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Finally Super Tag

babyg

Juniors
Messages
1,512
Not sure why they have to changed the name but great news and this be implemented Australia wide. We've talked about this on here for a long time.

http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/...lump-20110827-1jfi1.html?comments=12#comments

Tag footy the fix for junior slump
Phil Gould
August 28, 2011
Comments 12

Inclusive, fair and safe … members of the Cronulla and St George OzTag teams train at Don Lucas Reserve. Photo: Simon Alekna
On Sunday, September 25, in conjunction with OzTag Australia, the Penrith Panthers will hold a giant gala day to launch a new recreational form of rugby league.

This new game, called SuperTag, has been modelled on the popular OzTag game. It's a full-field game of tag football that can be played by women, girls, men and boys of all ages. It's an alternative winter sport for those who don't wish to engage in tackle football.

I urge all junior league officials, community groups, corporate sponsors and government officials to come along and view the action so they fully comprehend the potential of this wonderful initiative. We will stage competitions for boys and girls in three age groups on the gala day: 12, 14 and 16 years. Teams have been nominated from the Central Coast, Sutherland Shire and the junior leagues of western Sydney. The games will be played at Centrebet Stadium and several surrounding grounds. All the finals will be played on the main arena with prizes for the winning teams.

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This is an exhibition day to highlight one of our most important strategies of engaging fans of all ages in western Sydney and making the Panthers and rugby league a part of their healthy lifestyle - for life.

Up until now, OzTag has been kept exclusively as a summer sport. Junior league teams play real footy in the winter and many play the recreational form of the game in the summer to keep players together. OzTag has stayed away from winter timetables to avoid pulling players away from junior league clubs.

SuperTag now provides a winter alternative to tackle football that can be run by junior league clubs in collaboration with the Penrith District Junior League and the OzTag Australia organisation. I have no doubt it will be extremely popular with women, men and children of all ages. It will also help tackle some of the many challenges facing our game at junior and senior levels.

I see this as a great way to engage those people who don't know a lot about rugby league and are simply looking for a recreational sport. This is especially important due to the multicultural diversification in western Sydney. Over 600,000 people in western Sydney are from overseas. I can also see SuperTag attracting kids who play football (soccer), rugby, netball, softball and other sports. They may play other sports but they follow an NRL team. SuperTag can give them an involvement with a form of rugby league.

It's all about fun and participation. It is rugby league without the tackle. There's a skill level to accommodate everybody. Club ovals and facilities can be used to play the traditional tackle game. On the same weekend, the clubs can also offer a non-tackle version of our sport. For junior league clubs it will provide new revenue streams; not to mention increased patronage of club canteens and licensed premises.

SuperTag will boast colourful ¾-length-sleeve uniforms in bright team colours. There will be special gloves to make ball handling and tagging that much easier. It looks great. SuperTag has all the league skills of passing, kicking and shots at goal. The game is overseen by qualified referees and competitions are monitored by experienced officials.

We at the Panthers see SuperTag and OzTag as great solutions to a number of the issues our game faces. It also helps tackle worthy causes such sports participation, healthy lifestyles, child obesity and diabetes, and fosters community spirit. Some kids don't like playing tackle football.

Tag football is the answer.

In junior league we see a huge number enrol for their first league experience at a very young age. We see drop-out rates increase as we go through the age groups. Numbers decrease in the 9-10-year age groups as kids and parents get disillusioned with their early experiences. We see another decline around 13-14 years of age as size differences start to take effect and collisions begin to become a real issue.

We see a significant drop-off in participation rates in the 16-18-year age groups as young men leave school and start tertiary education or join the workforce. They don't have time for midweek training sessions and they can't afford to get injured playing a contact sport because they can't miss work or studies.

I've talked about this so often in this column over the years. Now is the chance to do something about it. SuperTag provides the safe and fun way to stay involved in the game. There's no need for midweek training sessions. It's a stress-free, low-maintenance, time-convenient social interaction for people of all ages and backgrounds.

