
Beware the rectangle of doom: rugby union must heed lessons of Harry Potter drama
There are occasions when rugby makes itself look idiotic and this was one of them. Fiji had just taken the lead and the Wallabies were looking slightly rattled as their wing Harry Potter ran back to field a long kick near his right touchline. Deciding to keep the ball alive he threw a long pass infield to an isolated teammate who was turned over. Fiji gleefully seized their opportunity and scored a potentially vital 'try' through Sireli Maqala.
The crowd were up on their feet, the commentators were in ecstasy and, for a split second, we had a glimpse of rugby heaven. Instinctive brilliance to stir the neutral soul and some sorely needed drama following the British & Irish Lions' damp squib of a game the previous day. Until, with grim inevitability, we saw the French referee Pierre Brousset draw the imaginary rectangle of doom in the air and ask the television match official to take a look.
What on earth was the problem? The final pass had been fine and there was no issue with the grounding of the ball. And then up popped slow-motion replays of Potter collecting the bouncing ball right back at the start. If you slowed one of them right down it showed his boot had grazed the sideline whitewash. Which, as far as the officials were concerned, rendered all the subsequent action null and void.
What should have been a glorious Fiji try was therefore ruled out because one of Australia's players had put a toenail into touch 20 seconds earlier before Fiji had even launched their successful attack. Try explaining that ridiculous one to non-rugby fans. The result was that Fiji were effectively penalised for doing absolutely nothing wrong. They also went on to lose a game they would otherwise probably have won.
The nitty gritty of on-field review small print is not, in itself, a particularly sexy subject. But on this occasion the ripple effect may prove significant. Both the Waratahs-Lions and New Zealand-France games at the weekend were also blighted by endless TMO referrals and lengthy stoppages while everyone stood and waited for a definitive decision to be delivered from on high. In total six tries ended up being scrubbed out.
This new age of pedantry was introduced with the best of intentions. But if you are looking to find an offence at a preceding ruck there will be plenty to choose from. Momentum can give the impression of passes being forward when actually they flew backwards out of the hand. Trying to see if someone has grounded the ball somewhere beneath a dozen huge bodies can be well-nigh impossible.
More fundamentally, as with VAR in football, endless video referrals alienate fans and professional coaches alike. Take Stephen Larkham, head coach of the Brumbies, who believes lessons need to be learned from the Fiji game. 'It was certainly frustrating watching at home,' the former Wallabies' World Cup-winning fly-half told the Guardian. 'I was like everyone else in Australia. Particularly Tom Wright's forward pass for that Wallaby 'try' down the right edge … they replayed it maybe 20 times. I think everyone wants them to make a decision and move on. If the TMO comes in that's fine but make a quicker decision.'
The irony here is that World Rugby implemented a global law trial at the start of the year meant to reduce the power of the TMO and to concentrate only on 'clear and obvious' offences in the last two phases of play (or the last attacking passage of play comprising at least two phases). So much for that objective. Ladle on top of that the reviews around high tackles and the amount of dead time during games is not greatly diminishing.
This is not encouraging news in the fight to make the sport more watchable and attract more viewers. 'We're searching for that in Super Rugby and you'd like to think we're doing the same in the Test arena,' Larkham said. 'There are heaps of people watching on TV and we'd like the game to be as quick as possible.'
The Waratahs coach, Dan McKellar, also feels that the push this year for swifter decision-making in Super Rugby should be a priority in the forthcoming Test series. The Lions head coach, Andy Farrell, is slightly more circumspect. 'We want the right decision, I don't think anyone wants to see a stop start game, everyone wants to see continuity,' he said. 'But in any given game there might be some decisions that need to be referred. Getting the balance is key.'
True enough. But this is also about more than simply waiting for a handful of wearisome in-game interludes to play out. Ultimately it is about how rugby wants to see – and sell – itself: as a sport played and officiated by human beings or as some kind of alien computer game?
It is a shared dilemma, of course. Cricket, football and tennis are wrestling with similar scenarios, the key difference being that rugby's law-book contains more shades of grey than the rest put together. 'Clear and obvious' should mean precisely that, the external chatter in referees' ears needs reducing and TMO interventions should be limited to the act of scoring/ball grounding and serious thuggery.
While some still grumble about the somewhat bizarre end to the 2017 Lions series, when Romain Poite originally awarded a penalty to the All Blacks only to change his mind after a chat with the Lions captain, Sam Warburton, at least that did not involve endless on-field replays and protracted frame-by-frame analysis. Those who want every rugby decision to be perfectly black and white – or to be pored over in slow motion to the nth degree – need to see the bigger picture.
