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Red Cards & HIA

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Sports Talk
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  • MiketheSnowM MiketheSnow

    Genuine question, not stirring the pot.

    So please take a moment before knee jerking down my throat.

    If Roigard had passed behind the oncoming BB, with BB acting as the dummy runner, and BB had clattered into Beirne is that a penalty against BB for obstruction or a penalty against Beirne for ‘tackling’ the man (BB) without the ball?

    J Offline
    J Offline
    Jet
    wrote on last edited by Jet
    #62

    @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

    Genuine question, not stirring the pot.

    So please take a moment before knee jerking down my throat.

    If Roigard had passed behind the oncoming BB, with BB acting as the dummy runner, and BB had clattered into Beirne is that a penalty against BB for obstruction or a penalty against Beirne for ‘tackling’ the man (BB) without the ball?

    We had an iteration of that when Freddie Steward and Hugo Keenan collided.

    Whomever hits the other in the head (regardless of game state) gets sent off. It’s that simple.

    Forward pass, dummy runners etc etc are all red herrings. Don’t hit the other lad in the head. That’s the point of all this nonsense in the first place. To protect the head.

    For the record I’m from the “it’s not tiddlywinks” school of hard knocks. I don’t think anyone should be sent off bar ripping out someone’s testicle.

    But if you send off one of my lads this week , I expect to see the lad from the opposition sent off the next week if he does a version of the same offense. And I expect fans of that team to go “fair enough”.

    What we have now is just garbage.

    We could have won the Lions series if Vunipola gets same sanction as SBW for forearm smashing a prone Beaudy Barrett in the face.

    We could have won the Lions series if Sean O Brien gets red for knocking Naholo out with a swinging arm.

    We could have won the Irish series if Taavao and Porter received the same sanction.

    We could have won World Cup final if Cane and Kolisi received the same sanction.

    Etc etc etc.

    I don’t forget, but officialdom and opposition fans seem to.

    The Irish (Sexton and Murray) were the worst onfield card chasers. Hands aloft at every ruck looking for referee intervention.

    Now the Irish feel aggrieved and their fans will lean on this card as the reason they lost

    It’s lamentable carry on from World Rugby.

    D 1 Reply Last reply
    11
    • MiketheSnowM MiketheSnow

      @Mr-Fish said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

      @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

      Genuine question, not stirring the pot.

      So please take a moment before knee jerking down my throat.

      If Roigard had passed behind the oncoming BB, with BB acting as the dummy runner, and BB had clattered into Beirne is that a penalty against BB for obstruction or a penalty against Beirne for ‘tackling’ the man (BB) without the ball?

      That would be a penalty against Beirne for tackling a player without the ball, as you say, but not if Beirne hits Barrett high, as he does in this instance.

      Thanks

      See that doesn’t make sense to me

      In that scenario, BB would never be in a position to catch the ball and in my view is obstructing the defender

      That’s something I’d like to see changed

      In my day, an M-1 or M-2 had to go across the chest of the ‘missed’ player, not his arse

      BonesB Offline
      BonesB Offline
      Bones
      wrote on last edited by
      #63

      @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

      In my day, an M-1 or M-2 had to go across the chest of the ‘missed’ player, not his arse

      Christ that's not been the case since I started playing, so you're going back more than 40 years to justify this incident?

      MiketheSnowM 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • J Jet

        @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

        Genuine question, not stirring the pot.

        So please take a moment before knee jerking down my throat.

        If Roigard had passed behind the oncoming BB, with BB acting as the dummy runner, and BB had clattered into Beirne is that a penalty against BB for obstruction or a penalty against Beirne for ‘tackling’ the man (BB) without the ball?

        We had an iteration of that when Freddie Steward and Hugo Keenan collided.

        Whomever hits the other in the head (regardless of game state) gets sent off. It’s that simple.

        Forward pass, dummy runners etc etc are all red herrings. Don’t hit the other lad in the head. That’s the point of all this nonsense in the first place. To protect the head.

        For the record I’m from the “it’s not tiddlywinks” school of hard knocks. I don’t think anyone should be sent off bar ripping out someone’s testicle.

