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FORUM / RUGBY /  Clarkson best tighthead in the game

Clarkson best tighthead in the game

Started by Saffolk 67 REPLIES971 VIEWS· 06 Oct 2025, 00:11
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SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 00:11
#1
06 Oct 2025, 00:11#1

According to a very astute rugby follower on here


The poor lad got completely destroyed by Steenkamp and the Bulls scrum


Poor Leinster scrum could not have retreated faster had it been on wheels

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 01:24
#2
06 Oct 2025, 01:24#2

Well he certainly destroyed your man Wessels when it counted, in the URC final.

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 02:12
#3
06 Oct 2025, 02:12#3

And it seems he did a number yesterday:


Rugby Pass

3. Thomas Clarkson – 8.5

A huge improvement on Slimani’s horror show last week. The scrum actually edged the Bulls on balance, with only one hinging penalty going against him. Scored a thumping try after a smart Deegan pop.



CL
clevermikeCoach57,555 posts
06 Oct 2025, 03:01
#4
06 Oct 2025, 03:01#4

I do not remember - was Clarkson in the Leinster team that played he Stormers?

BO
bobbok...Captain10,129 posts
06 Oct 2025, 05:45
#5
06 Oct 2025, 05:45#5

https://www.unitedrugby.com/

DB
DbDraadCaptain26,388 posts
06 Oct 2025, 06:21
#6
06 Oct 2025, 06:21#6

"...huge improvement on Slimani’s horror show last week."

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 10:25
#7
06 Oct 2025, 10:25#7

Edged the Bulls scrum bwhaaahaaaa

CL
clevermikeCoach57,555 posts
06 Oct 2025, 10:48
#8
06 Oct 2025, 10:48#8

According to Superbru he dd come on as a replacement and was demolished by a nder 20 player in both scrumming and rolling mauls. Is that what happen to a top class tighthead prop? He scrummed a gainst teenekamp he lost that battle as well.

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 15:21
#9
06 Oct 2025, 15:21#9

So who do I believe Billy Bunter who never played but a few games beyond High School or Rugby Pass.


Another case closed…. hahaha!

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 15:46
#10
06 Oct 2025, 15:46#10

Go watch the game you fucking idiot

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 15:48
#11
06 Oct 2025, 15:48#11

Oh so you admit if I watched the game I’d reach the right conclusion, just as I did when Clarkson destroyed Wessels,

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 15:53
#12
06 Oct 2025, 15:53#12

If you watched the game you would see Steenkamp destroy Clarkson with the Bulls scrum marching them backwards for about 3m


Only a fucking loser would comment on a game they have not watched - you are pathetic


You lied about Clarkson vs Wessels and were too rugby ignorant to know that one prop could pre engage before his partner has - that’s because you know so little about the finer details of the game - you get the basics


Clarkson beat Wessels with an early engage in the first scrum and never again - so you lied as per usual

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 17:15
#13
06 Oct 2025, 17:15#13

Nobody can meaningfully pre engage Chat searched the net and found nothing. It’s a myth. The facts are simple Clarkson had by far the better of Wessels, every report confirms that.



SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 17:42
#14
06 Oct 2025, 17:42#14

Chat tells us you can pre engage you liar but someone who has played and been around the game most of his life will know that it’s obvious one prop can pre engage before his partner - the frontrow is not glued together you idiot


Fuck me - this coming from an old fart who thinks his IQ trumps bwaahaaaaa


Bullshit did Clarkson have the better of Wessels other than the first scrum pre engage - you are lying as you always do


Clarkson was owned by Steenkamp on the weekend - only a fucking rugby idiot would even suggest him as the best tighthead in the game - he is a fucking nobody


That’s how rugby stupid you are - IQ my arse

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 20:24
#15
06 Oct 2025, 20:24#15

Chat does not say pre engaging works when asked properly….it’s physically impossible for one prop to dominate another before the whole scrum engages.

