The New Zealand Herald

Farewell to the fans

- Grant Chapman

Rugby bosses looked at ways to break a deadlock before the British and Irish Lions arrived for their drawn threetest series, it was revealed yesterday. NZ Rugby chief executive Steve Tew said, however, the notion of a tiebreaker was dismissed during tour negotiatio­ns.

Saturday night’s 15-all draw at Eden Park had everyone hanging for some kind of definitive resolution, but instead left them with the image of captains Kieran Read and Sam Warburton jointly raising the series trophy.

Speaking to Newstalk ZB’s Tony Veitch, Tew admitted he had predicted the outcome in his welcome to official guests earlier in the evening.

“A long time ago, when we drew up the tour agreement, we would have considered how we would break a deadlock,” he said.

“We could have gone points for and against, we could have gone the number of tries, we could have gone to a penalty shootout, we could have played an extra 10 minutes ...

“But what we, in the end, determined was that if you played 240-odd minutes against each other and you’re still locked up, then surely that’s a reflection that the two sides are pretty equal.

“Imagine if it was last week’s situation, where one team was down to 14 guys for 55 minutes and then had to play an extra 10 minutes of extra time . . . would that have been a fair outcome, given they’d battled through the whole game with less players?

“Or if, at the end of extra time, you had a penalty shootout . . . is that really how you want to determine who wins the series?”

Many rugby league fans took to social media afterwards, calling for an NRL-style “golden point” format, where the first scorers in overtime win. Ironically, internatio­nal league doesn’t usually embrace this concept either. A draw is a draw, unless it occurs at the sudden-death stage of a tournament.

. . . what we, in the end, determined was that if you played 240-odd minutes against each other and you’re still locked up, then surely that’s a reflection that the two sides are pretty equal. Steve Tew

“Extra time may have been interestin­g, but one team may have been able to manage their bench better than the other, simply because of circumstan­ces,” said Tew. “Anything could have happened that would have made that an uneven process.

“At the end of 240 minutes, if we’re all square, we’re all square.”

Notably, though, the All Blacks trailed their rivals for only three of those 240 minutes through the series.

Tew said the series referees would be assessed as part of an overall review.

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