        But if you send off one of my lads this week , I expect to see the lad from the opposition sent off the next week if he does a version of the same offense. And I expect fans of that team to go “fair enough”.

        What we have now is just garbage.

        We could have won the Lions series if Vunipola gets same sanction as SBW for forearm smashing a prone Beaudy Barrett in the face.

        We could have won the Lions series if Sean O Brien gets red for knocking Naholo out with a swinging arm.

        We could have won the Irish series if Taavao and Porter received the same sanction.

        We could have won World Cup final if Cane and Kolisi received the same sanction.

        Etc etc etc.

        I don’t forget, but officialdom and opposition fans seem to.

        The Irish (Sexton and Murray) were the worst onfield card chasers. Hands aloft at every ruck looking for referee intervention.

        Now the Irish feel aggrieved and their fans will lean on this card as the reason they lost

        It’s lamentable carry on from World Rugby.

        D Offline
        D Offline
        Dodge
        wrote on last edited by Dodge
        #64

        @Jet said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

        @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

        Genuine question, not stirring the pot.

        So please take a moment before knee jerking down my throat.

        If Roigard had passed behind the oncoming BB, with BB acting as the dummy runner, and BB had clattered into Beirne is that a penalty against BB for obstruction or a penalty against Beirne for ‘tackling’ the man (BB) without the ball?

        We had an iteration of that when Freddie Steward and Hugo Keenan collided.

        Whomever hits the other in the head (regardless of game state) gets sent off. It’s that simple.

        Forward pass, dummy runners etc etc are all red herrings. Don’t hit the other lad in the head. That’s the point of all this nonsense in the first place. To protect the head.

        For the record I’m from the “it’s not tiddlywinks” school of hard knocks. I don’t think anyone should be sent off bar ripping out someone’s testicle.

        But if you send off one of my lads this week , I expect to see the lad from the opposition sent off the next week if he does a version of the same offense. And I expect fans of that team to go “fair enough”.

        What we have now is just garbage.

        We could have won the Lions series if Vunipola gets same sanction as SBW for forearm smashing a prone Beaudy Barrett in the face.

        We could have won the Lions series if Sean O Brien gets red for knocking Naholo out with a swinging arm.

        We could have won the Irish series if Taavao and Porter received the same sanction.

        We could have won World Cup final if Cane and Kolisi received the same sanction.

        Etc etc etc.

        I don’t forget, but officialdom and opposition fans seem to.

        The Irish (Sexton and Murray) were the worst onfield card chasers. Hands aloft at every ruck looking for referee intervention.

        Now the Irish feel aggrieved and their fans will lean on this card as the reason they lost

        It’s lamentable carry on from World Rugby.

        You see, this was given red at the time and I called it live as that was consistent with how it was being reffed at that point. Before the decision was made, people were calling me an idiot and saying i didn't understand rugby if i thought that would be a red.

        I don't think that would be given as a red today, they would look harder for mitigation. I think it would be more likely decided a rugby incident with two players going for a bouncing ball, maybe a penalty for high contact but mitigated because the Irish player dipped to collect the ball, or because Steward looked like he was pulling out of the contact / bracing for contact etc.

        The lack of consistent application of the decision making process is the problem but that is in part because of how fans reacted to individual decisions feeling unfair.

        As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

        ACT CrusaderA J 2 Replies Last reply
        3
        • D Dodge

          @Jet said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

          @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

          Genuine question, not stirring the pot.

          So please take a moment before knee jerking down my throat.

          If Roigard had passed behind the oncoming BB, with BB acting as the dummy runner, and BB had clattered into Beirne is that a penalty against BB for obstruction or a penalty against Beirne for ‘tackling’ the man (BB) without the ball?

          We had an iteration of that when Freddie Steward and Hugo Keenan collided.

          Whomever hits the other in the head (regardless of game state) gets sent off. It’s that simple.

          Forward pass, dummy runners etc etc are all red herrings. Don’t hit the other lad in the head. That’s the point of all this nonsense in the first place. To protect the head.

          For the record I’m from the “it’s not tiddlywinks” school of hard knocks. I don’t think anyone should be sent off bar ripping out someone’s testicle.

