Super Rugby Pacific organisers have announced five more law trials for the 2026 season while also recommitting to their TMO pledge.
The flagship southern hemisphere club competition begins this month and ahead of it starting they have looked to bring in more innovations in an attempt to speed up the game.
‘Fan-focused’ has been the watchword for New Zealand and Australia over the past two years and they insists that the amendments are going some way to achieving that goal.
They have their critics, however, who claim that the two countries are taking away some of the fundamental aspects of the game.
That includes reducing the impact of the scrum. World Rugby, who are currently led by an Australian in Brett Robinson, have already introduced a law which prevents teams from taking a scrum after the awarding of a free-kick and Super Rugby has looked to depower the set-piece further.
In 2026, there will now not be a scrum awarded for accidental offsides and delaying playing the ball away from the ruck, which is one of five law trials being introduced.
Other four trials
Of the other four, it includes no mandatory yellow or red cards following a penalty try, no more players to be added to the ruck when the referee says ‘use it’ and players being allowed to be take a quick tap within a metre either side of the mark or anywhere behind the mark.
The final one sees a slight change to the 50/22, allowing teams to pass back into their own half before executing the kick.
World Rugby have ‘created their own monster’ as prominent coach hits out at calls to depower scrums
“These innovations for 2026 reflect the ongoing commitment of Super Rugby Pacific to deliver the most entertaining and engaging rugby competition in the world,” Super Rugby Pacific chief executive Jack Mesley said.
“From the members and fans, to the players and coaches, and the referees themselves, we continue to experience resounding support for the measured steps that we’re taking to refine the game.
“We want to be a competition that encourages quick taps and faster restarts, that cuts down on unnecessary stoppages, and that embraces positive, attacking rugby.
“Super Rugby Pacific will continue to work closely with World Rugby and our stakeholders to evolve the game and produce the best version of rugby, and to strongly advocate that the innovations that are clearly working in Super Rugby Pacific be adopted more widely.”
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Super Rugby have also reiterated their TMO commitment, where they can only intervene unprompted if the referee has missed an act of foul play or a clear and obvious infringement leading to a try.
They have claimed that it has eradicated four minutes of ‘dead time’ since it was introduced a few years ago.
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