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Wales v Australia

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Rugby Matches
walesaustralia
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  • G gibbon rib

    @bones said in Wales v Australia:

    So we've got no explanation as to why a swinging arm to the head is a YC when compared to Valetini's fuck up? At least Valetini was attempting a tackle. What was the Welsh player doing?

    That is the one big decision that I think the ref didwrong. Thomas was lucky to get away with a yellow.

    At least Valetini was attempting a valid tackle, he just got it badly wrong. Thomas' clean out was just reckless and ridiculously stupid

    BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    wrote on last edited by
    #180

    @gibbon-rib said in Wales v Australia:

    @bones said in Wales v Australia:

    So we've got no explanation as to why a swinging arm to the head is a YC when compared to Valetini's fuck up? At least Valetini was attempting a tackle. What was the Welsh player doing?

    That is the one big decision that I think the ref didwrong. Thomas was lucky to get away with a yellow.

    At least Valetini was attempting a valid tackle, he just got it badly wrong. Thomas' clean out was just reckless and ridiculously stupid

    Yeah exactly and it's pretty much reaching to call it a clear out even - the player wasn't even part of the breakdown, so he was just attacking someone really.

    When the ref says no mitigation for Valetini and then throws up a yellow for that (was the wrapping mitigation he discussed for this or the Aussie high shot just before it) it's hard not to think he's being blatantly biased.

    G 1 Reply Last reply
    4
    • barbarianB barbarian

      In real time it's pretty bonkers he let it play on like he did. I wonder if he saw it as a line-ball decision he could check with the TMO when the try was scored?

      https://www.instagram.com/p/CWgi0W_J3Ie/?utm_medium=copy_link

      G Offline
      G Offline
      gibbon rib
      wrote on last edited by
      #181

      @barbarian Might have been in his mind. It was a surprise he played on, 9 times out of 10 (OK, maybe 99 out of 100) it would have been a whistle straight away.
      But when he's talking to the TMO he's clear that he saw it go backwards and he just wants them to check. You wouldn't do that unless you had a reasonable level of confidence.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • BonesB Bones

        @gibbon-rib said in Wales v Australia:

        @bones said in Wales v Australia:

        So we've got no explanation as to why a swinging arm to the head is a YC when compared to Valetini's fuck up? At least Valetini was attempting a tackle. What was the Welsh player doing?

        That is the one big decision that I think the ref didwrong. Thomas was lucky to get away with a yellow.

        At least Valetini was attempting a valid tackle, he just got it badly wrong. Thomas' clean out was just reckless and ridiculously stupid

        Yeah exactly and it's pretty much reaching to call it a clear out even - the player wasn't even part of the breakdown, so he was just attacking someone really.

        When the ref says no mitigation for Valetini and then throws up a yellow for that (was the wrapping mitigation he discussed for this or the Aussie high shot just before it) it's hard not to think he's being blatantly biased.

        G Offline
        G Offline
        gibbon rib
        wrote on last edited by gibbon rib
        #182

        @bones Yeah, the wrapping was supposedly the mitigation for this. But that's nonsense, makes no sense. The only way this is not as bad is that the impact to the head wasn't as hard as the Valentini one, but it was still bad enough that it wasn't mitigation.

        Edit: it's also worth comparing this one with the Fijian red last week - that was a similar case of a guy throwing himself at someone on the ground and smacking his head with his arm. Very inconsistent, Thomas should have seen red

        Edit2 : the mitigation for the Aussie one in the same phase (I think it was Alaalatoa on Basham) was that the Welsh player was falling into him

        NTAN 1 Reply Last reply
        2
        • G gibbon rib

          @bones Yeah, the wrapping was supposedly the mitigation for this. But that's nonsense, makes no sense. The only way this is not as bad is that the impact to the head wasn't as hard as the Valentini one, but it was still bad enough that it wasn't mitigation.

          Edit: it's also worth comparing this one with the Fijian red last week - that was a similar case of a guy throwing himself at someone on the ground and smacking his head with his arm. Very inconsistent, Thomas should have seen red

          Edit2 : the mitigation for the Aussie one in the same phase (I think it was Alaalatoa on Basham) was that the Welsh player was falling into him

          NTAN Offline
          NTAN Offline
          NTA
          wrote on last edited by
          #183

          @gibbon-rib said in Wales v Australia:

          Edit: it's also worth comparing this one with the Fijian red last week - that was a similar case of a guy throwing himself at someone on the ground and smacking his head with his arm. Very inconsistent, Thomas should have seen red

          From memory the Fiji player completed a tackle then had a second swing.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • G gibbon rib

            @tordah this is one of the more bizarre claims I've ever seen on a rugby site. That the ref should overrule the laws of the game and treat a legal knock-back as an illegal knock-on because if infringes some unwritten ethereal "spirit of the game".