Most importantly, SuperTag provides a winter version of rugby league participation for women and girls. I want to see the ladies involved. My daughters play OzTag. The mums play OzTag. My son plays OzTag in a mixed team with his sister. They love it. Once they try SuperTag I'm sure they'll love it, too. They can play this game for as many years as they feel young at heart.

SuperTag will also provide legitimate pathways for kids to be recognised and recruited into tackle rugby league at older ages. There will be elite levels of the game including representative competitions at district, state and national levels. I can't see why international competitions won't emerge in this sport. SuperTag answers the problem of rugby league at both junior and senior levels becoming too much of a power game, dominated by the big boys who just tuck the ball under the arm and stomp over the smaller kids. This game develops speed, agility, passing and space awareness. The smaller kids really get a chance to enjoy their rugby league experience rather than being intimidated. It will also teach the bigger boys there is more to football than merely collision and wrestle.

I can see this leading to the development of more halves and playmakers at the senior level. We sure need them and current development pathways are not producing anywhere near enough. Small kids with potential are giving the game away too early or are being ignored by junior league coaches in favour of the powerfully built ball-runners.

I also intend for the Panthers and OzTag Australia to provide free midweek competitions in some under-privileged areas throughout western Sydney for kids and adults who might normally struggle to meet the financial requirements of organised sporting competitions. This will be one of our very important community initiatives. We want everyone to feel a part of rugby league.

So mark down September 25 at Centrebet Stadium. You can inquire at the Penrith Junior League offices or go to the OzTag Australia website for more details. A number of NRL stars will be there checking out the action and interacting with the kids. It will be great fun.
 

Teddyboy

First Grade
Messages
6,573
Love stuff like that and think every Rugby club/ground should have a Touch/Tag section be it summer or 12 months a year as it does help but money in the Union/League bar tills as well as putting interest into both codes.
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
65,957
will they actually brand it RL or NRL linked? Look at how the AFL brands Auskick, we need to do the same so that anyone playing tag clearly recognises they are playing a form of RL. On the Oztag website thaere is not a single reference to RL.

WHAT'S OZTAG?
OZTAG football is the latest craze in recreational sport that now has competitions running all over Australia, with the largest areas located in Sydney, Brisbane and Canberra.
It is a non-tackling game. Normal dimensions of the field are 70 metres x 50 metres. Two fields will fit on one rugby or soccer field. Eight players in each team are on the field at anyone time. Players wear shorts with a Velcro patch on each side. A strip of cloth is attached to the Velcro, known as a tag. The object of the game is to score tries. Defenders prevent this by tagging the ball carrier, removing the tag from the shorts.

In OZTAG football the attacking team has six plays or tags to try and score a try or promote the ball down field as close to the line as possible. The game is exciting due to the fact of the tagging situation which can be difficult to remove. The invention of the tag also prevents phantom calls.

All skills are utilised in OZTAG football including kicking. Passing becomes an attacking weapon, and if a player is put into a gap, there is a high probability they will make a clean break. When attacking the line, fancy moves such as around-the-corner passes work well, often making the defender stoop low to remove the tag.

The game is low/medium-contact sport and the rules are designed to encourage this - you cannot as an attacker run straight at a defender, you must run at the gaps. A defender cannot impede the progress of an attacker, so if you try to get a tag and bump the attacker you may well be penalised. The rule is whoever initiates contact will be penalised.

The rules allow for the ball to go to ground with the advantage rule applying - this results in a lot of broken field play. Teams kick off to commence play and restart play after a try has been scored. Line drop-outs are taken from the centre of the try line. Kicking in general play is allowed but it must be below shoulder height of the referee.