          But if you send off one of my lads this week , I expect to see the lad from the opposition sent off the next week if he does a version of the same offense. And I expect fans of that team to go “fair enough”.

          What we have now is just garbage.

          We could have won the Lions series if Vunipola gets same sanction as SBW for forearm smashing a prone Beaudy Barrett in the face.

          We could have won the Lions series if Sean O Brien gets red for knocking Naholo out with a swinging arm.

          We could have won the Irish series if Taavao and Porter received the same sanction.

          We could have won World Cup final if Cane and Kolisi received the same sanction.

          Etc etc etc.

          I don’t forget, but officialdom and opposition fans seem to.

          The Irish (Sexton and Murray) were the worst onfield card chasers. Hands aloft at every ruck looking for referee intervention.

          Now the Irish feel aggrieved and their fans will lean on this card as the reason they lost

          It’s lamentable carry on from World Rugby.

          You see, this was given red at the time and I called it live as that was consistent with how it was being reffed at that point. Before the decision was made, people were calling me an idiot and saying i didn't understand rugby if i thought that would be a red.

          I don't think that would be given as a red today, they would look harder for mitigation. I think it would be more likely decided a rugby incident with two players going for a bouncing ball, maybe a penalty for high contact but mitigated because the Irish player dipped to collect the ball, or because Steward looked like he was pulling out of the contact / bracing for contact etc.

          The lack of consistent application of the decision making process is the problem but that is in part because of how fans reacted to individual decisions feeling unfair.

          As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

          ACT CrusaderA Offline
          ACT CrusaderA Offline
          ACT Crusader
          wrote on last edited by
          #65

          @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

          As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

          Agree.

          I’m not sure consistency is the problem, but what has evolved is the fine lines from incident to incident. They’ve tied themselves in knots somewhat.

          D 1 Reply Last reply
          3
          • ACT CrusaderA ACT Crusader

            @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

            As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

            Agree.

            I’m not sure consistency is the problem, but what has evolved is the fine lines from incident to incident. They’ve tied themselves in knots somewhat.

            D Offline
            D Offline
            Dodge
            wrote on last edited by
            #66

            @ACT-Crusader said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

            @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

            As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

            Agree.

            I’m not sure consistency is the problem, but what has evolved is the fine lines from incident to incident. They’ve tied themselves in knots somewhat.

            and if i step out of the 'is it red or not in the context of the current rules' and think about 'should that be a red' then I am in favour of more mitigation being applied. It is somewhat inevitable that with more mitigation, then the clear lines between what is and isn't red get more blurred.

            In the WC Final, from memory I didn't think Kolisi would be sent off when i saw it live but did think Cane would be - but had it happened earlier that year they both would have been.

            NepiaN 1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • D Dodge

              @ACT-Crusader said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

              @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

              As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

              Agree.

              I’m not sure consistency is the problem, but what has evolved is the fine lines from incident to incident. They’ve tied themselves in knots somewhat.

              and if i step out of the 'is it red or not in the context of the current rules' and think about 'should that be a red' then I am in favour of more mitigation being applied. It is somewhat inevitable that with more mitigation, then the clear lines between what is and isn't red get more blurred.

              In the WC Final, from memory I didn't think Kolisi would be sent off when i saw it live but did think Cane would be - but had it happened earlier that year they both would have been.

              NepiaN Offline
              NepiaN Offline
              Nepia
              wrote on last edited by
              #67

              @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

              @ACT-Crusader said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

              @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

              As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

              Agree.

              I’m not sure consistency is the problem, but what has evolved is the fine lines from incident to incident. They’ve tied themselves in knots somewhat.

              and if i step out of the 'is it red or not in the context of the current rules' and think about 'should that be a red' then I am in favour of more mitigation being applied. It is somewhat inevitable that with more mitigation, then the clear lines between what is and isn't red get more blurred.

              In the WC Final, from memory I didn't think Kolisi would be sent off when i saw it live but did think Cane would be - but had it happened earlier that year they both would have been.

              I've watched them both again recently for some reason. I'm genuinely baffled how Kolisi didn't get a red for leading with his head. That happens now - red, that happens before the final - red.

