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  • R Offline
    R Offline
    reprobate
    wrote on last edited by
    #56

    they need to go back to the drawing board on everything and decide whether it should be a free-kick or penalty. scrums are the prime example. it's meant to be a contest for possession. That means the outcome should be winning the ball or a free-kick, unless someone does something dangerous. no stoppage while we set another scrum. no stoppage while we kick for touch and then wait for the lineout. just a fucking free-kick, play on.

    Dan54D 1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • R reprobate

      they need to go back to the drawing board on everything and decide whether it should be a free-kick or penalty. scrums are the prime example. it's meant to be a contest for possession. That means the outcome should be winning the ball or a free-kick, unless someone does something dangerous. no stoppage while we set another scrum. no stoppage while we kick for touch and then wait for the lineout. just a fucking free-kick, play on.

      Dan54D Offline
      Dan54D Offline
      Dan54
      wrote on last edited by Dan54
      #57

      @reprobate as it is in Super. But have to be careful, if you drop a scrum to stop a try maybe getting scored, is a free kick enough?

      R 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • Dan54D Dan54

        @reprobate as it is in Super. But have to be careful, if you drop a scrum to stop a try maybe getting scored, is a free kick enough?

        R Offline
        R Offline
        reprobate
        wrote on last edited by
        #58

        @Dan54 said in Rugby or NFL:

        @reprobate as it is in Super. But have to be careful, if you drop a scrum to stop a try maybe getting scored, is a free kick enough?

        Hence back to the drawing board mate. That could be covered by penalty try rules, repeated / cynical infringing etc.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • No QuarterN No Quarter

          @MN5 said in Rugby or NFL:

          @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

          One thing that the review system in cricket has really helped with is taking the heat off the umpires. There is so much less scrutiny on them these days. If an umpire gets a call wrong, then the expectation immediately falls on the players to review. If they don't review, then it's much harder to just blame the umpire when the professional players didn't notice either. Then in the scenario where the umpire gets a call wrong and the players don't have any reviews left, then the first comment is they shouldn't have wasted their reviews on calls they got wrong and the umpire got wrong. I think that's been a really good thing overall.

          Rugby is a very different sport to cricket though, but some form of onus on the players also making the right call would help, at the moment the assumption is all the players on the field except the ref knew what happened in the moment, and that won't be true at all.

          Good God.

          If Rugby allowed players to review that might kill the game stone dead. Imagine if Jonny Sexton was still playing ?

          The idea being it removes the TMO from intervening, or intervening much less. At the moment the TMO is randomly intervening, causing huge delays in some games where he thinks there's a lot to make calls on.

          Little Jonny could blow his only two reviews in the first 10 minutes then bitch and moan about calls against him for the rest of the game, and it'd fall on deaf ears because he wasted his reviews on calls he got wrong.

          barbarianB Offline
          barbarianB Offline
          barbarian
          wrote on last edited by
          #59

          @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

          @MN5 said in Rugby or NFL:

          @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

          One thing that the review system in cricket has really helped with is taking the heat off the umpires. There is so much less scrutiny on them these days. If an umpire gets a call wrong, then the expectation immediately falls on the players to review. If they don't review, then it's much harder to just blame the umpire when the professional players didn't notice either. Then in the scenario where the umpire gets a call wrong and the players don't have any reviews left, then the first comment is they shouldn't have wasted their reviews on calls they got wrong and the umpire got wrong. I think that's been a really good thing overall.

          Rugby is a very different sport to cricket though, but some form of onus on the players also making the right call would help, at the moment the assumption is all the players on the field except the ref knew what happened in the moment, and that won't be true at all.

          Good God.

          If Rugby allowed players to review that might kill the game stone dead. Imagine if Jonny Sexton was still playing ?

          The idea being it removes the TMO from intervening, or intervening much less. At the moment the TMO is randomly intervening, causing huge delays in some games where he thinks there's a lot to make calls on.

          Little Jonny could blow his only two reviews in the first 10 minutes then bitch and moan about calls against him for the rest of the game, and it'd fall on deaf ears because he wasted his reviews on calls he got wrong.

          I just don't think this would work well in practice.

          Here's a scenario that happens fairly regularly - ball carrier in tight, carrier 2/3 tacklers over the line, mass of bodies but knocks the ball on slightly before grounding it over the line.

