You need to help Greenberg stand strong right now

By Tim Gore / Expert

“Acts such as these must be obliterated from the game, and I’ll begin by obliterating you.”

These are legendary words that then judiciary chief Jim Comans uttered as he handed a record 15-month suspension to Western Suburbs second rower Bob Cooper in 1982. Cooper had run in to support his teammate Paul Merlo, who had just been hit by Steelers prop Greg Cook’s cocked elbow. The subsequent brawl at the Wollongong showground saw Cooper break Steelers’ winger Lee Pomfret’s cheekbone and nose as well as breaking Cook’s jaw.

Todd Greenberg’s current crackdown on infringements has its parallel in Comans efforts to clean up the game in the early eighties.

While the effort to remove endemic thuggery from the game may seem a world away from cracking down on the rampant stretching of the rules that has pervaded the game over the last decade, both situations have one thing in common: they require a determined leader to make it happen.

The majority of us are hoping that Todd Greenberg can be as effective in this current crackdown as Comans was in the early eighties.

Fights were common in rugby league in those days. The culture of cheap shots mixed with the ethos of sticking up for your mates saw lots of escalation.

Early on in my rugby league supporting days I was shocked by the brawl in the 1981 Newtown Jets-Manly Warringah Sea Eagles semi-final. In particular I found Steve Bowden smashing three colours of shite out of Mark Broadhurst just horrible. It was brutal and ugly and horribly human. It was stuff better kept to the sort of seedy pub car parks that any decent person avoided.

These men frightened and repulsed the 11-year-old me. It was little wonder that my main sports of choice were Aussie Rules to watch and soccer to play. What kid would want to play ‘thugby league’?

I’m certain that the powers that be at Phillip Street understood that my reaction – and that of my parents – was becoming a prevalent view. Rugby league was ugly. It had to be fixed.

When Jim Comans obliterated Bob Cooper he clearly signalled the intention of the game’s then powerbrokers that the ugly era was going to end.

One of the journalists in that room covering it was a young Phil ‘Buzz’ Rothfield. While the 15-month suspension was unprecedented and lots were openly opposed to it, Rothfield had the courage to support it. Perhaps he recognised that a change had to happen, that a firm stand had to be made to achieve it.

If you look in the background of the Bowden/Broadhurst incident you’ll see a very young and very concerned looking Phil Gould pulling players apart. Fighting and cheap shots were never his go. Foundation Raider Angel Marina always told me of Gould that he was a fair player and a good bloke.

Rothfield’s tweet – note also the response from the NRL Media account – shows that those who are opposing the right of the referees to enforce the rules of the game are the same people who once were the ones most likely to back necessary change.

Now it seems that Buzz and Gus may not be able to see woods for the trees.

The Comans crackdown did not end with the Cooper suspension. The Phillip Street hierarchy had to stay strong to ensure the culture changed as there were many who thought that it might be a passing phase.

When Les Boyd brutally smashed Darryl Brohman’s jaw in State of Origin One 1983 referee Barry Gomersall did not even send him off. The incident only garnered a penalty.

Further, he wasn’t even charged by the NSWRL. In fact he was selected to play for Australia the following day.

It took the Panther’s club secretary to cite him and bring Boyd before the judiciary. When Comans suspended Boyd for 12 months there were many who felt that the punishment was way too harsh. That included NSW coach Ted Glossop, who appeared on behalf of Boyd’s defence.

However, Comans stood strong. His actions were pivotal and central to the game of rugby league being cleaned up. That clean up ushered in the best period that rugby league has ever experienced and its popularity has duly sky rocketed.

There are many cancers that afflict our beloved game right now. One of them is that over time the rules of the game have been allowed to get pushed and bent to the point that negative, spoiling tactics have become the norm.

Ask most fans what they really hate in the game and they’ll tell you things like wrestling, holding down the tackled player, strategic peel-offs, hands in the play the ball, blocking kick chasers, incorrect play the balls and of course offside play.

All of these things have been used by coaches as strategies to slow their opponents’ attack and allow the defence to reset and prepare, and the referees have allowed it to happen.

