Birdee_Num_Num
Bench
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He clearly lost possession and tapped it on.It is but it is what expected after the bunker got involved.
The right call was made it was clearly forward but calling it a knock on when it was clearly a pass is just absurd.
The issue I have BBB is this.Katoa loses possession and taps it forward. That’s been a knock on forever in Rugby League. I saw it on the replay on Sunday, not some frame by frame press conference. Blame Katoa for bad hands.
If he’d actually passed it the only controversy would be how blind the officials were.
If the person who loses control of the ball catches it again it is not a knock on, or if they get a kick to it, it has always been this way. The fact he didn’t regain control but tapped it on forward constitutes a knock on, if he had tapped it backwards it would be a knock back. These are not new rules, they have always been this way.The issue I have BBB is this.
The ball clearly starts to leave his arm in a forward motion yes.
Annesley says that he does not re-gain control of the ball.
If that's the case.. are tap ons by players that go forward called forward passes or knock-ons?
They are called forward passes.
So the act of tapping a ball on must therefore be considered "controlling" the ball.
The ball doesn't just miraculously turn left into the arms of the inside man after coming away from the arm.
Katoa has completed the passing action by controlling the ball.
Other incidents I can think of similar to this are when players lose possession and get a foot to it before it hits the deck.
anyone remember the Justin hodges crap about charge downs in origin years back with Bill harrigan?
Trying to find a way in the definition to justify it what happened.
It was a forward pass that got missed.. and you know what.
IDGAF because I've seen 1000 by that f**king team against us the other way and no one gives a shit.
But he did control the ball.If the person who loses control of the ball catches it again it is not a knock on, or if they get a kick to it, it has always been this way. The fact he didn’t regain control but tapped it on forward constitutes a knock on, if he had tapped it backwards it would be a knock back. These are not new rules, they have always been this way.
If they hadn’t picked it up there would have been a great deal of heads rolling once it had been by Seen the Fox commentators.
Mate, if you think that was forward you need to go and sign up as a touchie. Your eyes are just as good.What was their explanation for allowing the forward pass form haas to bullemore under the posts?
The leg up Souths got to beat us was proof of thatThe bottom line is that the NRL have simply proved what we all know - if you are connected with certain teams you WILL be given the benefit of the doubt, and if you are connected with certain other teams, the reverse is true.
I have not been as disillusioned about a game (and the game) for a LONG time!
Of course, I will keep watching and supporting, but it makes me angry!
Any game is a series of events, all of which effect ‘what comes next’ so the theory that we would’ve lost anyway does not hold water.
But he did control the ball.
the ball clearly comes away fractionally at the last minute in a forward direction.
as in towards the try line.
he completes the pass .. which was forward yes.
the fact the ball got to the intended player on the inside indeed indicates a secondary "controlled" action.
otherwise he would have just spilt it forward and it would have hit the deck.
he doesn't need to catch it again.I'm just watching it again now, 11 minute mark.
Front on view, a Broncos player pulls Katoa's ball carrying arm away, Katoa loses the ball then taps it forward with his forearm. Never to catch it again and regain it, clear knock on. Which has been the rule forever.
Totally correct decision.
I'm just watching it again now, 11 minute mark.
Front on view, a Broncos player pulls Katoa's ball carrying arm away, Katoa loses the ball then taps it forward with his forearm. Never to catch it again and regain it, clear knock on. Which has been the rule forever.
Totally correct decision.
Yeah, I think the reason we are firing up is that the refs did not call a forward pass, and the video ref cannot adjudicate on whether a pass is forward or not.Rubbish no broncs players touches his ball carrying arm
It is in the first 20 seconds of the NRL highlights package here https://www.nrl.com/tv/news/match-highlights-broncos-v-sharks-1235064/
It is an errant pass which went forward which from what I understand has been called a forward pass since time immemorial and not a knock on.
You are correct about the Broncos and the arm, from front on it looked as though he did. I mistook Katoas wrist strap as a hand. My bad. Its a loose carry and tap on knocked forward without regathering, not a pass, there's the difference, but like with Birdee I get your point. To the letter of the law it is a knock on, thats the only real issue here.Rubbish no broncs players touches his ball carrying arm
It is in the first 20 seconds of the NRL highlights package here https://www.nrl.com/tv/news/match-highlights-broncos-v-sharks-1235064/
It is an errant pass which went forward which from what I understand has been called a forward pass since time immemorial and not a knock on.
For it not to be deemed a knock on or back he needs to catch it again after he fumbles. Very different from batting it on, but I do get your point. Not the same but similar as batting it on means it has been passed to the player, not him fumbling first without regathering.he doesn't need to catch it again.
the secondary event is deemed control.
the same reason a person batting the ball on in a back line shift that goes forward is called a forward pass and not a knock-on.
they are deemed to have controlled the ball through flight even though they don't physically catch the ball.
I don't see it any different to fumbles that have been followed by a kick before hitting the ground.For it not to be deemed a knock on or back he needs to catch it again after he fumbles. Very different from batting it on, but I do get your point. Not the same but similar as batting it on means it has been passed to the player, not him fumbling first without regathering.
I'm going to agree with you here, there is absolutely no difference between having the fumbles and getting a kick in before it hits the ground. The major difference is a kick propelled forward is not a knock on, off the hands propelled forward is.I don't see it any different to fumbles that have been followed by a kick before hitting the ground.
the element of control is re-established through the kick not the catch.
I distinctly remember a Penrith game at Penrith years ago where this happened to us and a try was scored (fumble with kick).
more importantly you have to ask whether the same application of the rules would have occurred if this was staggs on the receive to Corey oats inside ball in the same circumstances.
absolutely f**king NOT.
they'd have been straight into that f**king annoying as f**k song and dance they carry on with.