Bob Dwyer Rugby Workshops

Referee Blunder Denies Wallabies Victory

ANZ Stadium, Sydney. 11th September, 2010

Another cliff-hanger finish, with a victory to the New Zealand All Blacks, marked the conclusion of this year’s Tri-Nations Championship and an historic clean sweep to the victors. The victory was marred somewhat however, as the referee, Mark Lawrence, incredibly missed an illegal play by New Zealand captain, Richie McCaw, in the immediate lead up to his try. This try put the All Blacks to within striking distance of the desperately unlucky Wallabies, who had led for virtually the entire match.

In an apparently rehearsed play – what team actually practises illegal plays – Mc Caw detached early, while the ball was still in the scrum, to put himself in a position to take the pass from No.8, Kieran Read, and run in the try. That this obvious transgression was missed, not only by the referee, but also by his assistant on the touchline, defies belief and gives extra weight to a growing number of knowledgable rugby people who are concerned that incompetent refereeing will mar next year’s Rugby World Cup. On this occasion, refereeing incompetence virtually denied the Wallabies a well-earned victory.

The All Blacks’ fight back in the last 14 minutes from a 13 point deficit was full of merit, and was a tribute to their fitness, self-belief and sheer rugby know-how . No-one could deny this, but the laws of the game are there and all players have the right to the referee’s protection under these laws. The Wallabies were let down and must have felt gutted; I certainly felt gutted with them.

The Wallabies were the better team on the night. They scored two brilliant tries, with vision and running and handling skills that enthralled the huge crowd. Only poor goal-kicking by Matt Giteau kept the Wallabies’ score within reach of the All Blacks. Once again, however, they paid the penalty for less than secure set plays. Both scrum and lineout were reasonable – indeed, for a period in the middle of the match, the Wallabies had the All Black lineout rattled – but the All Blacks regrouped, sorted out their problems and finished on top in these vital areas of the game. This is the sign of a very good team.

Only one team in world rugby shows good attention to the detail of the fundamentals of the game – New Zealand. I have said often, that good technique is at the core of all quality play and the All Black coaching staff clearly understand this. In the vital areas of support play and realignment, they are exemplary, and their results follow. Conversely, a lack of attention to this detail has been my major complaint with the Wallaby management. There was, yesterday however, an extreme urgency in the Wallaby focus on realignment in defence. If they can now understand that this is also fundamental to quality attack, we can move forward still further. Certainly, our attack was excellent in the early part of the game, but as players tired, the fundamentals disappeared. Compare this with the All Black performance; as they tired, their fundamentals strengthened.

For two seasons now, I have been critical of Wallaby performances. I have seated most of the blame for this on to their coaching team. “Fundamentals are absent”, I have claimed, “and it is the responsibility of the coaching team to insist on these.” In the last two matches, there has been significant improvement and, if we keep on improving, we will get there. Yesterday, in particular, we finally got consistent numbers at the tackle contest. Execution was far from perfect, but intent and commitment were there in abundance. I said last week that this team does not lack at all for spirit, courage and commitment, so maybe there is some glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel.  The Wallabies played the No.1 team in world rugby yesterday, and were dreadfully unlucky not to win. This must speak for the future, when a significant number of top quality players will return to the squad. Ioane, Hynes, Shepherd, Mortlock, Horwill, Vickerman, Palu, Higginbotham, Polota-Nau, Alexander and Kepu will add enormously to the larger squad; and, who knows, maybe Waugh, Smith (George) and Baxter still have plenty to offer.

Finally;

1. I have already mentioned the referee, but certainly not all of his, and his assistants, blunders. I await Paddy’s comment.

2. Kurtley Beale continues to improve and will become a World XV choice – and very soon!

3. Matt Giteau is not a consistently good goal-kicker; he has poor days far too frequently. He cannot be the first-choice kicker for a World Cup winning team. Perhaps, with this burden taken away, he can show the full extent of his talents.

4. What is it with Robbie Deans and his bench? Berrick Barnes was a significant performer, off the bench, in last week’s victory in South Africa. Why, in Heaven’s name, did he not get more game time yesterday?  His direction, straight-running and footwork could have won the day again. Maybe we can add a “Bench Coach” to the entourage.

