After excessive penalty counts in NZ and England, Nigel Owens sizes up refereeing the PRO14 restart
Vetern Welsh referee Nigel Owens has called for patience amid fears that the Guinness PRO14 penalty counts will be as extreme as seen when other tournaments such as Super Rugby Aotearoa and the Gallagher Premiership returned to action following the lockdown.
The PRO14 got underway on Friday night in Italy following its five-month layoff with 30 penalties being awarded at Stadio di Mongio in a game won 17-13 by Zebre, and the tournament will continue across the weekend in Wales, Scotland and Ireland.
It was last April when World Rugby issued a law application guideline for the breakdown and that re-emphasis was a factor when competitions restarted in New Zealand and England. There were 60 penalties in the opening two matches in New Zealand in June, with 164 awarded in last weekend’s six matches in England, an average of more than 27 per game.
Now the PRO14 is returning and following on from a statement issued by tournament organisers regarding its breakdown law application, referee Owens has touched on the subject ahead of taking charge of the Saturday fixture between Scarlets and Cardiff in Llanelli.
The PRO14 statement read: “Since the suspension of the Guinness PRO14 in March, World Rugby has issued a breakdown law application guideline that will be enforced in the tournament as of round 14.
The @Nigelrefowens column: What I've missed most about rugby and how key referee change will make matches better https://t.co/ROX9mUiT8d
— WalesOnline Rugby (@WalesRugby) August 22, 2020
“The core focus of this development is to ensure player welfare, while mitigating risks of injury and encouraging fair play on the pitch. Following extensive research on current trends and challenges, the specialist breakdown group recommended the strict reinforcement of the existing law as the most appropriate course of action.”
Explaining his approach to putting this directive into action on the pitch, Owens wrote in his latest walesonline.co.uk column: “There’s set to be a tweak or two to the way things are overseen on the pitch and I’m optimistic games will improve as a result.
“It’s not that much of a change, really, focusing on the tackle area. Basically, when someone is trying to achieve a turnover, if the ball is slow to come away because the opponent isn’t letting go properly, the whistle will sound earlier.
“Last year it would have been two or three seconds before I intervened. This year it will be a second quicker to prevent the man trying to make the turnover from being cleared out in a dangerous position. Legal clear-outs will still be permitted. But we don’t want to see anyone being hit around the neck or head while they are trying to claim possession from an opponent. The spin offs could be more ball-in-play time, quicker rugby and more attractive games.
“It’s going to be a challenge to get it right in the short term for players and officials, so I’d appeal for a bit of patience. People will be rusty and it will take a few weeks for us to become comfortable with the new arrangements. No matter how much you prepare for them, it’s not the same as being in a match situation with the extra intensity that involves.
“We’ve seen that after a few problems in Super Rugby Aotearoa, with a high penalty count in the early games, things settled down and some of the matches were superb. Some referees appeared a bit quick on the whistle at first, which is understandable. And players took some time to adapt.
“But it didn’t take long for it to click and the games have been fluid and easy on the eye, with a decent job done by the men in the middle for the most part. Let’s hope that will be the case here.”
Excellent to see the rugby family weigh in behind JP after what must be a sickening blow https://t.co/untJCxCUX4
— RugbyPass (@RugbyPass) August 21, 2020
Comments on RugbyPass
Its a great idea but one that I dont think will have a lot of traction. It will depend om the prestige that they each hold but if you can do that it would be great. When Japan beat the Boks (my team) I was absolutely devestated but I wont deny the great game they played that day. We were outclassed and it was one of the best games of rugby I have seen. Using an idea like this you might just give the the underdog teams more of an opportunity to beat the big teams and I can absolutely see it being a brilliant display of rugby. They beat us because they planned for that game. It was a great moment for Japan. This way we can remove the 4 year wait and give teams something to aim for outside od World Cup years.
5 Go to commentsHi, Dave here. Happy to answer questions 🥰
5 Go to commentsDon’t think that headline is accurate. It’s great to see Aus doing better but I’m not sure they’ve shown much threat to the top of the table. They shouldn’t be inflating wins against the lousy Highlanders and Crusaders either.
3 Go to commentsSuch a shame Roigard and Aumua picked up long term injuries, probably the two form players in the comp. Also, pretty sure Clarke Dermody isn’t their coach. Got it half right though.
