SIMILARLY TO OUR previous two referee reviews, this piece will examine the performance of the match officials during Irelandโs win over the Wallabies last weekend.
The article will outline the circumstances of each situation within the game before a currently active guest referee adds their analysis of the incidents. Their contributions will be marked as โrefereeโs viewโ.
Itโs worth stressing again that the intention here is not to harshly criticise or call-out match officials.
We hope that by examining the big calls and a few of the less obvious decisions, we can improve our knowledge of the application of the laws of the game and help our readers to do the same.
Match officials play a key role in deciding the outcome of rugby games and positive, non-aggressive discussion of this element of the sport is something The42 wants to encourage.
Overview:
Ireland beat Australia 26-21 at AAMI Park in Melbourne last weekend in what was a high-tempo contest with a ball-in-play time of 32 minutes and 43 seconds.
Referee Paul Williams awarded 27 penalties in total, with Australia giving up 15 and Ireland conceding 12.
There were three yellow cards in the game.
Irelandโs Cian Healy was sin-binned for collapsing a Wallabies maul, for which Williams also awarded a penalty try, while Ireland replacement loosehead prop Jack McGrath was shown yellow for a deliberate knock-on while off his feet in a ruck.
Wallabies wing Marika Koroibete was yellow-carded for a dangerous tackle.
Koroibete yellow
Ireland are attacking in the sixth minute when Conor Murray skip passes to Rob Kearney, who is tackled by Wallabies wing Marika Koroibete.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
Referee Williams immediately sounds his whistle to halt play and speaks to assistant referee Marius van der Westhuizen, asking, โYou got anything? Might have a look at the point of contact.โ
Van der Westhuizen: โYeah, Iโve got a clear lift and turn, just got to look for point of contact.โ
Williams asks for a โTMO checkโ and tells television match official Ben Skeen, โWhat Iโm looking at is a lifting tackle here, I just want you to have a look at potential foul play, please.โ
After three replays, Williams says, โOK, thanks Benโ and van der Westhuizen confirms his input: โLands dangerously, but not on the neck.โ
Williams calls across Koroibete and says, โItโs a clear lifting tackle and heโs landed dangerously, itโs a yellow card.โ
Law 9.18 applies here:
Refereeโs view:
โThere is a good process between the TMO and referee here and they get the correct outcome.
โOne point to highlight particularly is that the referee takes full control. This is a good yellow card decision.โ
McGrath yellow
Australia are attacking in the Ireland 22 in the 76th minute when scrum-half Nick Phipps appears to knock the ball on at the base of a ruck.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
Referee Williams indicates a scrum to Ireland, but within a few seconds his assistant referee, Pascal Gaรผzรจre, calls for the Williamsโ attention.
Gaรผzรจre says,โGreen off feet, knocks the ball deliberately, so there is a knock-on after,โ and Williams responds, โSo potential foul play? Do you want to have a check?โ
Williams asks TMO Skeen to check for โa deliberate knock-on by Green.โ
After seeing an Irish player making contact with the ball, Skeen confirms, โWe do have a deliberate knock-on, weโre just now going to get video footage of the [player's] number.โ
โPaul, it is Green number 17,โ confirms Skeen soon after.
Williams calls over Jack McGrath and says, โItโs a deliberate action, youโve deliberately knocked the ball on and itโs a yellow card.โ
Law 11.3 applies here:
Refereeโs view:
โThis is excellent work by the team of officials, with a great spot by the assistant referee and then a seamless process to confirm the offence and the player involved.
โThe match officials took their time and got the right decision, another correct yellow card.โ
Healy yellow:
The Wallabies set up a maul 10 metres out from Irelandโs tryline and surge forward, before Cian Healy brings it to ground.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
Williams awards the Wallabies a penalty try and seeks out Healy and saying, โYellow card, intentionally collapsing.โ
Refereeโs view:
โThe penalty try is the correct decision here, as Green 1 begins to collapse the maul just before the tryline.
โHowever, it is very rare now that a referee at the top level goes to the pocket for a yellow card after a penalty try from a maul, unless there were multiple penalty kicks or a warning just before.
โIn my eyes, this is a harsh yellow card.
