New Zealand Rugby needs to take the utmost care to reduce head injuries in the game, and this season it is clearly doing so. The yellow cards handed out in the opening weekend of Super Rugby this season suggests referees have been told to show no leniency. But the card and penalty try awarded against a Chiefs player in their match with the Crusaders on Saturday night was surely taking things too far.
As the video on our website clearly shows, the Chiefs player was tackling an opponent who was attempting to score a try in the corner. As try-scorers are trained to do, the player dropped his head and shoulders low in his drive for the line.
The tackler succeeded in bundling him into touch but inevitably the tackler's arm came into contact with the opponent's head. Not deliberately, not swinging dangerously. The tackler's arms were around the opponent's shoulders and came into contact with his head as hetried to get down to the tryline.
The referee asked to see a video replay and after conferring with the television match official, they agreed it warranted a yellow card and a penalty try, since the try would have been scored had the tackler released his arms as soon as they made contact with the head. It is hard to see how the tackler could have done this in the split second it all happened.
Rugby must be one of the most difficult sports to referee. It has more rules than the average spectator knows or understands and contentious things happen at high speed. A referee has to make instant decisions and often these cannot be easy.