作者adair (大專丙組)
看板NTURugbyTeam
標題有控在看
時間Sat Nov 6 00:36:03 2004
A Props Guide to Playing Prop
Prop forwards are the cornerstones of a rugby team. Let there be no
misunderstanding; whilst the
move is towards faster play, and hence more mobile and swifter players, you
cannot play rugby
union as it stands today without props. However, that is in a perfect world.
Or at least the case in
international rugby, where coaches have in theory at least, the choice of
hundreds of props down
through the hierarchy of rugby clubs, and where players are very unlikely to
turn down the chance
of playing and getting a posh dinner thrown in for free, let alone the
possibility of visiting some
exotic foreign city in which to play.
Or Cardiff.
On the other hand, not everyone lives in a perfect world. For many third and
fourth teams in clubs
throughout the land (whose 1st team themselves are languishing in something
like the Rutland
3rd Division alongside St. Dunstan's Blind School, the local girl's grammar
school team, and the
outpatients department of the local hospital, and are bottom.) the situation
is quite different. Some
weeks they are awash with props, and so end up with a front-row consisting of
three props, a
fourth in the second row, and a fifth horribly drowning on the wing. Other
weeks they have only
one prop available, and make do with the hooker propping for only the third
time in his life, or a
spare centre making up the position. On these occasions a long and heated
debate will take
place whether the inexperienced player should play loose or tight. Someone in
the team always
knows someone who knew a back that volunteered to play prop once and now
spends his days
mumbling into his soup and watching the birds on the lawn. The player will
have a horrendous
experience as by Murphy's Law his opponent will be a former international
prop acting as coach
to the opponents who fancied a game this week. He will consequently become
disenchanted with
rugby and fade out after a few more weeks and take up gardening or golf, and
suffer nightmares
weekly for the rest of his life.
Props are not supposed to score tries. Those that do have either cheated or
fallen over in the
wrong place. My brother is also a prop, but while on tour to Holland several
years ago, was put on
the wing and scored a hat trick. Since that day no other prop in his club has
spoken to him, and I
only discourse with him about our mother's birthday present. He has been
forced into exile to
Australia, where for some strange reason they accept try-scoring props. Must
be something to do
with all those convicts and kangaroos. If by some incredible fluke of luck a
prop scores, he will
spend the rest of his life describing in great detail the feat. Most props
telling this tale will,
however, not let on that when they scored their try it was worth three points.
Props must be the butt of everyone's jokes. They must also have at least a
bit of a beer belly.
They must be the slowest runners on the pitch (with possible the exception of
the referee if
playing third team rugby). Everyone will take the piss out the props at every
conceivable
occasion. Equally, everyone will look to their props to sort out any
argy-bargy, and call upon them
to lead the singing. All props must be able to drink 20 pints, including
three of them in quick
succession, all three drunk in less than 2.46 seconds (Olympic qualifying
time).
Props are born, not made. That is why the only props that are left twenty
years after they finished
playing are those that played their entire life in the murky underworld of
front-row play. All those
upstarts from the 2nd-row and back-row who got too fat and slow in old age
fade away after
prolonging their careers for a couple of years by the insidious ploy of
taking up propping. They
are the sort of people who support Liverpool because they win, and live in
Torquay anyway. They
are also the sort of person who started following rugby at the age of 22 back
in 1989 because
England started to win in less of an ad-hoc fashion.
Finally, props are wonderful people, and should be nurtured. If you are a
prop, be proud in the
knowledge that your trade is a hard, unsung one, where success is worn
inside, in the heart,
unlike these flashy back-row and fly-half types. If you are not a prop, gaze
upon them henceforth
with awe, for these men and women are the salt of the earth. And buy them a
pint.
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