5. Why does a hugely talented team like New Zealand need to consistently belittle their performances with deliberate, illegal tactics? Maybe it’s been going on for so long that it’s become their security blanket.

Comments  

 
# Nick Owens 2010-09-12 13:44
Hi Bob, I really enjoy reading your post match analysis which is generally spot on. I agree that the Wallabies are in danger of spoiling NZ's World Cup party. Though I think NZ needs to win the World Cup much as SA did in 1995... for the good of the soul of the nation! Returning to yesterday's game. The Wallabies did play well for 60 minutes, but Cruden brought a lot of self-induced pressure on the All Blacks with his poor kicking at both restarts and when kicking out of hand. I suspect Colin Slade may end up as Carter's back up. Also Mealamu going off early affected them too... Back to the illegal move off the back of the scrum. My thoughts are that they "stuffed up". Read was meant to break first and pass back inside to McCaw, but McCaw instead broke just before Read. It was a timing error. I don't believe it is something they would practise... why? Because it is too risky! Imagine risking being penalised when they had a good chance of scoring anyway! Keep up the good reports Bob, we all enjoy it! Nick
 
 
# Nick 2010-09-12 13:45
I think NZ have just identified large grey areas of refereeing successfully, which they then play to the limit. A few years back they managed 8-man defensive lineouts with both hooker and the halfback 'creeping' in as lifters. Then the whiparound scrum. Then playing beyond the ball at the breakdown. There was a time when Oz were better than anyone at exploiting these grey areas. Didn't they virtually invent backline plays with blockers? What would the top Oz team be, given full availablity, Bob? Robinson-Moore-Alexander-Vickerman-Sharpe-Pocock-Elsom-Palu-Genia-Cooper-Giteau-Mortlock-O'Connor-Ioane-Beale??
 
 
# Royz 2010-09-12 13:47
My Dywer, If you think McGaw detached early from the scrum, what do you say about O'connor tackling Cory Jane without the ball as Cory was trying to pick the ball off from Muliaina ? That should have been a penalty try becoz not only O'connor tackled Jane without the ball, but he also came from an offside position. No use complaining about referees becoz your Wallaby have this habit of losing games they lead in the last 20mins. Think of the many times they've lost to the ABs while holding a lead for a good peroid of a game. They were lucky to win in South Africa after establishing good leads in the first halves. Think about that but not bullshit the referee becoz you make your own luck in this game. And Australia has the worst referees in the IRB.
 
 
# Dave H 2010-09-13 13:37
Bob, Please - in my opinion the best Wallaby coach in my lifetime should know better. Stop making these silly comments regarding "cheating" and selective descriptions of referee errors that disadvantaged the Wallabies. Incorrect calls aided the Wallabies far more than the All Blacks to the extent that if Lawrence had got everything right the points gap at full time would have been much greater.
 
 
# David 2010-09-13 13:39
I think in any game with this level of intensity, you are going to find refereeing errors. Some may be worse than others. I believe Turner interfered with the ball Muliaina was trying to pop to Jane & Jane was tackled early. Given the situation, I believe the correct rulling should have been a penalty try and a yellow card for a professional foul. Fortunately that refereeing blunder didn't cost the All Blacks the game. I always believed Australia would tire towards the end after their last few weeks, but I underestimated their cohesion after 2 hard games that NZ lacked early on. I suspect your desire to see the Wallabies win the game may have blinded you to some of their failings - like I often do when we lose too :)
 
 
# Joe Carbery 2010-09-13 13:40
Bob, Having watched the match (on replay) a couple of times, I reckon the move for McCaw's try was rehearsed, as McCaw packed on the blind-side (as he did in the immediately preceding scrum, which collapsed, causing a reset.) To be fair to the ref and the touch-judge, I thought McCaw and Reid broke simultaneously, or as near as didn't matter. I thought the ref was harsh on Pocock, particularly the first penalty the ABs kicked.Pocock was legal. The All Blacks won by being a bit fitter on the day and by using a reliable goa-kicker. A worry for them must be that when you're in front it can be difficult to improve as complacency can set in and there's no one to emulate. And what would happen if McCaw and Carter were not fit?
 
