Rugby’s initiative and the sport’s governing body has been pleased with how the change has been adopted at all levels of the game. “It’s early days but I think everyone recognises this is a positive and necessary move,” spokesman Dominic Rumbles said.

“These changes have been entirely founded on research on over 600 head injury incidents in over 1,500 matches and that data says that the tackle is responsibl­e for 76 per cent of head injuries.”

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