An unseen moment in the NRL bunker on Anzac Day shows officials aren't on the same page when it comes to interpreting the rules.
Speaking on NRL:360 on Tuesday night, co-host Paul Kent revealed referees' boss Tony Archer wasn't happy with Luke Patten, who was the main bunker official for the Storm's clash with the Warriors in Melbourne.
Patten green-lit a Cooper Cronk try in the second half after it was sent upstairs with a query of obstruction. A Melbourne decoy runner made contact with a defender as the Warriors were on their tryline, but the former Bulldog ruled the defender who was impeded would not have been able to get across and make a play at Cronk before he crossed the line, even if he wasn't bumped into.
As an ex-footballer, he used common sense and personal discretion to make a call rather than go by the strict black-and-white interpretation of the rules that would have seen the try disallowed.
Technically, the decoy runner, who ran a line from the outside in, hit "the outside shoulder of an inside defender" according to Ben Ikin, and therefore the try should not have stood.