Simmons was warned directly by Kaplan in the first half for loitering on the wrong side of the ruck (Kaplan actually said "you've done it twice now. Stop it or I will penalize you"). Then in the second half he warned the Reds captain about Simmons again, but didn't penalize him once.
God forbid if it transfers over to the Wallabies. It'd be a real shame to see our Golden boys slowing down the Darkness ball.
Sharks also received 4 penalties within 5m of their own try line and managed to keep all 15 players on the field..
things go both ways
I disagree with this statement. Yes the sharks forwards had an exceptional game but the Reds forwards seemed to evenly match them at all times. I personally believe the ref had bad calls ONLY to the reds and that the sharks were well treated at most times. There were too many mistakes in which the ref made and he should have acknowledged his poor predicament and picked up on that 10 minutes into the game. period.
McKenzie's gamble baffles Plumtree
22nd July 2012 12:22
Sharks coach John Plumtree admitted he was surprised at coaching counterpart Ewen McKenzie's decision to move Will Genia to 10.
The Reds lost their Super Rugby play-off clash to the Sharks 30-17. And while the visitors were full value for their win, questions were raised why McKenzie opted to switch his scrum-half to fly-half after starting pivot Ben Lucas went down injured early in the match.
It was thought inside centre Mike Harris would be the logical replacement at 10 as he's played there for the Reds already this season, and replacement back Ben Tapuai take the Kiwi's place in midfield.
But Genia moved to the pivotal position with Nick Frisby coming on at nine and the Sharks took full advantage when centre Paul Jordaan scored a brilliant try following some superb lead-up work from JP Pietersen and Ryan Kankowksi.
However, Genia began to find his feet at fly-half and got the Reds back in the match with five minutes to go in the half when he scythed through the Sharks defence, passed out wide to number eight Scott Higginbotham before taking a return pass to score beside the posts.
Genia turned from hero to villain soon after half-time when his flat cut-out pass was intercepted by Sharks scrum-half Charl McLeod, who raced 70 metres to score under the posts for the match-clinching try.
"I was a little surprised that they didn't put (inside centre Mike) Harris at 10," said Plumtree.
"Will allowed us into the game because he was throwing a lot of skip passes and we read that."
Meanwhile, Genia couldn't hide his frustration following his team's play-off defeat that saw the defending champions' title defence come to an end - snapping their six-game winning run in the process.
The Reds dominated possession in the second half and seemed to get their reward when flanker Liam Gill barged over, only for the television match official to rule no try despite replays showing otherwise.
"I thought we scored a try off Gill's pick and go, but I don't understand how it was wasn't conclusive," Genia said.
"I felt if we got that try we were back in the game - it's very disappointing to finish on a sad note like that."
The argument a couple of us are making is that Kaplan seems to let one thing cancel out the other.
If he hadn't been frustrated by what Simmons was doing, I think the Sharks would have lost a man earlier.
Rather than making both teams play within the laws of the game to keep the game flowing, Kaplan seems to have this habit of letting teams infringe and just not calling them on it to let the game flow.
I agree with Mr Plumtree, it baffled me to
Give me a ref who knows what he wants from the players and any team at this level should have the ability to quickly adapt. The game should then flow and player may follow the law. Will prevent the game turning into shit fight we saw on saturday which i'd suggest is bad for the game in the long run.
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Cant be easy for you. Look at it this way, even if Father Xmast was the ref on saturday, there is no way the Reds would have won this match. The Sharks outplayed them in every possible way on the day.Do people really think that is what Kaplan was doing? Still leaves things up to the ref and who the hell is Kaplan to say that loitering offside is sufficient to cancel out a penalty in the 5m line. Give me a break. Sure the Reds aren't angels but that just sounds like a crock to me.
And why should it be justified to "let the game flow"? Give me a ref who knows what he wants from the players and any team at this level should have the ability to quickly adapt. The game should then flow and player may follow the law. Will prevent the game turning into shit fight we saw on saturday which i'd suggest is bad for the game in the long run.
Very poor justification for very poor reffing.