Home > Rugby > Rugby Union > Aw, ref! Would someone please explain the new Super 14 rules to Bryce Lawrence?
Aw, ref! Would someone please explain the new Super 14 rules to Bryce Lawrence?
Experienced official Lawrence controlled his 100th first-class fixture when the Highlanders hosted the Hurricanes - but seemed a bit confused about the intention of the new experimental laws.
by Hamish McBrearty on 08 March 2008
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The 2008 Super 14 is being played under some of the so-called Stellenbosch Laws, developed at the South African university of the same name.
These laws are designed to speed up the game, provide fewer stoppages and lead to more tries. One of the main changes is that all infringements other than offside and foul play now result in free kicks, not penalties, and it was this law which Lawrence seemed to struggle with on Friday night when the Highlanders hosted the Hurricanes.
The first, and most obvious, incident of the night came when Ma'a Nonu was tackled, regained his feet and was then penalised for not releasing the ball, his obligation when tackled and held. So confusing was this decision that the commentators speculated the penalty was for a different offence.
This decision was wrong on two counts: First, under the new laws failing to release the ball when held is a free kick and not a penalty, which it was under the old laws. Secondly, replays even at full speed, showed Nonu clearly was not held and was entitled to get up and continue. Perhaps the error can be put down to old habits dyng hard.
However, the old habits were clearly hard to break as Lawrence gave another penalty for handling the ball on the ground at a ruck, a free-kick offence under the new laws, and incorrectly signalled for penalties rather than free kicks on numerous occasions before getting it right in the end.
The decisions that baffled me most were penalising props for angling in on their opponents. Law 10.4 (i) covers foul play in scrums andmakes no mention of players' angles; it does mention lifting an opponent up or forcing him upwards out of the scrum, but trying to apply that wording to this situation is stretching the definition a little.
A better law to apply here is 20.8 (g) which is concerned with players "twisting or lowering their bodies ... that is likely to collapse the scrum". Neither of these laws fit the exact situation, so perhaps there has been some instruction from administrators to penalise this. However a change in the wording would clear up some confusion.
The final contentious decision was a penalty for collapsing the maul, but again the law is unclear. Law 17.2 (e) states: "A player must not intentionally collapse a maul. This is dangerous play". Dangerous, but not foul play according to this law, which should not be read in isolation, as law 10.4 (i) clearly defines this as foul play. In this situation Lawrence got it exactly right.
The issue here is not that Lawrence got some decisions wrong, and others which will be endlessly debated by fans, referees and journalists. It is that he obviously does not have the experimental laws clear in his head.
For a referee of his experience to be initially signalling incorrectly so often shows that he is operating on auto-pilot, and that is when referees make the most mistakes.
Comments (7)
by Pete on March 19, 2008
Just on this, you might find Lawrence was escaling his sanction from a free to a long arm if he found these actions to be 'cynical.' This is clearly defined in the ELV Laws and shows a good control of the laws if he was doing so. Another point, it is very unlikely that he is running on auto-pilot and not thinking, as how many players are making mistakes under the new law given that what they have done in the past still comes naturally. I just think that you are being very harsh on the bloke when it would be one of his first ELV games ever. There is a lot to think about differently out there, and I just find it a little rough.
by Russell Warne on April 19, 2008
Hamish, your comments have been proved correct in the Sharks vs Brumbies game today (19 Apr 08). Referees like this damage the game as fans stop watching when the ref systematically fails to understand or evenly apply the rules. Rugby structures need to evolve a means to have poor referees experience some disciplinary action to ensure they are more careful in preparing and refereeing. On of your readers commented that you were to harsh, but at this level of rugby it is not fair on teams, sponsors, players and fans to be lenient.
by tyson banks on April 19, 2008
having watched today's sharks vs brumbies game, i have no doubts that lawrence influenced the match in a negative manner.Yes the sharks did infringe and deserved their cards, but where was the consistency?? why were smith and co not penalised for for doing the exact same thing at the breakdown i.e. slowing it down and handling on the ground. The penalty for obstruction capped it all, disgraceful performance by the ref!
by Warren Jee on April 19, 2008
Absolutely inconsistent. It is obvious who he wanted to win! A ref who goes on like this has no place in first class rugby. Hopefully his calf injury keeps him out rugby for a while as the authorities seem to do nothing about these kinds of performances. They should introduce ref siting!
by SONNY MILLS on April 19, 2008
THE AUSTRALIAN COMMENTATORS WERE STUNNED AT THE POOR DECISIONS OF REF BRYCE LAWRENCE'S POOR HANDLING OF THE SHARKS VS BRUMBIES GAME 19/4/2008 .IS THE REF TO BLAME ? NO . THE IRB IS TO BLAME . WHERE IS THE USE OF TECHNOLOGY TO HELP THE POOR CHAP? THE TELEVISION AUDIENCE AS ONE SPENT THE GAME SAYING OOPS OOPS OOPS ITS TIME TO DRAW A LINE IN THE SAND . I WANT FOXSPORT SATELLITE TECHNOLOGY NOW AVAILABLE FOR BRYCE ON THE FIELD NOT TO DO SO IS A TRAVESTY
by bradley robinson on April 20, 2008
F**k the IRB, the sharks vs brumbies games was buggered up because of crap refing. The brumbies got away with infringements that sharks got called for, or even sent off for!!!
by Brad Challis on April 20, 2008
What do you have to do to lose your job as a ref? Are there no consequences to your actions on the field? Would someone please tell me when shocking refereeing becomes cheating?
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