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Of
late much has been heard of the Northern
Union game of football and its supposed
advantages over the Rugby Union game. In
some quarters, particularly in those which
hotly support the New Zealand professional
team, a great deal of stress is laid on
the greater fastness of the Northern system.
In
an article headed "The Northern Union
Game: Is it Football?" in "Amateur
Sport Illustrated," E.H.D. Sewell effectively
dispels this illusion.
Mr
Sewell has well earned a wide reputation
in many branches of amateur athletics, and
particularly so in boxing, football, and
cricket; therefore "knows what he is talking
about." He says : -
"When
I was at Bedford a very old friend of mine
was always trying to pull my leg on the
subject of Rugby football, which, he said,
was not football at all, but handball, and
an exceedingly dangerous, not to say vicious,
form of handball at that, as compared with
Association football.
It
is only by adopting this criterion, which
led him to regard the Rugby game as inferior
to the Association, because it was hand,
and not football, that I am able to, answer
the question asked at the head of this paper
in the affirmative.
The Northern Union game is football in that
sense only. For the rest, it is neither
fish, flesh, fowl, nor even a passable bloater.
The
whole game, as a game, is spoilt by the
one rule which makes it imperative that
in order to find touch the ball must be
made to pitch in the field of play and bounce
into touch; otherwise a scrum must be formed
at the spot whence it was kicked.
One can almost overlook the "play the ball"
rule, and that which insists upon half-backs
remaining behind the last row of the scrum,
but one cannot pass by the most idiotic
ordination ever passed by man for the utter
ruination of a capital sport.
It is a popular belief that the Northern
Union game is a much faster game - ergo,
more attractive to the man who pays - than
the true and only Rugby game. Like many
popular beliefs, this is wrong.
It
was a popular belief that C. B. Fry and
Haywood cannot bat on wet wickets. It may
be still, if so, it is on a par with the
belief that the N.U. game is much faster
than the R.U. game.
It
is possible that two sets of good players
- One cannot call XIII's teams - might make
it very fast if they had unusual amount
of luck in not finding touch and yet beating
opposing backs, while kicking; but an ordinary
game is probably, on the whole, slower than
an ordinary R.U. game.
Let
us consider this bounce into touch rule
for a space. The man is not yet born who,
for a kick of any length, can so "manipulate"
the ball "with his foot" as to make it bounce
into touch. That much is certain. In all
long touch kicks there is an element, of
luck - a puff of wind, a lucky or unlucky
bounce on pitching, may make ten yards or
more difference.
But
the fluke has never reigned so supreme as
it does in the Northern Union football where
practically the whole art of establishing
position by touch-finding is negated - or
depends upon fumbling of the opposition
back division.
As
an example of a sequence of incidents in
a N.U. game, the following will suffice.
The
full-back catches a punt meant for a bounce
into touch, runs as far up the field as
possible, kicks almost straight up the field
and follows up; a three-quarter dropping
back. Opposing right wing three-quarter
anticipates the punt, catches and returns
it to mid-field, where opposing centre "marks"
out of range of goal.
He
may land the ball directly into touch, and
tries to do so, but kicks badly and a wing
three-quarter, with forwards charging down
on him, catches and punts up field again,
and follows up just too late to opponent
full-back - and so on, da capo.
Meanwhile
the forwards have watched the battle of
the hoofs, and have run about ten yards
all told. Indeed, once or twice during a
match I saw, there was ample time for the
two scrums to have a cup of afternoon tea
what time their respective backs were "bouncing"
each other, or trying to. But for the most
part the two sets of forwards were busily
engaged "unintentionally obstructing!"
the follows-up with elbow and foot!
At
the end of one of these punting displays
it generally happens that the ball drops
in the middle of a scattered crowd of forwards.
Then the fun begins! The scene resembles
a bun-scramble at a school treat very closely,
and nothing but the whistle of the teacher
- I mean, referee - puts an end to the melee.
Of
football there is none whatever at this
stage. There is just a writhing mass of
humanity, some of it on the ball, some of
it in juxtaposition, some rather more remote,
and the rest as far off as you please.
I
have a very vivid recollection of a New
Zealander lying on his stomach with one
Northern Unionist sideways across his back,
and another kneeling near his head; which
was being pressed, nose downwards of course,
into Mother Earth. The whereabouts of the
ball had long since lost all interest for
the sportsmen, who outnumbered the foe by
two to one. That, they knew, would come
back when the backs had finished bouncing.
Why worry?
Then
there is the "play the ball" rule, which
provides that a player Iying on the ground
in possession of the ball must be allowed
to get up and play it.
One
sees humorous incidents during any game,
but anything more comic than a ring of perspiring
players stooping with their fingers stretched
wide apart, like fish-hawks about to strike,
round a prone performer hugging the ball
and looking out of every corner of his eyes
and the back of his ears as it were, for
some loophole through which he may dart
the instant he has decided to "play the
ball" I never did see.
The
player of the ball (as I have indicated)
is supposed to be allowed to get up and
play it; but the margin between his sinful
frame and the turf was never very appreciable
before the fish-hawks aforesaid got to their
fell work, and the ball didn't get all the
playing, I can promise you!
The
"half behind the back row of the scrum"
rule is not a bad rule, and, considering
the free start which an opposing half thus
gets when the ball comes to him, scoring
ought, to the last day of the Northern Union,
be very high. In the true Rugby Union game
it would be if there were a similar law.
When
in Northern Union land Brown scores a try
and Jones kicks a goal, the score reads
one goal one try, five points, instead of
the far more simple one goal, five points.
This difference seems to have been framed
rather from a desire to be different than
for any other reason.
By
parity of reasoning there is just about
that much justification for the other differences
between the two sets of rules which have
only reduced a grand game, if properly played,
to a miserable spectacle.
One
feels heartily sorry for those who are doomed
to waste athletic ability upon a pastime
the rules governing which so handicap them."
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