'It is difficult to imagine how an act of foul play of this sort could be worse' - Cheetah cops 13-week ban
A Cheetahs player has copped a massive 13-week ban for a truly foul act that was deemed 'contrary to the spirit of sport'.
Nico Lee of Toyota Cheetahs faced a Disciplinary Hearing today in Cardiff following the citing of an incident which occurred against Connacht Rugby on Saturday.
The player was reported by the Citing Commissioner in charge for alleged infringement of Law 9.27 – A Player must not do anything that is against the spirit of good sportsmanship.
With regard to the offence, Lee accepted that he had cleared the contents of his nose onto the face of an opposing player thereby committing an act of foul play.
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The Disciplinary Committee concluded that the player had committed the act intentionally.
The Panel found that: "The Player’s actions are an act of foul play. They have no place in the game. This is not a case of over-exuberance, or an act which is within the rules of the game going awry. It follows that by its nature this act is one that is deserving of punishment. It is contrary to the spirit of sport."
It was accepted that: "The effect on the victim player was understandably serious. There is no expectation, and there ought never be an expectation, that an opposing player would clear the contents of their nose onto an opponent."
In upholding the Citing Complaint the Disciplinary Committee deemed that the offence merited a red card with a top-end offence with an entry point of 26 weeks.
In reaching that conclusion the Panel found that: "It is difficult to imagine how an act of foul play of this sort could be worse, save for repeated acts or where actual injury is caused."
The panel did not find any aggravating factors and applied mitigation of 50% in respect of the Player’s admission of facts, and his clean disciplinary record. The Panel found that the Player’s approach to the hearing and his conduct throughout was mature, sensible and considered. They found that there was demonstrable "regret and an element of embarrassment about the situation."
The committee took into account the rugby calendar for the rest of the season and for domestic fixtures in South Africa, and as a result, the player is banned for a period of 13 games and is free to play from midnight on Sunday, July 21, 2019.
The player was reminded of his right to appeal.
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No, bugger off Schmidt, stop interfering in Australian rugby to keep us down
Your selections are rubbish and your game plan is unAustralian. Go back to NZ. Oh wait, you're actually still there ......
Go to commentsWhich is why more depth needs development. There are are several players waiting in the mix who will be good to great ABs. Our bench replacements this year were not always up to the mark
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