Shelflife wrote: » 16.4.b Players must not handle the ball in a ruck. If the player is taking the ball out thats fine, or even if he is pulling the ball out between bodies, but he cant touch the ball and then leave it in the ruck. As Losty said its a situation that needs to be managed.
Shelflife wrote: » When the ball leaves the lineout or crosses the line of touch. Effectively when the ball is played off the top to the SH, then you can attck the outhalf position.
wicklowstevo wrote: » wouldnt that mean you would be ahead of the ball when the sh passes it ?
Shelflife wrote: » If youre that quick then yes, once you start from an onside position you are fine. once the ball has left the line of touch then its open play and you can stand where you want.
wicklowstevo wrote: » fast enough to scare the chocolate out of a slow out half anyway . cheers
matthew8 wrote: » If it comes off the shoulder is it a knock on?
rje66 wrote: » Did player make an attempt to catch it?!!!!
rje66 wrote: » Technically no. It's hands or arm. But ..... In a scenario where a player trying to field a high ball and it first hits shoulder /upper bicep area and drops between elbows it's hard not to give a KO. Whereas a player gets a bullet pass and before he can react it hits his shoulder/upper bicep area and goes forward it's hard to call a KO. A bit of 'how the ref sees it and how sympathetic he is' goes into the mix also...
matthew8 wrote: » Question was in relation to La Rochelle-Toulouse. Came off the top off his shoulder as he tried to field a kick (ball bounced up off it, away from him) and a try was scored a few seconds later but was disallowed because the tmo believed it a knock on. Earlier in the half Toulouse were awarded a controversial try after a player rolled forward around 5 metres after going down (not tackled though) without releasing the ball and the try was scored next phase. Sky Sports felt it was a terrible call. Who was right?
Snickers Man wrote: » The out half attempts a drop at goal from half way. The referee scampering back to adjudicate is satisfied that the ball went between the posts but is unsure whether it cleared the crossbar. He is entitled to ask the TMO to verify. BUT.... a defender covering back has retrieved the ball before it went dead and has opted not to touch it down for a 22m drop out given the state of the clock but to run it out instead. Question: does the referee have the right to stop the play AT THIS POINT even though the ball may still be live? Or can he let it run to the next natural stopppage and then go back to see if the ball was indeed over the bar and that three points should be awarded? When is the correct time for the ref to got to TMO in this scenario and what should be the protocol with restarting the game at this late stage?
awec wrote: » I think it's an unlikely scenario anyway. For there to be a defender in position to catch a drop goal that lands short and be able to run it back for a try would suggest that the attacking team aren't that far from the try line. So at this distance, you'd imagine the referee and the assistants would have a pretty good view anyway. If the drop goal was from distance then I'd say it's unlikely that a defender would be in position to catch it if it landed short, and by the time they got back to it the attacking team would be on top of him (or close to it).
Snickers Man wrote: » On the contrary. If it was a long-distance attempt on goal, and it passed near the crossbar it is quite likely that the ball would not carry over the dead ball line and a full back running back to cover might very easily retrieve (the word I used) the ball before it went dead. In that scenario, if he believed a drop goal had not been scored and with time running out, his ONLY option would be to run the ball out and attempt a counter attack.
LeinsterDub wrote: » Will get lost in the match thread. You've to kick it before the 80?
Losty Dublin wrote: » Answered in the thread but once again, you may kick it at any time when the ball is in play once you don't time waste at a place kick.
LeinsterDub wrote: » In fairness he wasn't exactly taking the piss. The ref seemed to rush the kick from the minute he blew up. Offically it's 60 seconds from the time the penalty is awarded or the ball becomes available?
Snickers Man wrote: » This one is inspired by my many sleepless nights since the All Blacks beat us at the death a year ago. (OK I'm obsessional. Forgive me) Imagine the scenario. A team is leading a test match by 5 points with less than a minute left. They are in possession around midfield and are picking and driving to run the clock down. They know they are vulnerable to the referee dealing harshly with any killing the ball or going off their feet so they decide to vary the play. The out half attempts a drop at goal from half way. The referee scampering back to adjudicate is satisfied that the ball went between the posts but is unsure whether it cleared the crossbar. He is entitled to ask the TMO to verify. BUT.... a defender covering back has retrieved the ball before it went dead and has opted not to touch it down for a 22m drop out given the state of the clock but to run it out instead. Question: does the referee have the right to stop the play AT THIS POINT even though the ball may still be live? Or can he let it run to the next natural stopppage and then go back to see if the ball was indeed over the bar and that three points should be awarded? To my mind two controversial outcomes could ensue from this. If he stops the play there and then, with the defender trying to run the ball out to start a counter attack, only to find that the ball didn't clear the bar, surely the defending team is put at a disadvantage by having to drop the ball out to the opposition. Or in an alternative scenario, the ref doesn't immediately go to TMO, the defender who retrieved the ball sets up a counter attack which eventually results in his team scoring a try long after the 80 minutes have expired. Then the ref consults the TMO to find that the original drop goal attempt HAD been successful, so he overturns the try, awards the three points and the match to the other team. When is the correct time for the ref to got to TMO in this scenario and what should be the protocol with restarting the game at this late stage?