            M Offline
            M Offline
            Margin_Walker
            wrote on last edited by
            #184

            @gibbon-rib said in Wales v Australia:

            @tordah this is one of the more bizarre claims I've ever seen on a rugby site. That the ref should overrule the laws of the game and treat a legal knock-back as an illegal knock-on because if infringes some unwritten ethereal "spirit of the game".

            Yep, I find the fuss being made over this decision baffling. It went backwards, hence it was legal. It's that simple. You can't wish something into the law book that's not there when a decision doesn't go your way.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • TordahT Tordah

              @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
              In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
              The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

              Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

              You would hope 100 out 100 would not penalise.

              boobooB Offline
              boobooB Offline
              booboo
              wrote on last edited by booboo
              #185

              @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

              @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
              In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
              The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

              Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

              You would hope 100 out 100 would not penalise.

              There is no "negative intent". Stopping a pass legally is a very positive result for Wales.

              If you take that attitude then defence generally is "negative intent".

              And Beauden "got lucky" for that regathered intercept v Wales and should have been penalised.

              Don't throw dumb passes so close to the opposition and remove the chance of them being blocked.

              CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
              4
              • gt12G gt12

                @voodoo said in Wales v Australia:

                @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

                @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
                In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
                The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

                Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

                Why on earth not?

                Why shouldn't a defensive player knock the ball down and backwards to prevent a try???

                There are two sides to this as I agree with you, but then I wonder, as you can knock the ball on as part of a charge down then score off it, and that makes sense.

                So, I can see a reasoning here that you shouldn't be able to deliberating knock down a pass from the opposition but could knock it back in general play or off a kickoff.

                It's like Mabo.

                boobooB Offline
                boobooB Offline
                booboo
                wrote on last edited by booboo
                #186

                @gt12 said in Wales v Australia:

                @voodoo said in Wales v Australia:

                @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

                @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
                In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
                The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

                Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

                Why on earth not?

                Why shouldn't a defensive player knock the ball down and backwards to prevent a try???

                There are two sides to this as I agree with you, but then I wonder, as you can knock the ball on as part of a charge down then score off it, and that makes sense.

                So, I can see a reasoning here that you shouldn't be able to deliberating knock down a pass from the opposition but could knock it back in general play or off a kickoff.

                It's like Mabo.

                I think it's down the continual use of the wrong terminology.

                Referring to a knock down all the time has created the impression it's somehow illegal, and if not illegal unethical.

                There is nothing against the spirit, the law, Mabo or The Vibe by attempting to knock the ball backwards, getting it right, being seen to do so by the ref in real time on the field and it being confirmed by video by the TMO.

                The counter argument is "it looked odd".

                M 1 Reply Last reply
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                • boobooB booboo

                  @gt12 said in Wales v Australia:

                  @voodoo said in Wales v Australia:

                  @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

                  @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
                  In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
                  The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

                  Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

                  Why on earth not?

                  Why shouldn't a defensive player knock the ball down and backwards to prevent a try???

                  There are two sides to this as I agree with you, but then I wonder, as you can knock the ball on as part of a charge down then score off it, and that makes sense.

                  So, I can see a reasoning here that you shouldn't be able to deliberating knock down a pass from the opposition but could knock it back in general play or off a kickoff.

                  It's like Mabo.

                  I think it's down the continual use of the wrong terminology.

                  Referring to a knock down all the time has created the impression it's somehow illegal, and if not illegal unethical.

                  There is nothing against the spirit, the law, Mabo or The Vibe by attempting to knock the ball backwards, getting it right, being seen to do so by the ref in real time on the field and it being confirmed by video by the TMO.

                  The counter argument is "it looked odd".

                  M Offline
                  M Offline
                  Machpants
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #187

                  @booboo said in Wales v Australia:

                  @gt12 said in Wales v Australia:

                  @voodoo said in Wales v Australia:

                  @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

                  @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
                  In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
                  The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

                  Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

                  Why on earth not?

                  Why shouldn't a defensive player knock the ball down and backwards to prevent a try???

                  There are two sides to this as I agree with you, but then I wonder, as you can knock the ball on as part of a charge down then score off it, and that makes sense.

