Deciding whether or not ball has been touched down...

thepercy


Referees in America
Joined
Sep 21, 2013
Messages
923
Post Likes
147
Current Referee grade:
Level 1
[LAWS]22.2 Picking up the ball from the ground is not grounding it. A player may pick up the ball in the in-goal and ground it elsewhere in the in-goal.[/LAWS]

Is an attempt to pick the ball up (even with some downward pressure) treated the same as picking the ball up?
 

OB..


Referees in England
Staff member
Joined
Oct 7, 2004
Messages
22,981
Post Likes
1,838
In practice if all 30 players think one thing, and the referee has another view, I am guessing something has gone badly wrong.
I had this once, as I have mentioned before. A scrumhalf who had never played the position before picked up the ball which was on the "wrong" side of the scrum and went to feed it in from that side. The TH stopped him and he went to change sides, but I did not allow it. From discussion afterwards in the bar I think I was the only person on the pitch who knew that bit of law, but I didn't take a 30-man poll.

More recently a team tried to put a player back on after he had been knocked out and then gone off looking very dazed. They insisted that the referee could not over-rule their physio. He refused their arguments.

Presumably those who benefit from your decision would not complain, so you won't know if they think you are wrong.

By all means check up later, so that you know for next time. However the basic point is that you must referee according to what you think, not according to what you think that they think.

(Curiously enough, if you were wrong and they were right, I'd criticise you for being wrong, but applaud you for sticking to your decision. As long as you didn't do it again next time I saw you.)
 

crossref


Referees in England
Joined
Sep 14, 2009
Messages
21,810
Post Likes
3,148
the first one is a pretty good example (although in reality if you had let it ride, somewhere on the pitch was bound to be a player or two who notice that you don't know the Law... so good on you for sticking to it).

in the OP it was one of fact - if actually both teams thought he had made the touchdown, and the referee was the odd one out, I'd wonder if he had made the right deicsion. In practice no doubt the opinions of the players were evenly divided, and the referee made the call -- which is what he is there for.

What would you do if the only ball avaialble was under the pressure prescribed by Law, but all the players were OK to play with it?
 

barker14610


Referees in America
Joined
Apr 13, 2009
Messages
1,248
Post Likes
0
Were you in-goal for the call? Do a little salesmanship and all is well if you are right there.
 

Dickie E


Referees in Australia
Joined
Jan 19, 2007
Messages
14,124
Post Likes
2,145
Current Referee grade:
Level 2
Ball is stationary in-goal. Defender charges at the the ball and deliberately knocks it with his hand over the deadball line. I would have to assume that the ball remains in contact with the grass momentarily as the ball is knocked. Penalty or touch-down?
 

Ian_Cook


Referees in New Zealand
Staff member
Joined
Jul 12, 2005
Messages
13,680
Post Likes
1,760
Current Referee grade:
Level 2
If you didn't understand what I meant then I doubt you would understand a further explanation, sorry.


Yep.

"Sir, I have found you an argument; but I am not obliged to find you an understanding."

- Samuel Johnston


Ball is stationary in-goal. Defender charges at the the ball and deliberately knocks it with his hand over the deadball line. I would have to assume that the ball remains in contact with the grass momentarily as the ball is knocked. Penalty or touch-down?

Pressing or downards slapping action, ball squeezed out like an orange pip over DBL? Touchdown

Scooping action and ball goes over DBL? PK (and possible PT depending on proximity of defenders/attackers)

Punching action and ball goes over DBL? PK (and possible PT depending on proximity of defenders/attackers)

Intent is key!!
 
Last edited:

Rushforth


Referees in Holland
Joined
Jan 19, 2011
Messages
1,300
Post Likes
92
Intent is key!!

So Ian, you are not even vaguely interested in 22.11? Let alone 22.9 - you seem to be completely ignorant of what players actually do, but then again you seem to be full of yourself.

For my own part, I have not once seen a player scoop or punch the ball over the DBL, nor a PT awarded, but then again, I'm only approaching 100 games reffed and 1000 experienced (ok, more on both, but not that much), and the closest I can recall was a PT for deliberately knocking the ball into touch by a player on the ground about 3 yards out of goal in 1988.

In other words, you are bullshitting again, because not a single defender in the history of rugby has attempted to NOT ground a ball brought in there deliberately. But I will bow to your experience as to idiocy, should you so wish.
 

andyscott


Referees in England
Joined
Oct 26, 2008
Messages
3,117
Post Likes
55
Bloody hell, if he touches it, Peep grounded, simples, take the easiest route for you as a ref.
 

Dickie E


Referees in Australia
Joined
Jan 19, 2007
Messages
14,124
Post Likes
2,145
Current Referee grade:
Level 2
In other words, you are bullshitting again, because not a single defender in the history of rugby has attempted to NOT ground a ball brought in there deliberately. But I will bow to your experience as to idiocy, should you so wish.

I have seen half a dozen occurrences where a defender has intentionally batted the ball over the DBL. Possibly because it is OK to do in RL.
 

Jacko


Argentina Referees in Argentina
Joined
Aug 8, 2005
Messages
1,514
Post Likes
79
Current Referee grade:
National Panel

TigerCraig


Referees in Australia
Joined
May 19, 2008
Messages
1,464
Post Likes
236
For my own part, I have not once seen a player scoop or punch the ball over the DBL, nor a PT awarded, but then again, I'm only approaching 100 games reffed and 1000 experienced (ok, more on both, but not that much), and the closest I can recall was a PT for deliberately knocking the ball into touch by a player on the ground about 3 yards out of goal in 1988.