          It would be understandable the players might not see this, nor the referee. But the cameras pick it up. I'm not sure it's fair on the defending side to expect them to challenge something they had no way of seeing. So does the TMO intervene, or let a dodgy try stand?

          No QuarterN 1 Reply Last reply
          1
          • mariner4lifeM Online
            mariner4lifeM Online
            mariner4life
            wrote on last edited by
            #60

            a slight knock on nobody saw except the guy with 10 super slow-mo cameras is not a dodgy decision though. The game needs to learn to live with this stuff.

            They won't though, because no one in sport is mature enough. Losing teams, coaches and fans default to ref bashing.

            MiketheSnowM 1 Reply Last reply
            6
            • barbarianB Offline
              barbarianB Offline
              barbarian
              wrote on last edited by
              #61

              Of course. No game will live with that. People can't live with a clearly forward pass being called back, how do you think they'd go with a knock-on being allowed to stand?

              It's about protecting the refs more than anything.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • mariner4lifeM mariner4life

                a slight knock on nobody saw except the guy with 10 super slow-mo cameras is not a dodgy decision though. The game needs to learn to live with this stuff.

                They won't though, because no one in sport is mature enough. Losing teams, coaches and fans default to ref bashing.

                MiketheSnowM Offline
                MiketheSnowM Offline
                MiketheSnow
                wrote on last edited by
                #62

                @mariner4life said in Rugby or NFL:

                a slight knock on nobody saw except the guy with 10 super slow-mo cameras is not a dodgy decision though. The game needs to learn to live with this stuff.

                They won't though, because no one in sport is mature enough. Losing teams, coaches and fans default to ref bashing.

                With refs like Doleman who can’t see infringements at the end of their arms, TMOs are essential

                mariner4lifeM 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • MiketheSnowM MiketheSnow

                  @mariner4life said in Rugby or NFL:

                  a slight knock on nobody saw except the guy with 10 super slow-mo cameras is not a dodgy decision though. The game needs to learn to live with this stuff.

                  They won't though, because no one in sport is mature enough. Losing teams, coaches and fans default to ref bashing.

                  With refs like Doleman who can’t see infringements at the end of their arms, TMOs are essential

                  mariner4lifeM Online
                  mariner4lifeM Online
                  mariner4life
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #63

                  @MiketheSnow said in Rugby or NFL:

                  @mariner4life said in Rugby or NFL:

                  a slight knock on nobody saw except the guy with 10 super slow-mo cameras is not a dodgy decision though. The game needs to learn to live with this stuff.

                  They won't though, because no one in sport is mature enough. Losing teams, coaches and fans default to ref bashing.

                  With refs like Doleman who can’t see infringements at the end of their arms, TMOs are essential

                  hard disagree, but we'll never meet on any common ground so I'll leave it alone

                  what you mean is "can't see infringements against my team at the end of their arms" because no one gives a solitary fuck about their own openside "pushing the line" and anyone who says they do is flat out lying.

                  At any given time on a rugby field there are probably 3 players infringing. There is a wild inconsistency of what gets looked at.

                  MiketheSnowM 1 Reply Last reply
                  4
                  • mariner4lifeM mariner4life

                    @MiketheSnow said in Rugby or NFL:

                    @mariner4life said in Rugby or NFL:

                    a slight knock on nobody saw except the guy with 10 super slow-mo cameras is not a dodgy decision though. The game needs to learn to live with this stuff.

                    They won't though, because no one in sport is mature enough. Losing teams, coaches and fans default to ref bashing.

                    With refs like Doleman who can’t see infringements at the end of their arms, TMOs are essential

                    hard disagree, but we'll never meet on any common ground so I'll leave it alone

                    what you mean is "can't see infringements against my team at the end of their arms" because no one gives a solitary fuck about their own openside "pushing the line" and anyone who says they do is flat out lying.

                    At any given time on a rugby field there are probably 3 players infringing. There is a wild inconsistency of what gets looked at.

                    MiketheSnowM Offline
                    MiketheSnowM Offline
                    MiketheSnow
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #64

                    @mariner4life said in Rugby or NFL:

                    @MiketheSnow said in Rugby or NFL:

                    @mariner4life said in Rugby or NFL:

                    a slight knock on nobody saw except the guy with 10 super slow-mo cameras is not a dodgy decision though. The game needs to learn to live with this stuff.