                  So, I can see a reasoning here that you shouldn't be able to deliberating knock down a pass from the opposition but could knock it back in general play or off a kickoff.

                  It's like Mabo.

                  I think it's down the continual use of the wrong terminology.

                  Referring to a knock down all the time has created the impression it's somehow illegal, and if not illegal unethical.

                  There is nothing against the spirit, the law, Mabo or The Vibe by attempting to knock the ball backwards, getting it right, being seen to do so by the ref in real time on the field and it being confirmed by video by the TMO.

                  The counter argument is "it looked odd".

                  Totally, people do it all the time off the high ball - card them all!

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • barbarianB Offline
                    barbarianB Offline
                    barbarian
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #188

                    Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

                    voodooV nzzpN antipodeanA 3 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • barbarianB barbarian

                      Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

                      voodooV Offline
                      voodooV Offline
                      voodoo
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #189

                      @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

                      Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

                      Not sure if the splintering caused any issue, but on the basis that it didn't (because the ref didn't call that), then I thought the carrier got to ground fine and the defense just flopped over - certainly a scrum to Yellow, could even have been a penalty

                      barbarianB 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • voodooV voodoo

                        @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

                        Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

                        Not sure if the splintering caused any issue, but on the basis that it didn't (because the ref didn't call that), then I thought the carrier got to ground fine and the defense just flopped over - certainly a scrum to Yellow, could even have been a penalty

                        barbarianB Offline
                        barbarianB Offline
                        barbarian
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #190

                        @voodoo But the splintering is caused by Fainga'a being pulled back from behind by a Wales player at 7seconds. The player wasn't bound to the maul before doing this, IMO.

                        voodooV 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • boobooB booboo

                          @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

                          @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
                          In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
                          The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

                          Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

                          You would hope 100 out 100 would not penalise.

                          There is no "negative intent". Stopping a pass legally is a very positive result for Wales.

                          If you take that attitude then defence generally is "negative intent".

                          And Beauden "got lucky" for that regathered intercept v Wales and should have been penalised.

                          Don't throw dumb passes so close to the opposition and remove the chance of them being blocked.

                          CrucialC Offline
                          CrucialC Offline
                          Crucial
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #191

                          @booboo said in Wales v Australia:

                          @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

                          @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
                          In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
                          The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

                          Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

                          You would hope 100 out 100 would not penalise.

                          There is no "negative intent". Stopping a pass legally is a very positive result for Wales.

                          I think their is a bit of confusion here. IMO it was a negative action but tat was solely because he didn't look to be trying to knock it back,it was just fortuitous that he did. He was just sticking out a hand to stop the pass and it worked out.

                          G 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • barbarianB barbarian

                            Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

                            nzzpN Offline
                            nzzpN Offline
                            nzzp
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #192

                            @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

                            Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

                            I saw what you saw by the sound of it - the defence splintered went around the back of the maul and then tackled the ball carrier while grotesquely offside.

                            yet the ref just waved it on. Weird.

                            G 1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • barbarianB barbarian

                              @voodoo But the splintering is caused by Fainga'a being pulled back from behind by a Wales player at 7seconds. The player wasn't bound to the maul before doing this, IMO.

                              voodooV Offline
                              voodooV Offline
                              voodoo
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #193

                              @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

                              @voodoo But the splintering is caused by Fainga'a being pulled back from behind by a Wales player at 7seconds. The player wasn't bound to the maul before doing this, IMO.

                              Maybe, but my point was more that even despite that, you should have received a penalty (or at minimum a scrum) from the next action - certainly shouldn't have been a turnover!

                              So in summary, yes, your rage was entitled!

                              barbarianB 1 Reply Last reply
                              2
                              • nzzpN nzzp

                                @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

                                Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

                                I saw what you saw by the sound of it - the defence splintered went around the back of the maul and then tackled the ball carrier while grotesquely offside.

                                yet the ref just waved it on. Weird.

                                G Offline
                                G Offline
                                gibbon rib
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #194

                                @nzzp said in Wales v Australia:

                                @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

                                Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

                                I saw what you saw by the sound of it - the defence splintered went around the back of the maul and then tackled the ball carrier while grotesquely offside.

                                yet the ref just waved it on. Weird.

                                Yeah that's how I saw it too, thought it should have been a penalty to Oz

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                2
                                • voodooV voodoo

                                  @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

                                  @voodoo But the splintering is caused by Fainga'a being pulled back from behind by a Wales player at 7seconds. The player wasn't bound to the maul before doing this, IMO.

                                  Maybe, but my point was more that even despite that, you should have received a penalty (or at minimum a scrum) from the next action - certainly shouldn't have been a turnover!

