The Press

Shorter red card on the cards

- Paul Cully

Sanzaar’s drive to see the 20-minute red card introduced across the internatio­nal game has made progress, although there are still hurdles to be cleared.

Sanzaar chief executive Brendan Morris attended the recent World Rugby “Shape of the Game” forum in London, and told Stuff that the proposal had been recommende­d for a vote at a World Rugby council meeting in May.

If successful, and the council vote needs to be a 75% majority, the proposal would be advanced to a global trial, which is the first step to it becoming law.

However, there is still some reticence from the Six Nations competitio­n, with two sources sayng France had reservatio­ns. The ongoing concussion class action in England is also another factor, but Sanzaar is highly motivated to push the change.

“The [Shape of the Game] workshop made some recommenda­tions, one of which was that the 20-minute red card would go to a global trial,” Morris said.

“In the short term, the Six Nations bloc came back to us and said, ‘well, we’d prefer to go to a closed trial and trial it and then come back and have another look’.

“But where we ended up is that the recommenda­tion through to World Rugby’s council meeting on May 9 is that we’re looking to go to a global trial. For that to be accepted, you’ve got to get a 75% majority vote of the voting members of council.”

The 20-minute red card has been used in a closed trial in Super Rugby since 2020, and introduced into the Rugby Championsh­ip in 2021. It wasn’t used last year so as to make it consistent with the rules that teams would encounter at the Rugby World Cup.

Cognisant of the player welfare implicatio­ns, Morris said if the 20-minute proposal made it into law it could be accompanie­d by a tougher off-field sanctionin­g regime.

In practical terms, it could mean players such as Jordie Barrett, who was shown a red card against the Reds, still being allowed to return to the field of play after 20 minutes, but copping a longer ban than the one handed down to him last week.

Morris said southern hemisphere fans had told Sanzaar loud and clear that they opposed 80-minute red cards, especially as a number of them were due to technique and timing issues in the tackle, rather than dirty play.

“Look, it’s no secret that we’ve been driving this pretty hard,” Morris said. “... The game really needs a reset and there’s a broad acknowledg­ment around that.

“The biggest issue that we’ve got in the game at the moment is we’ve got to get the balance between safety and spectacle.

“Player welfare is still our No 1 priority. However, we’ve got to start looking at this game with a fan-obsessed lens.

“We’re in the entertainm­ent business and we’re not just competing against the NRL and AFL, we’re competing against Netflix and Taylor Swift, and the beach and the movies.

“We’ve got to be more open-minded about what do they [supporters] want from the game?

“And they’re telling us that 15 on 15 is really important for them.”

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