The 400-game man Craig Bellamy has been at the forefront of many of these tactics. I don’t say that to malign him; his job is to get his team to win. He, like any good coach, will push and probe the edges of the rules to try and get an advantage. There has been no-one better at it. And if it works, then he’d be a fool not to do it – and it has worked.

However, many of the game’s fans have really tired of those negative tactics being the norm.

It is the job of the governing body to ensure the game’s health. The eight and then six-tackle rules were brought in partly to stop the St George Dragons total dominance of the game. Warren Ryan’s tactic of getting repeat sets by bombing into the in-goal and trapping the defenders was remedied by allowing a tap from the 22 if the ball was caught on the full.

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However, in the last decade the emphasis has clearly been on game flow. As I’ve shown in analysing how marquee games are officiated differently, game flow has been seen as far more important than actually officiating the rules correctly.

However, that has led to more and more boundaries being pushed back by the teams. As that has happened more and more fans have begun to rail against the officiating for allowing it to happen.

All that’s really necessary to drive out all the negative defensive tactics that slow the game down is to enforce the rules. And that is what Todd Greenberg is doing.

I have not been a fan of many things Greenberg has done, but I’m a huge fan of this crackdown – and, as far as I can tell, so are the great majority of the fans. Further, I loved that Greenberg has personally owned the initiative. The buck has stopped with him. That’s how a good leader operates.

Greenberg needs all of our vocal support right now.

Why? Because the likes of Rothfield and Andrew Johns are attacking the crackdown. And make no mistake: they may be out of step with the majority of fans on this, but they have huge influence.

Their stance is in spite of a Daily Telegraph poll showing that 93 per cent supported the crackdown. It is what the fans want. A lot of other influencers want the crackdown to continue too. Bill Harrigan, Gorden Tallis, Wayne Bennett and Paul Kent have all come out in support of it.

The reaction on social media – as well as at Shark Park – when Cam Smith was sin binned was one of disbelief and jubilation (Dane Eldridge’s take on the incident is a must-read). That it was done by the number one referee, Matt Cecchin, told me that the NRL meant business.

Like the Jim Comans crackdown, this emphasis on enforcing the rules must continue until sides adapt their style of play so the ascendancy switches back to attacking, positive football and away from negative, slow-down-the-game management.

However, if the crackdown is to have the desired lasting effect, it must be partnered with more sin-binnings.

We’ve seen that sides can still win while losing the penalty counts. However, a sin binning really hurts a side, and the real threat of a player spending ten on the pine is the sort of thing that causes real changes in game strategy.

(AAP Image/Craig Golding)

The good news is that the NRL is on the same page in this regard, as this statement from an NRL spokesman shows:

“The referees will always have the option of using the sin bin for repeated infringements. So far in 2018, of the 13 sins bins, three have been for repeated infringements.

“The referees will continue to be vigilant when it comes to penalising players for offences including not making a genuine attempt to play the ball, as well as for being offside. And in instances where there have been repeated infringements involving specific offences and under certain circumstances, referees can and will use the sin bin.”

I beseech Todd Greenberg to stay strong in this crackdown and to up the ante by directing his referees to use the bin even more to give it real grunt.

I implore fans to tweet their support to @Todd_Greenberg and @NRL so they know that you are behind them and they are emboldened to stay the course.

And while you are at it, tell @BuzzRothfield that you are behind Todd too.

But when you do, don’t forget that Buzz was once a man who backed Jim Comans at a vital point when change was needed.

The Crowd Says:

2018-04-07T04:28:23+00:00

Roscoe Wyer

Guest


Gus Gould commented how enjoyable last nights game between Souths & Dragons. Could it be that penalties and send offs are having good effect on how the game is being played. Play the ball and infringements close to your own goal line did not slow the play last night and the players did their bit not to incur these penalities. Penalties will always be part of the game but how the flow of the game goes is due to the approach of coaches & players. Keep it up.

2018-04-06T19:17:33+00:00

Mycall

Guest


Unfortunately after watching the first 3 games this week, it seems that the NRL has backed down. The teams were improved but I would say that in general, the refs were lenient on slowing the rucks again. Flopping is worse now than when Hindmarsh was at his peak. The 10m is hard to judge watching on TV, but the "line speed" of the defence is suspicious in occasion.

