Australia coach Joe Schmidt’s claim that the decision at the end of the second Test against the British and Irish Lions contravened the sport’s player welfare drive has been rejected by the boss of World Rugby.
The officials decided not to overturn Hugo Keenan’s series-winning try after reviewing a clear-out in the build-up from flanker Jac Morgan as the Lions snatched a late victory a compelling contest at the MCG.
Wallabies coach Schmidt said it was a call that “didn’t live up to” World Rugby’s focus on player welfare.
“I don’t agree with that,” World Rugby chief executive Alan Gilpin told the Rugby Union Weekly podcast in Sydney.
“We’re trying to find that really tricky but massively important balance between a sport that is a brilliant physical contest and as safe as it can be in for the players. It’s a very tough balance.”
The incident occurred in the last passage of play in a pulsating contest in front of 90,000 fans at Melbourne’s fabled MCG.
As the Lions attacked near the Australia line, Wallaby flanker Carlo Tizzano tried to get over the ball at a ruck.
With Tizzano bent over – and his head well below his waist – in the classic ‘jackaling’, external position, Morgan drove into him to prevent him from stealing possession from the Lions.
Morgan appeared to make contact with the neck and shoulder area of Tizzano, who lurched backwards out of the breakdown, but with both players so low referee Andrea Piardi decided Morgan had made a legitimate attempt to ruck him off the ball.
After the ball was then worked out to the left for Keenan to score, the referee discussed the collision at the ruck with the television match official and decided to stick with his initial decision that it was not a penalty, and to award the try.
World Rugby chief Gilpin added: “I understand emotions are running high and I understand Joe’s looking at specific laws and playing that into the sort of officiating and welfare debate.
“But Joe knows well, and so do all the international coaches, that we are investing heavily [in player welfare], whether it’s instrumented mouthguards across the professional game, whether it’s all the investment we make in the science and research.
“One of the great wonders of rugby is the complexity of our laws and the interpretation of that. We know that creates controversy and sometimes frustration but it also gets everyone talking about rugby, and talking positively about rugby and what an amazing game it was.”