4. Fewer Substitutions, More Stamina
Rugby’s bench revolution has gone too far. With 6–2 or even 7–1 splits, the game’s turning into a power contest instead of a skill showcase.
Big men off the bench change the tone completely — fresh legs smashing into exhausted defenders, making the final quarter less about finesse and more about fatigue management.
Cutting substitutions would reward endurance, intelligence, and in-game adaptability. Tired players make for open spaces and attacking flair — not endless pick-and-go sequences.
It’s a move that could restore rugby’s balance between brains and brawn.
5. Scrap the Caterpillar Ruck
Let’s be honest — the caterpillar ruck is killing the vibe.
That slow, snaking queue behind the ruck just to give the nine a perfect box-kick platform? It’s dull, predictable, and completely out of step with the modern fan’s appetite for pace and excitement.
Yes, it’s clever. But it’s not entertaining.
Referees calling “use it” earlier has helped, but the only real fix is to ban the tactic outright. Speed up the breakdown, bring back contestability, and let rugby breathe again.
The Six Nations should be about tempo, tension, and theatre — not tactical time-wasting.
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