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'Helped me out': Danny Care's take on avoiding 'stonewall' sending off

By Josh Raisey
Danny Care

Harlequins scrum-half Danny Care can count himself as very fortunate that he was not red-carded against Northampton Saints on Saturday at Twickenham.

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The 37-year-old was yellow-carded by referee Karl Dickson in the first half of the contest with the Gallagher Premiership leaders for a high tackle on Courtney Lawes (you read that correctly), before finding himself in hot water in the second stanza.

A Northampton break was brought to a halt after Care dived straight over a ruck to stop his former England teammate Alex Mitchell from playing the ball.

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Dickson immediately reached for his pocket to show a yellow card, which would have resulted in a red, but was sidetracked by an altercation. Upon review, the decision was that Care would not be yellow-carded, much to the dismay of the commentary team of David Flatman and Brian O’Driscoll. But Care disagrees.

Despite sporting a grin on his face after being substituted immediately after this incident, Care said after the match that he believed the ball was out.

Match Summary

1
Penalty Goals
2
6
Tries
4
4
Conversions
3
0
Drop Goals
0
157
Carries
101
10
Line Breaks
11
6
Turnovers Lost
17
4
Turnovers Won
1

“I thought the ball was out,” he said to Ugo Monye on TNT Sport

“Straight bat, I thought the ball was out.

“That one [the Lawes tackle] the rules are the rules. He’s a big lad. I don’t know how I got high enough to hit his head. But it’s one of those. I’ve got to get my head out the way and go a bit lower. Disappointed myself there.

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“This one [the ruck infringement], I think the ball’s out. I’m trying to get the ball.”

Pundit Lawrence Dallaglio gave his take on the events though, and certainly did not agree with Care.

“I spent a lot of time on a yellow card and I can assure you, after a linebreak, that is a stonewall yellow card,” the former England captain said.

Care did concede that the squabble after his dubious rucking may have been his saving grace.

The England centurion added: “There was a little fracas after which maybe helped me out.”

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Ed the Duck 9 hours ago
Why European rugby is in danger of death-by-monopoly

The prospect of the club match ups across hemispheres is surely appetising for everyone. The reality however, may prove to be slightly different. There are currently two significant driving forces that have delivered to same teams consistently to the latter champions cup stages for years now. The first of those is the yawning gap in finances, albeit delivered by different routes. In France it’s wealthy private owners operating with a higher salary cap by some distance compared to England. In Ireland it’s led by a combination of state tax relief support, private Leinster academy funding and IRFU control - the provincial budgets are not equal! This picture is not going to change anytime soon. The second factor is the EPCR competition rules. You don’t need a PhD. in advanced statistical analysis from oxbridge to see the massive advantage bestowed upon the home team through every ko round of the tournament. The SA teams will gain the opportunity for home ko ties in due course but that could actually polarise the issue even further, just look at their difficulties playing these ties in Europe and then reverse them for the opposition travelling to SA. Other than that, the picture here is unlikely to change either, with heavyweight vested interests controlling the agenda. So what does all this point to for the club world championship? Well the financial differential between the nh and sh teams is pretty clear. And the travel issues and sporting challenge for away teams are significantly exacerbated beyond those already seen in the EPCR tournaments. So while the prospect of those match ups may whet our rugby appetites, I’m very much still to be convinced the reality will live up to expectations…

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