hahahah
Laurie Fisher @LordLaurie58
6mReally enjoyed being at Ewen's presentation to the IRFU last Saturday.#maulpickmaulpickmaulpickmaulpick
Gold!
He's got the perfect surname for what's he's doing too!
hahahah
Laurie Fisher @LordLaurie58
6mReally enjoyed being at Ewen's presentation to the IRFU last Saturday.#maulpickmaulpickmaulpickmaulpick
Was it? Ok, thanks for clearing that up. All I remember was he got sent off for repeated infringements, but now that you mention it I think I do remember it going like that.He got a yellow for repeated infringements, but was already on a yellow so it became a red.
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Was it? Ok, thanks for clearing that up. All I remember was he got sent off for repeated infringements, but now that you mention it I think I do remember it going like that.
He got a yellow for repeated infringements, but was already on a yellow so it became a red.
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A lot of talk about ref giving warnings etc and taking the quick tap removes the ability for the ref to give a warning but is there any requirement for a ref to 'warn' a captain before going to the pocket?
All Rugby players should know that repeated infringements inside your own red zone = card. I don't think anyone would've had an argument if one of the Brumbies had been carded without an actual warning as the consecutive penalties/advantages were quite ridiculous at times.
I'm ok with the result - I was happy with the win over the Tahs a year or two back in similar circumstances so can't complain about being on the other side of it now. That's Rugby.
One of the curious things for me was when we were panned by all a few years back for our win over the Brumbies when we were out scored in terms of tries but got home off the boot of Cooper. We were almost demonized for our 'negative' Rugby but when our coach has a moan about it when the shoe's on the other foot apparently that's not on? Seems like a double standard.
St George and Sir Richie could play a game of invisible rugby against each other.
Yes, Reds fans are (on the whole) more one-eyed than Brumbies fans.
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Yes, an official warning is required.
Law 10.3 (b)
Repeated infringements by the team. When different players of the same team repeatedly commit the same offence, the referee must decide whether or not this amounts to repeated infringement. If it does, the referee gives a general warning to the team and if they then repeat the offence, the referee cautions and temporarily suspends the guilty player(s). If a player of that same team then repeats the offence the referee sends off the guilty player(s).
So instead of rehashing the same argument over and over again. I'd like you guys to tell me this; what you would have done if you had been in the same position as the Brumbies? I believe this is a pretty fair question.
There is some abiguity in that law, concerning whether it is if a yellow carded player then commits the same offence they are red carded or whether it is any player. In practice I've never seen it refereed like that (where any similar offence by any player is given a red card after a yellow has been issued).
It always seems like a team has to build back up to another card once one has been issued.
You're probably right about our Reds brothers and sisters there, barbarian (and what's wrong with being a passionate one-eyed supporter of one's team?), but the Brumbies faithful are quickly gaining a reputation for seeing things only through a horse's mouth. I've been to Canberra these last two years to watch them clean up my beloved Tahs, some Brumbies fans are positively feral. And I'm not the only one who's noticed this development.
So instead of rehashing the same argument over and over again. I'd like you guys to tell me this; what you would have done if you had been in the same position as the Brumbies? I believe this is a pretty fair question.
You're obviously sitting with the wrong people in CanberraI second that Lindo. Once again not all of them but the times I have watched the Reds in Canberra there have been some total arseholes in the crowd. I was lucky in that we won and not unexpected they went into a cowardly silence.
I have seen some dickhead Reds fans at Suncorp also. The bloke behind us on Saturday night who couldn't let a sentence out with the F word despite women and children present. In 2011 some dirty bastard threw food at my brother who is a Brumbies fan at full time after Giteau slotted that penalty on full time. I don't consider myself a violent man but I wanted to knock his block off for that.
Going to a red straight away would be too harsh, but if we saw refs go to a yellow on the next offence we'd see a cleaner game.
Yeah. He spear tackled someone (from memory) and got yellow, then came back and impeded an AB's quick throw in, which Joubert had already warned us about. So he copped another yellow, which became a red.
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Nothing differently. The Brumbies were largely getting away with the infringements (with just penalties which were not costing them points) so doing anything different would have been stupid and not playing to the referee.
Thanks, that's what I wanted to hear. BTW, I think that the words 'cynical play' have been done to death both on the forum and on the blogs. Desperate play yes, cynical......not so much.Exactly. I would have done the same as them, which is why it is a refereeing and law issue, not a Brumbies one.
Fair enough I understand what you mean. But reading it that way you are going to sit with the stats are like a bikini problem. Because even if kicked out on the full it still don't mean you turned it over as a line out is one of the set plays where you have a very good chance of winning the ball. That is also why most tries get scored of it.Not in terms of the match statistics it isn't.
I don't know any statistics providers that count a kick where your team doesn't retain the ball as a turnover.
The only time a kick would be considered a turnover statistics-wise is when you kick out on the full from outside your 22 and the lineout takes place from where you kicked it.