Games are usually played over 40 minutes, two twenty minute halves. Times may be varied to suit age groups and conditions.

oztag_logo_shad.jpg

724179_1_O.jpg
 
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NRL-TGG

Guest Moderator
Messages
1,354
will they actually brand it RL or NRL linked? Look at how the AFL brands Auskick, we need to do the same so that anyone playing tag clearly recognises they are playing a form of RL. On the Oztag website thaere is not a single reference to RL.



oztag_logo_shad.jpg

724179_1_O.jpg

Look at the OzTag rule book or in their history.

One or the other states that the first games were purely Rugby League. I can't remember which one its in though.
 

NRL-TGG

Guest Moderator
Messages
1,354
You can kick though, only on the zero and 4th/5th tackles (and the ball must not be kicked over the shoulders)

So I'm taking it as SuperTag is a bit different to Oztag.

Is Supertag the exact same game as Rugby League but without the tackles?

That's the impression Gus gives in the article.
 
Messages
14,139
The CRL and WARL already play LeagueTag. This is nothing new. It's just that now that Sydney (or Penrith) has decided to do it it's a revolution apparently. And in LeagueTag you can kick exactly the same as in RL, bombs and all, except in the case of kids where mini rules apply.
 

babyg

Juniors
Messages
1,512
Either way every rugby league club should have their own tag comp. It would be good to be part of an actual club rather than just be rocken up to some random park every Tuesday night. This has so much potential in terms of linkages with the community.
 

Danish

Referee
Messages
31,875
I'd love for this to start up round my way. Looking at playing league for the first time in almost a decade next year but would love something like this to get a feel for positioning etc again.

Major problem I can see with it though is finding enough rectangular fields to play yet another winter sport on. There isn't a ground in the shire that doesnt have a soccer or league game being played on it between daylight hours over the weekend, so not really sure where they'd be able to squeeze this in.
 

hutch

First Grade
Messages
6,810
Touch, oztag, league tag, super tag are all non contact forms of rugby league and we should of worked harder to bring them under the rugby league banner. The irb have taken over touch in some countries! It is a great way of spreading the game and growing the sport in other countries. Once again we have missed the boat, I doubt the people who run the game would even care though!
 

franklin2323

Immortal
Messages
33,546
So I'm taking it as SuperTag is a bit different to Oztag. Is Supertag the exact same game as Rugby League but without the tackles?
Yep. Different games. Normal oztag is played accross the field so 50m. 8 a side. Kicking under shoulders on the 0, 4th & 5th. Normal kick offs & drop outs.

Supertag I played at a rep carnival. Full field 11 a side. Can kick on any tackle at any height. It's so much more thinking like League just no training or tackles.
 

ByRd

First Grade
Messages
5,937
I hope this starts up in my area, i play oztag 2 nights a week and would play this for sure.
 

bazza

Immortal
Messages
30,045
Major problem I can see with it though is finding enough rectangular fields to play yet another winter sport on. There isn't a ground in the shire that doesnt have a soccer or league game being played on it between daylight hours over the weekend, so not really sure where they'd be able to squeeze this in.

Definitely
May be a chance for Friday/Saturday evening games or they hope this will take players from the other sports
 

ellen_159

Juniors
Messages
12
been playing LeagueTag for the last 3 years in Group 20 and am glad its moving to Western Sydney. In a similar form anyway
 

franklin2323

Immortal
Messages
33,546
Definitely
May be a chance for Friday/Saturday evening games or they hope this will take players from the other sports

Where I play oztag at (Richmond Uni) the summer comp has an AFL team. A Windsor A grade team (Coote's brother plays), A team which all the Fifita's play, Cliff Lyons & Craig Izzard are playing. So it's popular

It will be interesting if many of those teams put in Supertag teams when it starts in Oct. I can't see many non league teams going well in it. Very hard to defend but as a league team it's great off-season training
 

bazza

Immortal
Messages
30,045
It will be interesting if many of those teams put in Supertag teams when it starts in Oct. I can't see many non league teams going well in it. Very hard to defend but as a league team it's great off-season training

I guess the hope is that players who would normally quit league and play soccer would instead play SuperTag rather than mass switching from soccer/AFL/union to tag
 
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