No bounce plus no separation equals a TRY

I think Jorge scored a fair try.

Reasoning is he had control of the ball to start with and was in the process of losing control but had not lost control yet. At what point does one lose control is the question?

For those saying no try what would have been the ruling? No try knock on (even though there was no knock on before hitting the ground)?

If the had been an offload he still would have had enough control to get the ball away just not full control to hit the recipient on the chest.

Where the application of the rule went wrong was when players were regathering kicks and not getting full control before grounding.
 
Why do they look at incidents in slow motion?
All replays should be in real speed. It's how we all watch things. If it looks like a try in real speed it is a try.
When you slow it down frame by frame there is almost always separation as a player touches the ball down.
In real time this looked like a try. In slow-mo it doesn't. But the on-field ref ruled a try which, at normal speed, it was.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Latest posts

2025 Ladder

Team P W D L PD Pts
1 Bulldogs 13 11 0 2 98 28
2 Raiders 15 12 0 3 100 26
3 Warriors 13 10 0 3 35 24
4 Storm 12 8 0 4 171 22
5 Sharks 14 8 0 6 26 18
6 Dolphins 14 7 0 7 146 16
7 Broncos 13 6 0 7 44 16
8 Sea Eagles 14 6 0 8 22 16
9 Roosters 13 6 0 7 -18 16
10 Dragons 13 5 0 8 -59 16
11 Panthers 13 5 1 7 -9 15
12 Cowboys 13 5 1 7 -106 15
13 Tigers 14 5 0 9 -66 14
14 Rabbitohs 14 6 0 8 -88 14
15 Knights 14 5 0 9 -69 12
16 Eels 13 4 0 9 -105 12
17 Titans 13 4 0 9 -122 12
Back
Top Bottom