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Will Mathieu Raynal be the star of the show in the first Bledisloe test?

Referee Mathieu Raynal during the Guinness Six Nations Rugby match between England and Ireland at Twickenham Stadium on March 12, 2022 in London, United Kingdom. (Photo by Bob Bradford - CameraSport via Getty Images)

Who’ll be the star of the show at Marvel Stadium on Thursday?

Will it be Rieko Ioane? Captain Fantastic Sam Cane? Marika Koroibete or Rob Valetini?

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Sadly, as we’ve become increasingly accustomed, it might well be referee Mathieu Raynal.

I don’t seek to blame referees for rugby’s ills.

After all, it’s an incredibly thankless task.

I was at a schoolboy match the other day, where a spectator found fault with a parent-referee’s decision.

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The ref stopped the game to ask the spectator if he’d like to come out on the field and do it himself. I can’t quote what the referee said but, when the spectator replied “no,’’ the ref told him to shut the front door, or words to that effect.

It’s easy to dismiss Wallabies great David Campese. The man has a lot to say about rugby and rarely is any of it good.

But Campese was right in taking the game to task last week and for trying to speak on behalf of disgruntled and bewildered fans.

Rugby has so many laws, seemingly all of them open to interpretation, which contribute to making the sport stop-start at best.

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From scrums, to the breakdown, lineouts, mauls and incidental contact with the head, referees aren’t short of areas in which to intervene.

I was disappointed, as a fan of rugby, with the way Nic Berry refereed the recent match between New Zealand and Argentina. The Pumas were probably never a chance of upsetting the All Blacks two weeks in a row, but I didn’t feel Berry even allowed them the opportunity to make it a contest.

Similarly, Ben O’Keeffe played way too big a part in South Africa’s win over Australia that same evening.

Refereeing is incredibly hard, not least because of all the audio the man in the middle gets in his ear. Georgian Nika Amashukeli copped a bit of grief for the way he controlled the All Blacks and Pumas in Christchurch, but I’d contend it was the Television Match Official and Assistant Referees who ran that match.

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Amashukeli was guilty of over-explaining decisions that night, I suspect in part because often he wasn’t the one making them.

Look, I just want the ball in play and for the two teams to decide the outcome. If a few scrums hit the deck and the breakdowns are a shambles, so be it.

I’m tired of scrum re-sets and referees guessing which prop to penalise for a collapse. I get no satisfaction from hearing the whistle blow every time a ball-runner hits the deck.

I can’t believe we’re having official water breaks in test matches, when guys in bibs are bringing bottles on every couple of minutes as it is.

Rugby’s not alone there. There isn’t a round of the English Premier League that passes without comment on the inadequacy of the VAR system.

The NRL’s Bunker has made that sport almost as stop-start as rugby and cricket’s DRS wastes minutes analysing incidents that should take seconds.

The search for a perfect game, a game without error or controversy or anything to frighten the mothers of would-be players has spoiled a good product.

It has given officials – both on and off the field – licence to nitpick and interfere. Too often the whistle blows and no-one, be they player, coach, spectator or commentator knows why or who’s at fault.

It’s not always that way. I thought Angus Gardiner was in total command, when South Africa beat the All Blacks at Mbombela Stadium.

It was clear he had the TMO and ARs in his ear the whole time, but he ran the show. He let the game flow and he ignored the attempts of the other officials to overrule him.

But that’s the exception, as far as I can tell.

I hope Thursday’s test in Melbourne is a contest. I hope the ball’s in play, both teams perform well and that there’s a worthy winner in the end.

Most of all, I don’t want us to be having to debate whether a particular law is fit for purpose or if Raynal was right or wrong in deciding something that determined the outcome.

I’ll give you one law to ponder, before I go.

In rugby league, a deliberate knock down is merely a knock on. The defender doesn’t have to try and intercept the ball, he doesn’t have to prove his palm was pointing upwards and that he was trying to effect a catch.

The whistle simply blows, a scrum is packed and the game carries on.

I’d take that over 25 replays from various angles that result in someone being sent to the sinbin.

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Comments

8 Comments
G
Greg 1034 days ago

This is what we can now expect 12 months out from the World Cup. Referees aren’t interested in the flow of the game or who wins or loses. The only thing that they’re interested in is not missing an indiscretion no matter how minute. The only thing that’s important to them is getting a gig in France even if it screws the game.

N
Nick 1035 days ago

A prophetic article, unfortunately 100% correct. He was the most influential person on the field, absolute howler of a call to cost the wallabies the game.


Most of all, I don’t want us to be having to debate whether a particular law is fit for purpose or if Raynal was right or wrong in deciding something that determined the outcome.

Pity, that's all anyone is talking about. Rugby is the real loser here.

M
Michael Röbbins (academic and writer extraordinair 1036 days ago

How unfortunately, eerily prescient this article turned out to be

R
Robert 1039 days ago

Excellent article and in my opinion pretty much spot on. I wish we could go back to the days of the referee being the sole judge of fact.

W
WI 1039 days ago

I didn’t see who authored this article. Perhaps the players could help the refs by playing by the rules and everyone wear a helmet. It’s so ridiculous to obsess about contact to the head but do nothing regarding proper protection.

B
BR2B 1039 days ago

Come on, are you serious ?

Refs have full video support and regulations that answer 99.5% of situations to decide for.

Most do a good if not a great job. Some decisions trigger a debate, because interpretation / perception can be subjective. No sport escapes this tolerance.

