MUNSTER CENTRE SAM Arnold faces the prospect of further punishment for his recklessly high hit on Ulster out-half Christian Lealiifano during last night’s Pro14 inter-pro at Kingspan Stadium.
Arnold was shown a red card by referee Sean Gallagher for the incident which occurred in the 58th minute of the derby fixture in Belfast, with his dismissal turning a topsy-turvy game in Ulster’s favour.
After consulting with his TMO, Gallagher deemed Arnold to have committed an act of foul play and under Law 10.4 (e) has been cited to appear in front of a disciplinary panel on Wednesday.
The 21-year-old, a former Ulster player, is now in danger of missing Munster’s final two Champions Cup pool games later this month if the panel conclude that his actions merit a suspension.
Under World Rugby’s sanctions for four play, Law 10.4 (e) carries the following sanction entry points:
- Low End: 2 weeks
- Mid-range: 6 weeks
- Top end: 10 to 52 weeks
Arnold’s sending off proved to be the defining moment in the round 12 clash with Ulster overturning a 17-5 deficit at the time of the incident to snatch a stunning 24-17 victory.
It was Munster’s second defeat on the bounce following their loss to Leinster on St Stephen’s Day and leaves them 15 points behind Glasgow Warriors in Conference A.
Johann van Graan’s side host Connacht at Thomond Park on Saturday.
You can watch the incident from 3.20 in the video highlights below:
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Mayo won’t win with O Shea slowing play up on the pitch
A brilliant article, maith Thu Maurice.
Mayo have been plagued by serious bad luck through the last decade and some crazy decisions by players and management also. This label of bottlers is bull. Any athelete or team that have experienced the pain that Mayo have gone thru in the last decade and still keep on coming back every year is just phenomenal.
Think the author nailed it with analysis of Horan. We’ll see if lessons have been learned when May &June come around…..hope so
You can coach anything you like but it’s what goes on in the 6 inches between the ears that matters when push comes to shove. And Mayo still can’t get that right.
After all is said gaelic football would be so boring without Mayo.
@Tom Keane: i know its great fun watching them bottle it and the supporters thinking Sam is theirs to loose
Good article. James has certainly given Mayo supporters some white knuckle ride while Mayo manager. Of course the fact that Sam has not been brought home will inevitably be held against him. If he doesn’t get there will be regarded as the best manager never to win an All Ireland? Not ba title that he’d want.