Referees
• Well done James Jones in Dragons v. Ospreys the weekend before last, for pinging Ospreys scrummie, Rhys Webb, for baulking a pass from the ruck. It's a law that goes unpunished too often.
• Whilst we are handing out bouquets to referees well done Alain Rolland last Saturday in Scarlets v Northamptom for carding Saints' 12. Tom May in the 3rd minute for lobbing the ball into the face of Scarlets 9. Gareth Davies after the whistle had blown. That stuff gets up my nose.
Another well done: about 15 minutes later when he reversed a Saints penalty after Saints 6. Callum Clark came barrelling into Scarlets ball-runner 6. Aaron Shingler, again after the whistle. Cheap shot Callum; interim England coach Lancaster, who picked you in the 6N squad won't like that lack of discipline.
Good Sports
That was sporting of the Ravenhill crowd whose team, Ulster, thrashed Leicester 41-7 in the Heineken Cup last Friday, to wish the visitors a good trip back to England, near the end of the game. But expressing it in song: “Sweet chariot, coming for to carry me home …” must have got up the Leicester players' noses.
Laws
Ulster v. Leicester – Stefan Terblanche of Ulster, about 37 metres from his goal line kicks through, the ball goes into the Leicester in-goal and defender Billy Twelvetrees squats down on the ground one leg stretched out over touch-in-goal and takes the moving ball and dots it down. After confirming with the AR that the ball was still moving as 12Trees took the ball Romain Poite awards a scrum to Leicester back where the ball was kicked.
That's fine, but 12Trees didn't pick the ball up cleanly: he inadvertently grounded the ball, oh so briefly, before picking it up – a light grounding that could have earned a try for an attacker. It should have been a 22 drop out to Leicester. You see this quite a bit with those stretched out 'pick ups'. Grounding can be momentary.
Test not played in two halves
The 1st Test NZ v Australia in 1913 at Athletic Park was played in heavy rain, and wind, on a muddy pitch, and it was bloody cold too. For some reason the game was played in four quarters. As far as is known this is the only occasion on which a test match has been not been played in two halves.
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