                    They won't though, because no one in sport is mature enough. Losing teams, coaches and fans default to ref bashing.

                    With refs like Doleman who can’t see infringements at the end of their arms, TMOs are essential

                    hard disagree, but we'll never meet on any common ground so I'll leave it alone

                    what you mean is "can't see infringements against my team at the end of their arms" because no one gives a solitary fuck about their own openside "pushing the line" and anyone who says they do is flat out lying.

                    At any given time on a rugby field there are probably 3 players infringing. There is a wild inconsistency of what gets looked at.

                    You can look at it this way, but when obvious infringements are committed and missed by the the three onfield officials it’s quite galling

                    Regardless of whether it’s for or against your team, or rugby fans with no national skin in the game who just want to see a fair contest

                    DuluthD 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • mariner4lifeM Online
                      mariner4lifeM Online
                      mariner4life
                      wrote on last edited by mariner4life
                      #65

                      what are you talking about though? Offside? Side entry? taking too long with your hands on the ball? not rolling away fast enough? blocking the kick chase? obstruction? scrum infringements? Not 5m at the lineout? off your feet at an attacking ruck?

                      Rugby has a thousand rules, it's the most complicated fucking sport on earth for almost no reason. If you want everything 100% "accurate" (however you want to measure that given so many infringements are open to the interpretation of the ref in question) you are basically asking for a game of almost non-stop penalties and set pieces.

                      And that brings me to the biggest point, whose interpretation matters most? refs or TMO's?

                      taniwharugbyT MiketheSnowM D 3 Replies Last reply
                      3
                      • mariner4lifeM mariner4life

                        what are you talking about though? Offside? Side entry? taking too long with your hands on the ball? not rolling away fast enough? blocking the kick chase? obstruction? scrum infringements? Not 5m at the lineout? off your feet at an attacking ruck?

                        Rugby has a thousand rules, it's the most complicated fucking sport on earth for almost no reason. If you want everything 100% "accurate" (however you want to measure that given so many infringements are open to the interpretation of the ref in question) you are basically asking for a game of almost non-stop penalties and set pieces.

                        And that brings me to the biggest point, whose interpretation matters most? refs or TMO's?

                        taniwharugbyT Offline
                        taniwharugbyT Offline
                        taniwharugby
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #66

                        @mariner4life well we already know different refs and different TMO's have different interpretations, so goes back to your comment re overly complicated rules.

                        Not black and white, we have 50 shades of grey!

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • mariner4lifeM Online
                          mariner4lifeM Online
                          mariner4life
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #67

                          It's not a shot at rugby either, League has like 5 rules and the bunker comes up with the weirdest shit every week and people hate it.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • mariner4lifeM mariner4life

                            what are you talking about though? Offside? Side entry? taking too long with your hands on the ball? not rolling away fast enough? blocking the kick chase? obstruction? scrum infringements? Not 5m at the lineout? off your feet at an attacking ruck?

                            Rugby has a thousand rules, it's the most complicated fucking sport on earth for almost no reason. If you want everything 100% "accurate" (however you want to measure that given so many infringements are open to the interpretation of the ref in question) you are basically asking for a game of almost non-stop penalties and set pieces.

                            And that brings me to the biggest point, whose interpretation matters most? refs or TMO's?

                            MiketheSnowM Offline
                            MiketheSnowM Offline
                            MiketheSnow
                            wrote on last edited by MiketheSnow
                            #68

                            @mariner4life said in Rugby or NFL:

                            what are you talking about though? Offside? Side entry? taking too long with your hands on the ball? not rolling away fast enough? blocking the kick chase? obstruction? scrum infringements? Not 5m at the lineout? off your feet at an attacking ruck?

                            Rugby has a thousand rules, it's the most complicated fucking sport on earth for almost no reason. If you want everything 100% "accurate" (however you want to measure that given so many infringements are open to the interpretation of the ref in question) you are basically asking for a game of almost non-stop penalties and set pieces.

                            And that brings me to the biggest point, whose interpretation matters most? refs or TMO's?

                            I don’t care who calls it, but I’d be really happy to see consistent and correct calls for knock ons, forward passes, offsides, and grounding

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • mariner4lifeM Online
                              mariner4lifeM Online
                              mariner4life
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #69

                              offside has never been called by a TMO except on poor old England when they thought they had beaten us.