                                  So in summary, yes, your rage was entitled!

                                  barbarianB Offline
                                  barbarianB Offline
                                  barbarian
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #195

                                  @voodoo said in Wales v Australia:

                                  So in summary, yes, your rage was entitled!

                                  After 15 years on this site, finally I get the reinforcement I needed. Thank you. I can now die happy.

                                  G 1 Reply Last reply
                                  3
                                  • barbarianB barbarian

                                    @voodoo said in Wales v Australia:

                                    So in summary, yes, your rage was entitled!

                                    After 15 years on this site, finally I get the reinforcement I needed. Thank you. I can now die happy.

                                    G Offline
                                    G Offline
                                    gibbon rib
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #196

                                    @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

                                    @voodoo said in Wales v Australia:

                                    So in summary, yes, your rage was entitled!

                                    After 15 years on this site, finally I get the reinforcement I needed. Thank you. I can now die happy righteously angry.

                                    FIFY

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    3
                                    • barbarianB barbarian

                                      Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

                                      antipodeanA Online
                                      antipodeanA Online
                                      antipodean
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #197

                                      @barbarian said in Wales v Australia:

                                      Found the maul turnover hat got me quite angry. Am I right or wrong? Would appreciate an impartial view from you uneducated kiwi morons, and morons from other jurisdictions as well.

                                      Clear penalty against Red 19 to me. Admittedly I had to watch a couple of times to find the culprit.

                                      NTAN 1 Reply Last reply
                                      2
                                      • CrucialC Crucial

                                        @booboo said in Wales v Australia:

                                        @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

                                        @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
                                        In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
                                        The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

                                        Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

                                        You would hope 100 out 100 would not penalise.

                                        There is no "negative intent". Stopping a pass legally is a very positive result for Wales.

                                        I think their is a bit of confusion here. IMO it was a negative action but tat was solely because he didn't look to be trying to knock it back,it was just fortuitous that he did. He was just sticking out a hand to stop the pass and it worked out.

                                        G Offline
                                        G Offline
                                        gibbon rib
                                        wrote on last edited by gibbon rib
                                        #198

                                        @crucial said in Wales v Australia:

                                        @booboo said in Wales v Australia:

                                        @tordah said in Wales v Australia:

                                        @gibbon-rib I don't think the argument should be about whether it went backwards by an inch or not.
                                        In basically EVERY instance this happens, the referee penalises the intent, which here quite clearly was to disrupt the pass through a negative play, that is not in the spirit of the game.
                                        The ball was not clearly knocked back (it was knocked back by an inch or two), but the intent of the player was to disrupt and he took the chance of an extremely negative play which he might have been carded for. Seeing as assumed intent is already a part that is refereed, 99 out of a 100 refs would penalise the Welsh player here.

                                        Basically, nobody wants to see a try like this, nobody wants to see plays decided by measuring whether a ball fell downwards at an angle or not. The intent was bad and he got lucky. Yes, play to the whistle and all (fucking idiot Kurtley), but the Welsh player knew himself he fucked up. If that try was chalked off, there would be almost no complaints, as it wouldn't feel wrong. We all know that is not how we play this game.

                                        You would hope 100 out 100 would not penalise.

                                        There is no "negative intent". Stopping a pass legally is a very positive result for Wales.

                                        I think their is a bit of confusion here. IMO it was a negative action but tat was solely because he didn't look to be trying to knock it back,it was just fortuitous that he did. He was just sticking out a hand to stop the pass and it worked out.

                                        Having watched the replays far too many times, I've actually come to the conclusion that Tomkins deserves a bit more credit than just being the beneficiary of pure luck. His motion is more than just sticking his arm out, he actually moves his hand and fingers back as the ball arrives in an attempt to knock it backwards towards himself. And I think he knew it went backwards - he does slow down, but you can clearly see him saying "back" to the ref. (It's reasonable to ask why he slowed down at all, my guess is that he thought it had been called back because of of reactions of all the other players / 75k fans around him).

                                        So I think he was just very lucky, rather than incredibly lucky.

                                        Having said that, it's all irrelevant to the outcome, all that matters is whether the ball went forwards.

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                                          gibbon rib
                                          wrote on last edited by gibbon rib
                                          #199

                                          So of the last 15 matches between Wales and Australia, Australia won the first 12 and Wales the last 3.

                                          Only one has been decided by more than 9 points
                                          10 of them were by 7 points or fewer
                                          7 were by 3 points or fewer

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