SA Rugby magazine

South African rugby news, interviews, videos and more. Covering the Springboks, Bulls, Stormers, Sharks, Cheetahs and Lions, as well as schools and club rugby.

Primary Menu Search
  • Home
  • Match Centre
  • Vodacom URC
  • Videos
  • Cars
    • Cheap cars for sale
    • Used Cars For Sale
    • New Cars For Sale
    • Demo Cars For Sale
  • Deals
    • One Day Deals
    • Nationwide Deals
      • Deals in Cape Town
      • Deals in Johannesburg
      • Deals in Durban
      • Deals in Pretoria
      • Deals in Port Elizabeth
    • Accommodation Deals
    • Romantic Getaways
    • Food and Drink Deals
    • Experiences
    • Health and Wellness Deals
    • Beauty and Spa Deals
  • BLACKOUT RUGBY MANAGER
You are here: Home ∼ It’s not about rugby player safety

It’s not about rugby player safety

Leicester's Will Spencer was red-carded for this tackle Will Spencer
Published on December 21, 2018 | Leave a response

ZELIM NEL says the global campaign to make rugby ‘safer’ is driving another agenda.

San Francisco rugby player Mark Bingham died on 11 September 2001 trying to overwhelm the hijackers of Flight 93.

Measured against non-contact sports, rugby is not safe, and the only way to change that is to eliminate the contact elements from the game that make it rugby. For fans and players, a game where tickles replace tackles is unthinkable, but that’s exactly where the drive for safety is headed.

The agenda to ‘make rugby safe’ has got far less to do with player safety than it has with tumbling a cultural pillar that celebrates masculinity.

It’s the same reason the USA’s most popular game, American football (remember, the team sport we used to ridicule for arming its participants with too much protection?), is the target of a similar ‘safety’ campaign. Just like driving a big bakkie, eating meat and drinking beer, playing rugby is now wrong … because ‘safety’.

Following a tackle that led to the tragic death of Nicolas Chauvin, a Stade Français academy player, an editorial in French newspaper L’Equipe reportedly claimed that ‘rugby kills’.

This head-in-the-sand statement pays no heed to the simple gauge used by every human since the dawn of time to make daily decisions, namely probability. Many of the same folks demanding the game be made safer because ‘rugby kills’ would be outraged by the assertion that ‘sharks kill’, and yet almost 450 people (that we know of) have been killed by sharks in unprovoked attacks over the past 60 years, while there have been almost 3,000 reported attacks.

The probability of being eaten by a shark is extremely low and that’s why the World Surf League continues unabated. By participating in the sport, surfers are implicitly agreeing to the risk of being attacked by a shark.

The probability of being killed playing rugby is equally low, and that makes the global campaign to make the game safer somewhat suspicious. Rugby players should be inducted with a briefing of the risks, and every effort should be made to reduce those risks without altering the nature or balance of the contest.

Instead, World Rugby is being led by the nose in pursuit of ‘a safer game’, an objective that is conveniently open-ended and unquantified.

‘For anyone to say that rugby kills … when you go to the shop, you could step out on the street and a bus hits you. That’s the equivalent of what happened,’ Pau academy coach James Coughlan told RugbyPass in response to a call from Bernard Laporte, the unofficial boss of World Rugby, to lower the legal tackle height to the waistline.

‘It’s extremely sad … but if we get caught up with it and start changing rules and laws and making decisions based on what’s happened … sometimes it’s just an accident. I think if we lose sight of that it’s a slippery slope.’

ALSO READ: French propose major tackle law changes

Civilisation was built on the back of brave men like Bingham who risked (and lost) their lives building a wall that protects the timid and the weak from invaders.

Where will the brave men of tomorrow come from if they grow up in a sanitised world where everything sharp is covered in bubble-wrap?

Maybe that’s the plan.

– This column first appeared on AllOutRugby.com

Posted in Uncategorized Tagged high tackles, Tackling

Post by SA Rugby magazine

SA Rugby magazine

Check out Blackout Rugby Manager HERE!

← Previous Next →

Sevens’ party falls flat

World Rugby shouldn’t have messed with a winning sevens formula, writes SIMON...

Draining format clogs Blitzboks’ blockage

A protracted schedule took the wind out of South Africa's sails at...

England cut Eddie, Razor to stop the bleeding

England have made the rash decision to part ways with coach Eddie...

Rassie ref hom in die rooi

Rassie Erasmus is hardly the embarrassment that some are making him out...

Cut and paste Kurt-Lee for Kolbe

Kurt-Lee Arendse ticks all the right boxes to replace the injured Cheslin...

Rassie auditions for England job

Rassie Erasmus has made the most calculated of public job applications to...

Boks need to make mentality adjustment

The Springboks need to lose their underdog mentality, writes SIMNIKIWE XABANISA in...

Kolbe’s worth every penny

Cheslin Kolbe’s big-money move to Toulon should be welcomed as a massive...

‘Bok gameplan, when executed correctly, is hard to match’

The opportunity to play against the All Blacks is a career highlight...

Five key areas the Boks need to dominate for first victory

SA Rugby magazine highlights five crucial areas the Boks will need to...

Top six: Best and worst foreign imports

SARugbymag.co.za identifies six of the best and worst foreign players to play...

Column: When context is needed

As highlighted by the Argentina controversy, ‘cancel culture’ needs a spoonful of...

Dark cloud hangs over WP Rugby

The problems at Western Province Rugby are layered, and everyone involved needs...

From the mag: Foreign Favourites

As Vodacom Super Rugby turned 25 this year, JON CARDINELLI picks an...

Bulls rookies to watch

After a massive exodus of players the Vodacom Bulls will be eager...

Analysis: The new suffocate-and-strangle game

For the Boks to emerge as World Cup winners, they need to...

VIEW MORE
  • Bonus-point Bulls douse Dragons
  • Munster maul luckless Lions
  • Stormers sign off 2022 in style
  • Sharks carve Bulls on New Year’s Eve

Jacques Burger’s Perfect XV

    BKT United Rugby Championship, Scotstoun, Glasgow, Scotland 8/1/2023 Glasgow Warriors vs DHL Stormers Stormers' Damian Willemse Mandatory Credit ©INPHO/Craig Watson
  • Highlights: Heartbreak for Stormers in Glasgow thriller

###


COVID-19 Corona Virus
South African Resource Portal

African Insider
African Insider News

ABOUT

  • Contact us
  • Competitions
  • Videos
  • Player Features
  • Subscribe
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy Policy

TOURNAMENTS

    • Rugby Championship
    • Super Rugby
    • Currie Cup
    • Varsity Cup
    • Gold Cup
    • Schools
    • Six Nations
    • Champions Cup
    • World Cup
    • Challenge Cup

OPINION

  • Mallett on SuperSport
  • Cardinelli column
  • Lewis column
  • Xabanisa column
  • Borchardt column
  • Superbru

Primary Menu

  • Home
  • Match Centre
  • Vodacom URC
  • Videos
  • Cars
    • Cheap cars for sale
    • Used Cars For Sale
    • New Cars For Sale
    • Demo Cars For Sale
  • Deals
    • One Day Deals
    • Nationwide Deals
      • Deals in Cape Town
      • Deals in Johannesburg
      • Deals in Durban
      • Deals in Pretoria
      • Deals in Port Elizabeth
    • Accommodation Deals
    • Romantic Getaways
    • Food and Drink Deals
    • Experiences
    • Health and Wellness Deals
    • Beauty and Spa Deals
  • BLACKOUT RUGBY MANAGER