                              You're dreaming on the rest. There has never, ever been a clear consensus across the world on a forward pass. Knock ons are way open to interpretation and probably for the really little ones not best viewed by a TV angle.

                              What's the problem with grounding?

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • mariner4lifeM mariner4life

                                what are you talking about though? Offside? Side entry? taking too long with your hands on the ball? not rolling away fast enough? blocking the kick chase? obstruction? scrum infringements? Not 5m at the lineout? off your feet at an attacking ruck?

                                Rugby has a thousand rules, it's the most complicated fucking sport on earth for almost no reason. If you want everything 100% "accurate" (however you want to measure that given so many infringements are open to the interpretation of the ref in question) you are basically asking for a game of almost non-stop penalties and set pieces.

                                And that brings me to the biggest point, whose interpretation matters most? refs or TMO's?

                                D Offline
                                D Offline
                                DurryMexted
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #70

                                @mariner4life Im with you on this. Referral would be perfect (with right ot retain if call upheld) If it wasnt glaringly obvious enough for the ref & touchies to notice, along with the captain & his team being not convinced enough to appeal - award it. Every now and then it might lead to a lucky try but thats part of the beauty of the game in my opinion. That fijian try that was dissallowed by an Aussie foot in touch on the other side of the field really epitomised TMO over reach in my opinion. Reward good play and focus on the balance of the game, there is space for margin of error in rugby.
                                Im sure they could put trackers in players boots, the ball, have AI scanning the field at all times and just handover the reigns entirely if they wanted every single call to be correct and nothing would ever be missed, if all we cared about was accuracy, but no the subjectivity is part of the enjoyment, the dark arts and the bounce of the ball. Rant over

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                1
                                • barbarianB barbarian

                                  @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

                                  @MN5 said in Rugby or NFL:

                                  @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

                                  One thing that the review system in cricket has really helped with is taking the heat off the umpires. There is so much less scrutiny on them these days. If an umpire gets a call wrong, then the expectation immediately falls on the players to review. If they don't review, then it's much harder to just blame the umpire when the professional players didn't notice either. Then in the scenario where the umpire gets a call wrong and the players don't have any reviews left, then the first comment is they shouldn't have wasted their reviews on calls they got wrong and the umpire got wrong. I think that's been a really good thing overall.

                                  Rugby is a very different sport to cricket though, but some form of onus on the players also making the right call would help, at the moment the assumption is all the players on the field except the ref knew what happened in the moment, and that won't be true at all.

                                  Good God.

                                  If Rugby allowed players to review that might kill the game stone dead. Imagine if Jonny Sexton was still playing ?

                                  The idea being it removes the TMO from intervening, or intervening much less. At the moment the TMO is randomly intervening, causing huge delays in some games where he thinks there's a lot to make calls on.

                                  Little Jonny could blow his only two reviews in the first 10 minutes then bitch and moan about calls against him for the rest of the game, and it'd fall on deaf ears because he wasted his reviews on calls he got wrong.

                                  I just don't think this would work well in practice.

                                  Here's a scenario that happens fairly regularly - ball carrier in tight, carrier 2/3 tacklers over the line, mass of bodies but knocks the ball on slightly before grounding it over the line.

                                  It would be understandable the players might not see this, nor the referee. But the cameras pick it up. I'm not sure it's fair on the defending side to expect them to challenge something they had no way of seeing. So does the TMO intervene, or let a dodgy try stand?

                                  No QuarterN Online
                                  No QuarterN Online
                                  No Quarter
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #71

                                  @barbarian said in Rugby or NFL:

                                  @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

                                  @MN5 said in Rugby or NFL:

                                  @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

                                  One thing that the review system in cricket has really helped with is taking the heat off the umpires. There is so much less scrutiny on them these days. If an umpire gets a call wrong, then the expectation immediately falls on the players to review. If they don't review, then it's much harder to just blame the umpire when the professional players didn't notice either. Then in the scenario where the umpire gets a call wrong and the players don't have any reviews left, then the first comment is they shouldn't have wasted their reviews on calls they got wrong and the umpire got wrong. I think that's been a really good thing overall.

                                  Rugby is a very different sport to cricket though, but some form of onus on the players also making the right call would help, at the moment the assumption is all the players on the field except the ref knew what happened in the moment, and that won't be true at all.

