Weekend Herald

NRL boss stands by tougher penalty rules

- AAP

Don’t blame the referees, blame me.

That’s the message from NRL boss Todd Greenberg after a spike in penalties this season has drawn fierce criticism from fans and commentato­rs.

League legend Andrew Johns became the latest to lash out at officiatin­g after 19 penalties were blown in the round-three match between Melbourne and North Queensland.

It came less than a week after 26 infringeme­nts were called between the Storm and the Wests Tigers — part of an increase of five penalties per match this year.

Greenberg says the referees are only doing what he’s asked them to do and the onus is on the governing body to remain ahead of coaches attempting to push boundaries.

“If people want to come out over this weekend and start ripping into the referees, I’ve got some advice for them: they better start ripping into me first because all the referees are doing is following instructio­n,” Greenberg said on Triple M radio.

The NRL has been open about its edict to clean up the play-the-ball as well to ensure sides remain on side in defence.

Greenberg said it was up to the referees to ensure their crackdown lasts the entire season.

“I’ve asked the referees to make sure it doesn’t just happen in rounds one, two and three, that it happens all year,” he said.

“Ultimately, it’ll ensure that the fans have a much greater game to watch.”

Greenberg also said the competitio­n committee would consider the reintroduc­tion of the five-minute sin bin to prevent teams deliberate­ly conceding penalties close to their tryline.

Johns believed the game was being destroyed by penalties.

“Twelve penalties blown in that first half, I’d say nearly three-quarters of them for offside, inside the 10,” he said during the Nine Network’s game commentary.

“Rugby league’s a game that flows and there’s attrition. You can’t do that with so many penalties.

“There’s no flow.’’

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