The Citizen (KZN)

SA ref caught in crossfire

SA WHISTLEMAN WHO WILL HANDLE FINAL COMES UNDER FIRE Sanzaar CEO says the criteria follows a clear selection policy.

- Rudolph Jacobs

The appointmen­t of Jaco Peyper as referee for Saturday’s Super Rugby final between the Lions and the Crusaders at Ellis Park has caused a mini-outcry – especially Down Under.

At the root of the complaint is the 58th-minute yellow card Peyper dished out to Hurricanes flyhalf Beauden Barrett in last weekend’s semifinal against the Lions.

And in Barrett’s absence, the Lions scored 17 points to change a deficit from 22-29 into a match-winning lead of 39-29 by the time the All Black flyhalf returned to the fray.

But these same Kiwis convenient­ly forget that a New Zealand referee was in charge when Glen Jackson officiated last year’s final in Wellington between the Lions and the Hurricanes ... and the Lions didn’t offer a single complaint.

Kiwi website Stuff.co.nz said Peyper handed out a second-half yellow card to Beauden Barrett for apparently “accidental­ly” rolling away with the ball after a tackle on Ruan Combrinck, calling it a “very harsh call”.

“The deeper issue is that Peyper’s nationalit­y meant that controvers­y was almost bound to rear its ugly head. There is a simple way to avoid this: the Super Rugby final must be refereed by ‘neutral’ referees.

“Instead, we have a situation where we are talking about Peyper and perhaps not giving enough credit to the Lions, who finished like a tank squadron over the top of the weary Canes.”

Sanzaar CEO Andy Marinos said the selection criteria for all match official appointmen­ts for the last two years follow a clear tournament policy – as agreed by the executive committee and the tournament’s stakeholde­rs – that such appointmen­ts be merit-based.

“This policy is written into the tournament protocols and appointmen­ts are made according to this policy on a weekly basis and is also the policy used for the finals last year as well as this year.”

Lions coach Johan Ackermann said they saw the impact of a yellow card against the Sharks during the quarterfin­als and it’s “already difficult playing against a quality side”.

“When you give away a card it’s tough and the Hurricanes experience­d that, but it was created through pressure,” he said.

“The good thing is that the players used the opportunit­y. The reality is that it won’t get any easier and you still have to work hard.”

Ackermann said a card didn’t necessaril­y mean points get handed out on a silver platter.

“The card made a difference but the players’ calmness, decision-making and intensity were great. The guys did small things much better in that second half.”

Also see Page 34

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Source: sanzarrugb­y.com Pictures: Gallo/Getty Images, Backpagepi­x
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