Sounds an interesting concept, but I do wonder where it'd fit into an already bursting schedule.Great to hear the Champions League of Rugby is coming from 2025, 8 teams from NH, 7 teams from SH and 1 from Japan. As people are saying considering South Africa are considered part of NH, to have 7 from NZ/Aus/Pacific/Argentina seems a little heavy.
The deets are that in Lions tour years only, the Champion's Cup pools will play out normally but then instead of the usual knockouts the Aus/NZ teams come over and they play this. So there's no change in the number of matches because it'll be a straight 4-match knockout instead of CC last 16 and onwards.Sounds an interesting concept, but I do wonder where it'd fit into an already bursting schedule.
The T20 CL isn't a thing anymore, after all.
you speak like this isn't just another thing for the crusaders to win.it should be a pretty competitive thing.
The All blacks leave on Monday so if they were to of made changes things would have been pretty hectic.Foster keeps his job, Cane stays as captain, same squad - nothing changes despite pretty much every man and his dog calling for blood. South Africa will be licking their lips at securing a biggest ever win over the All Blacks.
Rough to get Tonga as a 5th side, especially as they could land a few ex all blacks like they’re trying to do. Looks like comfortably the hardest poolTonga has beaten Hong Kong 44-22 to qualify for the RWC in France. They'll play in Pool B with South Africa, Ireland, Scotland, and Romania.
HK will play in the repercharge in Dubai in November for the final spot (for a spot in Pool C with Australia, Wales, Fiji, and Georgia). The other teams in the repercharge are the USA, Portugal, and Kenya.
Pool D? Japan, Samoa, Argentina all in the running for second place.Looks like comfortably the hardest pool
Argentina v Japan is interesting but I think both sides would be locked out of qualifying they were in group B in place of say Scotland.Pool D? Japan, Samoa, Argentina all in the running for second place.
Pool C only really Australia & Wales
This has been coming for ages, and why I've considered the rugby codes in particular as being under existential threat long termInevitable court action
Case against rugby union governing bodies on dementia destined for courts
A legal case involving a group of rugby players diagnosed with early-onset dementia and other irreversible neurological impairments, including the former Wales captain Ryan Jones, looks destined for the courtswww.theguardian.com
No idea how game is made substantially safer as accidental head knocks will always be a thing
Going to be next to impossible to make the games quantifiably safer without fundamentally changing themThis has been coming for ages, and why I've considered the rugby codes in particular as being under existential threat long term
Like people are already up in arms about the objectively very "low-hanging fruit" changes to the rules with regards to punishing forceful head contact, and fair enough, they really do have a pretty outsized impact on how enjoyable the sport is to follow. But if that's the case, then I don't see how tackling the harder, sub-concussive stuff which CTE/dementia research is increasingly focussed on will be at all possible without straight up ruining the game.Going to be next to impossible to make the games quantifiably safer without fundamentally changing them
Will also be prohibitively expensive to insure participants
basketball should be pretty safe I'd reckonHave posted on here many times that Test cricket's main job is to hold on with its fingernails for the next twenty years because there is going to be a huge, gaping hole in the competitive teams sports market opening up as the big team contact sports are crushed one by one by a mass of lawsuits, at least in the rich developed countries.
I don't count that as a contact sportbasketball should be pretty safe I'd reckon
thank you for giving me a potential topic for my final essay for my sports law subject this coming semLike people are already up in arms about the objectively very "low-hanging fruit" changes to the rules with regards to punishing forceful head contact, and fair enough, they really do have a pretty outsized impact on how enjoyable the sport is to follow. But if that's the case, then I don't see how tackling the harder, sub-concussive stuff which CTE/dementia research is increasingly focussed on will be at all possible without straight up ruining the game.
Have posted on here many times that Test cricket's main job is to hold on with its fingernails for the next twenty years because there is going to be a huge, gaping hole in the competitive teams sports market opening up as the big team contact sports are crushed one by one by a mass of lawsuits, at least in the rich developed countries.
shady plagiarising.thank you for giving me a potential topic for my final essay for my sports law subject this coming sem
i've changed my mind i'm gonna do the essay on whether or not we should care if Kapil Dev threw it per today's standards ?shady plagiarising.
EDIT - also, you can say he sparked an idea in you?