Gobsmacked
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They can position themselves in line with run of play and raise their flag when it's foward.
Both flags = foward pass.
Both flags = foward pass.
Touch judges already rule on forward passes don’t they? If they see them that is.
Not a RL fan I see.They can position themselves in line with run of play and raise their flag when it's foward.
Both flags = foward pass.
Yep, this is a good video on forward passes, it for the other code, but the physics and rules are still the sameA pass is legal unless it definitely travelled forward out of the hands. As distinct from a pass is illegal unless it definitely travelled backwards relative to the ground. The latter doctrine is favoured by the more intellectually-challenged.
Some touchies need a frontal lobotomy to clear their brain of crowd and media culture before being allowed to officiate. Phantom forward passes are known to arise from this scenario -
Centre-field PTB, dummy-half jumps out, engages the marker, gives short ball to receiver moving at pace. Both run and pass are perfectly-timed. Touchie from 30 metres away calls it forward. Mainly because his view of the hands is obscured and he just assumes from the positions of the bodies that it must have been forward.
This.You would be surprised how much the touchies say to the referees, that gets ignored
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I do have issues with how touch judges are told to position themselves - i.e. Being back the 10m defensive line to "help" the referee, staying in tight when looking at try scoring opportunity in the corner instead of circling out wide. But that's a larger issue with how officials are assessed and instructed to officiate the game.
The problem is that all it does it actually inhibit their view. It's doesn't help their view of the touch line, and then the corner post actually takes the view of the touch-in-goal line away. The referee is rarely in position to see the 'front on angle' as you suggest.The 10 metre issue was brought in when Bill harrigan was made NRL Referees Coach. Dumb decision then and still is in my opinion.
As to why they stay tight like they do, they are also looking at the feet to ensure they do not go into touch before hand. Often the referee can see the "front on" angle.
Would she be armed?monitored by a female police officer
Definitely disarming.Would she be armed?
The problem is that all it does it actually inhibit their view. It's doesn't help their view of the touch line, and then the corner post actually takes the view of the touch-in-goal line away. The referee is rarely in position to see the 'front on angle' as you suggest.
If the touch judge circle out wide, they have view of the touch and touch-in-goal line, and the only view obscured is literally in the in-goal area.
Of course, it is all a moot point considering we have the video referee/bunker to review.