Risteard wrote: » It's tricky one. I think it should have been allowed but I remember a few years ago when Agen were playing Leinster I think and the ball was chipped, bounced over the Leinster player's head and Caucau running on to it kind of slapped it forwards and caught it before it hit the ground or any other player, but it was ruled a knock on. I also have a question of myown, can a mark be called from a missed penalty kick?
remwhite wrote: » Was playing a match the other week and one of our players was trying to catch a loose pass. The ball was dropping at his feet and he just managed to get a hand to it and flick it up. He gave it a fairly substantial flick and it went about 2 meters forward an over head height but he caught it. He was away and the ref blew it up and said "ya can't do that". Never touched anything but his hands, no opposition and not the turf. Didn't matter a whole lot but am I right in saying the ref was incorrect.
castie wrote: » Isnt this more to do with the fact that you cant run up and throw the ball over a guy and run past him to collect it before it hits the ground?
Risteard wrote: » Thing is though, if you say what happened in your match is a knock-on, thene where's the limit drawn, can juggling the ball from a bad pass be counted as a knock on? I suppose like many things it's up the the ref's interpretation.
Risteard wrote: » I also have a question of myown, can a mark be called from a missed penalty kick?
Downtime wrote: » Yes it can even if it has come off the post
Downtime wrote: » In sevens, yes.
Goose81 wrote: » Like this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KzvnexjWJYg I think this was the first time it was done on a large scale ,I think clarification was made after that made it illegal.There was lots of debate over whether it was legal or not at the time.
karlitob wrote: » I looked it up again. I dont think you can. You can mark a ball 'even if it has hit the goal posts or crossbar' but that probably means from open play. Law 18: a mark cannot be made from a kick-off or restart kick except for a drop out. A penalty restarts the game. A kick-off restarts the game. A drop out would mean a 22-drop out. So no - you cant mark from a penalty.
19.2 QUICK THROW-IN (a) A player may take a quick throw-in without waiting for a lineout to form. (b) For a quick throw-in, the player may be anywhere outside the field of play between the place where the ball went into touch and the player’s goal line. (c) A player must not take a quick throw-in after the lineout has formed. If the player does, the quick throw-in is disallowed. The same team throws in at the lineout. (d) For a quick throw-in, the player must use the ball that went into touch. A quick throw-in is not permitted if another person has touched the ball apart from the player throwing it in and an opponent who carried it into touch. The same team throws into the lineout.
Risteard wrote: » Just to aadd that the excuse being offered on RTE that it wasn't a quick lineout and was in fact a proper lineout just taken quickly (if you get me) doesn't stack up as I'm sure there has to be a minimum 2 players form each team for a lineout. Also there's the fact that Kaplan asked if it was the same ball suggests that he didn't view it as a lineout.
Downtime wrote: » A penalty is not a kick- off or restart kick and therefore can be marked. It does not restart the game as the game is still live during a penalty kick
castie wrote: » Not sure about this but Phillips also joined the lineout as it was being taken which is surely illegal given the distance he traveled to recieve it.
RuggieBear wrote: » I'll youtube it and see what you all think. I'm slightly very biased and i could be very wrong but appears to be a shocking noncall to me.
defadman wrote: » im confused with one rule! it is how come a ref will give a penalty when a team is pushing the other team back in the scrum or maul?
newby.204 wrote: » When a player kicks the ball he has to chase to get everyone else onside? but sometimes say ROG kicks and someone else chases? both kicks are from play but two different chasers
lologram wrote: » Law 11.2 c) refers to 'Action by the kicker or other onside player'. So basically anyone who was behind (or level with) the kicker can chase forward and put players on the same team onside. There is another thing they have to consider though. The offside players have to actively retreat 10 metres from any player on the opposing side who might try catch the ball after it's been kicked. They altered this Law to stop people just idly standing in the field and waiting to be put onside. This is where the Law is, if you want to look at it in more detail. http://www.irblaws.com/downloads/EN/Law_11_EN.pdf
mikedragon32 wrote: » Hardly a laws question. Junior leagues will finish up in the next couple of weeks or so and then the cup competitions start, when it's up to ye to determine how much longer you play!