              I remember watching a tik tok, pommy accented dude 😉 ,where he went out of his way to claim no mitigation for Kriel changing direction but that there was all sorts of mitigation in Kolisi's tackle including that the head contact was indirect, I guess head to head doesn't count if you also hit on the shoulder. What's even worse is that Kolisi had come in on a straight line from quite a distance, meanwhile Cane was tracking across field and Kriel turned in after he was running the opposite way.

              Actually I think I need to leave this discussion, I'll just wind up hating rugby again at this rate.

              J 1 Reply Last reply
              8
              • NepiaN Nepia

                @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                @ACT-Crusader said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

                Agree.

                I’m not sure consistency is the problem, but what has evolved is the fine lines from incident to incident. They’ve tied themselves in knots somewhat.

                and if i step out of the 'is it red or not in the context of the current rules' and think about 'should that be a red' then I am in favour of more mitigation being applied. It is somewhat inevitable that with more mitigation, then the clear lines between what is and isn't red get more blurred.

                In the WC Final, from memory I didn't think Kolisi would be sent off when i saw it live but did think Cane would be - but had it happened earlier that year they both would have been.

                I've watched them both again recently for some reason. I'm genuinely baffled how Kolisi didn't get a red for leading with his head. That happens now - red, that happens before the final - red.

                I remember watching a tik tok, pommy accented dude 😉 ,where he went out of his way to claim no mitigation for Kriel changing direction but that there was all sorts of mitigation in Kolisi's tackle including that the head contact was indirect, I guess head to head doesn't count if you also hit on the shoulder. What's even worse is that Kolisi had come in on a straight line from quite a distance, meanwhile Cane was tracking across field and Kriel turned in after he was running the opposite way.

                Actually I think I need to leave this discussion, I'll just wind up hating rugby again at this rate.

                J Offline
                J Offline
                Jet
                wrote on last edited by
                #68

                @Nepia said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                @ACT-Crusader said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

                Agree.

                I’m not sure consistency is the problem, but what has evolved is the fine lines from incident to incident. They’ve tied themselves in knots somewhat.

                and if i step out of the 'is it red or not in the context of the current rules' and think about 'should that be a red' then I am in favour of more mitigation being applied. It is somewhat inevitable that with more mitigation, then the clear lines between what is and isn't red get more blurred.

                In the WC Final, from memory I didn't think Kolisi would be sent off when i saw it live but did think Cane would be - but had it happened earlier that year they both would have been.

                I've watched them both again recently for some reason. I'm genuinely baffled how Kolisi didn't get a red for leading with his head. That happens now - red, that happens before the final - red.

                I remember watching a tik tok, pommy accented dude 😉 ,where he went out of his way to claim no mitigation for Kriel changing direction but that there was all sorts of mitigation in Kolisi's tackle including that the head contact was indirect, I guess head to head doesn't count if you also hit on the shoulder. What's even worse is that Kolisi had come in on a straight line from quite a distance, meanwhile Cane was tracking across field and Kriel turned in after he was running the opposite way.

                Actually I think I need to leave this discussion, I'll just wind up hating rugby again at this rate.

                The only way to do this is for head contact to be all red, all yellow, penalty only or nothing.

                If ruling out head injuries in the goal, then just ref them all the same.

                I have zero problem with Cane getting his red card in the RWC final.

                BUT... I should have been sat with a Springbok fan with a beer saying "Jesus that was mental eh, both our captains sent off in the World Cup final".

                Instead our fella gets marched, and theirs stays on to lift the trophy.

                And im sat there thinking "what have I just watched?".

                Wayne Barnes and Tom Foley decided the outcome of that game in the most random arbitrary fashion.

                Particularly so, when Foley interjected for absolutely everything, going back phase after phase to rule out tries, bar Ardie Savea's legal turnover, which ultimately cost us the game points wise.

                If we want NFL level pedantry and slo mo's then every decision needs the same microscopic scrutiny or at least the availability of a coaches challenge.

                Spurious or ad-hoc pedantry just winds everyone up and is patently unfair in its implementation.

                Otherwise put your whistle away and let it flow.

                Rugby is a fabulous sport, but I wouldnt want to play the current version of it.

