'He's got to be better' - Rennie blames player, not ref for card
Wallabies coach Dave Rennie says the onus is on Lachie Swinton and his teammates to make adjustments after the firebrand backrower narrowly avoided a second red card in just his sixth Test.
Swinton was yellow carded late in the first half of Saturday's 30-17 defeat of South Africa but it was almost a red card that would have blown the top off a disapproving near-capacity Suncorp Stadium.
He clashed heads with Springboks' No.8 Duane Vermeulen and, after significant consultation with the match review officials, referee Matthew Carley looked set to show him red.
One last look though confirmed the pair's shoulders collided first, allowing a mitigating factor that saw Swinton's upright tackle penalised with a yellow card.
"He's got an arm up in the tackle, he's just got caught upright and because he's upright and there's a head contact - head on head - he's responsible as the tackler," Rennie observed.
"We've got to accept that and he's got to be better."
It followed Swinton's red card against the All Blacks at the same ground, that came in similar fashion, in his 2020 debut.
"We're plucking out one example, aren't we?," Rennie said when asked if Swinton had earned a reputation. "It's (physicality) a strong area of his game, you've just got to be accurate.
"I would say Marika's (Koroibete) gone into make that tackle, all of a sudden he's in Lachie's face and he hasn't had a lot of time to react."
The penalty was one of 17 conceded by Australia compared to the Boks' 10.
That came after South Africa had probed World Rugby over their officiating of the scrum and Australia's apparent blocking tactics in last Sunday's loss on the Gold Coast.
"We can't bring the ref into the game through those actions so we've got to be better."
"Some of it you can't argue with ... we need to be better."
Latest Comments
Recent complaints that SA players have a 12-month workload isn't of itself a credible enough excuse to lay at the door of EPCR administrators. If SA clubs want to participate in NH league and club competitions and also participate in SH internationals, then clearly something has to give.
From the EPCR perspective, I do think that the format/schedule issues can be fixed if there's a strong enough desire to remove some of the logistical challenges clubs are facing with these long and frequent trips across the hemispheres.
From the SA player workload perspective however, I'm not sure how players can participate safely and competitively at both the club and international levels. Perhaps - and as Rassie appears to be developing, SA develop a super squad with sufficient player numbers and rotation to allow players to compete across the full 12-month calendar.
Bottom line though, is the geographical isolation is always going to restrict SA's ability to having the best of both worlds.
Go to commentsMoriaty refused to play for wales also he’s injured, France’s is being coy about wales, North in the dark but Sam David and jerad are you joking their not good enough
Go to comments