• Productive and positive symposium sees rugby’s major stakeholders united in commitment to tackle injuries
  • Delegates encouraged by stabilised injury incidence and reduced concussion incidence
  • Tackles account for 50 per cent of injuries – symposium focuses on reducing tackle injury risk
  • Continued commitment to tough sanctions on dangerous high tackles and shoulder charges
  • Tackle height trials to be continued by World Rugby and unions

World Rugby will undertake detailed analysis on a package of law proposals after its three-day player welfare symposium in Paris concluded with delegates submitting evidence-based injury-prevention proposals.

Leading coaches, match officials, recently retired players, international and domestic competition representatives, game analysis experts, doctors and sports scientists considered the detailed latest shape of the game and injury data before breaking into workshops to consider potential injury-prevention focus areas within the next four-year law amendment review cycle that will begin after Rugby World Cup 2019.

While community and youth injury rates are comparable to other mass-participation sports, overall elite level injury-rates are not increasing and concussion incidence has decreased by between 10-14 per cent in the last year, the game is united in its commitment to further reduce the risk of injury.

The latest elite level data confirms that ball in play time has increased by 14 per cent since 2014 and is as high as 41 minutes in some competitions and therefore the number of tackles has also increased. This is significant because the tackle accounts for up to 50 per cent of all match injuries and 76 per cent of all concussions, while 73 per cent of tackle concussions occur to the tackler.

With the tackle the major focus, the delegates focused on three areas: law change, behaviour change and tackle education. Delegates also considered how the number and type of tackles could be altered and greater space be created to deliver better player welfare outcomes.

Having considered the game and injury trends, the delegates formulated embryonic potential law amendment solutions for World Rugby to further explore within the law amendment process:

  • Continue tackle height trials, including high tackle warning programme, in elite rugby
  • Examine the number of replacements used in elite matches
  • Examine the promotion of space through committing more defending players to the ruck and the ruck offside laws
  • Examine ways to promote a greater contest at the ruck
  • Examine the creation of space by examining kicking and touch law
  • Examine the ability to review a yellow card when a player is in the sin-bin for dangerous foul play

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World Rugby will now take the broad, embryonic proposals from the forum forward to the Law Review Group, who will run detailed feasibility analysis and determine suitability for potential trial and make recommendations to the Rugby Committee. Any law amendments that progress after detailed evaluation, would initially be trialled in a closed environment after Rugby World Cup 2019

World Rugby Chairman Sir Bill Beaumont said: “These are important first steps on the road to law review within the next Rugby World Cup cycle. They are important because it is the first time that we have kick-started the process with the sole purpose of injury-prevention.

“We are at an embryonic stage. The work of this group will go forward to the multi-disciplinary World Rugby Law Review Group for detailed consideration and analysis and to determine practicality, likely impact and therefore which ideas, if any, would be suitable for closed trial recommendation.”

At the symposium, delegates reaffirmed their commitment to ensure a clear, consistent and tough approach to dangerous high tackles, while domestic competitions expressed a desire to explore ways to assist with the future law trials process, an important part in the four-year cycle.

World Rugby is also likely to call on an elite competition to adopt a trial of a high-tackle warning system, which halved concussion at the 2018 World Rugby U20 Championship in France. The initiative aims to change player and coach behaviour and lower the acceptable height of the tackle by giving a post-match warning to a defender who has made an upright tackle resulting in head contact. Two warnings in a tournament result in a one-match ban.

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