Wallabies lock Darcy Swain handed lengthy ban for dangerous clean out on Tupaea

Australia's Darcy Swain has been suspended for six weeks for the incident that left New Zealand's Quinn Tupaea with a bad knee injury.
Tupaea suffered a ruptured medial cruciate ligament (MCL) and a partial anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear in his left knee after Swain entered a ruck and made firm contact with the All Black's outstretched left leg.
Swain, who received a yellow card at the time, was cited after the match at Melbourne's Marvel Stadium last week.
The ban imposed by a SANZAAR Judicial Committee hearing will extend to 6 November ruling Swain out of Saturday's return, and the tour matches against Scotland at Murrayfield on October 30 and France in Paris on 6 November.
He will also miss next month's Australia A tour of Japan, the squad for which he was controversially named in this week in what some felt was a ploy to 'use up' his suspension. By making the ban time-, rather than match-related, that issue has been negated.
Swain was found guilty of contravening Law 9.11 - " Players must not do anything that is reckless or dangerous to others"
In its findings, the Judicial Committee chair, Andre Oosthuizen SC ruled the following:
"Having conducted a detailed review of all the available evidence, having heard from the player and from his legal representative, Aaron Lloyd, the Judicial Committee upheld the Citing and deemed the incident meet the red card threshold for Law 9.11."
"With respect to sanction the Judicial Committee deemed the act of foul play merited a mid-range entry point of six (6) weeks. Through the actions by the player such as position, control, and player movements they found the incident was not intentional, however, it was highly reckless."
After the test All Blacks coach Ian Foster said: "We've got a player who's probably out for nine months and you're not allowed to target legs on the side at cleanout past the ball. The rules are pretty clear."
Wallabies coach Dave Rennie was of a different opinion.
"I'm not convinced about Darcy's [yellow card]," Rennie said. "It was certainly nothing intentional. Ironically, he got neck-rolled prior to him cleaning out, but that wasn't picked up."
In better news for the Wallabies Cadeyrn Neville has made a full recovery from his knee injury picked up against England and will start in the second row in Auckland.
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Earl has played well as a number 8. Not sure what you expect him to have won.
You didn’t use it seperately. You started talking about 6N win ratios in response to me saying that you can’t just select players on the basis of their individual win ratios, which I said in response to the point you made about Earl’s win ratios. Try to keep up!
“So you agree a players 2023 form may not be the best marker for selection this time.”
Not sure how you infer that from what I said. I do agree, but it’s unrelated to what I said about Smith.
Go to commentsTwo 40 year old coaches, two 50 year old coaches and two 60 year old coaches can all have vastly different levels of experience. That should be idiot-proof. If you still can’t understand how or why age and experience are NOT conflated, then that’s entirely on you.
You could perhaps google the term paradox?
I’ll give you a hint; the most successful manager in English soccer attained 90% of his trophy haul in an era that had unregulated spending…
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