The New Zealand Herald

Eye gouge a sickening act which has no place in game

- Michael Burgess comment

Since when is eye gouging okay?

A sickening foul act on Kiwis captain Dallin Watene-Zelezniak soured what was otherwise a fabulous second test at Anfield yesterday.

First things first — England were the better team and deserved their 20-14 victory over the Kiwis.

But England prop George Burgess should have played no part in the final 20 minutes.

It was the kind of incident that makes you turn away from the television screen and has absolutely no place in the game.

Sometimes there are accidental moments in league, given the brutal physicalit­y of the sport, the heavy contact, the size of the players and the speed of the modern game. This wasn’t one of them.

Only he will truly know, but Burgess appeared to know exactly what he was doing as he wrestled with Watene-Zelezniak in the process of completing a tackle just after the hour mark.

Whether it was a rush of blood to the head, or a premeditat­ed attack, Burgess’ act needs to be met with a lengthy ban.

This wasn’t a case of some fingers accidental­ly scraping across the eye, or an errant slap across the face.

It looked like a deliberate, callous, cowardly attack on the Kiwis captain by the Rabbitohs prop, when he was already pinned by another tackler. Worst of all, it’s incredibly dangerous.

Referee Gerard Sutton and local video referee Ben Thaler now have some explaining to do. Sutton appeared to warn Burgess moments later, and there will no doubt be retributio­n coming in the tribunal later this week.

But it should have been an instant sending off offence, or at the least a sin bin, if Thaler was doing his job.

The footage was crystal clear from the replays — countless viewers across England would have been recoiling at what they had seen.

There wasn’t any doubt or grey area, which makes it even worse.

And it was up to the man in the video box to inform Sutton of the severity of the incident. No one wants too many interventi­ons from upstairs but this was an extreme act that required extreme action.

Especially as the sport tries to grow the internatio­nal game, in front of a huge free-to-air audience on the BBC.

To his credit, Watene-Zelezniak didn’t mention the incident in his post-match television interview, but he did confirm later that Burgess’ fingers plunged into his eye.

“I felt a finger go in my eye,” Watene-Zelezniak told the media after the game. “That’s football. Lucky the doctor was there to give me something. It was a bit blurry after that. Whatever he gave me helped a lot. That’s internatio­nal football. I’m a tough boy, I’m an adult, I’m a man, so I can take those kinds of things, but what I can’t take is a loss.”

Watene-Zelezniak was unsure if Burgess’ act was intentiona­l.

“I have no idea, I’d have to watch the video back. He’s a big boy and he’s got some big fingers, too. I think his whole hand would probably cover my whole face.

“I’m sure he didn’t do it on purpose. Him and his brothers are good guys and they’ve done really good things for the game. I don’t think that’s in their kit bag, but it is what it is, you just have to deal with it.

“I’m pretty sweet now. The doctor gave me some kind of eye drops. I’m sure it was accidental. It didn’t really mess with the game much but that’s football.”

But whether it was a rush of blood to the head, or a premeditat­ed attack on the Kiwis skipper, Burgess’ act needs to be met with a lengthy ban.

It was just a shame there was no punishment meted out during the second half.

It left a bitter taste from what was a vastly entertaini­ng game, where the home side again showed their ability to soak up Kiwis pressure before lifting in the last 20 minutes.

New Zealand, just like last week, faded badly in the final quarter, and a boisterous home crowd helped get England home.

It may have been different with England down to 12 men, or maybe not. But that is a debate we shouldn’t be having now.

 ?? Photo / Sky Sport ?? George Burgess made clear contact with Dallin Watene-Zelezniak’s eyes.
Photo / Sky Sport George Burgess made clear contact with Dallin Watene-Zelezniak’s eyes.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand