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Red Card Lottery at the weekend

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Red Card Lottery at the weekend
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  • A Offline
    A Offline
    ARHS
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Surprised not to see much comment on the string of red-cardable offences in the weekend's internationals - especially after the NH decision not to allow Red Card replacement after 20 minutes. After the weekend I think that is an extremely poor decision.

    In watching matches this is what I though I saw, and is always open to interpretation. I have not re-watched and base this on initial impressions only:
    a) Two players leap up for the ball and (both?) heads hit shoulders. Red Card Argentina
    b) Player sets for tackle, but opponent passes well forward and catching player starts to duck for unexpectedly imminent contact. Medium contact to chin. Red Card USA
    c) Player grabs jersey of opponent burrowing into ruck legitimately, and immediately knees him in the face. Opponent goes off straight away. Yellow Card only England
    d) Player gets a bit of a hospital pass and shuffles across directly into the line of an exocet missile that launches into his chin sending him flying. Not worthy of review Fiji

    With all the talk about mitigation and intention, I thought the first two were yellows due to obvious mitigation. But, the sendings off impacted significantly on the matches.

    The other two seemed to be intentional acts with reckless disregard for opponent safety - but on the first one the Referee used the code word 'clumsy' to influence the TMO and it was just a yellow. The commentator suggested he was stepping into the ruck - where there was another head on the ground, and he barely missed another one after the knee. The second incident was not replayed on slow-mo as far as I can recall.

    I am no doubt biased in my view of what I saw, but do wonder how much card decisions depend on who the player is, which team they are from, and whether their team is playing at home. And I must question whether the TMO's are listening to the biased hometown commentary prior to the referral.

    I wonder what it would take for an England captain to be red-carded at Twickenham, or the Fijian captain in front of a partisan audience?

    What do Ferners think? In my eyes this demands a rethink of the 20 minute red card, as I think the referees make plenty of judgement errors because the stakes are too high - and they don't want to make a call that would see them pilloried if judged unwarranted. That tends to favour home teams.

    nzzpN boobooB MiketheSnowM 3 Replies Last reply
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  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to ARHS on last edited by
    #2

    @arhs said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    What do Ferners think? In my eyes this demands a rethink of the 20 minute red card, as I think the referees make plenty of judgement errors because the stakes are too high - and they don't want to make a call that would see them pilloried if judged unwarranted. That tends to favour home teams.

    If we're dishing out RC like candy (which is the intent), then a 20 min card + a heavy suspension seems a lot better.

    Honestly, though, the drum I keep beating is consistency. You just want to know that the line will be broadly consistent, and then everyone can adapt their risk/reward.

    If there is truly a drive to mitigate head contact (and there should be), then there should be responsibility on tacklers to stay low (nipple line is suggested; penalty for higher tackles), and on tacklers to stay high (not to bend into contact). The corollary would be that teammates who clean out and connect with heads of their own team should also be penalised/carded.

    The challenge is that rugby is a deeply physical, confrontational and fluid sport. It's what makes it worth watching. But the consistency is a massive headache as you say

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  • boobooB Offline
    boobooB Offline
    booboo
    replied to ARHS on last edited by
    #3

    @arhs have promoted to the Front Page ( @Duluth better check formatting and stuff)

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  • mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4life
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    alt text

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  • RapidoR Offline
    RapidoR Offline
    Rapido
    wrote on last edited by Rapido
    #5

    Chicken and egg. I've pretty much given up on rugby because of all the red cards hence have not seen , been outraged or been frustrated by the red cards.

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  • Dan54D Offline
    Dan54D Offline
    Dan54
    wrote on last edited by
    #6

    I have only really seen the Fijian one, and admit to being surprised it wasn't checked at least. But not really sure we will ever get it exactlt right.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to ARHS on last edited by MiketheSnow
    #7

    @arhs said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    Surprised not to see much comment on the string of red-cardable offences in the weekend's internationals - especially after the NH decision not to allow Red Card replacement after 20 minutes. After the weekend I think that is an extremely poor decision.

    In watching matches this is what I though I saw, and is always open to interpretation. I have not re-watched and base this on initial impressions only:
    a) Two players leap up for the ball and (both?) heads hit shoulders. Red Card Argentina.

    OK I’ll play

    Did you even watch the Wales v Argentina match?

    Mallia (15, Argentina) puts up a perfectly weighted kick which allowed him to cover the ground to contest for the ball when it landed.

    Hardy (9, Wales) positioned himself perfectly to field the kick, bringing the ball into his breadbasket and making the catch.

    In the act of catching the ball Hardy bent his knees and set his heels to ensure a good catch and brace himself for imminent impact.

    So far, textbook from both players.

    Mallia was never in position to contest for the ball in the air so set himself for the front on tackle of Hardy, which he timed perfectly.

    Unfortunately for Mallia in the split second he had to decide to contest or tackle he dropped his head (correct tackling technique) and took his eye off Hardy and Hardy’s body position.

    On first impact, Mallia’s head made contact with Hardy’s head.

    Unlucky / poor tackling technique but the laws are crystal clear.

    If first impact from the tackler is on the ball carrier’s head and there are no mitigating circumstances, then it’s a straight red.

    Both players are vertically challenged and Hardy barely dropped whole body position in the act of catching the ball and stealing himself for impact.

    No mitigating circumstances, referee had no choice but to show red.

    Action starts around 01:50

    gt12G A KiwiwombleK 3 Replies Last reply
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  • gt12G Offline
    gt12G Offline
    gt12
    replied to MiketheSnow on last edited by
    #8

    @mikethesnow

    I was happy with that call, the Argentinian was just too high and clocked him in the head. I'm not sure Argentina needed a man rubbed out for 50 minutes though.

    The 20 minute red would have made this game much more interesting - I went straight to bed.

    The non call on this tackle on Dmac is one I can't understand at all.

    nzzpN MiketheSnowM CrucialC 3 Replies Last reply
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  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to gt12 on last edited by
    #9

    @gt12 said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    @mikethesnow

    I was happy with that call, the Argentinian was just too high and clocked him in the head. I'm not sure Argentina needed a man rubbed out for 50 minutes though.

    The 20 minute red would have made this game much more interesting - I went straight to bed.

    The non call on this tackle on Dmac is one I can't understand at all.

    The Fiji one is much worse. Can't believe they didn't look again - late-ish, and right in the head.

    Argie tackle was clumsy, but he had time to go lower and should have. Unlucky you'd say, and a good example of a 20 min red being the right call.

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  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to gt12 on last edited by
    #10

    @gt12 said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    @mikethesnow

    I was happy with that call, the Argentinian was just too high and clocked him in the head. I'm not sure Argentina needed a man rubbed out for 50 minutes though.

    The 20 minute red would have made this game much more interesting - I went straight to bed.

    The non call on this tackle on Dmac is one I can't understand at all.

    Dead set red

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  • A Offline
    A Offline
    ARHS
    replied to MiketheSnow on last edited by
    #11

    @mikethesnow yep I concede that one. Thanks. Switched on to match after the incident and thought I saw it played from an angle where Mallia looked up as if wanting to catch ball then dipped his head very late. But that replay shows exactly as you say. He was not high because he was still trying to catch He had time to lower himself and the impact point so red. But I still think that a 20 minute red is a fairer outcome for bad judgement as distinct to malicious foul play.

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  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to MiketheSnow on last edited by Kiwiwomble
    #12

    @mikethesnow said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    @arhs said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    Surprised not to see much comment on the string of red-cardable offences in the weekend's internationals - especially after the NH decision not to allow Red Card replacement after 20 minutes. After the weekend I think that is an extremely poor decision.

    In watching matches this is what I though I saw, and is always open to interpretation. I have not re-watched and base this on initial impressions only:
    a) Two players leap up for the ball and (both?) heads hit shoulders. Red Card Argentina.

    Unfortunately for Mallia in the split second he had to decide to contest or tackle he dropped his head (correct tackling technique) and took his eye off Hardy and Hardy’s body position.

    Unlucky / poor tackling technique but the laws are crystal clear.

    I hate being pedantic but which is it?

    this is where get annoyed, yes, punish contact with the head, of course...but, if the correct technique (low, head down to the side etc) means the tackler cant keep track of all the variables throughout the whole movement then that is a mitigating factor for me

    its the same when a player never takes his eye off the ball in the air...its very hard for him to know if someone else is jumping for it...should he watch for the player...in which point hes unlikely to catch the ball and so could be argued isn't seriously competing for it

    MiketheSnowM BonesB 2 Replies Last reply
    2
  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by
    #13

    @kiwiwomble said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    @mikethesnow said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    @arhs said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    Surprised not to see much comment on the string of red-cardable offences in the weekend's internationals - especially after the NH decision not to allow Red Card replacement after 20 minutes. After the weekend I think that is an extremely poor decision.