                1 Reply Last reply
                4
                • J Offline
                  J Offline
                  Jet
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #69

                  When I read comments from Irish fans (amongst others) under clips of the Porter tackle and they hand wave it away with Barnes rhetoric of "absorbing tackle", I despair.

                  He broke Retallicks face.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • BonesB Bones

                    @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                    In my day, an M-1 or M-2 had to go across the chest of the ‘missed’ player, not his arse

                    Christ that's not been the case since I started playing, so you're going back more than 40 years to justify this incident?

                    MiketheSnowM Offline
                    MiketheSnowM Offline
                    MiketheSnow
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #70

                    @Bones said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                    @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                    In my day, an M-1 or M-2 had to go across the chest of the ‘missed’ player, not his arse

                    Christ that's not been the case since I started playing, so you're going back more than 40 years to justify this incident?

                    I’m not trying to justify this incident

                    I’m trying to get a sense of what the officials are looking at

                    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • D Dodge

                      @Jet said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                      @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                      Genuine question, not stirring the pot.

                      So please take a moment before knee jerking down my throat.

                      If Roigard had passed behind the oncoming BB, with BB acting as the dummy runner, and BB had clattered into Beirne is that a penalty against BB for obstruction or a penalty against Beirne for ‘tackling’ the man (BB) without the ball?

                      We had an iteration of that when Freddie Steward and Hugo Keenan collided.

                      Whomever hits the other in the head (regardless of game state) gets sent off. It’s that simple.

                      Forward pass, dummy runners etc etc are all red herrings. Don’t hit the other lad in the head. That’s the point of all this nonsense in the first place. To protect the head.

                      For the record I’m from the “it’s not tiddlywinks” school of hard knocks. I don’t think anyone should be sent off bar ripping out someone’s testicle.

                      But if you send off one of my lads this week , I expect to see the lad from the opposition sent off the next week if he does a version of the same offense. And I expect fans of that team to go “fair enough”.

                      What we have now is just garbage.

                      We could have won the Lions series if Vunipola gets same sanction as SBW for forearm smashing a prone Beaudy Barrett in the face.

                      We could have won the Lions series if Sean O Brien gets red for knocking Naholo out with a swinging arm.

                      We could have won the Irish series if Taavao and Porter received the same sanction.

                      We could have won World Cup final if Cane and Kolisi received the same sanction.

                      Etc etc etc.

                      I don’t forget, but officialdom and opposition fans seem to.

                      The Irish (Sexton and Murray) were the worst onfield card chasers. Hands aloft at every ruck looking for referee intervention.

                      Now the Irish feel aggrieved and their fans will lean on this card as the reason they lost

                      It’s lamentable carry on from World Rugby.

                      You see, this was given red at the time and I called it live as that was consistent with how it was being reffed at that point. Before the decision was made, people were calling me an idiot and saying i didn't understand rugby if i thought that would be a red.

                      I don't think that would be given as a red today, they would look harder for mitigation. I think it would be more likely decided a rugby incident with two players going for a bouncing ball, maybe a penalty for high contact but mitigated because the Irish player dipped to collect the ball, or because Steward looked like he was pulling out of the contact / bracing for contact etc.

                      The lack of consistent application of the decision making process is the problem but that is in part because of how fans reacted to individual decisions feeling unfair.

                      As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      Jet
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #71

                      @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                      @Jet said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                      @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                      Genuine question, not stirring the pot.

                      So please take a moment before knee jerking down my throat.

                      If Roigard had passed behind the oncoming BB, with BB acting as the dummy runner, and BB had clattered into Beirne is that a penalty against BB for obstruction or a penalty against Beirne for ‘tackling’ the man (BB) without the ball?

                      We had an iteration of that when Freddie Steward and Hugo Keenan collided.

                      Whomever hits the other in the head (regardless of game state) gets sent off. It’s that simple.

                      Forward pass, dummy runners etc etc are all red herrings. Don’t hit the other lad in the head. That’s the point of all this nonsense in the first place. To protect the head.

                      For the record I’m from the “it’s not tiddlywinks” school of hard knocks. I don’t think anyone should be sent off bar ripping out someone’s testicle.

                      But if you send off one of my lads this week , I expect to see the lad from the opposition sent off the next week if he does a version of the same offense. And I expect fans of that team to go “fair enough”.