 
# John -Aspen 2010-09-13 13:42
Hi Bob, I sense that the Wallabies and their supporters are becoming accustomed to losing to the ABs. When a Wallabies team loses for the tenth straight time to their mortal rivals and the Aussie pundits extrapolate said loss as a milestone on a journey to divine intervention @ next year's World Cup, that defies everything I know and love about Australians. The Wallabies have to stop playing ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder) rugby whereby their playmakers learn to manage a game and stop playing miracle rugby because they are "expressing" themselves. Sound like instant gratification Generation Y behavior to you? It does to me.
 
 
# Kane 2010-09-13 15:20
Bob that's a very selective article you have written here only focusing on NZ faults not of Australia. I think you should go back to doing what you do best and criticizing the coaching panel, at least is warranted. If you watch the replay of McCaws try yes he did detach early but O'Connor wasn't back five meters therefore hes offside and also Elsom wasn't bound to the shoulder. Two offside's verses one. Yes you did mention the referee and and his assistants blunders but yes you are correct you definitely didn't mention them all, aka the Australia's first try came from a scrum awarded to Australia from an incorrectly called forward pass and the failure to give a penalty try when turner played the ball on the ground and O'Connor tackled a player without the ball on the tryline. Perhaps McCaw's try is just justice.
 
 
# Richard from New Zealand 2010-09-13 15:23
Hi Bob, Your continued belief that not only does Paddy need to justify referreeing decisions to you but also that he is even aware of your opinion is somewhat delusional. Your assertion that the All Blacks (and Richie McGaw in partiuclar - you know he is their Captain Bob?!) "practise" their cheating is nothing short of insane. For a clever and respected Coach to make such comments defies belief, unless of course this was YOUR mantra when you helmed probably the best Wallaby Team ever? The reality is that there was a timing mistake between Richie and Read and the Officials missed the error. Your glowing praise for the Wallabies versus an underperforming All Black unit would suggest that the Wallabies shouldn't have needed that decision anyway?! The Wallabies are still wobbling in my opinion. This was their opportunity to get the monkey off their back with the All Blacks weak in selected areas and they blew it. I agree that these Wallabies are also understrength and there are positives to take on board ahead of next year's World Cup (how good is Beale?!) but they are still some way behind a full strength All Black side. The end of year tour should be interesting...
 
 
# Joe Carbery 2010-09-15 12:58
Bob, If I may be allowed another comment on McCaw's try: On YouTube there is a clip called "Richie McCaw does the Wallabies - In Reverse." It's shot from behind the goal-line. It clearly shows Genia moving quickly to the left hand (open) side of the scrum as soon as Weepu puts the ball in. He does not follow Weepu around the scrum. In the dim antedeluvian days when I played rugby a basic defensive system was that the defending half-back took the first man to play the ball on the side the ball was put in (in this instance Reid was Genia's man) and the flanker took the second (Elsom to take McCaw.)With Genia scarpering off to the open side it meant that Elsom was forced to tackle Reid. O'Connor made the mistake of coming in on Reid also, giving a clear run to McCaw. This was a defensive error an Under-14 team would have been embarrassed to make.
 
 
# Kent 2010-09-15 13:16
No mention of Rocky Elsom detatched and offside at the very same scrum Bob. Didn't quite catch that one with the other eye then? No mention either of the two penalty try offences in the opening minutes when O'Connor prevented Mils from releasing the ball and then Smith getting taken out preventing a certain try twice. No mention of the poor ref decision to award the scum that lead to Australia's try or his interference in the AB's defence to allow Oz to score their first try. Typical one eyed rantings again from a former great coach.
 
 
# Kent 2010-09-15 13:18
In 1998, the AB's lost 5 test matches in a row. We convinced ourselves that but for "a few bad ref decisions", "the rub of the green", "missing players", "a few missed kicks", those 5 loses could so easily have been 5 wins. So we stuck with the coach and look what it got us. No better ref calls, no rub of the green, the returning players flopped and kicks were still missed. Robbie is teaching his charges exactly what he knows. Which just happens to be exactly what he's taught half the AB's. That's why you can't beat us. The AB's know Robbies plan and know how to beat it.
 

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