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Cheetahs' three-week Irish and Welsh tour ends with second lengthy player suspension

Cheetahs' Ox Nche, in action in a 2017 Super Rugby match against the Chiefs, has been one of the Cheetahs most consistent players in the PRO14. (Photo by Johan Pretorius/Gallo Images/Getty Images)

Cheetahs have wrapped up their three-week Irish and Welsh tour copping a second hefty ban.

Nico Lee was suspended for a massive 13 weeks for a truly foul act that was deemed ‘contrary to the spirit of sport’ – Lee cleared the contents of his nose onto the face of Connacht’s Colby Fainga’a during a match in Galway on February 16. 

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He will now be joined on the sidelines in South Africa by Ox Nche following his eight-week ban for the yellow card incident he was involved in last Friday in Dublin. 

Nche was reported by the match citing commissioner for alleged infringement of Law 9.12 – a player must not physically abuse anyone – and Law 9.25 – a player must not intentionally charge or obstruct an opponent who has just kicked the ball.

The Cheetah was sin-binned on nine minutes at the RDS for his collision with Leinster’s Fergus McFadden and an all-Scottish disciplinary committee comprising of Kathrine Mackie (chair), Roddy MacLeod and Ian Douglas concluded that Nche had committed an act of foul play involving contact to the head.

(Continue reading below…)

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In upholding the citing complaint, the disciplinary committee deemed the offence merited a red card under Law 9.12 (striking with the shoulder) and that the contact to the head was intentional with a top-end entry point of 10 weeks. 

The committee took into account the player’s previously clean disciplinary record and his good conduct and applied 20 percent mitigation which reduced the ban to eight weeks.

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To ensure the eight-week ban accounts for meaningful matches played by the Cheetahs in the Guinness PRO14 and the Currie Cup, Nche, who has the right to appeal, will be free to play from midnight on Sunday, May 19.

Nche’s suspension capped a tough three weeks for his club as they lost at Connacht, Scarlets and Leinster and have fallen to sixth place in the seven-team Conference A. 

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sorrel 1 hour ago
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The whole thing was absolutely delightful from a scrummaging perspective. Both teams were 100% certain they could just push the other team off the ball and both teams scrummed like it. I love the dark arts tactical battles, but there’s something really refreshing about a game where both the teams in the pushing contest just want to push. But, yeah, South Africa were the clear winners of that part of the game.


Scrums went as follows in the first game (I’m going from a handy dandy compilation video I made from screen recordings so I don’t have exact ref calls)

1. Canadian feed - Reset. On second feed, Canada gets the ball away, but South African scrum pushes into them

2. South African feed - South Africa gets the ball away clean

3. Canadian feed - Free kick to South Africa

4. South African feed - South Africa pulls the ball forward in the scrum a few meters, gets advantage, and gets the ball away clean

5. Canadian feed - Canada gets the ball away clean.

6. South African feed - South Africa push Canada backwards, but give away a penalty

7. South African feed - South Africa pulls the ball forward in the scrum maybe 10ish meters, gets advantage, and gets the ball away clean

8. South African feed - Free kick to Canada

9. South African feed - South Africa gets the ball away clean

10. South African feed - South Africa makes meters in the scrum and gets the ball away clean

11. South African feed - Reset. On second feed, South Africa makes meters in the scrum, gets advantage, and gets the ball away clean

12. Canadian feed - South Africa push them backwards, but give away a penalty

13. Canadian feed - 75 minutes into the game, Canada pulls the ball forward at the scrum and get advantage


I haven’t done such thorough analysis for the second test, but if you enjoy scrumming at all, you should really watch these games. They’re the sort of games where you look forwards to knock ons because the scrums are so good.

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