Pfitzy
Nathan Sharpe (72)
Obviously the subbies know the Laws of the Game better!!
I've done my field test now so am 1 online test away from being fully legit
Obviously the subbies know the Laws of the Game better!!
He's not tackled. But you can't crawl anywhere with the ball in your possession - Law 13 has the stated Principle that players will be on their feet.
But you can't crawl anywhere with the ball in your possession
Because he wasn’t tackled he’s allowed to get up on one knee and offload it though, fundamentally I’m not sure why that’s any different to gettin on his knees and placing the ball, he didn’t actually gain any ground by going from his stomach to his knee
Regardless i thought the decision was a bit rushed for the type event it was, especially considering how much time is taken to conclude other TMO events
No!! If players from both teams are bound above and you on ground it is a ruck whether you tackled or not so you can't use hands!!
Because he wasn’t tackled he’s allowed to get up on one knee and offload it though
ENDING A MAUL
16. A maul ends and play continues when:
a. The ball or ball-carrier leaves the maul.
b. The ball is on the ground.
c. The ball is on or over the goal line.
17. A maul ends unsuccessfully when:
a. The ball becomes unplayable.
b. The maul collapses (not as a result of foul play).
c. The maul does not move towards a goal line for longer than five seconds and the ball does not emerge.
d. The ball-carrier goes to ground and the ball is not immediately available.
e. The ball is available to be played
TRY
2. A try is scored when an attacking player:
a. Is first to ground the ball in the opponents’ in-goal.
b. Is first to ground the ball when a scrum, ruck or maul reaches the goal line.
c. With the ball is tackled short of the goal line and the player’s momentum carries them in a continuous movement along the ground into the opponents’ in-goal, and the player is first to ground the ball.
d. Is tackled near to the opponents’ goal line and the player immediately reaches out and grounds the ball.
e. Who is in touch or touch-in-goal, grounds the ball in the opponents’ in-goal provided the player is not holding the ball.
My recollection is that BPA was under some AB players who hadn't noticed he had gone to ground. It was called a maul, therefore going to the Maul Law (16) we see:
If he's under any bound players who were part of the original maul, the only logical option is the one in bold (17.d.) above.
Technically you could say this is now a Ruck (Law 15)
If you listen to the official reason for the no try it’s because he “propels himself forward” so it is “double movement.” No double movement law in union.
The referees need to communicate better. Pretty easy to penalise him for playing the ball on the ground if that's your interpretation of him propping himself up on his knees. Blowing a penalty for a law that is well-known not to exist in rugby is village.
Not for me. Using a loaded term like double movement doesn’t help clarity at all. It makes sense to say that he has to release the ball immediately, if that was his ruling, I didn’t hear him say anything about releasing. Also, all that talk about ‘propelling himself forward’ was rubbish as he didn’t.The double movement explains how he breached the law.
The penalty was for not releasing.
I think it is fine. The nuance is in why was it a penalty for not releasing as you're allowed to reach out and place the ball. The fact that he moved a second time to do that is why it wasn't legal.
There's a number of penalties where the reason the referee states isn't actually the law that is broken. E.g. last week the referee penalised Rob Simmons for changing his bind in the maul. Clearly that isn't against the laws. The law he broke was being offside at the maul but it was the action of changing his bind that put him from a position where he was onside to one that was offside.
A solid summary Pfitzy - well done mate.
Just a point that gets confused a lot in Rugby is the view that a Maul can become a Ruck. it can't.
Once a Maul is formed, if it goes to ground, it's now a collapsed Maul - not a Ruck. It looks weird and the way referees try to get the ball out and into play definitely confuses the issue but they're doing that to avoid the scrum following a collapsed maul.
You can count the number of people who actually understand mauls on a single hand.Agreed - hence my point above that there is no transition in either law stating it can change like that
However in practical terms, it happens all the time for the reasons you state: get the ball on the deck and call "use it". Players often don't know the laws and backrowers aren't the brightest so you'll see refs call "RUCK!" to let them know that killing it won't work at that point.
You can count the number of people who actually understand mauls on a single hand.
Fucking abominations.
I just think we're at a point where the "stop once" rule needs to be jettisoned. Use it or lose it.
I remember back when they brought in the 5 second rule that England would game the shit out of it, and when refs used to let mauls form and then not starting counting the stoppages until it had advanced.
If you're going sideways or backwards, use it or lose it. Fixed.
Right, genuinely never knew that. Thought that it was only after a completed tackle you couldn't crawl.
You can count the number of people who actually understand mauls on a single hand.
Fucking abominations.
I've done my field test now so am 1 online test away from being fully legit