In other words, you are bullshitting again, because not a single defender in the history of rugby has attempted to NOT ground a ball brought in there deliberately. But I will bow to your experience as to idiocy, should you so wish.

I've given more yellow cards (with penalty try) for this over the last 3 years than for any other single reason

Standard practice for leaguies
 

menace


Referees in Australia
Joined
Nov 20, 2009
Messages
3,657
Post Likes
633
Current Referee grade:
Level 2
So Ian, you are not even vaguely interested in 22.11? Let alone 22.9 - you seem to be completely ignorant of what players actually do, but then again you seem to be full of yourself.

For my own part, I have not once seen a player scoop or punch the ball over the DBL, nor a PT awarded, but then again, I'm only approaching 100 games reffed and 1000 experienced (ok, more on both, but not that much), and the closest I can recall was a PT for deliberately knocking the ball into touch by a player on the ground about 3 yards out of goal in 1988.

In other words, you are bullshitting again, because not a single defender in the history of rugby has attempted to NOT ground a ball brought in there deliberately. But I will bow to your experience as to idiocy, should you so wish.

Rushforth, I'm not in the habit of supporting our 'over the ditch' sporting foes, but I think you are seriously out of line with that response. Regardless of what you think of Ian from previous pissing contests you've had with him, that IMO was unnecessary.

Like dickie says above, I too have seen it a couple of times where a player deliberately knocks or bats the ball from in-goal over the dead ball line. Usually these players are rugby league converts, where such actions in-goal are permitted to prevent a try. (In RL the player who makes the ball dead matters, not who put it in-goal). The few times I've had it happen, I've never given a PT, but using some player empathy I have given a PK (as there was no oppo close enough that could have scored), and on other occasions I've let it go and had a word with the offender to let them know not to do it again (as the ball was just about to roll over the dead ball line anyway and there was no one in cooee).
 

SimonSmith


Referees in Australia
Staff member
Joined
Jan 27, 2004
Messages
9,354
Post Likes
1,456
So Ian, you are not even vaguely interested in 22.11? Let alone 22.9 - you seem to be completely ignorant of what players actually do, but then again you seem to be full of yourself.

For my own part, I have not once seen a player scoop or punch the ball over the DBL, nor a PT awarded, but then again, I'm only approaching 100 games reffed and 1000 experienced (ok, more on both, but not that much), and the closest I can recall was a PT for deliberately knocking the ball into touch by a player on the ground about 3 yards out of goal in 1988.

In other words, you are bullshitting again, because not a single defender in the history of rugby has attempted to NOT ground a ball brought in there deliberately. But I will bow to your experience as to idiocy, should you so wish.

A couple of points here:

1.I have refereed considerably more games than you and have seen this enough for it to be considered something worth considering.

2. With all due respect to your vast experience, I would have hard cash on Ian's refereeing and playing experience beating your somewhat narrow world view.

Your wording was rude and unnecessary. It's only made worse by being hyperbole and wrong, as other posters have proved.

God I hate defending Kiwis.
 

j3ref


New Member
Joined
Nov 20, 2013
Messages
3
Post Likes
0
Bloody hell, if he touches it, Peep grounded, simples, take the easiest route for you as a ref.

I agree with the principle of keeping things as simple as possible for your own sake. But the fact is that any player has the option to pick up the ball in goal as well as the option to ground the ball. If an attacking player fumbles the ball whilst attempting to pick it up in the in-goal area, or succeeds in picking up the ball and then loses possession to a defending player, would it be correct to award the try? I don't think so.

Following the same principles and the laws of the game, I think it is just as important to distinguish between pickups/pickup attempts and proper groundings by defending players. Touching the ball whilst it is on the ground does not in itself constitute a grounding. I would say that a defensive touch down needs to be just as clear and deliberate as a try grounding

At the risk of doing this to death, here is another common enough scenario...

After a five metre scrum a scrum half throws a bad pass towards his ten who is standing in the pocket in-goal waiting to kick. The pass pitches on the ground at the feet of the ten who crouches down to pick it up but fumbles it split seconds before the attacking nine dives on it. I would say try!
 

TigerCraig


Referees in Australia
Joined
May 19, 2008
Messages
1,464
Post Likes
236
From memory there was a PT awarded for knocking the ball dead in Super Rugby this year
 

thepercy


Referees in America
Joined
Sep 21, 2013
Messages
923
Post Likes
147
Current Referee grade:
Level 1
So Ian, you are not even vaguely interested in 22.11? Let alone 22.9 - you seem to be completely ignorant of what players actually do, but then again you seem to be full of yourself.

For my own part, I have not once seen a player scoop or punch the ball over the DBL, nor a PT awarded, but then again, I'm only approaching 100 games reffed and 1000 experienced (ok, more on both, but not that much), and the closest I can recall was a PT for deliberately knocking the ball into touch by a player on the ground about 3 yards out of goal in 1988.

In other words, you are bullshitting again, because not a single defender in the history of rugby has attempted to NOT ground a ball brought in there deliberately. But I will bow to your experience as to idiocy, should you so wish.

here, it happens because players in general have a lack of knowledge of the laws, probably because most do not start playing rugby untill college, more in high schoo now but not many
 
Top