This does not look good, Todd

By AJ Mithen / Expert

One of my least favourite sayings is ‘perception is reality’.

It’s attributed to Lee Atwater, a former Republican party strategist in the USA, who based his campaign work around making people believe things that may not have been entirely true, but were useful to his candidate.

These days, sports journos throw the phrase around all the time to justify their wilder opinions or confirm their own biases (it’s particularly popular in AFL circles).

I don’t like it, but the words keep coming around to me when I hear stories about the state of the NRL refereeing department.

Before we get too deep though, let’s take a step back.

The sequence of events at Shark Park last Friday night leading to Sione Katoa’s 58th-minute try were rare. It was a complete breakdown in the match officials’ communication, decision making and on-field leadership.

I can’t remember ever seeing anything like it and odds are that it will be a long time before we see the likes of it again.

Contrary to popular perception, the fact that it was so influential in the outcome of the game was also rare.

What was most concerning was that no one in the process took ownership, from when Rick MacFarlane put his flag up then whipped it straight down, to when Gerard Sutton put the whistle to his lips then took it out, to when Luke Patten hit the green button.

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There were at least three points where the correct decision could have been made if someone just took ownership. But from the moment the try was awarded, the NRL’s handling of this issue has been appalling.

Todd Greenberg came out Monday with chest puffed to declare: “You can take it as read that tomorrow’s appointments will reflect some of that disappointment. There has to be accountability, that’s across the board, including me. You can expect there will be accountability taken tomorrow.”

Fans are screaming out for strong, decisive leadership from the NRL and when the CEO comes out swinging, it’s expected the actions will match the rhetoric.

Recriminations landed on Tuesday: pocket referee Gavin Reynolds was cut for calling an incorrect forward pass which cost the Raiders a try. MacFarlane was cut for raising his flag when he shouldn’t have.

Funnily enough, nothing has been said of MacFarlane’s correct ruling on that forward pass.

Patten, who awarded the try against all reason, stays in the Bunker, demoted to a ‘lesser role’, whatever that means.

Sutton gets away pretty much clean, staying in first grade (more on that later). Remember, it was Sutton who put the whistle to his lips before abdicating responsibility to the Bunker.

You could read it all over his face when it became apparent there was going to be a try awarded – he knew he’d stuffed up.

But Greenberg waved through these appointments then sent out his head of football, Brian Canavan, to face the music. That’s not a good look. That’s not the leadership you’d expect from a CEO who less than 12 hours prior was talking tough.

Compounding all of this was the NRL’s own announcement that while Sutton was still doing first grade, he’d been ‘demoted’ to the Titans vs Warriors game – clumsy wording at best, a staggering display of disrespect at worst.

I’m not big on demotions and public dressing downs of referees. If I’m a referee, I could cop some real talk behind closed doors, but I’d want to know my boss will defend me in public from all the noise and tell my critics to do one when they’re screaming about how everything is my fault.

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I can cop that referees make mistakes – they get vastly more decisions right than wrong. To be completely honest, I’d prefer Macfarlane and Reynolds remain in first grade, to shake off one bad moment but stay on the horse.

Instead, Tony Archer and co. appear to be more than happy to publicly execute referees for errors, highlight demotions and generally give credence to all the whackjob theories out there about the whistleblowers.

I can’t remember the last public display of support from NRL headquarters on behalf of their match officials.

Why doesn’t anyone from head office come out strongly when referees are under attack? Who’s looking out for their wellbeing?

Greenberg has already hung the referees out to dry this year when he publicly rebuked them in announcing the NRL’s predictable backflip on their ‘annual rules crackdown’.

Ref bashing is the worst part of rugby league. It’s cheap, it’s a default to deflect from someone’s own shortcomings and, perhaps most sadly of all, it’s ingrained in the culture of the game – a stain that will never come out.

So it’s incredibly disheartening to see head office jump at the chance to sink the boot in as well.

In the wash up after the Friday night debacle, people jokingly predicted that Sutton would keep his job and everyone else would get the boot. The fact that this is essentially what’s happened does not help the NRL’s case against accusations of nepotism and reports of rock-bottom morale among the refereeing fraternity.

Many questions spring to mind: why didn’t Greenberg override this? Are we that light on for referees? Is it just that Tony Archer delivers an incredibly persuasive powerpoint presentation?

Are all the stories we read about doom and gloom in the ranks actually true?

Most importantly, how does the referee’s boss seem to have a magical hold over the CEO of a billion-dollar organisation?

It really does feed the perception that Tony Archer and Bernard Sutton are invincible and that, for all his tough talk, Todd Greenberg is a meek leader who’s getting walked all over.

Is that the reality?

The Crowd Says:

2018-07-26T08:46:43+00:00

Muzz

Guest


Pattens recycle bin is always full of brown paper bags.

2018-07-26T07:19:20+00:00

Adz Sportz

Roar Guru


I think the 2 refs and the bunker system is the right system. The problem is too much noise and when it comes to the bunker, its human error that's the problem

2018-07-26T03:31:51+00:00

Tim Gore

Expert


Agreed.