2018-04-06T18:59:28+00:00

Mycall

Guest


An incorrect play the ball is a scrum not a penalty!

2018-04-06T06:34:38+00:00

Kenw

Guest


I don't mind golden point getting scrapped because I don't mind draws (and also my team is historically terrible at GP) but I actually hope we see more GP games decided by penalties. If teams are standing metres offside, as they often are in GP, then they absolutely deserve to lose the game by penalty. The only problem with the Tigers v Broncos game was that the infringement was arguably not worth a penalty at all.

2018-04-06T02:52:22+00:00

JVGO

Guest


Absolutely zero sign of Todd's much vaunted crackdown last night. Just a normal game of football from two very ordinary sides.

2018-04-06T02:13:06+00:00

Griffo

Guest


TFH?

AUTHOR

2018-04-06T00:20:17+00:00

Tim Gore

Expert


That's beter mate. we don't take kindly to book smarts in these parts

AUTHOR

2018-04-06T00:06:13+00:00

Tim Gore

Expert


Dunderheads... Cliff have you been living in Canada? That is a very polite term for how many of us feel about 'RA'

2018-04-05T13:20:56+00:00

Sam

Guest


You forgot to mention Dermott Brereton and David Rhys-Jones. Brereton was always happy to get involved in a bit of biff. He chopped a massive couple of whacks against Geelong in The 1989 Grandpa's Final.

2018-04-05T10:40:45+00:00

Cliff (Bishkek)

Guest


Hi Tim, I live overseas for most of the year and do not get to see too much Rugby Union or Rugby League. But what I watched last year when home disgusted me. The flagrant breaking of the rules in both codes is a joke and flies in the face of fair play. Rugby - No. 9 places ball into the behind the front rowers feet. Never thought that I would see that in Rugby. League - Play the Ball, Holding Down, Offside, Wrestling - all illegal - and scrums are ridiculous. It has really turned me off interest in both codes - although with Rugby - the RA (formerly ARU) are a bunch of dunderheads

2018-04-05T10:18:40+00:00

Cadfael

Roar Guru


It's great that the referees are now refereeing games and not managing them for tv. I would like to see teams penalised with a sin bin for continual offside on the try line. What is a shame is that we have had four rounds and the penalties are still flowing. Are the plkayers actually that dumb or ore coaches trying to play chicken with the refs.

2018-04-05T09:18:37+00:00

JVGO

Guest


It stands for 'you will be moderated and banned from this site any moment for questioning the group think on this site'.

2018-04-05T08:56:26+00:00

Kurt S

Roar Pro


The thuggery morphed into other things. Billy Slater in his earlier days was a classic example. Salter was brilliant in his ability to lead with his knees at the most opportune time.

2018-04-05T08:11:42+00:00

Pomoz

Roar Rookie


Osmosis doesn't referee anymore. He hung up the whistle and now works in a desalination plant.

2018-04-05T07:54:25+00:00

Bargeall

Guest


This blitz on penalties near the line is meaningless without the sin bin threat as well (as exercised often in RU). However RL thrives on close games (eg Bulldogs v Bunnies where the aim seemed to be to keep it a one score game)and a sinbinning may cause a lopsided result to become more lopsided. Now for more penalties in the middle of the field.

2018-04-05T07:48:22+00:00

Big Daddy

Guest


It would be interesting to see the number of penalties called by the pocket ref as against the main ref. Some of these junior refs are out to impress and will call somethings the main ref wouldn't. I bet there would be less with one.

2018-04-05T06:53:49+00:00

Big Daddy

Guest


Lazy $50 on "roar" at 10s

2018-04-05T06:46:28+00:00

Griffo

Guest


I think the first couple of times that would be enough. If the referee tells them to go back and play it on the mark it negates any attacking advantage, putting the team in possession in a less preferable position than they would have been had they played the ball properly to begin with.

2018-04-05T06:32:35+00:00

Griffo

Guest


Apologies Tim. I'll remember to exercise my linguistic flexiloquence in more appropriate settings in the future. Buzz sucks!

2018-04-05T06:26:16+00:00

Griffo

Guest


It wasn't that high scoring was it? 4-0 I thought it was. They then played a Grand Final 3 weeks later that was quite high scoring.

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