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 20:48
#16
06 Oct 2025, 20:48#16

Bullshit Chat does say pre engaging works - you are lying - I’m happy to provide the evidence as I did before


A prop effecting a pre engage gets an early advantage on his opponent. The engage is massively important. The prop that engages first has an advantage putting his opponent on the back foot. The pre engage is a seconds worth but it counts,

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 21:01
#17
06 Oct 2025, 21:01#17

In the rugby scrum, can one prop gain a significant advantage if only he pre engages

ChatGPT said:

No, a single prop cannot gain a significant advantage by pre-engaging on his own—at least not for more than a split-second—because of how the scrum structure and modern refereeing mechanics work.

1. Biomechanics

A prop’s force is transmitted through his hooker and opposite prop:

  1. If only one prop “shoots early,” the drive isn’t directed into the opposition but mostly shears his own bind or collapses the channel.
  2. The hooker and opposite prop must be locked and synchronised for any meaningful horizontal push; otherwise, the early prop’s power leaks through his own shoulders or destabilises the front row.

2. Refereeing and Law Enforcement

Under World Rugby Law 19 (Scrum):

  1. The “engage” sequence—crouch, bind, set—is tightly controlled by the referee.
  2. A single prop pre-engaging before “set” is penalised as early engagement (free kick).
  3. Even subtle “anticipations” are usually spotted because the referee stands on that side and watches for early shoulder contact.

3. Practical On-Field Outcome

Occasionally, a prop might time his drop fractionally ahead of the call to get body height and hit angle right. The results:

  1. Marginal benefit: a better initial position or a small gain in shoulder height.
  2. Risks: loss of bind, neck exposure, penalty, or destabilising his own hooker’s strike platform.

4. Team Dynamics

Scrum dominance relies on synchronous timing—the coordinated acceleration of all eight forwards. Even the best scrummaging props (e.g., Tendai Mtawarira, Tadhg Furlong, Frans Malherbe) emphasise collective engagement timing. When one side hits alone, it’s usually a coaching or rhythm error, not a tactic.

Summary:

A prop acting alone can’t sustainably gain leverage; the mechanical and regulatory systems of the scrum make synchronisation far more valuable than anticipation. At best he might gain a fleeting half-beat positional edge; more often he destabilises his own side or concedes a free kick.

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 21:09
#18
06 Oct 2025, 21:09#18

I never said a significant advantage. I said a slight advantage but any advantage counts in a scrum


Wessels in that first scrum was hit with a slight pre engage by Clarkson which had him on the back foot and he never recovered from that


A prop like Ox is experienced and technically astute enough to recover from a pre engage but not every time

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 21:15
#19
06 Oct 2025, 21:15#19

Now it’s slight…..hahaha….he was hit with nothing except Clarkson overpowering him.

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 21:26
#20
06 Oct 2025, 21:26#20

No Moffie I have never used the word ‘significant advantage’ you did so try again


Clarkson overpowering him - that’s a lie - yet again. You resort to lying as you don’t get the subtleties of the game - they are beyond you

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 21:34
#21
06 Oct 2025, 21:34#21

A porker back peddling fast

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 21:39
#22
06 Oct 2025, 21:39#22

No you fucking idiot - where did I use the word significant advantage you lying prick huh?


You are such easy pickings - fuck me your arguments are so fucking weak


Provide the evidence old man

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 21:48
#23
06 Oct 2025, 21:48#23

‘A prop effecting a pre engage gets an early advantage on his opponent. The engage is massively important. The prop that engages first has an advantage putting his opponent on the back foot. The pre engage is a seconds worth but it counts,’….says the small porker.


Putting an opponent on his back foot is certainly significant. But as Chat opines, there is no way for one prop to project any force without destabilizing the scrum. It’s all nonsense. Wessels my have ben caught napping by the whole engagement process, but I doubt that as well, he struggled the whole game.

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 21:54
#24
06 Oct 2025, 21:54#24

So old man where did I mention a significant advantage? You pathetic liar, desperately poor at formulating an argument


Its a good thing you ensured we had Kellogs on the table and not pursued a career in law


Fuck me

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 21:55
#25
06 Oct 2025, 21:55#25

When you said it puts the opponent on the back foot. Which is where you are.