    In watching matches this is what I though I saw, and is always open to interpretation. I have not re-watched and base this on initial impressions only:
    a) Two players leap up for the ball and (both?) heads hit shoulders. Red Card Argentina.

    Unfortunately for Mallia in the split second he had to decide to contest or tackle he dropped his head (correct tackling technique) and took his eye off Hardy and Hardy’s body position.

    Unlucky / poor tackling technique but the laws are crystal clear.

    I hate being pedantic but which is it?

    this is where get annoyed, yes, punish contact with the head, of course...but, if the correct technique (low, head down to the side etc) means the tackler cant keep track of all the variables throughout the whole movement then that is a mitigating factor for me

    its the same when a player never takes his eye off the ball in the air...its very hard for him to know if someone else is jumping for it...should he watch for the player...in which point hes unlikely to catch the ball and so could be argued isn't seriously competing for it

    Both

    Correct tackling technique applied to an incorrect area of the ball carrier

    But you knew that

    He absolutely smashed Hardy but unfortunately for him, he aimed too high

    Big reward, big risk tackle

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  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to gt12 on last edited by
    #14

    @gt12 said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    @mikethesnow

    I was happy with that call, the Argentinian was just too high and clocked him in the head. I'm not sure Argentina needed a man rubbed out for 50 minutes though.

    The 20 minute red would have made this game much more interesting - I went straight to bed.

    The non call on this tackle on Dmac is one I can't understand at all.

    There was a call. It was “boomfa”.
    Now you know why we need 20minute RCs for commentators

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  • A Offline
    A Offline
    ARHS
    wrote on last edited by
    #15

    Just saw that Ludlow was cited for his incident meeting red card threshold.
    I am hoping the USA player Hattingh has his charge thrown out with red card deemed enough.

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  • NTAN Offline
    NTAN Offline
    NTA
    wrote on last edited by
    #16

    Tip tackle on Matera - shoulder/head hitting ground first - was given just a penalty.

    That's my issue with the officials going heavy handed on the red card to the Argie fullback.

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  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by
    #17

    @kiwiwomble said in Red Card Lottery at the weekend:

    its the same when a player never takes his eye off the ball in the air...its very hard for him to know if someone else is jumping for it

    You answered yourself in the very same post, but surely you can see how reckless that is?

    KiwiwombleK 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to Bones on last edited by Kiwiwomble
    #18

    @bones my point is it can be a circular argument

    if the player isn't watching the ball and jumps, competes, but doesn't get it...its quite likely he'll get done for not having a realistic chance of regathering...how could he...but if he never takes his eye of the ball...its hard to know where other players are...do he could go up...but the only thing stopping him getting it is another player...he didn't know about because he was watching the ball

    In this case, hes tried to watch both and decided to tackle rather than go for the ball, even drops into the tackle, what he hasn't seen is the wales player drop slightly upon catching and so they go head to head to shoulder to shoulder

    yes, starting point is RED but for me there are mitigating circumstances

    3a60ad3d-40fc-4c2b-ba1b-9b041558a9c2-image.png
    43b8cc31-0a34-47fd-afb9-01594ebdd5d3-image.png

    You can see the ground covered and both go from standing to crouched and a second doesn't pass

    I know, its just me, i hate seeing these red cards where in my mind there is no malice past past trying to make the perfectly timed tackle, i see it very different to the DMac tackle for example where hes lined him up from a mile away, and even then on first watching i tought it was just a huge hit, only on the reply did i click the hit to the head

    BonesB MiketheSnowM 2 Replies Last reply
    3
  • BonesB Offline
    BonesB Offline
    Bones
    replied to Kiwiwomble on last edited by
    #19

    @kiwiwomble you can't just decide you're going to ignore players, that's reckless and pretty silly in a game where there's 29 other players. "He only had eyes for the ball" is a stupid argument that doesn't apply to any other part of rugby.

    KiwiwombleK 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • KiwiwombleK Offline
    KiwiwombleK Offline
    Kiwiwomble
    replied to Bones on last edited by Kiwiwomble
    #20

    @bones you do understand what im saying though, we also hear people say, if theyre not watching the ball that they cant have had a realistic chance of regathering. and the line between the two is razor thin and were handing out the ultimate punishment for it

    In this case i think he times almost everything perfectly, its in less than a second both players drop resulting in an accidental (in my eyes) contact to the head, which would mitigate things

    BonesB 1 Reply Last reply
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Red Card Lottery at the weekend
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