Thanks for that. Interesting, under that interpretation, the player was tackled and the ref should have called that. If he did, Munster should be penalised for stealing after the tackle was complete. If not, the video discusses touching or putting hands on a player but doesn't address stealing the ball without touching him, or at least it's not clear it does, in which case Munster's action should prompt a clarification of the rule to cover this. IMO.They've changed the rules.
I'm not sure if Klein called surrender on Mariner but with the way he landed you can understand why Klein felt Munster wasn't entitled to pick up the scraps and score.
Thanks for that. Interesting, under that interpretation, the player was tackled and the ref should have called that. If he did, Munster should be penalised for stealing after the tackle was complete. If not, the video discusses touching or putting hands on a player but doesn't address stealing the ball without touching him, or at least it's not clear it does, in which case Munster's action should prompt a clarification of the rule to cover this. IMO.
Correct. It's been a knock on for 100 years.If they called the Koula one a knock on would Manly challenge?
If they did challenge would they overturn it?
I reckon the answer is no for both.
But the player is in possession of the ball. The ball is part of the player. So when Munster touched the ball he touches the player. Tackle complete.
I am confused why the Raiders were penalised and the ball returned to the half way for a kickoff that went out on the full after parramattas last try. I was under the understanding that a kickoff that went out in the full now went to the receiving team at the spot where the ball went out.
Can a referee call a six again, effectively give advantage, then change the call to a penalty when the receiving team squanders possession?
The ref did this for the Titans today, as they kicked the ball dead after the ref signalled six again.
Advantage on six again calls is certainly opaque.
Nope. Try again.Logic?
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They didn’t change it this year. It depends on what the 6 again is for.They changed the rule this year. If a team is awarded a 6again but drop it within the same tackle and not receiving an advantage they are awarded a penalty. I don't mind the rule.
Well take this for what you will, but on Triple M yesterday they had Ryan Girdler, Wade Graham and Michael Chammas and they were all unanimous that as soon as Munster touches the ball in possession of a prone player, it constitutes a completed tackle. Wade Graham was the one I took note of as he was RLPA director until he retired and as far as i know, rule changes have to go through the RLPA, so I would think he is a reasonable authority on current rules, at least up until last year and possibly if any 2024 rules came through the RLPA before he retired.Nope. Try again.
I thought the interpretation was changed this year because I don't remember seeing 6agains overturned to penalties in previous years? Can you remember games in 2023 where this happened?They didn’t change it this year. It depends on what the 6 again is for.
Moriata got tackled awkwardly, landed on his back and the ball spilled 5 metres backwards.
Ref calls knock on.
This is probably the dumbest argument for a knock on to have been called. Dropping a kick gets called knock back all the time. Dropped passes on the other hand usually get called knock ons unless they are very obviously backwards.That is the thing.
If it is a kick down field and the fullback drops it like that, It is always a knock on. No idea where that came from