Stu10

Referees in England
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2020
- Messages
- 744
- Post Likes
- 359
- Current Referee grade:
- Level 15 - 11
I would appreciate hearing how others referee the tackle/jackal/ruck scenario with regard to timing and what you are looking for.
I'm pretty sure I've got the technical requirements correct, but I sometimes struggle on the timing. Tackle, clear release, first man on feet can jackal and must make a clear attempt to lift the ball, once a defender comes in and a player from each team are in contact with each other and over the ball (most likely the jackler and the first defender to arrive) then it becomes a ruck and hands must be removed.
At u16 I find someone tries a jackal at almost every tackle without consideration, whereas in adult rugby players tend to make a quick evaluation and determine if the jackal is on or not based on positioning and whether a supporting defender is out of position. Subsequently, at u16, there are split seconds between the jackler getting hands on the ball and the first defender engaging to form a ruck, normally followed by a shout of "I had my hands on it, he's not releasing".
I'd appreciate some advice on judging that balance between the ball carrier being able to release or play the ball immediately after going to ground, jackler getting hands on the ball, and the ruck forming all within what feels like a second.
I'm pretty sure I've got the technical requirements correct, but I sometimes struggle on the timing. Tackle, clear release, first man on feet can jackal and must make a clear attempt to lift the ball, once a defender comes in and a player from each team are in contact with each other and over the ball (most likely the jackler and the first defender to arrive) then it becomes a ruck and hands must be removed.
At u16 I find someone tries a jackal at almost every tackle without consideration, whereas in adult rugby players tend to make a quick evaluation and determine if the jackal is on or not based on positioning and whether a supporting defender is out of position. Subsequently, at u16, there are split seconds between the jackler getting hands on the ball and the first defender engaging to form a ruck, normally followed by a shout of "I had my hands on it, he's not releasing".
I'd appreciate some advice on judging that balance between the ball carrier being able to release or play the ball immediately after going to ground, jackler getting hands on the ball, and the ruck forming all within what feels like a second.