3 Go to commentsOh the Aussie media, they never learn. At least Andrew Kellaway is like “Woah, yeah it’s great, but settle down there guys” having endured years of the Aussie media, fans, and often their players getting ahead of themselves only to fall flat on their faces. Have the “We'll win the Bledisloe for sure this year!” headlines started yet? It’s simple to see what’s going on. The Aussie teams are settled, they didn't lose any of their major players overseas. The Crusaders and Chiefs lost key experienced All Blacks, and Razor in the Crusaders case, and clearly neither are anywhere near as strong as last year (The Canes and Blues would probably be 3rd & 4th if they were). The Highlanders are annually average, even more so post-Aaron Smith and a big squad clean out. The two teams at the top? The two nz sides with largely the same settled roster as last year, except Ardie Savea for the Canes. They’ve both got far better coaches now too. If the Aussies are going to win the title, this is the year the kiwi sides will be weakest, so they better take their chance.
3 Go to commentsThe World Cup has to be the gold standard, line in the sand. 113 teams compete for what is the opportunity to make the pool stages, and then the knockout games for the trophy. The concept is sound. This must have been the rationale when the World Cup was created, surely? But I’m all for Looking forward and finding new ways for the SH to dominate the NH into the future. The autumn series needs a change up. Let’s start by having the NH teams come south every odd year for the Autumn/Spring series games?
5 Go to commentsWhat’ll happen when the AI models of the future go back in time and try to destroy the AI models of the past standing in their way of certain victory?
41 Go to commentsThanks, Nick. We (Seanny Maloney, Brett and I) just discussed Charlie as a potential Wallaby No 8, and wondered if he has truly realised how big he is in contact (and whether he can add 5 kg w/o slowing down). Your scouting report confirms our suspicions he has the materiel. No one knows if he has the mentality (as Johann van Graan said this week about CJ, Duane and Alfie B) to carry 10-15 times a game.
57 Go to commentsHe would be a great player for the Stormers, Dobbo should approach the guy.
3 Go to commentsGood article. A few years back when he was playing for the Cheetahs, he was a quiet standout for exactly the seasons stated here. I occasionally get to see his games in the UK, and he has become a more complete player and in many ways like an Irish player. His work ethic is so suitable to the Leinster game. I wonder if Rassie would have him listed somewhere.
3 Go to commentsResults probably skewed by the fact that a few clubs have foreign fly halves in their 30s, but most teams have young English scrum halves. Results also likely to be skewed by the fact that many teams rely on centres and fullbacks to provide depth at 10, whereas they will need to stock a large number of specialist backup 9s.
1 Go to commentsI really get the sense that when all is said and done, the path of least resistance will end up being a merger of Wasps & Worcester that essentially kills the Worcester Warriors brand and sees Wasps permanently playing at Sixways. I’m not saying that’s what should happen or what I want to happen. I just think it’s the easiest rout to take and therefore, will be what happens. Wasps will definitely return to play first, and I suppose it all depends on if they can find support at Sixways. If people turn up and support Wasps in that community, at that ground, I bet they drop the Sevenoaks plan and just remain at Sixways. Under the radar but not totally unrelated, it looks as though London Irish are going to be brought back from the dead by a German consortium and look set to return, likely to the remade Championship. It’s set to have 12 clubs next season with 14 in 2025/26, what do you want to bet those extra 2 are Wasps and London Irish?
3 Go to commentsThe shoulder is a “joint” with multiple bones. You don’t “fracture” a shoulder, you fracture any one or more of the bones that make up a shoulder.
2 Go to commentsOh dear, bones too suspect to continue?
2 Go to commentsBold headline considering the Canes and Blues are 1 and 2 and the Brumbies were soundly beaten by the Chiefs and Blues. Biggest surprise is Rebels 4 Crusaders 12 - no one saw that coming. If Aus are improving that’s great 👍
3 Go to commentsAnna, You are right, we need to have patience whilst the others catch up to England and France. Also it is the PWR that has been the game changer for England. the RFU put money into that initially at the expense of the Red Roses. I was sceptical at first but it has paid off in spades.
1 Go to commentsI think Matt Proctor became a 1 test AB in the same fixture. Cameron is quality and has been great this season, can’t believe’s he only 27. Realistically how would he not be selected for ABs squad this year. Only Dmac is ahead of him as a specialist 10. With Jordan out, it will come down to where and when Beauden Barrett slots back in, and where they want to play Ruben Love. Cameron seems an absolute lock in for the wider squad though. Added benefit of TJ-Cameron-Jordie combination at 9, 10, 11 too.
1 Go to commentsFarcical, to what end would someone want to pay to keep this thing going.
1 Go to commentsHavili, our best 12 by a mile, will be in the squad, if he stays fit. JB is the most overrated AB in the last 50 years.
61 Go to commentsWe had during the week twilight footy, twilight cricket, tw golf plus there was the athletics club. Then the weekend was rugby 15s plus the net ball, really busy club scene back then but so much has changed and rugby has suffered. And it was all about changing lifestyles.
6 Go to comments