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IRB to take hard line on criticism of referees
MELBOURNE - The International Rugby Board (IRB) will take a hard line on players and coaches criticising officials during the World Cup later this year, the governing body's referees chief said yesterday.
IRB referees manager Paddy O'Brien said fines and suspensions would
be imposed if individuals openly criticised officials without going
through the proper channels.
"Coaches mouthing off and blaming referees doesn't do the game,
referees or coaches any good," O'Brien told reporters in
Sydney.
The Irishman confirmed written complaints backed by video
evidence would be given due consideration by the IRB in France, but
public post-match comments would be punished.
"The really good coaches, and the teams that seem to be at the
top of the world at the moment, are the ones that are very
proactive in submitting reports to me, accompanied by clips where
they think they've been hard done by.
O'Brien cited the example of Jamie Noon's disallowed try in
England's 41-20 defeat by New Zealand at Twickenham in November as
an example of the referees' body responding to poor decisions.
The tournament starts in France on September 9.
Nampa-Reuters
"Coaches mouthing off and blaming referees doesn't do the game,
referees or coaches any good," O'Brien told reporters in Sydney.The
Irishman confirmed written complaints backed by video evidence
would be given due consideration by the IRB in France, but public
post-match comments would be punished."The really good coaches, and
the teams that seem to be at the top of the world at the moment,
are the ones that are very proactive in submitting reports to me,
accompanied by clips where they think they've been hard done
by.O'Brien cited the example of Jamie Noon's disallowed try in
England's 41-20 defeat by New Zealand at Twickenham in November as
an example of the referees' body responding to poor decisions.The
tournament starts in France on September 9.Nampa-Reuters
