I agree with this out of simplicity sake. Though I guess one can argue technically the Red team was the last team going forward, I suppose.Gut feeling.
I agree with this out of simplicity sake. Though I guess one can argue technically the Red team was the last team going forward, I suppose.Gut feeling.

If there is no offence refer to Law 19:The law says team going forward, not team in possession.
Which would be the kicking the team (in scenario 1).If there is no offence refer to Law 19:
Stoppage due to injury. In the scrum zone at the point where the ball was last played. The team last in possession
If there is no offence refer to Law 19:
Stoppage due to injury. In the scrum zone at the point where the ball was last played. The team last in possession
Last in possession would be the kicking team
(My bold)I like this answer simply because it's consistent to both sides in a situation where I personally felt their was equal blame. I also would've accepted if the ref gave out YC to both players. But I did not see justification (at least for scenario 1) to only YC one side in the incident.
(My bold)
So: no act of foul play, no player at fault,, and you're OK with two YCs being issued.
Pretend I'm your Coach. Debrief me on that thought process.

I do like the term "rugby incident" and don't think I've heard it before this thread. In fact, I'd bet most of the refs in my local society probably never heard / used the term either lol. But it helps fill a void for what otherwise would appear to be an indeterminate situation.I guess it sepends on your definition of "accept". You have to accept the referee's call, on one level. After all "sole judge and all that jazz".
However, if doing my club feedback to the referee's' department on a referee, whilst I would "accept" a referee's call on the level abpve, I would be very "unaccepting" of it but keeping it to myself until I put togethermy club feedback form. Putting the question: "Why was a "rugby incident" penalised?" I think if I were his advisor / assessor I'd be asking him the "talk me through the decision making process".
aka "shit happens"I do like the term "rugby incident" ... it helps fill a void for what otherwise would appear to be an indeterminate situation.
Perfectly happy with "rugby incident" but you originally said, changed after my post #12, one player was receiving the ball and the other was chasing hence my reference to charging and yellow card.
So if I understand this correctly, you are now saying both players are running towards each other?
And neither has any concern for their own safety?
The "keepers of the game" should be stopping this reckless behaviour.
I can't justify any cards in what you describe.If you can find out why 1 YC makes sense in the same scenario, I'll be more prepared to answer you.
For context, my role in this scenario was captain not ref, which is why I'd be ok with that outcome. My reasoning as a player would be that the ref must have a valid / logical reason and they are applying that reason equally in a scenario of equal fault.
As a ref, I wouldn't have given a YC at all, but I could see other refs trying to justify it was reckless from both players nonetheless, for their reasoning of a YC to each.
Works for me.I can't justify any cards in what you describe.
Blow time off, get the two players looked at, and have a chat with the captains in the downtime to explain why there's no foul play.
But point 2 is wholly material and influences the decision, you saw it we didn't, you need to get off the fence and comment upon Blue's status, else you get fudged decisions.I only clarified what my original post was saying, but it's still the same situation which is as follows:
Thoughts?
- Red team kicks off.
- Ergo Blue team is the receiving team (this does not imply anything about whether the Blue receiver was moving or static).
- A Red player chases after the kick.
- Then that Red player jumps in the air forward simultaneously as the Blue player jumps in the air forward (from their perspectives). Neither of them posses the ball yet.
- They both attempt to catch the ball in the air.
- The Red and Blue player knock heads into each other accidentally and fall to the ground.
If they were not airborne but charged into each other off the ball and clashed heads would this be viewed in the same manner?I can't justify any cards in what you describe.
Blow time off, get the two players looked at, and have a chat with the captains in the downtime to explain why there's no foul play.

In my view, yes. Eg, ball on ground and 2 opponents simultaneously dive on itIf they were not airborne but charged into each other off the ball and clashed heads would this be viewed in the same manner?
Point 2 isn't material at all (at least not in the way you're reading into it). All I was saying is there is a kicking team and a receiving team, because this is a kickoff. No different than saying there was an attacking team and a defending team, when speaking in regards to a particular players movement lol. And in this case, I suppose you can interchange kicking team with attacking team, and receiving team with defending team, if that makes it clearer for you.But point 2 is wholly material and influences the decision, you saw it we didn't...
you need to get off the fence and comment upon Blue's status, else you get fudged decisions...
Players movement doesn’t define whether they are 'attacking' or 'defending' teams.No different than saying there was an attacking team and a defending team, when speaking in regards to a particular players movement lol.
That's my point.Players movement doesn’t define whether they are 'attacking' or 'defending' teams.