ChrisR
Player or Coach
I appreciate the purpose of Ian's Law 19 mods (see post #19). By referencing the ball relative to the plane of touch he reduces the complexity of the law to "If its in, it's in. If its out, it's out."
However, I have two issues with the approach.
1. The plane of touch is impossible to accurately determine from the perspective of a referee unless they were positioned very near touch. The typical grassroots TJ wouldn't be a reliable judge either. Even an AR could have difficulty and wouldn't get much help from the TMO as camera angles wouldn't be directly down the LoT.
2. This approach would negate the athleticism of a players who could keep the ball in play.
Therefore I offer my version of an alternate Law 19. Incomplete but addresses the issue at hand.
Law 19 Touch and Lineout
In: A player is ‘in’ if all contact with the ground is in the field of play.
Out: A player is ‘out’ if they have any contact with the ground outside of the field of play.
Player in the air. A player in the air who leaps from touch and lands wholly in the field of play is ‘in’. A player who leaps from the field of play is in until they make contact with the ground outside of the field of play.
Player fielding the ball. A ball that is played by a player who is in is deemed to have been played in the field of play. A ball that is played by a player who is out is deemed to have been played in touch.
Examples.
A player standing in the FoP attempts to catch the ball but fails and the ball goes into touch. The ball is in touch put there by that player.
A player leaping from touch to land wholly in the FoP plays the ball. At the point that he plays the ball it is in. If the ball subsequently goes into touch it has been put there by that player.
A player leaps from the FoP and, prior to landing in touch, plays the ball back into the FoP. The ball is not in touch.
A player leaps from the FoP and, prior to landing in touch, plays the ball into touch. The ball has been put into touch by that player.
A player in touch plays the ball then the ball is in touch put there by the previous player.
Summary. This is consistent with the general law of a ball being in touch if it strikes any object in touch, with the sole exemption of the corner flag. This eliminates a player in touch batting a ball in the FoP to keep it in play. It also doesn’t make the distinction between ball at rest or in motion.
There is no application of the ‘plane of touch’, only the ground.
However, I have two issues with the approach.
1. The plane of touch is impossible to accurately determine from the perspective of a referee unless they were positioned very near touch. The typical grassroots TJ wouldn't be a reliable judge either. Even an AR could have difficulty and wouldn't get much help from the TMO as camera angles wouldn't be directly down the LoT.
2. This approach would negate the athleticism of a players who could keep the ball in play.
Therefore I offer my version of an alternate Law 19. Incomplete but addresses the issue at hand.
Law 19 Touch and Lineout
In: A player is ‘in’ if all contact with the ground is in the field of play.
Out: A player is ‘out’ if they have any contact with the ground outside of the field of play.
Player in the air. A player in the air who leaps from touch and lands wholly in the field of play is ‘in’. A player who leaps from the field of play is in until they make contact with the ground outside of the field of play.
Player fielding the ball. A ball that is played by a player who is in is deemed to have been played in the field of play. A ball that is played by a player who is out is deemed to have been played in touch.
Examples.
A player standing in the FoP attempts to catch the ball but fails and the ball goes into touch. The ball is in touch put there by that player.
A player leaping from touch to land wholly in the FoP plays the ball. At the point that he plays the ball it is in. If the ball subsequently goes into touch it has been put there by that player.
A player leaps from the FoP and, prior to landing in touch, plays the ball back into the FoP. The ball is not in touch.
A player leaps from the FoP and, prior to landing in touch, plays the ball into touch. The ball has been put into touch by that player.
A player in touch plays the ball then the ball is in touch put there by the previous player.
Summary. This is consistent with the general law of a ball being in touch if it strikes any object in touch, with the sole exemption of the corner flag. This eliminates a player in touch batting a ball in the FoP to keep it in play. It also doesn’t make the distinction between ball at rest or in motion.
There is no application of the ‘plane of touch’, only the ground.