                      What we have now is just garbage.

                      We could have won the Lions series if Vunipola gets same sanction as SBW for forearm smashing a prone Beaudy Barrett in the face.

                      We could have won the Lions series if Sean O Brien gets red for knocking Naholo out with a swinging arm.

                      We could have won the Irish series if Taavao and Porter received the same sanction.

                      We could have won World Cup final if Cane and Kolisi received the same sanction.

                      Etc etc etc.

                      I don’t forget, but officialdom and opposition fans seem to.

                      The Irish (Sexton and Murray) were the worst onfield card chasers. Hands aloft at every ruck looking for referee intervention.

                      Now the Irish feel aggrieved and their fans will lean on this card as the reason they lost

                      It’s lamentable carry on from World Rugby.

                      You see, this was given red at the time and I called it live as that was consistent with how it was being reffed at that point. Before the decision was made, people were calling me an idiot and saying i didn't understand rugby if i thought that would be a red.

                      I don't think that would be given as a red today, they would look harder for mitigation. I think it would be more likely decided a rugby incident with two players going for a bouncing ball, maybe a penalty for high contact but mitigated because the Irish player dipped to collect the ball, or because Steward looked like he was pulling out of the contact / bracing for contact etc.

                      The lack of consistent application of the decision making process is the problem but that is in part because of how fans reacted to individual decisions feeling unfair.

                      As it happens, I still think the Cane tackle would be red today.

                      Listen to Jaco in the clip "high degree of danger, always upright".

                      Contrast that with Beirne getting his red rescinded.

                      Contrast that with Porter breaking Retallicks face and getting yellow only.

                      They need to remove all the grey areas from this.

                      Hit the head you're off.

                      We will have a few games of 12 on 12, it might be fun, and eventually they might learn. OR we need to just let everything go.

                      This current hybrid sport of fastidious officials in one moment to laissez faire the next is unacceptable.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      4
                      • MiketheSnowM MiketheSnow

                        @Bones said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                        @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                        In my day, an M-1 or M-2 had to go across the chest of the ‘missed’ player, not his arse

                        Christ that's not been the case since I started playing, so you're going back more than 40 years to justify this incident?

                        I’m not trying to justify this incident

                        I’m trying to get a sense of what the officials are looking at

                        BonesB Offline
                        BonesB Offline
                        Bones
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #72

                        @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                        @Bones said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                        @MiketheSnow said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                        In my day, an M-1 or M-2 had to go across the chest of the ‘missed’ player, not his arse

                        Christ that's not been the case since I started playing, so you're going back more than 40 years to justify this incident?

                        I’m not trying to justify this incident

                        I’m trying to get a sense of what the officials are looking at

                        Prolly didn't have television let alone replays to help with decisions way back then.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        1
                        • D Offline
                          D Offline
                          Dodge
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #73

                          lets extend that logic then, either they're all off or none off?

                          All off - early 2023 interpretations effectively - was massively unpopular as it punished an always high lethal clothes line to the face in the same way it punished an accidental, drop in height passive collision. Most of the unpopularity came from the SH from memory, particularly Aus.

                          None off - Always high, loads of time shot to the face which knocks a player out gets a yellow. No incentive not to tackle high, no attempt to deal with the concussion issue in rugby etc.

                          Personally I wouldn't like to see it, as rugby is a dynamic contact sport and an accident or nothing incident can spoil a game. I also think we have to try and deal with the concussion issue.

                          Therefore that doesn't feel realistic or desirable to me. Mitigation is crucial, clarity in decision making is crucial. Some disagreement is inevitable so we're stuck with it IMO

                          J P 3 Replies Last reply
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                          • taniwharugbyT taniwharugby

                            @antipodean I'm more concerned with the fact the TMO had all that time to look at it, made his call and it was deemed wrong.

                            Does he get sanctioned for that? I mean in terms of his job, that is almighty fuck-up, and as some have said, while we will never know, it has potentially impacted the outcome of the game.

                            Credibility of the sport continues to fall.

