Thomas du Toit’s yellow card was spot on and there should be more of them

By Brett McKay / Expert

Referees handing out red and yellow cards aren’t ruining the game of the rugby; narrow-minded players making stupid decisions to earn the red and yellow cards are.

From an otherwise unremarkable game between the Waratahs and Sharks on Saturday, we have the curious case of a couple of cards issued by referee Nic Berry just after halftime.

The Waratahs won a lineout on their side of halfway, made a bit of ground from the resulting maul, before Jake Gordon took possession and kicked the ball upfield.

At the back of the maul, and with the ball now well away, Sharks prop Thomas du Toit still had hold of Jed Holloway’s jersey, who on realising the South African international was still attached, lashed out not toward the offending hand, but rather a long way further up the body, sending a flying forearm or elbow or both in the direction of du Toit’s right cheek-and-nose area.

Either stunned by the impact or straight-out playacting, du Toit slumped to the ground well after Holloway had made the successful, if moderately crude detachment.

The moment was picked up by the assistant referee and the TMO, who alerted Berry to the moment, and the appropriate process followed.

Holloway was shown a red card, despite Waratahs captain Michael Hooper’s rather misguided protest, with the ref quite clear in his explanation: “I know he’s held you back, OK, but you’ve taken it into your own hands. You’ve thrown an elbow and it’s connected with the head of a player. It’s a red card.”

The Foul Play Law is equally clear, stating: “A player must not physically or verbally abuse anyone. Physical abuse includes, but is not limited to… striking with any part of the arm.”

In their notice of a Foul Play Review hearing, SANZAAR paraphrased this specifically for the incident as “striking with the elbow”.

Holloway didn’t head to South Africa on Sunday with the Waratahs, and even with the inevitable and over-generous good Samaritan and early plea discounts, he was still suspended for three weeks on Monday night.

Waratahs player Jed Holloway (4) goes up for the ball (Photo by Speed Media/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

With the lock making his way from the ground, and while the boos rang out from local fans, with an evidently loose appreciation on the Laws of the Game, Berry turned his attention to du Toit:

“I’m going to deal with your actions as well, OK? You’ve held a player off the ball, so it’s going to be a yellow card against you.”

Generally speaking, there have been a couple of camps to the reaction to this bold decision.

The first camp is the “What? A yellow card for a jersey tug?” camp, whose added justification is “there’s be ten blokes a game carded, if that’s going to be the case.”

This camp sees the jersey tugging in compete isolation and can’t work out how it’s even a penalty. There are a number of laws around impeding players off the ball, or interfering with players not in possession that apply here, but that’s clearly neither here nor there for this camp.

The second camp is the “A jersey tug does not justify an elbow to the head” camp, who also struggle to see why du Toit was carded, as if he was a completely innocent bystander.

There’s also the “He deserved a yellow for the dive” camp, who also seem to believe Holloway might not have been pinged at all if du Toit didn’t fall to the ground. Which is amusing, if you consider just how many cameras are involved these days.

The final camp is the one I’ll firmly admit to being part of, and that’s the one that says du Toit absolutely deserved the yellow card for a cynical piece of play that, had it not happened, would not have resulted in Holloway lashing out as he did.

Holloway only copped his red card because of du Toit’s actions, and Nic Berry was bang on the mark for issuing the yellow as well.

But I’ll happily take this further.

The best way to get rid of what some see as questionable yellow cards for actions like du Toit’s in the long run is to issue more yellow cards for actions like du Toit’s in the short term.

Du Toit didn’t expect to get elbowed in the head, I’m sure, but he thought he could get away with tugging Holloway’s jersey because it’s rarely penalised.

But a jersey tug with the ball 20 metres away is like a team infringing again having already given up penalty advantage. It’s like taking a step forward in the defensive line when the referee is looking the other way, or the not-so-subtle glance over the shoulder and slight sideways step to impede an opposition player’s kick chase.

In isolation, they’re tiny things in the game that have little impact. But in the grander scheme, it’s exactly the kind of cynical play from (mostly) defensive sides that at time reaches plague proportions and is a large reason why referees cop as much criticism as they do for supposedly ruining the game when they do blow a penalty.

Berry should be applauded to sending du Toit to the naughty chair, and more’s the point, he and his colleagues should be encouraged to go harder on cynical infringements, especially early in games.

A yellow card for a ruck infringement on the defensive team’s try line in the fifth minute would immediately put both teams on notice for the rest of the game.

Referees going harder on cynical infringements would force teams into change, and ultimately allow the game to breathe, and become better to play and watch.

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But this is not a recent problem, obviously. It’s only got worse as the professional game has become more and more professional, and as players, coaches and teams strive for whatever edge they can.

And this is not a recent opinion either; I’ve long-held the thought the more yellow cards are a better solution than reducing penalty goal values, and first wrote about solving this issue with more yellow cards back in March 2012.

Thomas du Toit got his comeuppance on Saturday night in Sydney, but not from Jed Holloway.

And more players need to be penalised the same way.

