One of rugby,'s more stupid laws, this only applies to kicks in general playIn Ireland V Arg, Arg received a kick off, were subsequently held up and Ireland got the put in at the scrum, I thought if it was off a kick off, then the ball doesn’t get turned over?
If a maul is formed immediately after a player has directly caught an opponent’s kick in open play, a scrum that is awarded for any of the above reasons will be to the team of the ball catcher.
The Committee considered that the dangerous tackle was a result of poor technique, rather than by design, and by remaining upright and not lowering his body position prior to the tackle, the collision was inevitable in the upper body/ head area. There was however no sign of any malice whatsoever, and the Players actions were considered to be reckless and not intentional
The Kerevi written judiciary decision is up on the six nations site
I really like that they publish these. Well worth reading the desicions if you want to understand the process
The Committee considered that the dangerous tackle was a result of poor technique, rather than by design, and by remaining upright and not lowering his body position prior to the tackle, the collision was inevitable in the upper body/ head area. There was however no sign of any malice whatsoever, and the Players actions were considered to be reckless and not intentional
Yep, agreed. Kerevi was always going to get suspended because his head lined up with the ball carrier's head through the entire tackle process. He was never low enough to get mitigation.If you target the sternum - your impact area is probably going to be somewhere between the navel and the head, whereas you target the navel, its now probably between the sternum and the hips.
Which I suspect is fine at amateur/semi-pro level, but I wouldn't be surprised if they train to tackle a little higher than you'd expect as there is also the element of wanting to wrap up the ball/close off the offload. You see a lot of international players tackling on the higher side (part of the reason I don't ever see below sternum rule coming in at pro level, it just wouldn't work) which as you allude always runs a risk with the dynamic movement and speed at that level of competition. There are a number of high-side tackles in every game, but not all of them result in head collisions or in some cases get missed like that Sua'ali'i tackle in the Wales game or the Meafou tackle in the France/Argentina game which both looked a bit iffy.Unless you're a tracking missile - you can't guarantee what part of the body you're going hit when you make a tackle (ball carriers will ALWAYS move in the moments prior to contact). If you target the sternum - your impact area is probably going to be somewhere between the navel and the head, whereas you target the navel, its now probably between the sternum and the hips.
A sudden and significant drop/ movement is pretty much reserved for players who slip into contact or are impacted by another player.
This is consistent with the application of law in open play tackles for yonks.
It was absolutely a deliberate knock on.Good one in France v Argentina.
35 mins in
Pearce gives a yellow card and penalty try for a deliberate knock-on, where the ball clearly goes backwards.
I think it's the right call, the Arg player definately knocked the ball towards the opposition dead ball line, which is the definition in the law book.
linkythe young Irish flyhalf on debut was very very lucky to only receive a yellow card. That looks for all money a deliberate shoulder to the face.
But I was told they were consistentthe young Irish flyhalf on debut was very very lucky to only receive a yellow card. That looks for all money a deliberate shoulder to the face.
I was about to ask how there is anything in the framework that doesn't make that a red. Reckless/intentional, foulplay, no mitagation, straight to head with force. I support Ireland, but boy I'm really getting a bit over Fiji getting shafted on some of the calls/non-calls happening in their games.the young Irish flyhalf on debut was very very lucky to only receive a yellow card. That looks for all money a deliberate shoulder to the face.
This has been a real issue from commentators on both sides of the argument. We often see the Australian and NZ commentators criticized for their "let the boys play" attitude to this stuff (and they've earnt plenty of that criticism) many of the northern commentators are just as bad in the other direction.Disappointing to hear the commentators go on about "no mitigation for always illegal"
Mitigation is step 4 in the process. This challenge was not mitigated down, it was assessed as low danger at step 3.
If an idiot like me understands this, there should be no reason why commentators get it wrong. Got to do better than that. Understand your sport fellas if you are paid to describe it
The NH narrative is very much that it is primarily a SH problem. It dove-tails with the notion that the 20 min RC was a cunning plan to have a sacrificial lamb take out a class opposition player for little / no penalty.This has been a real issue from commentators on both sides of the argument. We often see the Australian and NZ commentators criticized for their "let the boys play" attitude to this stuff (and they've earnt plenty of that criticism) many of the northern commentators are just as bad in the other direction.
While world rugby could definitely communicate it better the information is there for them and as the "experts" they should be doing a lot more to understand and communicate it. If they don't put the work in there's little hope that the average fan will. That understanding, and ideally engagement with referees, is something I'd like to see a lot more of from Stan in the future.
The NH drivel around Kerevi’s 20min red card was exquisite. They seem to have forgotten three tries were scored while he was actually off the field…The NH narrative is very much that it is primarily a SH problem. It dove-tails with the notion that the 20 min RC was a cunning plan to have a sacrificial lamb take out a class opposition player for little / no penalty.
Fair critisims of the commentators phrasing and language. The yellow didn't have anything to do with mitigation, but it was around judgement of the degree of danger.7:46 on the match clock for those playing at home.
At 12:50 the TMO gives his descion. Degree of force assessed as not high, and so degree of danger assessed as low, and stays at yellow. Borderline one again. I think I could agree with either one.
Disappointing to hear the commentators go on about "no mitigation for always illegal"
Mitigation is step 4 in the process. This challenge was not mitigated down, it was assessed as low danger at step 3.
If an idiot like me understands this, there should be no reason why commentators get it wrong. Got to do better than that. Understand your sport fellas if you are paid to describe it
Thats the not law book definition, ball must travel forward.Good one in France v Argentina.
35 mins in
Pearce gives a yellow card and penalty try for a deliberate knock-on, where the ball clearly goes backwards.
I think it's the right call, the Arg player definately knocked the ball towards the opposition dead ball line, which is the definition in the law book.
Definition of forward in the law book = towards the oppositionThats the not law book definition, ball must travel forward.
Unless theyve poorly phrased the penalty for being a deliberate knock from the field, then its a clear error
A player must not intentionally knock the ball forward with hand or arm.