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Cheika attacks Cup referees

- DANIEL GILHOOLY

MICHAEL Cheika’s midweek warning that it’s “us versus everyone” at the Rugby World Cup returned to haunt him as the Wallabies were left stewing over some baffling officiatin­g in their 29-25 loss to Wales.

A captivatin­g fightback from 18 points down at Tokyo Stadium on Sunday fell painfully short and will probably leave Australia with a wickedly difficult playoff path.

Cheika walked out on a television interview minutes after full-time and the passionate coach had barely calmed down by the press conference, where he conceded he struggles to grasp rugby’s latest regulation­s.

He described himself as “embarrasse­d” as a former player that the rules around collisions had both softened and also become so unnecessar­ily complicate­d. Cheika also accused referees and TMOs of sucking the life from rugby with drawn-out replays of incidents.

Match officials are being “spooked” by World Rugby bosses, Cheika said, adding the sport is the big loser from head-high tackles being placed inside a black and white sanctionin­g framework.

He said players were becoming confused and he had joined them since watching games through the first two weeks of the tournament.

He was stunned to learn England back Piers Francis escaped any punishment for his apparent head-high tackle, while four other players in Japan have copped three-week bans, including Wallabies winger Reece Hodge.

“Oh look, I don’t know every directive, there have been a few of them come out,” Cheika said. “I don’t know any more. I don’t know the rules any more, honestly.” Cheika queried why Australia’s seemingly dominant scrum was penalised multiple times by French referee Romain Poite.

However, his chief concern was the momentum-swinging penalty against Samu Kerevi for bumping off tackler Rhys Patchell, who was upright.

Former Wallabies and Fox Sports commentato­r Phil Kearns slammed the Kerevi ruling and was just as adamant that Wales’ half-back Gareth Davies should have had his converted try ruled out.

Davies intercepte­d Will Genia’s pass from a ruck and dashed 60m but Kearns said replays showed he was clearly off-side “It was just embarrassi­ng that the referee hasn’t gone back to look how far, he’s (Davies) even 2m in front of his own defensive line that are moving up, that’s an embarrassm­ent,” Kearns said.

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