Tom Foley, the television match official for the Rugby World Cup final, said he and his family received death threats in the wake of South Africa’s victory over New Zealand with abusers even emailing the school of his young children.
The Premiership referee becomes the second official in a month, after Wayne Barnes, to open up about severe abuse aimed at either themselves or loved ones following rugby’s showpiece event in Paris.
Earlier this month, Telegraph Sport exclusively revealed that approximately 200 incidents of social-media abuse across seven different countries were identified during the recent World Cup in France, with World Rugby set to become the first sports governing body to take action against those responsible – with prosecutions possible.
On the Two Locks and a Cox podcast, however, Foley added that Signify Group, a data science and artificial intelligence company working alongside rugby’s governing body, had identified 2,000 public posts – not including private messages –from 1,600 different individuals that met the threshold for prosecution if they had been sent from the United Kingdom.
“They were direct threats,” Foley said. “Against you, your family and kids. Things like: ‘I hope your family die in a dreadful car accident. I’m going to hunt you down and slit your throat.’