Anything Aaron Smith can do, TJ Perenara can do too – including change the ref's mind
Convincing a referee to change his mind was long thought to be impossible, but on Saturday TJ Perenara became the second lippy New Zealand halfback to talk Australian ref Angus Gardner around in the space of a year.
These days it seems that anything Aaron Smith can do, TJ Perenara can do just as well. Passing, running and decision making are all pretty even for the two halfbacks, and now TJ can add the rare feat of convincing referee Angus Gardner to change his mind to match Smith’s effort last year.
That’s right, the same ref has now successfully been talked around by two separate All Blacks halfbacks.
In 2016, Smith achieved what was previously thought to have been impossible when he presented the flawless logic to Gardner that an exceptionally tight game between the Highlanders and Brumbies had hit full time.
Saturday night’s match between the Hurricanes and Reds at Suncorp Stadium saw Perenara inform the Australian whistleblower that a penalty that been awarded before a disallowed try still stood, prompting Gardner to reverse his original decision. The ‘try’ in question deserves mention too, given that Perenara deceived everyone by taking a cheeky quick tap without actually tapping the ball.
This is both a huge development for loudmouth halfbacks and a setback for coaches and parents who try to teach kids to accept bad officiating with grace and humility. Perenara’s frustration was quite evident and arguably justified, as at that point the TMO had almost earned himself a bonus point for disallowing tries – all against the Hurricanes (not that it mattered as they eventually won comfortably, 34-15).
Angus Gardner has carved himself out a pretty good reputation this year, most notably following the game he controlled between Perenara’s Hurricanes and Smith’s Highlanders. He is getting a bit of grief over the fact that he actually awarded three tries and had them overruled by the TMO in the Reds vs Canes game, but to put a positive angle on it, at least that proves that the system works. Plus, one wasn’t even his fault – one of his assistants decided to check out Mark Abbott’s rear-end rather than his foot landing on the touchline.
Meanwhile, although the All Blacks have depth at halfback that’s comparable to the Mariana Trench, the battle for the starting jersey this season looks likely to come down to Smith and Perenara specifically.
While all the talk after this game has been about Perenara’s verbal jousting with Gardner, the Wellingtonian is clearly taking no chances when it comes to providing the All Blacks coaching staff evidence that he demands inclusion. Due to the injury Ardie Savea picked up with 10 minutes to go, he jumped at the chance to pack down at flanker.
Let’s just say it went better than the last time a back attempted to get involved in a scrum.
Latest Comments
Were you shocked by Sexton trying to rip Barrett's head off when he scored that final try in that return game?
Sexton once again the beneficiary of incredible double standards. Some of the rules simply didn't apply to him. The referee even watched that replay about 5 times in slow motion to see if he grounded the ball. If an NZ player had made that tackle it would have been a yellow card.
Ireland led by Sexton were the biggest bunch of whingers to ever play the game. NZ's dislike of Ireland was not caused by losing to them, it was caused by the Irish players, commentators and media being such giant crybabies.
I genuinely think Ireland are the best team in the world, and I think they will beat the ABs on Friday, but they are by some distance the team I like the least, and I know many people, not just from NZ, who feel the same.
Go to commentsThanks for the analysis Nick, thought provoking as usual. Couple of queries though, in the pic where you've circled Williams bind , I'm pretty sure it shows Stuart's knee on the ground, surely that's a NZ penalty? Also having had the chance to watch it again the All Black scrum seeems to improve after halftime, but before either England or the All Blacks replace their props. Not sure if that was the result of Tuipolutu coming on or some halftime tips. Either way this is only Williams second international season, so he'll be better for the experience.
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