Cowboy coach Henry won't face NRL sanction

By Steve Jancetic / Wire

The referees at the centre of the seventh tackle try drama face the finals axe but outgoing North Queensland coach Neil Henry is likely to be spared any punishment for his claims of a NRL conspiracy against non-Sydney teams.

As the league went into damage control on Sunday over the referee howler which turfed the Cowboys out of the finals, NRL head of football Todd Greenberg – who was at the post-match media conference – had no issue with Henry’s emotional outburst.

“He spoke from the heart and I have great empathy for clubs that go through difficult periods for tough decisions,” Greenberg told Triple M’s NRL coverage.

“I don’t think he overstepped the mark there.

“What he did was show the raw emotion of what it’s like when you lose a football game in difficult circumstances.”

That explanation is hardly likely to go down well out Manly way after Sea Eagles coach Geoff Toovey copped a $10,000 fine for showing too much emotion in a tirade against referees last month.

Given the circumstances on Saturday night, however – with NRL boss Dave Smith admitting to Henry that the incident was an embarrassment – it would not be a good look for the game to then go and sanction Henry.

Greenberg said the NRL could do little more than put its hands up to the mistake.

“In simple terms, this was just a bad mistake, human error,” Greenberg said.

“It shouldn’t happen, it can’t happen particularity on big stages like finals and unfortunately it did.

“We have to make sure we’ve got enough systems and processes in order for these things not to happen.

“This is what sport is sometimes about. It doesn’t make it good; it doesn’t make it right.”

Speaking post-match, Cowboys skipper Johnathan Thurston intimated that a botched tackle count was an accident waiting to happen.

“There was times during the game where I’d be looking at the ref seeing what tackle it is, and they’re not even giving us the tackle,” Thurston said.

“You’re asking the referees on the field what tackle is it.

“I shouldn’t have to ask them what tackle – they should be telling us, and they’re not even telling us when they’re playing the ball.”

While Matt Cecchin – the whistleblower responsible for the erroneous count that ended with Beau Ryan scoring on the seventh tackle – and Henry Perenara are unlikely to be seen again during the finals series, there appears little compensation for a Cowboys club dudded by referees two years straight in the finals.

The ramifications go further, with Greenberg saying referees could be made to front the media in the future to explain their decisions.

“I’m not against that on certain occasions,” Greenberg said.

“People have the right to see players when they’ve had poor performances and they have to step up and just sometimes, I’m not saying regularly, where a referee does want to potentially portray his point of view, then we may look at it.”

The Crowd Says:

2013-09-16T06:31:20+00:00

oikee

Guest


Lunatics in charge of the asylum. The NRL are on a tightrope , one or two clubs dessert this code its all over. More clubs are joining the hemorrhaging list. They can fine the cows all they want, maybe the cows just wont pay.

2013-09-15T23:34:35+00:00

Pot Stirrer

Guest


TNRL prob cant do anything to Henry becuase he was sacked. However if i was a CEO, that immature response from henry woud be enough for me not to want to hire him. You would expect a Leader of men to be more intelligent than that,

2013-09-15T23:19:30+00:00

Short Hand

Guest


Why Not..his outburst was worse as he implied the NRL rigs games. Betting agencies might do it but he cant say that or imply it. Where does the real conspiracy theories lie and who with now.

2013-09-15T22:05:22+00:00

Lowdown

Guest


Well we can safely say now that the myth that was Todd Greenberg is completely exposed as a sham. As his world is collapsing around him, the brainiacs solution is to haul refs before the media to explain their mistakes. Why stop there Todd? Why not give the losing coach a bat, and let the public flogging commence. You could sell the tv rights for that I reckon. May also boost your pathetic crowds. Now, I feel bad for Neil Henry. The guy has obviously fallen from the bad luck tree and hit every branch - but he needs to cop a fine. For Greenberg to say he doesn't because 'he spoke from the heart' and 'raw emotion' is ridiculous. That's how messrs Bellamy, Stuart, Toovey etc landed in their troubles to begin with. Henry had every right to be upset - but to bring the comp (further) into disrepute needs to be fiercely protected. You can't go around inferring refs are making decisions to get a pre-arranged outcome. Greenberg is a fool for accepting this. He won't be able to fine coaches ever again after this weekend if Henry is not reprimanded to some degree. The myth that is Greenberg is long, long gone.

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