Guardian
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The 42
an hour ago
- The 42
'Big Joe' and the Lions look to lock in Test spots against Brumbies
AS MARO ITOJE was listing out the big Lions ball-carriers he hopes to see punching at the Brumbies defence today [KO 11am Irish time, Sky Sports], he named 'Big Joe McCarthy' among them. It seems the prefix applied to McCarthy within the Ireland squad has caught on in Andy Farrell's Lions group too. The Irish lock is a big fella, to be fair. He's the bulkiest second row in the Lions squad, weighing in at around 124kg and standing 6ft 6ins tall. McCarthy is explosive too, as everyone was reminded by his big performance against the Western Force. McCarthy has only had one other appearance off the bench against the Reds before returning to the starting XV for today's clash with the Brumbies, but he has been pencilled into most people's predicted Test match 23s. We know Farrell is a big fan of McCarthy's all-action physicality, so this must feel like a huge opportunity for the Leinster man to lock down a Test spot as he plays alongside captain Maro Itoje. 'He's obviously a great player,' said Itoje of McCarthy. 'He's been on fine form and I'm looking forward to playing with him.' Farrell has plenty of other options alongside Itoje for the Tests, of course, including McCarthy's Irish team-mates Tadhg Beirne and James Ryan. But being in this strong Lions team to take on the Brumbies feels like the ideal place to be. Deliver a big performance alongside Itoje 10 days out from the opening Wallabies clash and it will surely mean being in pole position. Advertisement Andy Farrell is expecting to see a big performance. Dan Sheridan / INPHO Dan Sheridan / INPHO / INPHO 'I think they will complement each other really well, both showing good form in their last game,' said Farrell of what he wants to see from McCarthy and Itoje. 'Continuity is pretty important to be able to add to that, I suppose there's no doubt that they would have listened to what everyone's been saying around as far as the performances, etc. It's up to them to make sure that they take a step forward.' The same applies to this entire 23, even if the rest of the Lions will have one final audition on Saturday against the AUNZ Invitational team in Adelaide. Following last weekend's scrappy performance against the Waratahs, Farrell and his assistants are keen to see this Lions 23 move closer to a Test match mentality. 'You want to see them stay in every single moment of the game and I know that sounds harsh and almost impossible to do but they understand 100% now, and have done for a week or so, what is expected of them to be the best teammate that they can possibly be,' said Farrell. 'So, that's what we're judging them on, the expectation of that and what it takes to be the best version of themselves but also what it takes to be part of this team and they understand that because ultimately that's what is going to make us successful or not.' The Brumbies are missing their key Wallabies, but Stephen Larkham's side are determined to make the Lions uncomfortable. They famously beat the Lions back in 2013 in a final midweek games before the first Test but that was a very strong Brumbies side including Scott Fardy, Tevita Kuridrani, Henry Speight, Jesse Mogg, Matt Toomua, Scott Sio, Sam Carter, and Colby Faingaa. Brumbies boss Stephen Larkham. Photosport / Andrew Cornaga/INPHO Photosport / Andrew Cornaga/INPHO / Andrew Cornaga/INPHO There is talent in this Brumbies selection and there will be a big crowd of well over 20,000 people roaring them on, but they know it's an onerous task to try and take down a Lions team that means business. Fullback Andy Muirhead is always a threat, lightning-quick wing Corey Toole should have some big moments, blindside Tom Hooper played for the Wallabies off the bench last weekend, and brothers Ryan and Lachlan Lonergan are popular local figures. After the lovely mild winter weather in Sydney and Newcastle, it has been chillier here in Canberra this week, but the Lions are expecting to turn up the heat as that first Wallabies Test looms. BRUMBIES: Andy Muirhead; Ben O'Donnell, Ollie Sapsford, David Feliuai, Corey Toole; Declan Meredith, Ryan Lonergan (captain); Lington Ieli, Lachlan Lonergan, Rhys van Nek; Lachie Shaw, Cadeyrn Neville; Tom Hooper, Rory Scott, Tuaina Taii Tualima. Replacements: Liam Bowron, Cameron Orr, Feao Fotuaika, Lachie Hooper, Luke Reimer, Harrison Goddard, Jack Debreczeni, Hudson Creighton. LIONS: Blair Kinghorn; Tommy Freeman, Garry Ringrose, Bundee Aki, James Lowe; Finn Russell, Jamison Gibson-Park; Ellis Genge, Dan Sheehan, Tadhg Furlong; Maro Itoje (captain), Joe McCarthy; Ollie Chessum, Tom Curry, Jack Conan. Replacements: Rónan Kelleher, Andrew Porter, Will Stuart, Josh van der Flier, Henry Pollock, Alex Mitchell, Marcus Smith, Mack Hansen. Referee: Pierre Brousset [France].


