SMH By Adrian Proszenko
The NRL is trialling technology during the upcoming pre-season games that it hopes will finally end one of the biggest frustrations in the game; definitively determining whether a pass has been thrown forward.
Head office has engaged two separate firms about solutions to the age-old problem, an area of the game that remains contentious despite the increasing number of officials on the ground or in the bunker.
One of the firms is the London-based Sportable, which proposes to insert a microchip into the Steeden to determine whether the ball leaves a player’s hands forwards or backwards. Another firm, which wishes to remain anonymous for now, will use tracking technologies to make the call.
The NRL will use the upcoming NRL trial and NRLW premiership games to assess whether the technology works and is cost-effective. Officials at Rugby League Central believe the options are as close as the game has ever come to fixing the most contentious part of the game.
“We have been quietly working on different types of technology with a couple of companies for the past 12 months or so,” said the NRL’s head of football, Graham Annesley.
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The NRL is trialling technology during the upcoming pre-season games that it hopes will finally end one of the biggest frustrations in the game; definitively determining whether a pass has been thrown forward.
Head office has engaged two separate firms about solutions to the age-old problem, an area of the game that remains contentious despite the increasing number of officials on the ground or in the bunker.
One of the firms is the London-based Sportable, which proposes to insert a microchip into the Steeden to determine whether the ball leaves a player’s hands forwards or backwards. Another firm, which wishes to remain anonymous for now, will use tracking technologies to make the call.
The NRL will use the upcoming NRL trial and NRLW premiership games to assess whether the technology works and is cost-effective. Officials at Rugby League Central believe the options are as close as the game has ever come to fixing the most contentious part of the game.
“We have been quietly working on different types of technology with a couple of companies for the past 12 months or so,” said the NRL’s head of football, Graham Annesley.
Full story link:
The new technology that could end contentious forward pass calls
The forward pass remains the most contentious part of the game, but that could all change due to a revolutionary technology trial during NRL pre-season and NRLW premiership matches.