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Does anyone think DMac will evolve into a top class 10? I personally am not optmistic. Is there any suggestion he is happy to experiment like this?
In terms of the Laws of the Game, it was absolutely the correct decision, An act of foul play that prevents a probable try being scored = penalty try against the team and a yellow card issued to the offender.
As to whether the Laws should be like that, well that is a discussion that is above my pay grade, but I will say this. If you don't have a penalty try in that situation, then you open the door for players to deliberately commit foul play to prevent a try being scored. This is something you see in RL quite often and I would not like to see it in our game
Does anyone think DMac will evolve into a top class 10? I personally am not optmistic. Is there any suggestion he is happy to experiment like this?
The new protocol means that the head is protected. In the course of making a tackle or cleaning out a player, the tackler makes:Yeah, I guess you're right. I think the problem (I have) is that the defender had little option because the player was diving for the line. It did look to me as if he hit his shoulder, not neck, first...but because of the downward momentum his arm ended up around the neck. I get that a yellow card = penalty try at that point, but I question whether it was initially a bad tackle, or rather one that evolved into a bad tackle due to circumstances out of the defender's control.
das
Does anyone think DMac will evolve into a top class 10? I personally am not optmistic. Is there any suggestion he is happy to experiment like this?
The new protocol means that the head is protected. In the course of making a tackle or cleaning out a player, the tackler makes:
1. any contact with the head = penalty
2. direct contact with the head = penalty + yellow card
3. direct contact with the head, with with force = penalty + red card
Mitigation is then applied in circumstances where the player slips or is ducking into the tackle.
In this case if you listen to the conversation between the referee and Sam Cane, he made it quite clear that the high tackle was a penalty only offence (#1 above) but it was committing foul play on the ball carrier who was in the act of scoring the try (resulting in a penalty try) that made it a yellow card. That tackle anywhere else on the field or not in the act of scoring would have been a penalty only. On that count, earlier in the match, Alaalatoa swung his arm and made direct contact with a player's head with some force but was only yellow carded. IMO, he was damned lucky it wasn't red.
As to the argument "what else could he do?" or "the defender had no option", well sorry, I don't buy it. Why should a defender get a free pass in committing foul play just because he is trying to stop a try. I think the defender in this scenario was out of position, or rather, there should have been another defender on the blind side who could have come forward and tackled Crotty before he started to dive for the line. We should not give defenders a free pass just because their team allowed themselves to get into position to concede a try. Let me put this scenario to you....
The same scenario but 5m further from the try line and there is a defender on the ground just past the last foot (so he's onside). Crotty runs left and has an open run to the try line with no other defenders in sight. The player on the ground sticks out a foot and trips Crotty.
What would you rule?
Would you still think "what else could he do?" or "the defender had no option" are valid defenses for the actions of the player on the ground?
not this season. has a lot to learn yet. havent seen any good game management from him. a 10 has to be able to preserve his forwards gas tank and utilise his backline. atm dMac tries too hard to do everything himself.Does anyone think DMac will evolve into a top class 10? I personally am not optmistic. Is there any suggestion he is happy to experiment like this?