The Scotsman

Rugby chiefs considerin­g 20-minute red card law

- By GRAHAM BEAN

World Rugby will consider introducin­g the 20-minute red card as a global law trial despite concerns that it could diminish the deterrent effect.

The law, which is being trialled in Super Rugby and was also implemente­d in the Guinness Pro14 Rainbow Cup last season, means the dismissed player can be tactically replaced by a substitute after 20 minutes.

England lock Charlie Ewels was sent off after 82 seconds against Ireland in the Guinness Six Nations last month, with many observers feeling the dismissal ruined the game as a contest.

World Rugby, however, is determined to keep lowering tackle heights and the Super Rugby trial so far has proved inconclusi­ve.

Glasgow Warriors and Edinburgh had a taste of the 20-minute red card during last season’s Rainbow Cup match at Scotstoun when each side had a player sent off. Edinburgh’s Mark Bennett and Glasgow’s Oli Kebble were dismissed but each was replaced 20 minutes later.

The 20-minute red card was one of three law variations trialled in the Rainbow Cup, along with the captain’s challenge and goal-line drop-outs. The latter has now been brought in but the captain’s challenge was dropped.

Regarding the 20-minute red card, World Rugby chief executive Alan Gilpin told the Daily Telegraph: “That’s been discussed before and will be discussed again.

“It would be great if more competitio­ns, even in a closed trial, would use it because that would give us more of an overview of the effect it would have.

“There is more work to do to analyse that and the concern is, if a team goes back to 15 players, is that enough of a deterrent to drive that behavioura­l change?

“We would like to see it trialled more widely before drawing any conclusion­s.”

The 20-minute red card is already available as a closed trial but cannot be considered for global adoption before the next women’s (later this year) and men’s (2023) World Cups.

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