Red Cards & HIA
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@canefan said in Red Cards & HIA:
@Dodge said in Red Cards & HIA:
@taniwharugby said in Red Cards & HIA:
@Dodge said in Red Cards & HIA:
you do that by incentivising players not to do it, therefore punishing the player, team and fans as a result.
Fixed it for you.
I largely agree with you, but I am dead against punishing the team and fans.
I mean with your statement above about training differently for these accidental contacts, where do thuggish acts sit? Because you (world rugby) are punishing the same group with the same in game sanction; player, team, fans, no one trained that.
by training to tackle lower it means that always illegal tackles (not bent at the waist etc) happen less often, the goal of which is to bring down the number of unintentional but still illegal head shots. Punishing the team means you punish the coach who loses his job if his team lose every week because the team goes down to 14 thus incentivising better coaching of the tackle, only punishing the player not the team doesn't have that impact. That's the argument made my World Rugby and has merit IMO
It's not working. How many remedial courses has Owen Farrell done and he still hits high? He's not the only one. The inconsistency of rulings, absorbing vs non absorbing tackles, mitigation. It's a mess even if their intentions are good
Precisely. The road to hell is paved with good intentions. Their implementation of this is an utter disaster. It's ineffective, arbitrary and ruining the sport as a result.
If you want to change player behaviour, punish the player so they're incentivised to tackle within the laws
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@antipodean said in Red Cards & HIA:
@canefan said in Red Cards & HIA:
@Dodge said in Red Cards & HIA:
@taniwharugby said in Red Cards & HIA:
@Dodge said in Red Cards & HIA:
you do that by incentivising players not to do it, therefore punishing the player, team and fans as a result.
Fixed it for you.
I largely agree with you, but I am dead against punishing the team and fans.
I mean with your statement above about training differently for these accidental contacts, where do thuggish acts sit? Because you (world rugby) are punishing the same group with the same in game sanction; player, team, fans, no one trained that.
by training to tackle lower it means that always illegal tackles (not bent at the waist etc) happen less often, the goal of which is to bring down the number of unintentional but still illegal head shots. Punishing the team means you punish the coach who loses his job if his team lose every week because the team goes down to 14 thus incentivising better coaching of the tackle, only punishing the player not the team doesn't have that impact. That's the argument made my World Rugby and has merit IMO
It's not working. How many remedial courses has Owen Farrell done and he still hits high? He's not the only one. The inconsistency of rulings, absorbing vs non absorbing tackles, mitigation. It's a mess even if their intentions are good
Precisely. The road to hell is paved with good intentions. Their implementation of this is an utter disaster. It's ineffective, arbitrary and ruining the sport as a result.
If you want to change player behaviour, punish the player so they're incentivised to tackle within the laws
And don't weaken. I hate it when the judiciary makes a decision and then backtracks on appeal
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@Dodge again, largely agree, but the punishment does not fit the crime.
The accident is getting the same charge as the deliberate act.
As I said, I hate cards full stop and we need to find a better way, 15 v 14/13 isnt what anyone wants to see.
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Some sanity, but what a mess this whole thing is. I have to say, if this hadn't been rescinded the armband would have come off the bedside table for sure this weekend. Cheating euros FFS.
https://www.bbc.com/sport/rugby-union/articles/crrerlz0k2do -
@Dodge said in Red Cards & HIA:
the TMO thing I see as a slightly separate subject. As I said on Saturday, in general i'm in favour of better decisions made badly over bad decisions made live but the balance does feel off. I don't like seeing a TMO bringing stuff back for a knock on in the middle of the park, I do agree it should be used for foul play but at the moment some of that stuff is too minor to be being interfered with
Agree that the TMO thing should be considered separately but in reality it’s all part of the same problem:
Coaches, fans and, I think to a lesser extent players, not accepting what I thought was a central tenet of the game - the ref is the sole judge of fact and law (or as I ounce heard a tough old English coach tell a bleating parent: there’s one ref Mate, and you’re not it!)
As a sport we need to celebrate every ref who picks up a whistle to try and do the impossible: fairly ref our game.
That starts with coaches accepting that they will get some big calls wrong and refusing to be baited by click hungry journalists into critical comments. It also demands that this begging for penalties & cards and simulation, in fact anything that makes it harder to ref the game get penalized/carded.
Hold your head and soccer simulate until you get the penalty then get up a play on? Fuck you - straight red.
See also pushing balls out of rucks, celebrating when you knocked on instead of grounding the try, pulling back at the scrum, placing the ball under the tackler at the ruck.
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Some good discussion at around 20 minute mark: https://m.youtube.com/results?sp=mAEA&search_query=Verdict+boks+office
25 cards so far in Autumn series!!!!! -
Today just another illustration of how out of hand this has become.
We need another approach that keeps 15 on field if at all possible.
A halfway house with old days might be:
‘Yellow card’ means you stay on but one strike.
Two yellows or technical red means automatic replacement.
Old fashioned red means you’re gone.
Maybe that might make TMOs less inclined to interfere every five minutes. -
I didn't catch any of the games over the weekend, but all I have heard about is how many cards each side got. The SA v Ireland game just sounds comical. What an absolute shit show this game has become.
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Although now Ireland are finally getting players sent to the naughty chair with regularity, perhaps we should have two TMOs?
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@antipodean said in Red Cards & HIA:
Although now Ireland are finally getting players sent to the naughty chair with regularity, perhaps we should have two TMOs?
Maybe they will see that the system is in fact broken? That it wasn't a good way to keep those cheating antipodeans in check?