The Crowd Says:

2019-05-01T08:28:14+00:00

elvis

Roar Rookie


There has always been play off the ball, I'd say it better now than it has ever been. And if a ref wants to deal with it, do it through the usual methods. Warning, Free kick, penalty, YC, RC. No need for new rules trying to figure out people's intentions. Are you the Peter who was active a lot in English Rugby ref forums?

2019-05-01T08:25:01+00:00

elvis

Roar Rookie


You can't even get agreement here on whether Du Toit broke the rules, let alone should have been sent off. How are refs supposed to divine if someone has evil in their heart when they did wrong? And how do you get consistency? I'm pretty forgiving and think the best of people, my reffing would be wildly dissimilar to someone who was a miserable git and hated people. One person's honest mistake is another's cynical foul....

2019-05-01T01:12:42+00:00

Machooka

Roar Guru


Thanks Brett... and apologies for being late to this one. Yep, and I do like your camp. In fact, I'm all for it! The penalties that were given were just and correct given the circumstances. In this case it was dumb and dumber. I'm tired of the continuous interference of players, around the ruck area, holding onto each other when not part of the contest. It's an area that needs tidying up. And, I'm sure the assistant referees could play a big part in this crackdown.

2019-05-01T00:14:22+00:00

Wal

Roar Guru


Exactly, the time from when he got hit to when he hits the ground is less than 2 seconds ON SLOW MO.

2019-05-01T00:11:19+00:00

Wal

Roar Guru


I am with you CR As I stated on another post, all of the replays are in slow mo, making it appear Du Toit held on for an age. Du Toit is still bound by another Waratah in the mall, are they holding him back? The very first frame of the video above shows, Holloway had lined up the strike before the halfbacks foot had even returned to the ground from his clearing kick. Meaning we are talking about keeping a player bound to a ruck for a fraction of a second, rucks require binding to both opposition and team mates and can't see the offence

2019-04-30T22:43:25+00:00

Connor33

Guest


Great read; brilliant argument. Hopefully the narrative builds into the WC.

2019-04-30T21:29:28+00:00

Carlos the Argie

Roar Guru


Has that ever happened before? Yappy, mouthy scrum halves bossing forwards? Can't seem to recall one instance when this hasn't happened.

2019-04-30T21:28:07+00:00

Carlos the Argie

Roar Guru


I disagree with this. Completely. Fear is part of the game. Every rugby player has to have some fear and the tools to control it and to dish it. But a huge hit, a big tackle, those are the legal tools. Everything else is just for thugs.

2019-04-30T11:29:59+00:00

The Ferret

Roar Rookie


In all fairness most league players are not smart enough to be as cynical in the way we are talking about with rugby.

2019-04-30T11:28:00+00:00

The Ferret

Roar Rookie


If that is the case than so be it. Not like it will help us win more games with the current mob out there wearing gold and the coaching we have. I remember when they took rucking out of the game... did not take long for players to stop. Also did not take players long to realize they could linger around on the wrong side of the ruck and give away 3 points instead of 5 either. How many times have you shook your head at a player who gets up after a blatant slowing down of a ruck with that dumb look on their face of “me sir? I had no idea I was on the wrong side.” You know as much as I know as much as the ref knows that it was no accident. Point is... players will adapt and so will the laws once it affects England and NZs ability to win games just like it has in the past.

2019-04-30T11:26:17+00:00

Gorgonite King

Roar Rookie


Cron probably just thought the Tahs are a sinking ship and wanted off

2019-04-30T10:43:19+00:00

jeznez

Roar Guru


no we have one more year of Gibson, although he'll need a new forwards coach. Then we get a new head coach. I can see Steve Tandy being a big chance of getting the role, former Ospreys coach then wound up without a job, worked for the Waratahs for free last year and has been given a paid role in charge of defence this year.

2019-04-30T10:05:17+00:00

James GC

Roar Rookie


Maybe they know MC will be free next year and ha e secured his services as they are no longer required at the wallabies so he can go back to where he came from thanks.

2019-04-30T09:41:28+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


Agreed. But to carry weight it needs to be formalized by World Rugby. Can’t have different refs seeing it differently. Another issue I have is players going down at slightest hint of illegal contact, soccer style to milk the penalty. Soccer at least has sanction for playing to the ref. Rugby might have to consider it too.

2019-04-30T09:00:15+00:00

Jacko

Guest


True.....They would be ON the pitch

2019-04-30T08:08:37+00:00

Nobrain

Roar Guru


We do not do that in Argentina, we respect the ref decisions. ????????????

2019-04-30T07:53:21+00:00

Double Agent

Guest


Also, once the ball is out the maul is over.

2019-04-30T07:50:27+00:00

Double Agent

Guest


Having a fistful of the jersey of a player running away is not my idea of being bound in a maul.

2019-04-30T07:46:57+00:00

Double Agent

Guest


The League refs had a crackdown on something or other at the beginning of the season and the commentators screamed and moaned. The same commentators who scream and moan when infringements are overlooked. Leaguies always find something terribly sinister about a penalty count that isn't identical for both teams. Unless it's 4-4 or 6-6 then the ref must have done something wrong!!

2019-04-30T07:35:22+00:00

Double Agent

Guest


Might have to update your glasses BennO. They're still doing that stuff.

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