RTÉ News
6 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Joao Pedro scores twice to lead Chelsea into CWC final
Joao Pedro scored twice on his full Chelsea debut as the Premier League side secured a place in the Club World Cup final – and a lucrative payday – with a 2-0 win over Fluminense. The Brazil forward, who only completed his £60million move from Brighton last week, struck in style in each half as Chelsea overcame his first professional club and sweltering conditions in New York on Tuesday. Their reward for victory is a chance to play for a jackpot exceeding £90m in Sunday's final against Real Madrid or Paris St Germain. Manager Enzo Maresca handed Pedro, who made his debut off the bench in the quarter-final defeat of Palmeiras, his first start in the absence of the suspended Liam Delap. It was a decision which paid very rich dividends as Chelsea battled past a Fluminense side who, captained by veteran former Blues defender Thiago Silva, had defied expectations to reach the last four. The temperature was around 34C at kick-off at MetLife Stadium and Chelsea were playing their 63rd game of a season that began last August. Yet they still made a strong start with the influential Enzo Fernandez having a shot blocked and then floating in a free-kick which Tosin Adarabioyo headed wide. Pedro Neto was also lively and it was his break down the left which led to Pedro's stunning opener on 18 minutes. Neto whipped in a cross which was cleared only as far as the former Brighton striker on the edge of the area and he brilliantly curled a shot beyond 44-year-old goalkeeper Fabio. It was a spectacular way to open his account for his new club but Pedro's celebrations were notably muted, almost apologetic, in front of the Fluminense fans. Chelsea could have immediately doubled their lead after Neto picked out Malo Gusto but the Frenchman's stooping header was straight at Fabio. They were almost made to regret that miss when Hercules broke through and rounded Robert Sanchez but Marc Cucurella cleared off the line. Chelsea had another scare when French referee Francois Letexier pointed to the penalty spot after a Fluminense cross flicked the head of Thiago Santos and then struck the arm of Trevoh Chalobah. It seemed a harsh decision and was reversed following a VAR review. Chelsea threatened again before the break when a Neto strike was deflected wide and Sanchez came to their rescue after the restart when he saved from Everaldo. Pedro struck the decisive blow on 56 minutes as Chelsea broke from deep inside their own half. Fernandez found Pedro with a superb through-ball and he cut inside Ignacio to hit a thunderous shot in off the underside of the bar. From then it became a case of seeing out the job and, although booked for time-wasting, Chelsea keeper Sanchez was not troubled. On the downside, Moises Caicedo appeared to pick up an injury in the closing stages. Nicolas Jackson could have added a third goal when he fired into the side-netting.

The 42
8 hours ago
- The 42
Wales players unhurt after team bus involved in crash on way to training
WALES' PREPARATIONS FOR their crunch Euro 2025 clash with France were dealt a blow when the team coach was involved in a crash on the way to training at the St Gallen Arena. The Football Association of Wales confirmed no players, nor the passengers in the other vehicle involved, were harmed in the incident, but the team's scheduled session on the pitch where they will face France in Group D on Wednesday evening was cancelled as a result. Head coach Rhian Wilkinson and midfielder Angharad James, who had travelled separately to the pre-match press conference at the stadium, were visibly shaken in a truncated appearance in front of the media before travelling back to their training base to be reunited with their colleagues. Wilkinson told the press conference: 'This is really developing right now so we are trying to be as clear and transparent as possible. Advertisement 'I think everyone, from all the reports, everyone is okay. Our priority is just to get them all together and away from the scene and reassess. 'We've got great staff, we've got really good support and we'll be checking in just to make sure that they continue to be okay. 'And also just as importantly, I believe the other car involved, I think everyone is OK there as well, so when we know, I'm sure we will be letting everyone know.' Despite her relief at the news that no-one had been injured, Wilkinson admitted the incident had been far from ideal preparation for a match which could determine her side's fate in the competition. However, she said football came second to the safety of her players, who she revealed have been conditioned to deal with the unexpected. She said: 'Yeah, I think football is secondary. Yes, we are shaken, just because we don't know. We are away from the team right now, so they've had to experience that. 'But equally, we have a great group and I have been assured everyone is fine. We have practised for the unexpected – I think that's what we can call this. 'Yes, football is secondary, but equally we'll check back in, make sure everyone is in a good spot and the we will start working towards football again after that.' The FAW later confirmed Wales, who lost their opening fixture 3-0 to the Netherlands on Saturday hours before the French got the better of reigning champions England, had trained back at their base. Wilkinson, who set off for the press conference with a clean bill of health, said: 'We always talk about the next match and this is another opportunity. 'Everyone always talks about what it means if we don't get a point, but equally it's about delivering as strong a performance as we can to show Wales just how proud we are to represent our country.' Related Reads Eight-time champions Germany make winning start at Euro 2025 Spain thump grieving Portugal to make Euro 2025 statement Wales, who beat Ireland in a playoff last December to qualify for their first-ever major tournament, lost their opener to the Netherlands 3-0. Defending champions England are also in their group.