                            Victor MeldrewV Offline
                            Victor MeldrewV Offline
                            Victor Meldrew
                            wrote on last edited by Victor Meldrew
                            #74

                            @taniwharugby said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                            I'm more concerned with the fact the TMO had all that time to look at it, made his call and it was deemed wrong.

                            This. There was a Yellow & Review so they must have been 100% sure. It didn't look a Red to me but the TMO and the Ref decided on a Red so that was that.

                            Complete fuck-up in an event designed to grow the game in the US.

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                            4
                            • gt12G gt12

                              @taniwharugby said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                              @antipodean I'm more concerned with the fact the TMO had all that time to look at it, made his call and it was deemed wrong.

                              Does he get sanctioned for that? I mean in terms of his job, that is almighty fuck-up, and as some have said, while we will never know, it has potentially impacted the outcome of the game.

                              Credibility of the sport continues to fall.

                              It is a joke. In this case, I thought a YC looked about right, but by the letter of the law and recent interpretation, it should be a RC.

                              There has to be a system that allows the game to flow with some penalty for the player, but doesn't ruin the event for fans.

                              I think I've settled on a YC for all of these, with the player replaced after 10 mins.

                              If you are out of replacements, you can't send another out.

                              Victor MeldrewV Offline
                              Victor MeldrewV Offline
                              Victor Meldrew
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #75

                              @gt12 said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                              There has to be a system that allows the game to flow with some penalty for the player, but doesn't ruin the event for fans.

                              I thought that was a Yellow with a Review.

                              gt12G P 2 Replies Last reply
                              1
                              • Victor MeldrewV Victor Meldrew

                                @gt12 said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                                There has to be a system that allows the game to flow with some penalty for the player, but doesn't ruin the event for fans.

                                I thought that was a Yellow with a Review.

                                gt12G Offline
                                gt12G Offline
                                gt12
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #76

                                @Victor-Meldrew said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                                @gt12 said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                                There has to be a system that allows the game to flow with some penalty for the player, but doesn't ruin the event for fans.

                                I thought that was a Yellow with a Review.

                                This could push World Rugby to adopting it. Realistically, that would be a nice start.

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                                0
                                • D Dodge

                                  lets extend that logic then, either they're all off or none off?

                                  All off - early 2023 interpretations effectively - was massively unpopular as it punished an always high lethal clothes line to the face in the same way it punished an accidental, drop in height passive collision. Most of the unpopularity came from the SH from memory, particularly Aus.

                                  None off - Always high, loads of time shot to the face which knocks a player out gets a yellow. No incentive not to tackle high, no attempt to deal with the concussion issue in rugby etc.

                                  Personally I wouldn't like to see it, as rugby is a dynamic contact sport and an accident or nothing incident can spoil a game. I also think we have to try and deal with the concussion issue.

                                  Therefore that doesn't feel realistic or desirable to me. Mitigation is crucial, clarity in decision making is crucial. Some disagreement is inevitable so we're stuck with it IMO

                                  J Offline
                                  J Offline
                                  Jet
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #77

                                  @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                                  lets extend that logic then, either they're all off or none off?

                                  All off - early 2023 interpretations effectively - was massively unpopular as it punished an always high lethal clothes line to the face in the same way it punished an accidental, drop in height passive collision. Most of the unpopularity came from the SH from memory, particularly Aus.

                                  None off - Always high, loads of time shot to the face which knocks a player out gets a yellow. No incentive not to tackle high, no attempt to deal with the concussion issue in rugby etc.

                                  Personally I wouldn't like to see it, as rugby is a dynamic contact sport and an accident or nothing incident can spoil a game. I also think we have to try and deal with the concussion issue.

                                  Therefore that doesn't feel realistic or desirable to me. Mitigation is crucial, clarity in decision making is crucial. Some disagreement is inevitable so we're stuck with it IMO

                                  What about all yellow?

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • D Dodge

                                    lets extend that logic then, either they're all off or none off?

                                    All off - early 2023 interpretations effectively - was massively unpopular as it punished an always high lethal clothes line to the face in the same way it punished an accidental, drop in height passive collision. Most of the unpopularity came from the SH from memory, particularly Aus.

                                    None off - Always high, loads of time shot to the face which knocks a player out gets a yellow. No incentive not to tackle high, no attempt to deal with the concussion issue in rugby etc.

