The New Zealand Herald

Rugby bosses out of touch with strict adherence to head-high hits

- Wynne Gray opinion

Player welfare is paramount and everyone at this World Cup and beyond needs to be protected from high shots, deliberate stiff arms or pile-driving tip tackles

However, ball carriers have become a protected species — an impractica­l solution in a sport built on physical confrontat­ion.

Instructio­ns from referees’ boss Alain Rolland to the match officials in Japan have given too much leeway to attackers and limited defenders’ actions. Some of the cards have been daft while the sinbin for Welsh hooker Ken Owens for a tip tackle without a subsequent judicial review made no sense. Add in the lengthy interventi­ons from TMOs and interminab­le slow-motion replays and it’s clear the system is flawed.

We haven’t heard from Rolland since his pre-tournament warning that high shots would be punished in a bid to reduce concussion­s. Maybe he has burrowed deep into a typhoon bunker and decided to stay there until his tour of duty is done.

Any measures to protect players are laudable but there has to be common sense about a fast-moving, high-impact game where players make mistakes, are caught off balance or surprised by a rival. Tackles will ride up or glance off shoulders but the intent has been to stop opponents not damage them.

But ball carriers also damage themselves when they charge into defenders at the wrong body height. If those players lead with their heads driving low into tackles how are defenders supposed to stop them?

It may be feasible for the tackler to ride the hit and let his arms wrap round the ball carrier’s back but near the line that concession will usually yield a try.

And how significan­t are the blows being red-carded? In most cases the victims carry on without any effects while Rolland builds his prosecutio­n on the basis that any high hit causes concussion.

Statistics actually point to increased injuries for tacklers when they aim lower.

Players need to be protected but that assessment has to be pragmatic rather than an arbitrary.

Japan has come to this ninth global rugby party with the best of attitudes, impeccable hospitalit­y and bursting enthusiasm but they have been let down by the tournament organisers who have lost the feel for the sport on their watch.

Mismatches in elongated pool play, confusion about high tackles and the subsequent bans topped by the absurd decision to cancel rather than postpone games has left a trail of blotches on the officials’ resumes.

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