Lawrence to referee Wallabies quarterfinal Darren Walton and Jim Morton
October 4, 2011 - 8:44AM
AAP
New Zealanders are bemoaning the appointment of Welsh referee Nigel Owens for their Rugby World Cup quarter-final, but Australia may have more to fear.
Kiwi whistle-blower Bryce Lawrence will control their sudden-death showdown with South Africa in Wellington on Sunday, just three weeks after his controversial display in the Wallabies' surprise loss to Ireland in the pool stages.
Apart from penalising Australia's scrum five times for collapsing, decisions that ultimately allowed Jonny Sexton and Ronan O'Gara to boot Ireland to a 15-6 victory, Lawrence's officiating of the breakdown was at times puzzling.
In David Pocock's absence with a back injury, Lawrence's latitude at the collision zone proved particularly costly for the Wallabies.
The breakdown has consistently been more of a "free-for-all" under the seasoned referee, making it difficult for harassed halfback Will Genia to feed the Wallabies backline with quick, clean ball.
While the Wallabies all tournament have refused to blame refereeing - or injuries - for less than convincing performances, Lawrence's display at Eden Park drew widespread criticism from fans and commentators alike.
Australia did beat South Africa 14-9 in Durban and minnows Russia 68-22 under Lawrence, but in his three Tests in charge this year they have been heavily punished.
The total count stands at 34-19 against.
The Wallabies have also finished on the wrong side of the penalty count in three of their four pool games and know they must be extremely disciplined in the highly-physical contest.
South Africa have lost injured centre Frans Steyn - and his ability to slot goals from 60 metres out - but regardless the Wallabies know they can ill-afford to be penalised against the kick-happy Springboks.
Skipper James Horwill flatly denied the Wallabies would be pushing the boundaries at the breakdown in the comfort of Steyn's absence.
With the tournament's leading pointscorer Morne Steyn in great goalkicking form, the Springboks still have the ability to punish the Wallabies for their every infringement.
"Morne Steyn is a fantastic kicker and I think his record in this tournament is pretty high," Horwill said.
"So you've got to be aware that their goalkicking ability across the board is pretty strong with or without Frans Steyn.
"You've got to have that in the back of your mind, that you can't give away silly penalties to allow them free points with kicks at goals."
Interestingly, Lawrence is one of three southern hemisphere referees appointed by the IRB to control the four quarter-finals.
Welshman Owens, under fire for last weekend's performance in the Boks' 13-5 win over Samoa, is the only northern appointment with the likes of Irishman Alain Rolland and Englishman Wayne Barnes overlooked.
Barnes is still a reviled figure in New Zealand for his ghastly miss of a French forward pass four years ago which led to the All Blacks' 2007 quarter-final demise.
Their would have been some relief from the tournament hosts when he was overlooked on Monday, but it was not celebrated.
"Oh no, we've got Nigel," was a headline in New Zealand's Fairfax Newspapers.
South African Craig Joubert will control Saturday's opening between Ireland and Wales, while Kiwi-born Australian Steve Walsh will referee England versus France.
© 2011 AAP