Cross Code Hybrid – the best of both or worst of all? This week a cross-code challenge between
Leeds Rhinos and Leicester Tigers has surfaced in the news reports championed
by none other than ex-Leicester head coach Bob Dwyer. Both sides are positive but wary, and so they
should be as the two main cross code games attempted so far have been mixed
affairs at best. Wigan disposed of Bath
over two legs in 1996 where Bath felt uneasy at going full tilt in the scrums
amongst other things, whilst Sale and St. Helens had a very close game which
was literally a game of two halves with one half league the other union; Sale
came out on top by just 2 points.
Leeds and Leicester are in many ways natural bedfellows,
both are largish cities with a century long tradition of support and have the
largest fan bases in their respective sports.
Some form of partnership between them seems a very good idea in principal,
but a Frankenstein match of neither and both codes at the same time seems very
odd indeed.
The proposed rules are that League is played in the attacking
sides own half whilst Union rules are in place once the attacking side has
passed the half way line. All this with
a 60 second “shot clock” similar to Basketball in place of League’s 6 tackles. Several sticky areas immediately come to mind,
first that 60 seconds isn’t long enough to build an attack with Union rules in
the attacking half, also scrummaging and line outs for the League side when
attacking, whether League’s 40:20 rule would be in place, and how exactly a
referee would be expect to rule when a player had crossed half way and such
when stripping the ball would be allowed combined with League’s voluntary
tackle rule should a team prefer to take a league phase?
Will this achieve anything for anyone involved? That is perhaps a more pressing situation for
messers Cohen and Hetherington. What are
each looking to gain? Union has an
international game League can only dream of, whilst League is better run
domestically and gains significantly better viewing figures for Sky. This would be a massive spectacle and gain
huge viewing figures and sponsorship; it might gain some more national fans for
both sides but the fundamental issues that limit League’s overall presence and
Union’s effectiveness will still be there and will still inhibit both codes.
Could this be the first step towards a reunion? Well under the proposed rules the answer is
no. A merger of the two games would be
possible in theory and at amateur level but the investment in the pro games
makes this a pipe dream at best and the current Frankenstein rules are far too
complicated for a regular series of games.
The idea of a league containing Wigan, Gloucester, St. Helens, Bath,
Leicester and Leeds is, of course, very appealing and will be mooted again and again
but the ingrained hierarchies will never let it happen.
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