The Guardian (USA)

Super League cuts number of head collisions after tackle height law change

- Exclusive by Aaron Bower

Super League has successful­ly reduced head collisions by a significan­t margin in the opening weeks of the new season after an overhaul of the sport’s tackle height laws.

The Rugby Football League approved a number of changes during the winter designed at better protecting players and minimising contact with the head, introducin­g stricter punishment­s for players who make head contact in a tackle. The changes were met by a backlash in the early weeks of the season, but early data seen by the Guardian has shown they are making a difference.

Since the governing body started collating tackle statistics in 2018, 13% in Super League included some form of contact with the head. In 2024, that has been reduced to 4.2%, essentiall­y meaning there are several hundred fewer tackles making contact with the head compared with this stage last year.

The number of players being diagnosed with concussion­s, however, has remained constant. That is in part due to a significan­t increase in the number of players wearing instrument­ed mouthguard­s, which help determine a player’s risk of a head injury and enable them to be removed from the action.

More than 75% of Super League players are wearing the guards this year, up from 15% last season. The expectatio­n is that concussion rates will decrease in the coming months, particular­ly when the sport lowers the legal limit for contact to below the armpit at profession­al level from next year.

At present, contact below the neck is deemed legal but the RFL hoped that by introducin­g stricter punishment­s for head contact this year player behaviour would change sufficient­ly. That would avoid a marked difference in the look of the sport when the changes are formally introduced.

The number of yellow cards has increased, but there has been a dramatic reduction in players charged for contact with the head since the beginning of the season, something the governing body attributes to a positive change in player behaviour. Sixteen players were charged after the opening round of Super League games; there were no charges last weekend.

The change in player behaviour is also shown by the number of penalties, which has stabilised to last year’s average. The opening round featured a record 90 penalties awarded but that has reduced to below 60 in recent weeks. Last year’s average for six fixtures was 58 penalties per round.

 ?? Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA ?? Wigan’s Luke Thompson is tackled by Castleford’s Elie el-Zakhem.
Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA Wigan’s Luke Thompson is tackled by Castleford’s Elie el-Zakhem.

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