The Laws of Rugby League

Sean Fagan of RL1908.com

Playing Laws 1895-1908

A summary of rule changes made in England by the Northern Union (NU/RFL) between 1895 and 1908, together with a full copy of 1908 laws (as used by the NSWRL, QRL & NU) are reproduced in the book Pioneers of Rugby League.

Overview of Amendments: 1909-2007
As played by the NSWRL/NRL

Please note this is not an exhaustive list of all rule changes, nor does it provide a full explanation of all amendments. This list is applicable to the NSWRL/NRL premiership only.

1909 Maximum of three forwards in front row of the scrum; other rows remain unrestricted.

1920 Scrum half required to roll ball into scrum.

1922 Goal from ‘fair catch/mark' and soccer-style ‘field goal' abolished.

1925 A second football provided at the touch-line to eliminate delays during all first-class matches.

1926 Goal-line drop-out (instead of from the 25-yard line) after defender makes ball dead; play-the-ball modernised - only marker and man playing the ball to be involved in contest for the ball, and marker to keep both feet on ground until ball is dropped or placed.

1930 Defending halfback to feed scrums, with attacking side having the loose-head; ‘3-2-1' scrum formation made mandatory.

1932 Hooker must have both arms over props (loose-arm rule); penalty extended to include optional scrum (instead of ‘free kick').

1948 Front rows cannot pack against each other until ordered by referee.

1951 Five-yard ruck rule introduced (for one season only); previously there had been a ‘no-yard' ruck rule.

1952 No-yard ruck rule reinstated; dummy-half and second-marker to stand one yard behind the two men at the play-the-ball.

1954 Tap penalty introduced, with offending team to retire 10 yards.

1956 Three-yard ruck rule, with no minimum distance for dummy-half and second-marker.

1959 Abolition of tap penalty.

1961 Dummy-half caught with ball resulted in a scrum.

1963 Reinstatement of unrestricted dummy-half runs; ball from scrum to come out from behind the second-rowers; non-offending team given feed and loose-head for scrum from penalties (including after kick to touch); teams can replace a maximum of two injured players up to and including halftime .

1964 Scrums minimum of 10 yards from goal-line; place kickoff from halfway line to restart play after unconverted try; penalty at halfway if kickoff out on the full.

1966 Five-yard ruck rule implemented.

1967 Four-tackle rule replaced unlimited tackles; tap penalty reintroduced; scrum replaced by tap kick for restart after penalty kick into touch.

1968 Restart after attacking team makes ball dead: 25-yard optional kick.

1969 Front row to pack ‘square' in the scrums.

1970 Two replacements for injured players allowed at any time during a game, provided those replacements had played at least half of a lower-grade game.

1971 Value of field goal reduced from two points to one, and six-tackle rule introduced.

1981 ‘Sin-bin' and differential scrum penalty introduced; four replacements allowed.

1982 Scrum feed and loose-head given to non-offending team.

1983 Value of try increased to four points; handover after sixth tackle if caught in possession.

1986 Twenty-metre restart when ball caught on full in in-goal.

1987 ‘Head-bin' introduced (players suffering minor head injuries allowed to return to the field of play after 10 minutes without affecting team's quota of replacements).

1988 Two fresh reserves allowed.

1990 In-goal touch judges used in finals series.

1991 Interchange rule introduced, allowing four players (two of whom could be fresh reserves and two of whom must have played half a game in the preceding Reserve Grade or President's Cup) unlimited interchanges throughout a match. This rule was brought in primarily to cut down the risk of the spread of blood-borne diseases. By April an angry public reaction forced a modification which provided for a maximum of four players to be available for a total of six interchanges in a match. Players sent to the ‘blood-bin' did not count among these six interchanges.

1993 Ten-metre rule introduced mid-season.

1996 Unlimited interchange reintroduced.

1997 Striking in the play-the-ball banned; no minimum distance for attacking team behind dummy-half; ‘40/20' rule introduced; new guidelines introduced to combat ‘dangerous throws'.

1998 ‘Zero tackle' introduced; video referee introduced.

2001 Limited interchange rule reintroduced allowing four replacements and a maximum of 12 interchanges.

2003 The Golden Point introduced to decide drawn games.

2004 Attacking player held up in-goal: play-the-ball 10 metres from goal-line.

2007 Tap from penalty kick to be taken 20 metres infield.

Compiled by Sean Fagan of RL1908 for and on behalf of the NRL © 2007
F
ull copy of 1908 laws are reproduced in Pioneers of Rugby League.

Dally Messenger book - to be released early August 2007 (preliminary cover design shown).
"The Master: The Life & Times of Dally Messenger"

'Pioneers of Rugby League" - the "Centenary Edition" of "The Rugby Rebellion" - includes new bonus historical rugby league material....
"Pioneers of Rugby League"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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