โCompare this decision to the lack of a yellow card for Gold 7 just before Green 3 scores a try.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
โThere is another penalty advantage against Gold for not rolling away here after Gold have accumulated a few penalties in their own 22, so why not give the yellow card here, for the collapsed maul, or at least warn the Gold captain?
โI felt that the process of upgrading in sanctioning to yellow cards was poor at times in this game.
โFor example, the offence below should be an easy yellow card decision.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
โThis is cynical play from Gold 10 and stops a clear linebreak.
โIt wasnโt the first deliberate knock-on from Gold in the game either.โ
Rolling away
The Wallabies are attacking out of their own half after an Israel Folau intercept of a Keith Earls pass, but Dan Leavy tackles Folau.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
Refereeโs view:
โThis is a penalty kick for Gold, in my opinion. Green 7 makes the tackle and needs to roll out left or right, not back into the Gold 9โฒs channel.
โGold 7 may be trying to pin Green 7, but the first offence is Green 7 rolling into the space. Sanctioning that offence early in the game would mean he doesnโt get in that space again.
โImagine a clock and if the player rolls out of the tackle to 11, 12 or 1 โ he is taking the space and deserves to be penalised.
โAlso look at the next breakdown and the actions of Green 5.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
โGreen 5 is the tackler and then as he gets back to his feet, his actions are enough to slow down the Gold clear out and give Green 6 that extra second to lock on to the ball and be rewarded.
โFor me, Green 6 isnโt ever really solidly on his feet here, with his hands going to ground in front of the ball before he gets onto it.โ
Tackles off the ball
Ireland are attacking in their own half and Johnny Sexton fires a pass to Niall Scannell, but Australia hooker Tolu Latu makes contact with Jordi Murphy off the ball.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
Refereeโs view:
โThere have been lots of tackles off the ball in the two games of this series. This example is the second time from Australia in the game and it is cynical play by Gold 16.
โItโs a good penalty kick decision from the referee, but this really needs a sterner warning to Gold. The referee says โMichael, thatโs twoโ to the Gold captain, but what does that really mean?
โAlso, the consistency needs to be strong in this area.
โLook at the actions of Green 13 on Gold 10 below, for example.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
โGreen 13 clearly takes out Gold 10 off the ball and this is a penalty kick. The referee needs help from his assistants in this area.
โThere was another potential penalty offence of a similar nature when Green had a possible try ruled out.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
โThis was a very tough decision to make on the possible grounding and was managed well again, but Green 6 is very lucky he wasnโt sanctioned for his actions on Gold 10.โ
Scrum:
Ireland have the put-in to the scrum near their own 22-metre line but the scrum collapses after Conor Murray feeds the ball in.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
Refereeโs view:
โThis is a good refereeing decision against Green 18, who โpancakesโ after the ball is put in โ he goes flat on his face after overextending and losing the contest.
โThere was another excellent refereeing decision at the scrum in the 12th minute, when Gold 1 and 3 both came under pressure and folded down, resulting in a penalty to Green.
โOne other point on the scrum area was that the referee blew the whistle to signal a scrum to Green just before the half-time siren, so the scrum should have been played.โ
Leaving the lineout:
Ireland have an attacking lineout in the Australia half and Cian Healy lines up at the front of the lineout.
Click here if you cannot view the clip above
Refereeโs view:
โI just wanted to point out that knowledge of the laws is important for players and coaches, as much as match officials.
โWatch the actions of Green 1 here. He leaves the lineout just after the ball has been thrown in and works around to create an attacking option.
โThis is a good application of the law from the player and in the design of the set-piece.
โWhen the ball leaves the hookerโs hands the lineout is over. Green 1 only leaves the lineout after the ball leaves the hands of Green 2.โ
What did you make of these decisions and the refereeing overall last weekend?
We would ask that people hold back from personal or overly harsh criticism, but let us know your take on the incidents above or any others from last weekendโs game. What was well done by the refereeing team and what could have been better?
The42 is on Instagram! Tap the button below on your phone to follow us!
Two valtras I hope he asked for
@Trevor Beacom: gonna be a CNH tractor , same owners as Juve ..
@Limรณn Madrugada: A couple of New Hollands no doubt
Massey is classy but the zetor be better
@Ronan McDermott: but Mossy Kean is f*ckin mean
@John Ezekiel W. Minnock: haha
Lot of lads playing junior b are very upset reading thisโฆ Especially since couldโve been them