                                  Good God.

                                  If Rugby allowed players to review that might kill the game stone dead. Imagine if Jonny Sexton was still playing ?

                                  The idea being it removes the TMO from intervening, or intervening much less. At the moment the TMO is randomly intervening, causing huge delays in some games where he thinks there's a lot to make calls on.

                                  Little Jonny could blow his only two reviews in the first 10 minutes then bitch and moan about calls against him for the rest of the game, and it'd fall on deaf ears because he wasted his reviews on calls he got wrong.

                                  I just don't think this would work well in practice.

                                  Here's a scenario that happens fairly regularly - ball carrier in tight, carrier 2/3 tacklers over the line, mass of bodies but knocks the ball on slightly before grounding it over the line.

                                  It would be understandable the players might not see this, nor the referee. But the cameras pick it up. I'm not sure it's fair on the defending side to expect them to challenge something they had no way of seeing. So does the TMO intervene, or let a dodgy try stand?

                                  Cricket already lives with this scenario where say the batsmen has faintly edged it, the umpire gives it not out, and the bowling side doesn't review even though the 3rd umpire can see a clear edge on the slow mo and snicko etc. In that scenario, the immediate reaction from fans is they should have reviewed it, not that the 3rd umpire should have intervened even though technically he could have. It puts the onus back on the players as well as the ref, which helps people remember that they are all human out there doing their best.

                                  barbarianB 1 Reply Last reply
                                  2
                                  • No QuarterN Online
                                    No QuarterN Online
                                    No Quarter
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #72

                                    I also take the point that this would take a pretty big cultural shift. Screaming at the ref for your sides inadequacies is very ingrained in rugby, more so than it ever was in cricket.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    1
                                    • MiketheSnowM MiketheSnow

                                      @mariner4life said in Rugby or NFL:

                                      @MiketheSnow said in Rugby or NFL:

                                      @mariner4life said in Rugby or NFL:

                                      a slight knock on nobody saw except the guy with 10 super slow-mo cameras is not a dodgy decision though. The game needs to learn to live with this stuff.

                                      They won't though, because no one in sport is mature enough. Losing teams, coaches and fans default to ref bashing.

                                      With refs like Doleman who can’t see infringements at the end of their arms, TMOs are essential

                                      hard disagree, but we'll never meet on any common ground so I'll leave it alone

                                      what you mean is "can't see infringements against my team at the end of their arms" because no one gives a solitary fuck about their own openside "pushing the line" and anyone who says they do is flat out lying.

                                      At any given time on a rugby field there are probably 3 players infringing. There is a wild inconsistency of what gets looked at.

                                      You can look at it this way, but when obvious infringements are committed and missed by the the three onfield officials it’s quite galling

                                      Regardless of whether it’s for or against your team, or rugby fans with no national skin in the game who just want to see a fair contest

                                      DuluthD Offline
                                      DuluthD Offline
                                      Duluth
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #73

                                      @MiketheSnow said in Rugby or NFL:

                                      You can look at it this way, but when obvious infringements are committed and missed by the the three onfield officials it’s quite galling

                                      There'd be less complaining if the standard of on field officiating was better because the TMO would be involved less. BOK had a clear view off the foot in touch in the Wallabies game - he should've made the call in real time. The illegal maul setup with a player in front should not be difficult for an on field official to spot either

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      4
                                      • No QuarterN No Quarter

                                        @barbarian said in Rugby or NFL:

                                        @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

                                        @MN5 said in Rugby or NFL:

                                        @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

                                        One thing that the review system in cricket has really helped with is taking the heat off the umpires. There is so much less scrutiny on them these days. If an umpire gets a call wrong, then the expectation immediately falls on the players to review. If they don't review, then it's much harder to just blame the umpire when the professional players didn't notice either. Then in the scenario where the umpire gets a call wrong and the players don't have any reviews left, then the first comment is they shouldn't have wasted their reviews on calls they got wrong and the umpire got wrong. I think that's been a really good thing overall.

                                        Rugby is a very different sport to cricket though, but some form of onus on the players also making the right call would help, at the moment the assumption is all the players on the field except the ref knew what happened in the moment, and that won't be true at all.

                                        Good God.