But I would'nt say refs can, beforehand, ever be designed as "star of the game" !

N
Nick 1035 days ago

thoughts on the farcical decision?

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TWAS 8 minutes ago
How the Lions will heap pressure upon Australia's million-dollar man

I’m sorry but this just seems like incredibly selective analysis attempting to blame all team failures on JAS.


Looking through the examples:


Example 1 - long place by JAS, all support overruns the ruck. Pilfer also achieved by a player resting his arms on JAS - so should be a penalty for of his feet anyway. No failure by JAS there failing to secure the ball. By his team mates, yes.


Example 2 - a knock on punched out by the first defender who’s tackle he initially beat, from behind. An error by JAS absolutely. But every player makes the odd handling error.


Example 3 - JAS just beaten to the ruck because defender shoots to make a good tackle He passes and immediately follows. Potentially should have been a penalty to Aus because the tackler had not released and swung around into JAS’s path preventing him securing the ball, and had not released when the jackal went for the pilfer. Tackler prevented a clean release by Potter and if there was any failure, it was the ball carrier who got into a horrible position.


I am struggling how you try and blame 1 on JAS and not support, but then blame JAS when the tackler fails to make a good placement.


Example 4 - JAS flies into this ruck out of nowhere, seemingly runs past the 12 to get there. Also did you miss McReight and Williams just jogging and letting JAS run past them? Anyway he busts a get to get there but was beaten to the contest. Any failure here is on the supporting players, McReight and Williams and JAS showed great instinct to charge in to try and secure.


Example 5 - JAS is following the lead of players inside him. How this is his fault I don’t know what you are thinking


Example 6 - Gleeson misses a tackle so JAS has to drift in off his man to take the ball carrier, leaving a larger overlap when he offloads. Failure by Gleeson not JAS


Examples 7 and 8 - Wallabies defensive line isn’t aggressive. But noting to do with JAS. Fisher has actually said he is not coaching a fast line speed. To try and blame JAS is again selective.


Seems like an agenda in this rather than the genuine, quality analysis I’ve come to expect from the author.

37 Go to comments
J
Jfp123 39 minutes ago
France push All Blacks to 80th minute in narrow Dunedin defeat

So, you think top rugby players’ wages ought to be kept artificially low, when in fact the forces of “demand and supply” mean that many can and indeed are commanding wages higher than you approve of, and even though players regularly get injured, and those injuries can be serious enough to cut short careers and even threaten lives, e.g. Steven Kitshoff.

.

As far as I can make out your objections amount to

1) they’ve sent a B team, which is not what we do and I don’t like it. Is there more to it than that? You haven’t replied to the points I made previously about sell out Tests and high ticket prices, so I take it reduced earnings are no longer part of your argument. Possibly you’re disappointed at not seeing Dupont et al., but a lot of New Zealanders think he is over rated anyway.


2) The Top 14 is paying players too much, leading to wage inflation around the world which is bad for the sport.

Firstly, young athletes have a range of sports to choose from, so rugby holding out the prospect of a lucrative, glamorous career helps attract talent.

Above all, market forces mean the French clubs earn a lot of money, and spend a large part of that money on relatively high wages, within a framework set by the league to maintain the health of the league. This framework includes the salary cap and Jiff rules which in effect limit the number of foreign stars the clubs employ and encourage the development of young talent, so there is a limit on Top14 demand. The Toulon of the 2010s is a thing of the past.


So yes, the French clubs cream off some top players - they are competitive sports teams, what do expect them to do with their money? - but there’s still a there’s a plentiful supply of great rugby players and coaches without French contracts. The troubles in England and Wales were down to mismanagement of those national bodies, and clubs themselves, not the French


So if you don’t want to let market forces determine wage levels, and you do want to prevent the French clubs from spending so much of their large incomes on players, how on earth do you want to set player wages?


Is the problem that NZ can’t pay so much as the Top 14 and you fear the best players will be lured away and/or you want NZ franchises to compete for leading international talent? Are you asking for NZ wage scales to be adopted as the maximum allowed, to achieve this? But in that case why not take Uruguay, or Spain, or Tonga or Samoa as the standard, so Samoa, a highly talented rugby nation, can keep Samoan players in Samoa, not see them leave for higher wages in NZ and elsewhere.

Rugby is played in lots of countries, with hugely varying levels of financial backing etc. Obviously, it’s more difficult for some than others, but aside for a limited amount of help from world rugby, it’s up to each one to make their sums add up, and make the most of the particular advantages their nation/club/franchise has. SA are not the richest, but are still highly successful, and I don’t hear them complaining about Top14 wages.


Many, particularly second tier, nations benefit from the Top14, and anyone genuinely concerned about the whole community of world rugby should welcome that. England and NZ have laid down rules so they can’t make the most of the French competition, which is up to them. But unlike some NZ fans and pundits, the English aren’t generally blaming their own woes on the French, rather they want reform of the English structure, and some are calling for lessons to learned from their neighbours across the channel. If NZ fans aren’t satisfied, I suggest they call for internal reform, not try to make the French scapegoats.


In my opinion, a breach of standards would be to include on your team players who beat up women, not to regularly send a B team on the summer tours for reasons of player welfare, which in all the years you’ve been doing this only some of the pundits and fans of a single country have made a stink about.


[my comments here are, of course, not aimed at all NZ fans and pundits]

266 Go to comments
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