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Change to the kickoff rule 2026

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
48,863
Value add is fulltime professional development of players something farming out players doesnt achieve

Improved game day experiance

The 2000 fans that head to Qld Stare Cup games would still go there even if the 2 NRL dont show up

My kids refused to go to state games after NYC ended, they didnt choose to follow those feeder clubs

Kids love NYC and fans love watching NYC players develop into NRL players, all on game day
Thanks for the commentary on this I learn stuff reading your posts
 

madball

Juniors
Messages
37
At the NRL-level I think the extended bench is not a bad idea. For the lower grades and players, not so much, particularly for the development of younger players - that also extends to the fact that those younger players don't have the extra veterans in the line-up at Cup level.
I also like going to the lower grade games to watch those players.
But as Penrith showed at the back-end of 2025, they don't care about what happens to the reggies.
 

siv

First Grade
Messages
7,064
So how are crowds going up then siv? They have been increasing year on year, but you say everybody is staying home or going to the pub. Both can't be true.
Well state cups are clearly not a contributer

There are clearly pluses and minuses

New facilities and teams act as a pluses in their honeymoon period

Though double or triple counting people at events like magic round is a false crowd number

Yet I physically see a volume of people no longer turning up to games also, with Thursday NF and Friday 6pm main games a real turn off. Which is evident from sub 10k crowds
 

mozza91

Coach
Messages
16,506
Have not heard one fan say that the kick off rule change would be a good idea. If they do change the rule it’ll be interesting to see the mental gymnastics from the Pro PVL Rugby League media to try and make it out to be a good decision.
 

siv

First Grade
Messages
7,064
I would like to see a few changes that would bring back crowds before kickoff

1 - National RG and maybe NYC (maybe U22)
2 - only 15 minutes gap before NRL game
3 - all Eastern or behind the posts seating to be GA with no reserved seating for regular season games. Western side is only reserved seating
4 - somewhere for kids to play touch footy inside stadiums
 

Dogs Of War

Coach
Messages
13,822
Have not heard one fan say that the kick off rule change would be a good idea. If they do change the rule it’ll be interesting to see the mental gymnastics from the Pro PVL Rugby League media to try and make it out to be a good decision.

I think it's a good idea in that teams will continue to just do the normal way, but if you really chasing points and are behind, I could see the guaranteed getting the ball being the best way to come back. It will really come down to what the data says after it's been in play for a while.
 

Timmah

LeagueUnlimited News Editor
Staff member
Messages
101,307
Well state cups are clearly not a contributer

There are clearly pluses and minuses

New facilities and teams act as a pluses in their honeymoon period

Though double or triple counting people at events like magic round is a false crowd number

Yet I physically see a volume of people no longer turning up to games also, with Thursday NF and Friday 6pm main games a real turn off. Which is evident from sub 10k crowds
2025 had the lowest number of sub-10k crowds ever, but go off champ
 

Timmah

LeagueUnlimited News Editor
Staff member
Messages
101,307
I would like to see a few changes that would bring back crowds before kickoff

1 - National RG and maybe NYC (maybe U22)
2 - only 15 minutes gap before NRL game
3 - all Eastern or behind the posts seating to be GA with no reserved seating for regular season games. Western side is only reserved seating
4 - somewhere for kids to play touch footy inside stadiums
None of these are to do with rule changes, which is the thread topic. Start a new thread if you want to keep banging on about your lower grade stuff
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
48,863

The NRL is facing backlash after the game’s 17 clubs – including reigning premiers Brisbane – rejected the code’s radical kick-off rule change proposal.
NRL chief Andrew Abdo is set for a showdown on Wednesday with club bosses, who have called for more time to trial a series of rule changes proposed by head office.

The clubs claim the NRL could put players at increased risk of injury and concussion by fast-tracking some of the changes.
The 2026 NRL Premiership will kick-off next month in Las Vegas and clubs fear the NRL and ARL Commission, chaired by Peter V’landys, are rushing to make major changes to the way the game will be played.

Among four proposed rule changes is the restart of play – option to kick-off or receive.

Traditionally, the team that scores a try receives the ball after their conversion attempt via a kick-off from the opposition.
However the NRL is looking to shake this up given a recent trend of momentum being difficult to stop when scoring teams get on a roll.

In an email from Abdo to the clubs on December 30, the NRL proposed a change to the rule which would see the team that concedes a try have the option to either kick-off or receive the ball to restart play.
However, the proposal has been rejected by the clubs.

This masthead has obtained an email from Broncos CEO Dave Donaghy, on behalf of the Club Consultation Committee, to Abdo on Friday which outlines the clubs’ concerns with the kick-off change.

“Clubs are opposed to this proposed rule, as they believe this changes the ‘fabric of the game’, in a way that may not be justified,” the email said.

The clubs have three concerns about the rule change, claiming there is little clarity around how it will be implemented, could increase stoppages and confuse fans, particularly those watching live at venues.

The clubs have requested clearer drafting and detail, however “given the scale of this change and the club views, clubs recommend trialling rather than immediate implementation.”

Even the game’s biggest figures are split on the kick-off change.

