Camisolas novas... patrocinador novo!
As equipas das escolinhas de Rugby do Belenenses já vestiram, no convívio do passado sábado, camisolas Patrick, a marca que patrocina o clube de forma transversal, equipando todas as modalidades e escalões competitivos e de formação.
Algumas imagens dos novos equipamentos estão disponíveis no Blog das Escolas do Belenenses, dedicado aos escalões de Bambis, Benjamins e Infantis.
As novidades não ficam todavia por aqui, já que a Mitsubishi deixa de ser o patrocinador principal das camisolas do Belenenses, e o Rugby juvenil (até aos iniciados) passa a contar com o apoio da Nestlé.
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Vídeo do Hino Nacional, no jogo de dia 28:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FekRrO1GXOI
Em Portugal ninguém fala nisto, mas a seguir ao Mundial, o jogo pode mudar e muito.
«The Times October 31, 2006
Scottish to experiment with radical home rules
By Lewis Stuart
ANYBODY wanting to see how rugby will be played in the future should make their way to Scotland next spring. Taking advantage of the need to pad the second half of the season with a second domestic competition, clubs north of the border have agreed to test the rule changes that could alter the face of the game after the next World Cup.
A whole raft of alterations could change fundamentally the look of the game. They are designed to speed up play and cut the number of penalties to make the sport an even better spectacle, both at grounds and on television.
The main ones are to cut the number of penalty offences to foul play, offside and handling on the ground; move the offside line five metres behind the scrum; allow handling in the ruck but police ruthlessly that the players join legally; and reduce the effectiveness of the maul by allowing the defending side to force it down.
[...]
The International Rugby Board (IRB) came up with the proposed changes at a series of meetings last year involving the likes of Rod Macqueen, the former Australia coach; Ian McIntosh, from South Africa; Pierre Villepreux, from France; Richie Dixon, from Scotland and Paddy O’Brien, their own referees manager. They were tested over three months at Stellenbosch University in South Africa last summer with positive feedback.
[...]
If accepted, the rule changes would make rugby a very different game. In theory, penalising any side that stops the game to set up a ruck or maul by making it likely that they will lose the ball should encourage handling rugby, with more offloads as sides aim to keep the ball moving rather than settle for an endless succession of rucks going nowhere.»
Já falámos, Duarte, ainda no tempo do Blog Rugby Azul...
Leia o artigo neste link:
http://rugbyazul.blogspot.com/2006/05/fim-da-mle-vista.html
Emfim, o artigo fala apenas nas mêlées, mas as alterações são de facto bastante mais abrangentes.
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