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 22:03
#26
06 Oct 2025, 22:03#26

You are just a weak liar


But prove me wrong - where did I use the words ‘significant advantage’


Good luck old man


Just fucking concede and go to bed - this is too easy

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 22:12
#27
06 Oct 2025, 22:12#27

Well let’s use your words then:


If he pre engages could he put an opponent ‘on the back foot’



ChatGPT said:

Excellent and nuanced question — and yes, for an instant, a prop who pre-engages can put his opposite number “on the back foot,” but it’s almost always short-lived, illegal, and self-defeating in the modern game.

Let’s break it down biomechanically and tactically:

1. What “on the back foot” actually means

In scrummaging terms it means the opposing prop’s weight momentarily shifts backward — his hips or heels move behind his shoulders, reducing his ability to resist or drive. That can happen if:

  1. You strike contact slightly earlier, with a lower angle,
  2. And your opponent isn’t perfectly braced.

So yes — if you anticipate the “set” by even a tenth of a second, you can deliver a micro-shock that appears to rock him back.

2. Why it rarely translates to a lasting advantage

  1. Force absorption: The opponent’s bind and his hooker immediately absorb the impact and reset the pressure line.
  2. Energy leak: Because your hooker and tight five aren’t yet fully loaded, your hit is mostly dissipated through your own pack, not transmitted forward.
  3. Referee management: Modern referees and TMO footage make this extremely risky. One early shove, or even a pre-contact nudge, is a near-automatic free kick.
  4. Body position compromise: A premature hit often straightens your back and narrows your hips — you lose the compact power posture needed once the scrum actually settles.

So the “back foot” moment is almost always followed by you being unstable or penalised.

3. What elite props actually do

At the top level, props time the drop and squeeze — not the full hit — micro-seconds before the “set.” They:

  1. Sink their hips early to get under the opposition’s chest line,
  2. Load tension through the bind,
  3. But don’t extend until the ref’s call.

This produces the illusion of an early hit without incurring the sanction — a timing advantage rather than an illegal pre-engagement.


4. Summary

AspectEffect of Pre-Engagement
Immediate impactMay rock opponent back fractionallySustained driveNone — force dissipates without pack synchronizationLegal riskVery high (early engage = free kick)Posture outcomeOften compromised, higher, less stableBest modern techniqueLoad tension early, explode exactly on “set”

In short:

A lone pre-engagement can momentarily unbalance an opponent, but it can’t hold him there — and the trade-off (penalty risk, loss of structure) makes it a tactical dead end at professional level.



SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 22:34
#28
06 Oct 2025, 22:34#28

Wow you are pathetic and very desperate


But above all you are a liar


You have been owned yet again

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 22:42
#29
06 Oct 2025, 22:42#29

No you denied that putting a player on the back foot and getting an early advantage was similar to getting a significant advantage….so I simply asked Chat the question again using your exact words and got the same answer. Squirm if you must

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 22:55
#30
06 Oct 2025, 22:55#30

There is a big difference between significant advantage and putting a prop on the back foot with an early engage you fucking idiot


Squirm for what exactly - more like pissing myself at how stupid you are and how pathetically weak all your arguments are


Have you always just been a yes man?

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
06 Oct 2025, 23:40
#31
06 Oct 2025, 23:40#31

So I used your exact words the second time and Chat said again it was nonsense….I’d recommend you read again What elite props actually do’. Chat kindly guiding you away from your nutter ideas,

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 23:49
#32
06 Oct 2025, 23:49#32

Oh boy



  1. In practice, one prop can “pre-engage” slightly before their partner, especially at lower levels or in certain tactical scenarios.
  2. This can happen because the props are binding and leaning, and timing isn’t always perfectly simultaneous.
  3. World Rugby law still technically requires a synchronized engagement on the “set” call, but in the real world, slight variations happen without automatically being penalized.



Important nuance:


  1. The referee may only penalize if the early engagement affects safety (collapse, wheel, front row instability).
  2. Experienced front rows often time their engagement to get a slight advantage in angle or drive, but it’s a fine line.



So yes—legally, simultaneous engagement is required, but in practice one prop can start pushing a fraction of a second before the other.


SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 23:50
#33
06 Oct 2025, 23:50#33


3. Key Points on Pre-Engagement



  1. Microseconds matter: Props don’t literally launch early like in a race; it’s more about body angle, weight shift, and bind tension.
  2. Safety first: Any overt pre-engagement that risks collapse, neck, or shoulder injury will be penalized.
  3. Experienced front rows do it constantly—it’s part of the battle for leverage and dominance.