Super coach Wayne Bennett is a fan of it but has been met with fierce opposition from powerful Canterbury boss and commentator Phil Gould.

The clubs have also called for “further clarity on both intent and justification” around a rule that would see more set restarts during games – raising fears about injury and concussion risk.

Currently, teams are awarded a penalty instead of a set restart if they are infringed within their 40m zone.

The NRL has proposed to reduce the zone to 20m, meaning infringements beyond that would be a six-tackle set restart to speed up play instead of a traditional penalty.

Several clubs have claimed “it feels unnecessary and risks undoing prior improvements” and raised concerns about player welfare and fatigue load, injury risk and concussion exposure and gamesmanship.

“Increased fatigue can directly contribute to injury risk and concussion exposure and may be inconsistent with the overarching objective of improving player safety,” the clubs said.

The clubs were mostly supportive of the removal of a seven-tackle set restart for accidental in-goal breaches and interchange modifications.

Teams are expected to move to 19 players on game day this year with six players on the bench. However only four bench players can be used with eight interchanges per game.

This will give coaches the flexibility to cover more positions depending on injuries during a game, limiting the impact losing a key player to injury or concussion early in a match can have.

While there are differing views among clubs, the 17 franchises have united on one front and want any rule changes to be trialled before being adopted in the NRL Premiership.

“Clubs are aligned on one critical point – any change introduced at NRL level must be accompanied by adequate lead time and detailed operational guidance to ensure coaches, players, trainers and match-day officials can train and implement changes consistently,” they wrote.

“Where changes are likely to materially impact fatigue, injury risk, match flow, tactics or officiating consistency, clubs strongly recommend trialling in lower-tier competitions and/or controlled trial periods (late season non-finals’ impacting games) prior to full NRL implementation, so the impact can be properly assessed.”

There is a feeling among the clubs that V’landys and Abdo are ready to fast-track the changes for the start of the 2026 season, setting the platform for a showdown just weeks before trial matches begin.
 
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Trifili13

Juniors
Messages
2,480
So the NRL wants to introduce an option of kicking off or receiving after a try to stop momentum of teams, yet wants to introduce more 6 agains to speed up play. How about they look into why there is so much momentum in games and tell the refs to stop pulling 6 agains out of their backsides that create this momentum in the first place.
 

T-Boon

Coach
Messages
19,209
By "the clubs" they mean the coaches. The same coaches who have shown zero regard for the best interests of the game for the last 25 years preferring to focus most of their attention on the dark arts that have ruined the game.
 

Yosemite Sam

Juniors
Messages
924
Neither of those rules are in the best interest of the game. With the new kick-off rule Brisbane's amazing run through the final series would not have been possible.

The game is flying right now. There is no need for any significant rule changes for at least the next 5 years.
 

PARRA_FAN

Coach
Messages
19,093
Neither of those rules are in the best interest of the game. With the new kick-off rule Brisbane's amazing run through the final series would not have been possible.

The game is flying right now. There is no need for any significant rule changes for at least the next 5 years.

This. Why on earth is anyone at the top considering these supposed exciting and radical changes? If the clubs arent performing, tough!!
 
Messages
18,424
The following article was published by the Sydney Morning Herald (source: https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/ho...e-scoring-team-kicks-off-20260104-p5nrht.html) -

How much will it change rugby league if the scoring team kicks off?​

Robert Dillon

By Robert Dillon

January 9, 2026 — 7.15pm

More often than not in the NRL, it’s the point of no return.

That pivotal moment when full-time is fast approaching, the game is in the balance and a team is under siege on its own line. Then the defence cracks.

Hearts sink and heads drop, because before they have even refilled their lungs with oxygen they’ll be kicking off again. Unless they can produce a play to regather possession, the result is all but in the bag.

So it has been for every rugby league season since 1908, except for one – the breakaway Super League campaign in 1997, which many fans would rather forget, or remember only because it split the game they loved in two.

In a bid to differentiate themselves from the established ARL competition, Super League implemented a number of on-field rule changes. One was the introduction of the video referee, which has clearly stood the test of time. The other decreed that whichever team scored points would restart play with a kick-off.

“Scorer’s kick”, in other words.

Initially, the change attracted criticism, largely because in the early rounds of the season Super League games were high-scoring try fests.

At the time, David Waite, coach of ARL team St George, described the rebel competition as being “a bit like basketball”.

“My view is that the ‘you score, we score’ doesn’t fool anyone,” he said.

By the end of the season, however, statistics suggested the new rule didn’t make that much difference.

In 96 Super League fixtures, 692 tries were scored, or 7.2 a game. In 141 ARL games, 959 tries were scored (6.8 a game). The average score in Super League was 28-15. The average ARL scoreline was 25-13.

So hindsight would suggest it evened itself out, yet when the two leagues reunited at the end of 1997 to form the NRL, tradition held sway, and scorer’s kick was consigned to the dustbin.
Until now.

Barely a month before the first pre-season trials, scorer’s kick is among four changes the NRL has asked clubs to consider. The others are an increase in game-day squad sizes from 17 to 19, set restarts instead of penalties outside the 20-metre line and six tackles instead of seven for the defending team if their opponents knock-on over the tryline.