2018-07-26T01:54:19+00:00

John

Guest


Throw enough crap against the wall eventually something sticks.

AUTHOR

2018-07-26T01:42:28+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


Cos 'try' is too hard to read? Heyoooooooo!

2018-07-26T00:52:57+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


That’s probably a good argument for coaches and ex-refs being consultants but as Don has said maybe it’s time the game moved away from putting these guys in charge. Great article AJ. Really positively provocative and has created sone good, reasonably sensible discussion...

2018-07-26T00:27:17+00:00

Furzey

Guest


Why is the button green?

AUTHOR

2018-07-25T23:05:27+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


I saw something a while back that showed Maguire was teaching the refs the ways players were breaking the rules, things like decoy runners loitering back in the defensive line. It was really interesting. That's what I'd expect from him, I doubt Madge 'coached' the refs in the same sense as he did for the Bunnies.

AUTHOR

2018-07-25T22:52:23+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


Funny thing, isn't it Baz. if a Raider made a tackle on Katoa it's a better than even chance the whistle would have gone for a knock on.

2018-07-25T22:12:12+00:00

Cedric

Guest


are there more bad calls? Yes I think so but in saying that I wouldn't call them bad calls, it's just that the flat pass is happening sooo much more now. Teams know to get the edge it's sometimes much easier to give that late ball flat, well that's always been the case, but in the modern game you have to try every edge. Hence the flat pass that so many times is forward and it is hard to blame the ref in a lot of these situations, he can't be everywhere, although the linesman should pick it up unless the winger or other is obstructing his view, but they don't pick them up. Therefore the obvious way to eliminate the forward pass is with tech, it's that simple, I know we hate using tech but it has come to the point where sometimes you wonder why you just wasted watching 77mins of footy for a team to win on a forward pass ( Warriors/Sharks ), or the Raiders game. The howlers, that's a different story altogether, I'm not sure why they happen but even after the ref and the crowd have watched them replay on the big screen they quite often stay with their totally wrong decision.

2018-07-25T11:21:30+00:00

Ian

Guest


That's the one that beats me. Did not the referee or the bunker have any curiosity to ask why the Raiders suddenly stopped, and no doubt, told the ref the touchie had put his flag up? The not seeing the flag excuse is BS in my book. The attempt to justify the unjustifiable is what should see the Suttons stood down

2018-07-25T09:56:30+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I disagree. The touchie put his flag up and then down immediately. Apparently he also said “knock on, no check it” or something similar. That’s so far out of left field I can’t blame the referee for being surprised and not knowing immediately how to respond. “The defenders waited for the whistle” - every kid that’s ever played footy gets taught to play to the whistle, not wait for it. I can understand the players reaction but is it really good enough for professional footy players to stop and wait for the whistle? Saying it’s all one person’s fault is almost as daft as saying it’s no one’s.

2018-07-25T09:49:47+00:00

Obi

Guest


Spruce the NRL called the Warriors v Titans a "low level" game. How much more proof than straight from the horses A.se do you want that some clubs are more equal than others

2018-07-25T08:41:20+00:00

Cadfael

Roar Guru


A good media adviser and a boss who doesn't throw his refs under a bus.

2018-07-25T08:39:51+00:00

Cadfael

Roar Guru


That there isn't the talent in the lower ranks comes back to the two referee system. The season before the two refs a game came in, the referees boss said there wasn't the talent to have two referees. He wanted it to stay at one referee. Has he been proved right? The othert side is the penalties (?). The demotion only meant they did a lesser game in the NRL. In years gone by, a demotion was just that. Drop to NSW Cup or reserve grade when that was in. Referees can't be dropped because they don't have the numbers.

2018-07-25T07:58:55+00:00

Cadfael

Roar Guru


The touchie put his flag up. Referees stop play to form a scrum or handover on the last. They do not play on. Players know this so the defenders waited for the whistle, which didn't come. The fault lies solely with the referee. He was the one who incurred no penalty at all.

2018-07-25T07:30:50+00:00

no one in particular

Roar Guru


nah, the Wally Lewis Medal is

2018-07-25T06:56:50+00:00

Rob

Guest


The touchy, ref and players made a boo boo. These things happen. The Bunker for me is embarrassing. They had the time to see what happened but took zero responsibility to help the officials, players and ultimately the game out by using some common sense. It extends to blant forward passes being ignored and the bunker not stepping in and carrying out their primary role of preventing howlers when possible. The reasoning given by the NRL is the cherry on top of the embarrassing cake. It’s been happening on a weekly basis unfortunately. Let the refs make the calls, let the touchy do his job. If they make a boo boo accept it happens. Simplify the rules and don’t try to make them open to interpretation. Coaches should be telling players to shut up and play the game not milk every opportunity.

2018-07-25T06:11:04+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Absolutely agree Ryan. Mistakes will always happen. Howlers will always happen. It’s the games response that’s most important and also signals its maturity and its intent and the NRL is woefully lacking here...

2018-07-25T05:57:00+00:00

Neil

Guest


This sets a bad precedent for all sports at all levels. Professional sport is the problem not referees.

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