Bath’s Ollie Lawrence: 'I was completely entitled to. I didn’t cheat... I didn’t dive'

Ollie Lawrence denies that he cheated to get Alex Mitchell sin-binned in Bath’s Gallagher Premiership defeat at Northampton on Sunday.
The England centre was the subject of an outcry on social media after he crumbled to the ground following a clash of heads with his international team-mate at Franklin’s Gardens.
Referee Anthony Woodthorpe reviewed the decision and showed Mitchell a yellow card, drawing a smile from Lawrence.
Lawrence apologised at the time on social media in case “my actions today offended anyone”, but he insists did not take a dive.
“We collided head on head. It wasn’t bad enough probably for me to go down in the way that I did,” he said in a video posted on his TikTok account.
“I probably could have carried on running and allowed the ref to pull it back afterwards if he thought there was foul play.
“But in that moment, whether my judgement was clouded or not, I felt like it was head on head so I went down. I was completely entitled to. I didn’t cheat the system, I didn’t dive.
“For our own safety, if there’s a head collision you’re allowed to go down and the ref can review it.
“A lot of fans weren’t happy with that, that’s fair enough and I understand your perspective.
“I apologised online and I said if you took offence to what I did then I am sorry, but I didn’t cheat, which is what a lot of people thought I was doing, and I didn’t dive.
“People said I brought the game into disrepute and I’d argue that I didn’t, I just went by the letter of the law.”
Lawrence also explained the smile that was shown on the big screen at Northampton.
“In terms of my reaction, I do smile after I make a mistake. It’s something I’ve done my whole career. It’s just my way of getting over it,” he said.
“There was no wry smile, or a wink, or whatever people think they saw. That’s just me cracking on.”
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“Pep didn’t win the ECL in 2009. It was 2008 with Barca”
Why are you so insistent on being wrong? Man United won in 2008 (beating Chelsea in the final). In 2009 Barcelona won, beating United.
“The gap between wins ignores the finals contested. 2 in 2 years with his City Triumph. The most recent put him in the elite company of managers to have won it with multiple clubs. Yet more late career success and history.”
Again - you’re not correct. City won the CL in 2023, and made the final in 2021. Those are the only two CL finals they have made. With Barcelona, Pep made the semi final four consecutive times - with City he’s managed only 3 in 8 years. This year they didn’t even make the round of 16.
To re-cap, you wrote that Pep “has gotten better with age. By every measure.” There are some measures that support what you’re saying, but the vast majority of the measures that you have highlighted actually show the opposite.
I am aware Les Kiss has achieved great things in his career, but I don’t care what he did over ten years ago. Rugby was a different sport back then.
I think your take on Gatland is pretty silly. Gatland was without Edwards in the 2013 and 2017 Lions tours and managed to do alright. You’ve also not addressed Eddie Jones.
I agree wrt Schmidt. He would ideally be retained, but it wouldn’t work to have a remote head coach. He should definitely be hired as a consultant/analyst/selector though.
“Look at the talent that would be discarded in Schmidt and Kiss if your age Nazism was applied.”
lol u really need to chill out lad. Kiss and Schmidt would both be great members of the coaching set up in 2025, but it would be ridiculous to bank on either to retain the head coach role until 2031.
Go to commentsGood to see this guy back, looking forward to this years RC.
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