                                        If Rugby allowed players to review that might kill the game stone dead. Imagine if Jonny Sexton was still playing ?

                                        The idea being it removes the TMO from intervening, or intervening much less. At the moment the TMO is randomly intervening, causing huge delays in some games where he thinks there's a lot to make calls on.

                                        Little Jonny could blow his only two reviews in the first 10 minutes then bitch and moan about calls against him for the rest of the game, and it'd fall on deaf ears because he wasted his reviews on calls he got wrong.

                                        I just don't think this would work well in practice.

                                        Here's a scenario that happens fairly regularly - ball carrier in tight, carrier 2/3 tacklers over the line, mass of bodies but knocks the ball on slightly before grounding it over the line.

                                        It would be understandable the players might not see this, nor the referee. But the cameras pick it up. I'm not sure it's fair on the defending side to expect them to challenge something they had no way of seeing. So does the TMO intervene, or let a dodgy try stand?

                                        Cricket already lives with this scenario where say the batsmen has faintly edged it, the umpire gives it not out, and the bowling side doesn't review even though the 3rd umpire can see a clear edge on the slow mo and snicko etc. In that scenario, the immediate reaction from fans is they should have reviewed it, not that the 3rd umpire should have intervened even though technically he could have. It puts the onus back on the players as well as the ref, which helps people remember that they are all human out there doing their best.

                                        barbarianB Offline
                                        barbarianB Offline
                                        barbarian
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #74

                                        @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

                                        @barbarian said in Rugby or NFL:

                                        @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

                                        @MN5 said in Rugby or NFL:

                                        @No-Quarter said in Rugby or NFL:

                                        One thing that the review system in cricket has really helped with is taking the heat off the umpires. There is so much less scrutiny on them these days. If an umpire gets a call wrong, then the expectation immediately falls on the players to review. If they don't review, then it's much harder to just blame the umpire when the professional players didn't notice either. Then in the scenario where the umpire gets a call wrong and the players don't have any reviews left, then the first comment is they shouldn't have wasted their reviews on calls they got wrong and the umpire got wrong. I think that's been a really good thing overall.

                                        Rugby is a very different sport to cricket though, but some form of onus on the players also making the right call would help, at the moment the assumption is all the players on the field except the ref knew what happened in the moment, and that won't be true at all.

                                        Good God.

                                        If Rugby allowed players to review that might kill the game stone dead. Imagine if Jonny Sexton was still playing ?

                                        The idea being it removes the TMO from intervening, or intervening much less. At the moment the TMO is randomly intervening, causing huge delays in some games where he thinks there's a lot to make calls on.

                                        Little Jonny could blow his only two reviews in the first 10 minutes then bitch and moan about calls against him for the rest of the game, and it'd fall on deaf ears because he wasted his reviews on calls he got wrong.

                                        I just don't think this would work well in practice.

                                        Here's a scenario that happens fairly regularly - ball carrier in tight, carrier 2/3 tacklers over the line, mass of bodies but knocks the ball on slightly before grounding it over the line.

                                        It would be understandable the players might not see this, nor the referee. But the cameras pick it up. I'm not sure it's fair on the defending side to expect them to challenge something they had no way of seeing. So does the TMO intervene, or let a dodgy try stand?

                                        Cricket already lives with this scenario where say the batsmen has faintly edged it, the umpire gives it not out, and the bowling side doesn't review even though the 3rd umpire can see a clear edge on the slow mo and snicko etc. In that scenario, the immediate reaction from fans is they should have reviewed it, not that the 3rd umpire should have intervened even though technically he could have. It puts the onus back on the players as well as the ref, which helps people remember that they are all human out there doing their best.

                                        That's a fair point, although at least in the case of cricket you can't suggest the players weren't able to see/judge for themselves.

                                        Plenty of cases in rugby where something happens where no player would see it - foot in touch, small knock-on etc. Now going back to Mariner's point that maybe we should be happy to live with that, but as he himself acknowledges that's never actually going to happen. The genie is out of the bottle.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • Dan54D Offline
                                          Dan54D Offline
                                          Dan54
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #75

                                          You know for all the moans about the rules/laws can be to complicated etc. It's the laws/rules whatever, if it too tricky, perhaps (and I know it happens now) just watch something else or something? I actually think it gives so many an out why their teams lose it probably keeps people watching. as they think their team would win if only................

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