These should be made public.
To see a team in effect refereed in advance and penalised on suspicion of an infringement is distressing and infuriating for fans of the game.
These ref 'tip sheets' we hear about amount to another set of rules which no-one else can see.
They equate to a tendency argument - Player X has done this twice so he'll probably do it again - and such arguments are rightly excluded in any fair tribunal other than in exceptional circumstances.
The tip sheets should be about situations, not about individual players or specific teams.
If they are not then they are inherently unfair.
If they are then prove it by making them public.
To see a team in effect refereed in advance and penalised on suspicion of an infringement is distressing and infuriating for fans of the game.
These ref 'tip sheets' we hear about amount to another set of rules which no-one else can see.
They equate to a tendency argument - Player X has done this twice so he'll probably do it again - and such arguments are rightly excluded in any fair tribunal other than in exceptional circumstances.
The tip sheets should be about situations, not about individual players or specific teams.
If they are not then they are inherently unfair.
If they are then prove it by making them public.