The NRL held a meeting with club bosses this week, and it did not go the way many coaches and CEOs had hoped. The league’s administration presented data pushing back against the widely held theory that the 2026 rule changes — particularly the expanded six-again rule — are directly responsible for the season’s alarming injury toll. The NRL’s message was clear: don’t blame us.
But across training paddocks and press conference rooms from Brisbane to Cronulla, the scepticism is loud, and it isn’t going away.
A Season Defined by the Casualty Ward
Let’s set the scene. The 2026 NRL season has been, by almost any measure, an absolute injury disaster.
Kalyn Ponga is on the sideline for six to eight weeks with a high-grade hamstring strain. Dylan Brown is out for a month. Tom Trbojevic won’t be seen until Round 13 at the earliest. Payne Haas is tracking towards Round 14 or 15. Jahrome Hughes — the Storm’s general, their heartbeat — missed Round 9 with concussion. The list goes on, and on, and on.
By the time Round 8 wrapped up, pectoral tears had felled both Corey Waddell (Sea Eagles) and Viliame Kikau (Bulldogs) in the same weekend. Jai Arrow remains sidelined indefinitely with a nerve injury. Long-term ACL casualties — Caleb Navale, Jaimin Jolliffe, J’maine Hopgood — have been ruled out well into 2027. Melbourne Storm have lost six straight games, a significant chunk of it attributed to an injury list that reads like a hospital ward manifest.
It is the kind of casualty toll that demands answers. And for months, plenty of people inside the game have thought they had one.
The Theory: Fatigue Kills
The argument that has gained traction at club level is straightforward. The NRL expanded the six-again rule in 2026, pushing the threshold for set restarts from the 20-metre line out to the 40-metre line. The result has been a dramatic surge in set restarts — up from an average of 6.4 per game last season to a staggering 11.5 per game this year.
The theory goes like this: more six-agains mean more unbroken possession sets, longer defensive efforts, and brutally fatigued players making desperate tackles at the end of those sets. Fatigued tacklers mean poor technique. Poor technique means hips dropping, bodies compromised, players going down with serious injuries.
Eels coach Jason Ryles articulated it with chilling clarity after losing lock J’maine Hopgood to an ACL rupture. “Those tackles, 99.99999 per cent of the time the boys don’t mean it,” Ryles said. “But unfortunately you keep throwing fatigue into the game and you keep making them more tired — they happen.”
Parramatta’s Dylan Walker went further, saying outright that the speed of the game had led to injuries. Canberra’s Ricky Stuart, one of the game’s most outspoken coaches, said the NRL had “lost the fabric of the game” — not just aesthetically, but structurally.
And club bosses were so alarmed that they reportedly pushed the NRL to front up at their next scheduled meeting to address the concerns directly.
The NRL’s Response: The Data Says Otherwise
The NRL came to that meeting armed with numbers. The league’s position, presented to club CEOs, was that the injury data does not support a direct causal link between the six-again rule and the spike in serious injuries. In the NRL’s view, the injury toll — while real and significant — reflects factors that exist independent of the rule change.
It is the kind of response that is simultaneously hard to dismiss and hard to fully accept. The league has access to data that clubs don’t. And it is worth acknowledging that rugby league has always been a high-injury sport — the question of whether this season is genuinely worse, or merely feels worse, is a legitimate one.
The NRL also pointed to the proactive steps it has taken on player welfare in 2026. Before the season began, all 17 clubs were informed that in-season contact training would be capped at no more than 100 minutes on a regular seven-day turnaround — dropping to 40 or 50 minutes on shorter turnarounds. It was a landmark move: the first official contact training limit in Australian rugby league history, designed specifically to reduce cumulative physical load and protect players from long-term brain trauma.
“The training load guidelines are designed to enhance player safety and have been developed following extensive research,” the NRL said in a statement.
The Rugby League Players’ Association, for its part, has been measured but persistent. The RLPA requested a comprehensive data pack from the NRL — covering game speed, play-the-ball rates, injury statistics, and more — after warning the league that fast-tracked rule changes could have unintended consequences for player welfare. Broncos captain Adam Reynolds backed the move. “Players are the main product of the game and you want to protect those assets as much as possible,” he said.
Why the Clubs Aren’t Convinced
Here is the problem with the NRL’s position: even if the data doesn’t prove causation, the optics are damning.
The six-again change was introduced without full buy-in from clubs. Set restarts have nearly doubled. Players are completing more tackles per game, defending longer sets under greater fatigue. And the injury list is the longest in recent memory.
You don’t need a PhD in sports science to connect those dots — or at least to ask serious questions. And when the organisation with the most to lose from admitting a rule change was a mistake is also the organisation interpreting the data, a degree of healthy scepticism from clubs is not just understandable. It is appropriate.
Ricky Stuart, never one to soft-pedal, has called for the six-again rule to be scrapped entirely. He’s not alone. Across the competition, coaches are quietly — and sometimes not so quietly — furious.
There is also a broader cultural concern at play. The NRL under Peter V’Landys has been bold, innovative, and at times genuinely brilliant in reshaping how the game is presented. But it has also developed a reputation for stubbornness — for backing its own decisions publicly even when the evidence on the ground suggests a rethink is warranted. V’Landys blamed player “indiscipline” for the surge in six-agains, putting the responsibility back on the players rather than the rule.
That framing hasn’t gone down well.
The Bigger Picture: A Game at a Crossroads
What makes this debate genuinely significant is that it sits inside a much larger conversation about what rugby league is becoming.
The six-again rule was always about speed — about creating a faster, more dynamic, more entertaining game. And it worked, for a while. Last season struck what many considered a happy balance. But in 2026, the dial has been turned too far, and the game is suffering for it. Margins are blowing out. Defensive teams are being starved of possession for entire halves. And players are breaking down at alarming rates.
Wayne Bennett, coaching South Sydney, loves it. “We’ve got a game that is full of entertainment right now,” he said. Bennett’s Rabbitohs have been one of the sides benefiting — they know how to exploit open, fast football. But even within his own roster, the injury list tells a complicated story.
The RLPA’s call for data is the right instinct. The union warned the NRL before the season that rushing rule changes could have unintended consequences. Now those consequences are potentially playing out in real time, and the union deserves answers — not just reassurances.
The NRL’s new contact training limits are a genuine and commendable step forward on player safety. But they address a different problem — the cumulative load of training week-to-week — rather than the in-game fatigue that coaches are pointing to as the real culprit this season.
What Happens Next?
The NRL’s shutdown of the injury theory in this week’s meeting will not end the conversation. If anything, it may intensify it.
Club bosses left that room with data that may or may not have satisfied their concerns. Coaches are still dealing with depleted rosters. Players are still going down. And with Magic Round approaching in Round 11 and State of Origin just weeks away, the pressure on the NRL to demonstrate that player welfare is genuinely its first priority — not just a talking point — will only grow.
The six-again rule may survive 2026. But if the injury toll continues at its current rate, and if the link between game speed, fatigue, and serious injuries becomes harder to dismiss, the NRL will face a reckoning. The data can shut down a theory in a meeting room. It is a lot harder to shut down when the casualty ward keeps filling up.