                                    Personally I wouldn't like to see it, as rugby is a dynamic contact sport and an accident or nothing incident can spoil a game. I also think we have to try and deal with the concussion issue.

                                    Therefore that doesn't feel realistic or desirable to me. Mitigation is crucial, clarity in decision making is crucial. Some disagreement is inevitable so we're stuck with it IMO

                                    J Offline
                                    J Offline
                                    Jet
                                    wrote on last edited by Jet
                                    #78

                                    @Dodge said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                                    lets extend that logic then, either they're all off or none off?

                                    All off - early 2023 interpretations effectively - was massively unpopular as it punished an always high lethal clothes line to the face in the same way it punished an accidental, drop in height passive collision. Most of the unpopularity came from the SH from memory, particularly Aus.

                                    None off - Always high, loads of time shot to the face which knocks a player out gets a yellow. No incentive not to tackle high, no attempt to deal with the concussion issue in rugby etc.

                                    Personally I wouldn't like to see it, as rugby is a dynamic contact sport and an accident or nothing incident can spoil a game. I also think we have to try and deal with the concussion issue.

                                    Therefore that doesn't feel realistic or desirable to me. Mitigation is crucial, clarity in decision making is crucial. Some disagreement is inevitable so we're stuck with it IMO

                                    Remember what’s driving this. Potential litigation down the road.

                                    It’s not us arguing over whether an attempted intercept should be a yellow if knocked on.

                                    We are being told that there is a problem with concussions in the game. Steve Thompson, Steve Divine etc. There has also been insinuations that concussions have led to suicides of some players. We also have a couple of high profile players with ALS. Not sure if related.

                                    As I stated before. I’m old school. I liked when Bechers Brook was a hard fence to jump. I like car crashes in F1. I like ice hockey fights.

                                    But fine, that was then, this is now. We need to clean everything up. And I am wrong. I’m the dinosaur.

                                    BUT. If the head is sacred , it’s sacred.

                                    Jessie Kriel was fine after Canes hit. Beaudy was fine after Beirnes. Savea was bloodied but fine after Kolisi’s. But we don’t ref on outcome we ref on the offence. So they should all be red. And as an addendum to that. If the ref is saying things like “High degree of danger”…it should be a mandatory HIA for the player who got hit in the head.

                                    Otherwise this is all just window dressing and arse covering for the potential court case down the road and not a real effort to clean up the game.

                                    I was quite happy with Rugby up until the mid 2010’s but what had happened since is not progress….its a far worse product we are being served up.

                                    We went from nobody ever being sent off or sin binned, to not being able to get through a game without a team going down to 14 in the space of a few years.

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                                    4
                                    • J Offline
                                      J Offline
                                      Jet
                                      wrote on last edited by Jet
                                      #79

                                      They were/are foaming in the mouth that Clarke didn’t get sent for his high shot of Tommy O Brien.

                                      Clemency for me but none for thee seems to be the mantra.

                                      MiketheSnowM 1 Reply Last reply
                                      2
                                      • Victor MeldrewV Victor Meldrew

                                        @gt12 said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                                        There has to be a system that allows the game to flow with some penalty for the player, but doesn't ruin the event for fans.

                                        I thought that was a Yellow with a Review.

                                        P Offline
                                        P Offline
                                        pakman
                                        wrote on last edited by pakman
                                        #80

                                        @Victor-Meldrew said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                                        @gt12 said in Ireland v All Blacks - Chicago2:

                                        There has to be a system that allows the game to flow with some penalty for the player, but doesn't ruin the event for fans.

                                        I thought that was a Yellow with a Review.

                                        M’be there ought to be a time limit for decision? At least game proceeds either with full 15 or while bunker prevaricates!

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • J Offline
                                          J Offline
                                          Jet
                                          wrote on last edited by Jet
                                          #81

                                          At 4:50 in the post match the journalist asked Razor: “It was the right call?” regarding the Beirne incident.

                                          Razors riposte:

                                          “it was a red card wasn’t it?, so then it’s a red card”.

                                          Three days later world rugby tell us :
                                          It is not a red card.

                                          BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
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