'That is Angus Bell's hand' - Whitelock try leaves fans irate
A contentious try by veteran second row Sam Whitelock has left many fans scratching their heads after the All Blacks defeated the Wallabies in Auckland on Saturday.
In a big turnaround from last week's epic Bledisloe drama in Melbourne, the men in black romped to a relatively easy 40-14 victory at Eden Park.
Yet Whitelock's try still rankled as many believe it was a Wallaby that grounded the ball and not the 6'8 All Black. Irish referee Andrew Brace on-field decision was that the try was good and he referred it to Welsh TMO Ben Whitehouse, who made the call that there was no reason not to award it.
However many fans watching at home believe that it was in fact Wallaby No.8 Angus Bell's hand that grounded the ball.
Some are even calling it the 'first own try' in rugby. Below is a video of the contentious touchdown.
The counter-argument being made by others is that both players were holding the ball, although from the footage it's hard to determine who was in control of the ball when it was grounded, although Bell seemed to be getting the better of it.
Whitehouse said that they were in 'simultaneous control' but that the All Blacks had had possession of the ball first and that he had no 'clear evidence' that a try had not been scored.
Others didn't see it that way.
Fox Sports' journalist Christy Doran wrote: "That is Angus Bell’s hand. Surely, the TMO can see this"
Australian commentator Sean Maloney Tweeted: "Best team wins no doubt, would just love for a referee on here to talk me through the law ruling around Whitelock try. Someone. Anyone. Please."
One Wallabies fan wrote: "Angus Bell scores for NZ. That will do me. He's a Wallaby. I'm done."
South African rugby account Jared Wright proclaimed it the sport's first ever own try. "Angus Bell, the first player to score an own try in test rugby?"
EK Analysis saw merit in the argument that both players were holding the ball, arguing Whitelock should get the try as he never lost control.
While it might hard to argue that the try was the difference between the sides, even if Ian Foster's side kicked on after it, it did mean helped the garner some precious points difference for New Zealand and that could be what decides this year's Rugby Championship.
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There is a continued murmur in local circles about reciprocal bi annual tours between SA and Argentine. Whether it's full blooded test tours or development tours or a mixture - ie touring with a "test" 20 and a development 20 the cream of which will be used in tests. We actually really enjoy playing the Argies and I believe they enjoy playing us. It goes back seventy years to the Junior Bok tours to Argentine involving Isaac van Heerden.
Go to commentsDon't think you've watched enough. I'll take him over anything I's seen so far. But let's see how the future pans out. I'm quietly confident we have a row of 10's lined uo who would each start in many really good teams.
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