Quote headhunter="headhunter"Yeah, the referees boss who literally made the rule in question has no credibility. Good one. The fact is that the referee in that case went against all logic and precedent at a crucial time in the game to deny Catalan a win. The archaic interpretation has not been applied one single time before or since, the rules were explicitly changed for use in that exact situation. It's even worse than the Magic Weekend tries involving Tansey and Green because it's not even an error or oversight, it's literally an incorrect interpretation of the rules based on the accepted standard practice. The referee could conceivably give a penalty at almost every play-the-ball for not making contact with the foot. He doesn't, and if he inexplicably decided to do so in the last second of a match to award the team without the ball a kickable penalty to allow them to level the scores then I'm sure there would be questions raised about his integrity.
At absolute best, the fact that the referee in the Salford match chose to interpret and apply the rules in that way at that specific time having not done so on any other occasion suggests he had an ulterior motive and was deliberately trying to cost one team the match. In reality I think he probably just had a brain explosion and forgot the rules, but that doesn't make it any more right.'"
Yes the ex-referee's boss who is at least partly responsible for the awful refereeing systen we have throughout the game currently, often blindly defends referees, and has got the rules wrong on numerous occasions on Sky has little credibility. Apparently only you and Sky Sports seems to think he has. Everyone else thinks he's a joke.
So the rule does exist then? It's just one you don't want applied.
It's not archaic as the new interpretation was only recently introduced, and it's not an interpretation, it's a rule.
The rule is clear. You are tackled if your ball carrying arm touches the ground whilst held by a tackler. After being tackled you must play the ball. If you don't you should be penalised.
The fact that an interpretation of that rule was introduced whereby players won't be penalised if they are deemed to not have known they were tackled does not invalidate that rule itself. That rule is still "live".
So the decision comes down to whether the ref thinks the player knew he was tackled and was trying to waste time or get further up-field illegally, or that he genuinely didn't know he was tackled. In that situation I find the referee's actions reasonable, even if I'd disagreed with them.
The referee didn't go against all logic and certainly didn't go against precedent, many players have been penalised for that before then.
If, in the last minute of a game, a player makes a blatantly poor/no attempt at playing the ball correctly then the ref is well within his rights to penalise him even if he'd let other, less obvious ones go. That's like saying because a ref doesn't penalise a team for being half a yard offside he can't penalise them for being 5 yards offside. And questions about the referee's integrity brings problems for Catalans. Because it's different referee's they have problems with.
So which is it? Is it the integrity of a referee? Or is it a problem with all referees?
The rule has been applied since, I've seen it penalised both on TV and at live games.
I think it's far more likely that Morgan Escare had a brain explosion and forgot the rules and got up and ran on instead of playing the ball than the referee forgetting the rules or, as you said initially, wanted Catalans to lose.