Of those changes, scorer’s kick – recommended by a highly qualified committee of coaches comprising Wayne Bennett, Craig Bellamy, Ricky Stuart, Ivan Cleary and Craig Fitzgibbon – appears the most significant and most likely to cause controversy.

In an email to clubs, NRL chief executive Andrew Abdo explained that scorer’s kick would be optional, because the team that has conceded the try would also be given the choice of kicking off, instead of receiving the ball.

Abdo said this would introduce “a new tactical element to the game where the captain can decide whether possession or field position is more important based on game circumstances”.

Bennett, who coached Brisbane to the Super League title in 1997, is clearly a fan of the concept, arguing that in the modern game, especially since the advent of the interchange and, more recently, set restarts, momentum swings have become increasingly hard to counter.

Scorer’s kick, theoretically, would give teams some respite when they are on the back foot, keeping them in the contest and reducing the likelihood of blowout scorelines.

“It makes it fair,” the game’s most experienced coach said last month. “You have equal opportunity with the ball. Ball control has always been important in the game, but it’s distorted because you can score, then you go back and get the ball back.”

Others are sceptical.

Canterbury boss Phil Gould has been the most outspoken critic, stating on social media: “Whoever it was that regurgitated the concept of the scoring team kicking off in the NRL should be publicly whipped. Please ... they tried this rubbish years ago, and it was a disaster.”

Cleary appears dubious, pointing out that Penrith (2023) and Brisbane (2025) won grand finals after launching mid-game comebacks. Such revivals hinge on getting the ball back from the kick-off.

Manly coach Anthony Seibold also has concerns. He played during the Super League era and has not forgotten that “there were still big scorelines and big momentum swings”.

He was wary of “change for change’s sake”, and recommended a trial period to assess the impact of scorer’s kick.

“Some coaches and players see potential for an added tactical element, but others believe this change alters game momentum,” Seibold says.

“I feel, tactically, short kick-off rules already provide a tactical option for the non-scoring team.

“Our club’s concern is built around how the tactic is communicated and what it does to the game, as this may increase stoppages if teams need to reset their positions once a decision is made.

“Clubs also need further detail on the process and communication of the rule.

“Our thoughts are that the rule be trialled before being implemented. Therefore, we can see how the rule changes momentum of the game and/or does it make the game better viewing and a better game for the players?”

Knights coach Justin Holbrook said he felt some of the proposed rule changes were “terrific” and would improve the game, but he was not convinced about scorer’s kick.

“I’m not sure if that’s going to be put in,” he says. “At the moment, it’s just a recommendation.

“Until it gets confirmed, I’m not really going to look into it too much … if it does, we’ll adapt to it.

“If all of a sudden you’ve got the choice [to kick off or receive the ball], it all depends on the position.

“If you’re behind, you want the ball back. If you’re not, you’ll kick long and things like that. It’ll all be the game situation if that comes in.”

Almost three decades after his “you score, we score” comment, Waite is still involved in rugby league, as chairman of Runaway Bay junior club on the Gold Coast, and as an advisor in Melbourne Storm’s pathways system.

He enjoys the modern game but insists it needs to maintain a “balance” between attack and defence.

He said scorer’s kick could potentially “sway the seesaw a bit”, but the NRL’s best coaches will soon adapt.

“I’m not against change and having a look at new ideas,” Waite says. “Obviously the game is still about possession and field position. That’s the war of attrition.

“It will add some fascination to see how coaches go about it.”

He predicted that most teams will opt to receive the ball after conceding a try, rather than kicking off.

“Although if they drop the kick-off, or turn the ball over on tackle two or three, they might be wishing they’d made a different decision,” he says.

He felt it was “really healthy for the game” that the NRL was willing to seek the advice of senior coaches to hopefully create an improved product.

Waite served his coaching apprenticeship at Canterbury in the mid-1980s under Warren Ryan, whose famous “umbrella” defensive system proved so effective it prompted officials to introduce the 10-metre rule, doubling the distance between the attacking team and the opposition defensive line.

Ryan, one of the all-time great coaches, believes scorer’s kick makes perfect sense.

“It’s consistent with the concept of a shared-possession game,” Ryan says. “We’ve scored, now you receive the ball from the kick-off, and we’ll see if you can score.

“I think it’s reasonable that the side that has been scored against should have the option of possession, if they want it. I don’t think it’s a bad thing.”

Ryan noted that rugby league’s rules have been tweaked multiple times over the years, normally for the code’s betterment.

“There’s not much wrong with the game as it is,” Ryan says. “The game has generally evolved as it has for good reasons. I don’t think they should tamper with it too much.

“But it’s supposed to be a game of shared possession. That’s why they got rid of unlimited tackles and went originally to four tackles and then six tackles.

“People wanted to see their team get a fair share of the ball, and this is consistent with that philosophy.”
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
48,863
When people say the game is flying in terms of on field product it can be improved

And refs manage games anyway to get teams back in it

The proposed change isn’t that big of a deal

I’m starting to worry the extended bench might reduce fatigue in the game too by hanging a bench full of forwards available when there’s no injuries
 

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