In short, pre-engagement in practice is about subtle positioning and loading, not blatant “rushing the set.” The best props use it to gain a mechanical advantage without drawing a penalty.


SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
06 Oct 2025, 23:51
#34
06 Oct 2025, 23:51#34

Nonsense my arse - you have been owned yet again

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
07 Oct 2025, 00:31
#35
07 Oct 2025, 00:31#35

Scrum1 1 Steenekamp tries desperately to scrum in,,,,,Clarkson stays straight as an arrow


9.49 Bulls scrum collapses under Leinster pressure…penalty


13.50 Scrum collapses simultaneously after the ball is out


25.30 Rock solid Leinster scrum


30.00 Clarkson powers through the Bools defense for a try


33.20 Clarkson called for hinging…..Steenekamp way over extended. Could have gone either way, I saw no rearward movement.


39.10 The first dominant Bools scrum with the whole Leinster pack shoved backwards


52.30 Clarkson dominates Steenekamp, not called the first time….second time ref calls No 1 lost your bind as Steenekamp elbow hits the deck again,


‘And 56.33 Steenekamp is subbed…..Clarkson is subbed at minute 58. It was a fairly even contest at scrum time with 2 penalties each. There was one dominant Bools scrum.



MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
07 Oct 2025, 01:35
#36
07 Oct 2025, 01:35#36

So you were seeing weight shift, bind tension and body angle on your TV screen….hilarious. As Chat says even if it happens there is no advantage and there is no way you saw a bind pressure tactic


A liar and next time include your question so we can see the bias you have introduced


In the meantime here is the truth from rugby pass

1. Jan-Hendrik Wessels – 5

Carried with his usual vigour and wasn’t bullied physically, but struggled to assert dominance at the set-piece, with Tom Clarkson more than matching him in the scrum.

MO
MozartCaptain49,914 posts
07 Oct 2025, 06:18
#37
07 Oct 2025, 06:18#37

And here’s Chat’s clarification on pre engagement:



?? 1. True pre-engagement = illegal hit

This is the scenario I described earlier. One prop extends before “set” and makes real forward contact first.

  1. The rest of his pack isn’t connected yet, so his force dissipates through his own body.
  2. The opposition absorbs and resets almost instantly.
  3. The referee sees the shoulder movement ? free kick.
  4. His posture opens up (hips high, chest forward), reducing later stability.

That does create a fleeting “back-foot” feel for the opponent, but it’s self-defeating and usually punished.

?? Outcome: no lasting advantage, high risk.

?? 2. Pre-load / pre-tension = legal micro-timing edge

This is what the short three-line quote describes.

Here, props are not moving early — they’re loading early:

  1. Tightening their bind,
  2. Dropping their hips half a beat sooner,
  3. Transferring weight slightly forward so that when “set” comes, their legs are already coiled.

No forward movement, no early contact — just readiness.

That’s why microseconds matter: the first fraction of a second after “set” decides who wins the height and pressure battle.

?? Outcome: real, lasting leverage; legal; exactly what “experienced front rows do constantly.”


…….


Which presents you with a bit of a conundrum. If you claim you saw 2….firstly I don’t believe you and secondly it’s perfectly legal. But if you claim you saw 1 Chat’s view is it is absorbed instantly and actually weakens the offenders scrum ie can’t be the reason Wessels was dominated and penalized.


That seems to be dispositive.



DB
DbDraadCaptain26,388 posts
07 Oct 2025, 06:43
#38
07 Oct 2025, 06:43#38

Keep digging...

MP
MpowerPro5,061 posts
07 Oct 2025, 08:20
#39
07 Oct 2025, 08:20#39

Essentially Wessels is a Hooker not a prop. That is why Clarkson got the upper hand in the scrum battle.


The Coaches should stick with wessels at Hooker.

SA
Saffolk Captain30,741 posts
07 Oct 2025, 11:52
#40
07 Oct 2025, 11:52#40

Yep Draad that hole is very deep


Thing is if you knew anything about rugby you would know that one prop can pre engage before his partner does - it’s common knowledge - part of the game


Something good old Moffie is totally unaware of

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