nzherald.co.nz

Malcolm Boyle: Hybrid rugby food for thought

5:30 AM Sunday Feb 3, 2013
Aussie league great Bob Fulton in onboard for the development of a new hybrid game.   Photo / Getty Images

Aussie league great Bob Fulton in onboard for the development of a new hybrid game. Photo / Getty Images

It's stating the bleeding obvious to say Australians love their sport. Any sport, anywhere, any time from two-up in a Balmain pub toilet on Anzac Day to gladiatorial set pieces in stadia.

It's not surprising therefore that there's always demand for more - and different - from action-hungry fans. Now speculation is mounting that a well-connected group with links to the top levels of rugby league is in the final development stages of a new hybrid game incorporating both rugby codes - including sevens.

The shape of the new game is still in its formative stages but, with past greats of Australian rugby league such as Bob Fulton on board, the final product has the potential to be spectacular.

My mail tells me the game will incorporate key parts of both codes. Some features are already leaking - such as replacing league's six- tackle rule with a basketball-style, 60-second 'shot clock' giving teams one minute to use the ball. The game will apparently also feature aspects of rugby and league in which using the ball quickly will be paramount.

The emphasis will be on speed and excitement. A game featuring schoolboys has been played in Australia to an audience of 6000 and was extremely well received.

While Australian rugby personalities are lending their support, the proposition is still to be considered in New Zealand. Former Kiwis coach Graham Lowe has long advocated a hybrid game, saying it was "inevitable with the increasingly busy player schedules in both sports and the demand for a wider talent pool".

From this initiative, it could eventually be possible for one pool of New Zealand players to be available to represent New Zealand in rugby, league, sevens and any other variation which may be developed. Players like Shaun Johnson and Kevin Locke from the Warriors would be absolute gold for sevens, while others could be available for selection in the hybrid game.

Of course, entrenched and one-eyed bias would need to be overcome in the long term but, as they say, nothing is impossible.

Seeing Brad Thorn announcing this week that he will be available for the Highlanders again confirmed that we are not far away from a multi-faceted squad system which could have selected All Blacks playing for the Kiwis in the Rugby League World Cup.

It's a fascinating concept which will likely attract derision from both codes but most of this will be myopic with the people behind this revolutionary thinking not likely to go away easily. Watch this space ...

- Herald on Sunday

Reason Able (Auckland Region) | 11:12AM Sunday, 03 Feb 2013
It's a great idea. Probably never fly in NZ where the diehard Rugby Unionists rule the roost. Their myopia lead to Eden Park being upgraded for the World Cup for purely parochial reasons. They'll resist this with equal vigor I'm sure.
Lovetruncheon (Ponsonby) | 11:12AM Sunday, 03 Feb 2013
silly.

if a games rules constantly need changing : its a not very good game in the first place.
JmannGod (Hawke's Bay) | 11:12AM Sunday, 03 Feb 2013
Rugby simply does not need League to move forward. A hybrid game must maintain the ruck, the maul and the scrum as an attacking weapon otherwise it is just a new form of League - why would Rugby bother with that?

Of course League is interested Rugby has an enourmous Internationally covered World Cup and is set to become a major Olympic event. Also, one feels this "hybrid" game will simply allow the Aussies to continue pillaging NZ playing stocks as they do in both Rugby and League these days (clearly any administration of a hybrid game would need to undertaken by the IRB to keep greedy Aussie hands off our players.

Look, I just cannot see why Rugby would bother? Already the player traffic is one-way and the eventual demise or "irrelevance" of League is basically assured. Whilst I would love to see all of the League players return to the true code, and I accept that Rugby probably requires a small number of radical changes.... as the senior partner Rugby would call ALL of the shots in a merger.
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