Brumby Runner
Jason Little (69)
Diving in the air Strewth. It is possible and even preferable to dive along the ground when going for the tryline from inside the field of play.
Just need to follow World Rugby's Safety Protocols on these things.World Rugby and Simple do not a Venn diagram make.
Hope your aim is good, otherwise Egon gets a rude shock...
See post #3889 and #3892 on the page before this one for WR (World Rugby)'s official line.Otago v Northland last night an Otago player picked up the ball at the back of a goal-line pileup & dived over several prone players, his boots making contact with at least one of them, into the in-goal. Ball landed on a defenders leg so Ref called held up.
1. How is this not dangerous play?
2. How can a defender, still on his feet & wholly behind the goal-line, tackle the player without conceding a penalty try & being binned for tackling a player in the air? Or is there a sub-section of a sub-clause of a guideline covering this situation?
woooo, up the all powerful Aussie illuminati.
I suppose his argument is that we define what reality is in respect to what is and what isn't a red card offence.There was a ridiculous article on Rugbypass quoting Nigel Owens who doesn't agree with the 20 minute red card.
Nigel Owens' verdict on the 20-minute red card trial
Retired referee Nigel Owens has shared his verdict on the 20-minute red card trial which has been used in The Rugby Championship.www.rugbypass.com
“As far as the 20-minute red card idea is concerned, I’m not a fan. As Mathieu has said, I don’t believe it will really solve any of the problems that we have in the game at the moment.
“If someone on the pitch has committed a red card offence, they should be given a red card that sees them sin-binned for the rest of the game. Simple as that. The problem at the moment is that players are being sent off for things like accidental head collisions, which are not acts of thuggery or recklessness, but simply rugby collisions just accidentally gone wrong.
“They should not be seen as red card offences in the first place – so do we need to change the laws instead? I think so, or we certainly need to look at the options, especially upright tackles. Too often, players are still not making the effort to go lower.
His argument is non-sensical because he's argued against it on the basis of a red card definition that doesn't match with reality.
But failing that - and there's always going to controversy given the dynamic nature of the game how hard it is to determine intent - why is he not singing the praises of this law change (at least as being a first step) which reduces the impact of a red card decision on the player's team?I suppose his argument is that we define what reality is in respect to what is and what isn't a red card offence.
I get your point - and while I don't know for sure, my guess is he's trying differentiate between incidents that occur as a part of the game (a high tackle) and extraordinary incidents like punching, biting, stomping, shoulder charge etc.But failing that - and there's always going to controversy given the dynamic nature of the game how hard it is to determine intent - why is he not singing the praises of this law change (at least as being a first step) which reduces the impact of a red card decision on the player's team?
I suppose his argument is that we define what reality is in respect to what is and what isn't a red card offence.
I get your point - and while I don't know for sure, my guess is he's trying differentiate between incidents that occur as a part of the game (a high tackle) and extraordinary incidents like punching, biting, stomping, shoulder charge etc.
An example to me that comes to mind is the SBW tackle vs BIL where he was sent off. Definitely a send off under law, but I'd argue it was a very poor attempt to perform an otherwise legal act of tackling compared to say a punch or stomp.
I understand this - I'm just saying his argument isn't non-sensical.We already have.
Nigel Owens is saying that he doesn't agree with it.
It's somewhat perverse that the same people arguing that the 20 minute red card is bad for player safety are also arguing that some of the incidents we have now determined should be red card offences aren't red card offences.
It's pretty clear that it makes zero difference to the brain whether the head contact was entirely accidental or whether it was reckless/intentional.
We've already resolved that too. The straight red card is still an option for things like Frank Lomani's elbow on Josh Canham. These incidents are vanishingly rare in modern rugby.
“Plus, we didn’t see any real changes in player behaviour when it was trialled this summer, including at The Rugby Championship. There is still a lot of careless, reckless conduct out there, so I don’t know if introducing these new cards has made much of a difference anyway.”
“If someone on the pitch has committed a red card offence, they should be given a red card that sees them sin-binned for the rest of the game. Simple as that"
“I’m against the 20 minute red card because if you have been sent off, you have done something reckless that has put another player at great risk, or you have committed an act of thuggery. A red card means you deserve to be off the pitch, so I don’t see why there should be a middle ground."