Surely
Post Whore
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If you look.at side on pics you will see the right arm is out in front of fekis body not as it appears in this pic where it looks like he is actually using it in the tackle.
That picture is after contact. Feki is halfway out the sideline. You got a pic from a little earlier?
The whole notion of leading with his left hand or touching with his left hand meaning he was trying to make a tackle is absolutely hilarious and possibly the best example of clutching at straws I have ever heard! There is nothing in his tackle to suggest he is trying to make a legitimate tackle by wrapping his arms around Feki's body. It is a shoulder charge end of story. And if he gets off then it is back for good and NO player should ever be suspended for it again.
All this while Napa misses 3 games for a head clash
Can you point to the NRL rule which says a legitimate tackle requires a player to wrap the arms?
Actually, tell me what the definition of a tackle is under NRL rules? I looked at the rule book and there is no such definition. The NRL don’t define what a legal tackle is.
There are plenty of tackles where a player goes in and only uses one arm to grab the opponent without wrapping the arms... is that a legal tackle then??
None of you, including Gallen on 100% Footy, seem to have bothered to read the freaking rule book. The shoulder charge rule does not say anything about “wrapping the arms” and, in any event, the NRL rules don’t seem to define what a legal tackle is.
All the rules say is a shoulder charge is “where a defender does not use, or attempt to use, his arms (including his hands) to tackle or otherwise take hold of the opposing player and the contact is forceful.”
As both of slaters hands and arms come into contact with Feki before his shoulder does, he has clearly “attempted” to use his hands or arms to knock him on his ass over the side line.
Some of you need to learn the rules before you start chirping away. “Ohh he didn’t wrap his arms it’s not a tackle”... Absolute hogwash. There is no such rule requiring arms to be wrapped.
This great game of league is gonna turn into bloody netball pretty soon. Well I guess at least netballers and their fans can read a rule book and not make it up as they go so maybe that’s the right way to go
I can't see how he could've done anything else whilst trying to save a try in a sudden-death match. He goes in with arms first, he probably gets knocked out. He goes low, Feki scores.
You’ll have to direct me to the section in the rule book that states that you are allowed to break them if there is no other option available.
Maybe we should go back and give the 99 grand final win to the dragons since the only way for ainscough to stop that try was to take the winger’s head off? Any legitimate tackling technique wouldn’t have stopped it, so by your logic the coat hanger is now in play
Absolutely agree with this. Slater has done the only real thing he could to save the try. But under current bullshit rules, it's illegal. He should probably have been binned and should get a ban.I never said he was allowed to break the rule. I said under the rules he should be banned. I'm also saying the rule is wrong for on-line, east to west tackles. As black and white as the rule is now, it doesn't work. When you shoulder charge a guy front on in the line, you have options. When you're executing a sliding, on-line tackle, your options are much less. As I said, Slater could have led with his arms and been either knocked out or feebly gone round the legs. But he knew he had to save a try with the best - albeit illegal under the black and white rules - option. I'd also suggest it's near on impossible to make head-high contact when making a shoulder-first side-on tackle. First contact is always going to be the opposition's shoulder. Which negates the reason the shoulder charge was banned in the first place.
The Ainscough one has no relevance.
Then there’s nothing to worry about. At all.Of course I have. I looked at the rule and the evidence.
I never said he was allowed to break the rule. I said under the rules he should be banned. I'm also saying the rule is wrong for on-line, east to west tackles. As black and white as the rule is now, it doesn't work. When you shoulder charge a guy front on in the line, you have options. When you're executing a sliding, on-line tackle, your options are much less. As I said, Slater could have led with his arms and been either knocked out or feebly gone round the legs. But he knew he had to save a try with the best - albeit illegal under the black and white rules - option. I'd also suggest it's near on impossible to make head-high contact when making a shoulder-first side-on tackle. First contact is always going to be the opposition's shoulder. Which negates the reason the shoulder charge was banned in the first place.
The Ainscough one has no relevance.