Scrum
Half Passes
For the scrum halfs, #9 or scrummies in the
team or the want-to-be’s.
I have dealt with the standard scrum-half
pass off the ground and that differs little from the pass a scrum-half will
give from a line-out or a maul except that then he receives the ball in the
air; this sometimes gets the scrum-half to stand up on his pass with the result
that the pass lacks power, floats or loses direction. It is essential that he
observe all the basics: foot going out with the pass, thigh back, arms parallel to the ground with his head down over his
arms. Ninety percent of scrum-half passes that are wrong happen when the
scrum-half stands up on his pass. If his pass is a little behind his fly-half,
the fly-half will have to change direction because he will have to twist his
body to take that pass and that will pull him inside; should the fly-half have
to reach upwards, he will slow down, offer a lovely belly target to his
opponent and lose passing time as he will have to lower his arms to make a
decent pass himself.
As I have often remarked, rugby is a
game of consequences- one poor pass from the scrum-half will lead to a
concatenation of unsatisfactory options taken by succeeding players, forced on
them by the original bad pass.
Pivot pass:
Most scrum-halves are right-handed and
have weak left hands; often from a line-out they are asked to pass long
distances. They find this difficult off the left hand to the right-hand
side (obviously the opposite from natural left-handers) and so they pivot on
the right foot and with their backs to the line-out pass off the right hand to
the fly-half and in this way gain a longer pass off the right hand. There is
added length owing to the momentum of the pivot, rather like a discus thrower
gaining momentum as he spins before releasing his discus. Some purists will
blanch in horror at the thought of the scrum-half's passing "blind",
for he will have his back to the loose forwards and see only his fly-half, but
as long as no time is taken over the pass, there is very little danger of an
interception. At the line-out the scrum-half must place himself facing the near
touchline with the ball between him and the touchline; on receiving the ball he
pivots, as I have said, on the right foot swinging his left leg around towards
his fly-half, once again applying all the parallels of the standard pass.
Dive pass:
This was very much in vogue in my playing days but the standing pass has
overtaken it mainly because of the fact that the scrum-half remains on his feet
and thus in play. Most players can pass longer distances standing than diving
but I have seen some prodigiously long dive passes. I was interested to see a
few scrumhalves using the dive pass in the recent World Cup games. It is useful
when you are in a tight spot and have people reaching out for you. Your dive
takes you away from them; it is also useful when you are chasing a ball moving
away from you on the ground. It is a quick pass which you can spin or not; you
would spin the ball if you wanted distance but a quicker shorter pass would not
need spin.
Let us say that the scrum-half is
passing to his left. He puts his right foot down behind the ball as his hands
cup it on either side with wrists cocked, fingers stretched backwards towards
the right foot. As he touches the ball his eyes move across to his fly-half.
Naturally, he will be crouching. He drives of his right foot, if he is being
chased, into his dive or he takes a pace on to his left foot and dives off that
- preferable for distance but sometimes there is not time for that extra pace.
The thrust comes off the leg into the dive, which goes out in the direction or
line of the fly-half. He dives forward and up he flings his hands and arms out
towards his fly-half, with the ball leaving his hands as the arms unbend and
become fully extended with the wrists un-cocking as he straightens his arms. As
he dives off the ground, he leaves his hands and arms behind and straight,
until he actually delivers the ball If he gets no height from his dive, his
pass will be a bad one and if he does not move forward in his dive, he will not
achieve length, nor will he get length should he bend his arms excessively in
delivering the pass. The straighter the arms the stronger the
pass.
As the scrum-half dives he arches his
back to give himself more power, which has the effect of lifting his pass too
high; to counter that he must try, in his dive, to be as parallel to the ground
as possible. To achieve that he gets his driving foot (and
thus leg) high off the ground. I am sure you have all seen those classic
photographs of diving scrum-halves in mid-air, everything in line, pointing in
the direction of the fly-half, hands, arms, body and legs; only the head is up
with eyes fixed on the target. When I see a good dive pass, I am always
reminded of those wonderful hunting dogs, pointers, poised, everything lined up
towards the prey.
Reverse pass:
I once brought in a passing fanatic to
coach my scrum-half and he insisted on working on the reverse pass; I did not
object though I was somewhat sceptical; my misgivings
were justified as early in the following match my scrum-half flung out a
reverse pass which sped past and behind the fly-half, nearly reaching the
fullback. The marauding vultures from the other side leaped on the ball in high
glee, ending up behind our posts with the ball buried beneath their bellies.
Despite this nasty experience, I believe the reverse pass should be part of the
scrummy's armoury. The
scrum-half crouches, as always, placing his feet as if for a normal pass ,
weight on the ball of the left foot as if, let us say, he were going to pass to
the left with his right foot behind as normal but instead now of throwing arms
and left leg out as he would do for a normal pass, he moves his hands and arms
in the opposite direction, to the right across his right hip, pivoting over his
right leg; the ball is moved by the wrists moving towards the right hand side
and the man to whom he is passing. This all sounds very complicated but it is
not. Stand up right now without a ball in your hands and go through the motion
described and you will see how easy it is. Now do the same
thing but this time pass left. You will see that there is not much
change in stance except, perhaps, that the left toe now points to the right. It
is easy to practise and fun, too, I strongly advise
that the passer be able to look at the man to whom he is passing and that it
not be a blind pass that he gives. It is a quick, clever pass that very often
takes the opponents by surprise as it is something of a dummy as most expect
the ball to be moving in the opposite direction because of the initial actions
and the stance of the passer