You Irish are all over the place here.
CM11 has gone from saying it was a pen try to now it is not.
MrJonno started with the assertion
MrJonno wrote: ↑Mon Feb 13, 2023 1:58 pm
as otherwise it is probably a PT and a YC.
which he has since gone silent upon.
CM11 stated the WR clarification said May’s try was an example of being legal which when challenged
Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 13, 2023 3:48 pm
b) Where TF does it say May's action was not illegal? At best, WR simply passes the buck on this one but does not proffer a judgement on the specific incident. You simply went all Irish and read what you wanted to see.
has now been modified to a partial admission with
CM11 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 14, 2023 2:27 pm
The second (ed: May’s) was not commented on as being illegal or not and it's at the high end of being a dangerous dive.
and then changes his mind again
CM11 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 14, 2023 2:27 pm
Basically world rugby are saying ….. May and many others are fine
So there is some dangerous end and some are fine but others are not?
MrJonno still has comprehension issues or selective reading disease
MrJonno wrote: ↑Tue Feb 14, 2023 1:27 pm
The issue is you see every dive for the line as a jump to avoid a tackle whereas world rugby specifically differentiates between them, which for some reason you can't accept
when literally 3 posts above
Torquemada 1420 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 14, 2023 12:38 pm
That example is not in scope because the act of leaving the ground occurred after all tacklers had already been passed.
and completely recasts his position when it was he who kept trying to paint the WR ruling to the limited context of “jump”.
Anyway CM11
CM11 wrote: ↑Tue Feb 14, 2023 2:27 pm
Again, Torque, it's very clear.
and WR explicitly state it's OK to go airborne to dive for the line.
No WR does not. And it is getting tiresome having to post what is there for you to read even if you choose to change the meaning:
In principle, in a try scoring situation, if the action is deemed to be a dive forward for a try, then it should be permitted.
“
In principle” is already a non absolute.
and then they immediately cloudy it in the very same paragraph (i.e. it's a continuation of subject) with
If a player is deemed to have left the ground to avoid a tackle; or to jump, or hurdle a potential tackler, then this is dangerous play and should be sanctioned accordingly.
which takes us right back to the mess I highlighted in the very first post on this debate which is that there is next to no reason (I excepted showboating) to leave the ground that high (dive or otherwise) in the proximity of a defender other than to avoid the tackle. There is a difference with the low dive we all learned at school which also was to ensure a safer grounding
- avoid user error a la Dominici/Italy
- to lessen the chance of a defender knocking it out a la Burns/Medard
Note that on the user error, going so high heightens the chance of spilling the ball (especially embarrassing when showboating). And I suspect (I don't know because WR has been so poor in clarifying in the clarification) that this is the thinking behind their
In principle bit i.e. your old school low dive is out of scope and zero chance of dangerous play but somewhere further up the levitation gradient, they are wrestling with what to do.