Wednesday, 17 October 2007

Kaplan cops it

October 17th, 2007

Jonathan Kaplan missed out refereeing the World Cup third and fourth play-off because of his poor touch judge performance in New Zealand’s controversial quarter-final defeat against France.

IRB head of referees Paddy O’Brien has finally admitted English referee Waynes Barnes and match touch judges Kaplan and Tony Spreadbury made mistakes that were costly.

O’Brien did the review of the match performance and said their performance influenced why none of them were involved in the bronze play-off match or the final. Kaplan, who refereed England’s semi-final win against France, could in any event not be considered for the final because South Africa are involved. Barnes, an Englishman, would also not have been a contender because of his nationality.

An independent review, not sanctioned by the IRB, showed 13 calls going against New Zealand and three against France, which were wrong.

In the official review, headed up by O’Brien, the evidence was damning against the officials.

Despite this the IRB referees’ board still gave Barnes a pass mark.

O’Brien said a review of Englishman Barnes and touch judges Kaplan and Spreadbury, found a series of wrong calls against the All Blacks.

A successful penalty would have been enough to win the match for the All Blacks, but Barnes did not award one penalty against France in the second half.

“Wayne’s game’s been (reviewed) by all four selectors and myself, probably under more scrutiny than any other game due to the interest in it,” O’Brien told Radio Sport.

“There were errors made. There was a scrum turnover not given in the first half that should have been. There was clearly the forward pass that was missed by all three officials and, at the end of the day, with Wayne being the referee he must take responsibility for that.

“There were two calls, one with a hand in the ruck and one with offside at a ruck in the last 10 minutes, which the touch judge should have given him.

“We’ve certainly reviewed the touch judges’ performance and that’s been reflected in our appointments for the third-fourth playoff and the final. Both of those touch judges have missed out.”

O’Brien said he was not prepared to concede that Barnes, a 28-year-old former barrister who has been refereeing test matches for less than a year, was overawed by the quarter-final appointment.

“I think there were a lot of factors involved in New Zealand not winning that game and one of them was some issues with refereeing and touch judging - and we’ve always said that - but to blame him for the loss is completely wrong,” he said.

www.keo.co.za

Owen no longer has get-out clause, say Newcastle

Simon Williams
Wednesday October 17, 2007
The Guardian


Newcastle United's chairman, Chris Mort, last night said that Michael Owen does not have a £6m get-out-clause in his contract as reports suggested that the Manchester City manager, Sven-Goran Eriksson, was preparing an offer for the striker.

The England player's future at St James' Park has been questioned due to the fact that his advisors negotiated a clause which would have enabled him to leave for £12m at the end of his first season at St James's Park, and for £9m at the end of his second after he joined from Real Madrid for £17m in August 2005.

But Mort said: "There was a clause in Michael's contract which allowed him to leave for a certain fee during the last transfer window and the summer before that as well, but that sort of clause does not exist any longer. "

Manchester United's Ryan Giggs has signed a deal that extends his contract until the end of June 2009. The 33-year-old has played 727 matches for the club. Only Sir Bobby Charlton (759) has played more games for United.

"I am delighted to have signed for a further season. I am enjoying football more than ever and I hope to carry on playing football for Manchester United for as long as I can. I would like to thank Sir Alex Ferguson, the fans and everyone at the club for the great support I have received over the years."

Chelsea's midfielder Michael Ballack is still "a few weeks" away from returning to training, according to the German team doctor Hans-Wilhelm Muller-Wohlfahrt.

Ballack has been out of action since April with a persistent ankle problem but Muller-Wohlfahrt said: "In close agreement with the English doctors, I think he will be training again in a few weeks."

Pascal Chimbonda could sign a new contract at Tottenham Hotspur next week. "We are in talks over a new deal," Chimbonda's agent, Willie McKay, said. "I have spoken to [Tottenham's sporting director] Damien Comolli about an extension for Pascal. Talks are going well and we are waiting until after the next match to try and conclude things."

Mikel Arteta's agent is not surprised by reports that Real Madrid are interested in the Everton midfielder. The Spanish club, along with Chelsea and Real Zaragoza have been linked with a January move for the player. "No one from Real Madrid has come to us. But it is normal that a great club is interested in Arteta because he is doing very well," said Inaki Ibanez.

Portsmouth's £3m midfielder Papa Bouba Diop has put club before country by opting out of an international friendly against Guinea and a Senegal training camp to rest a damaged hamstring.

Ref selection panel stand behind Barnes

17/10/2007
NZPA
Referee Wayne Barnes made at least three serious errors that went against the All Blacks late in the World Cup quarterfinal against France, an International Rugby Board (IRB) panel has found.

France scored the winning try from a forward pass and committed at least two other two offences that could have been penalised, the IRB referees' selection panel found.

IRB referees' manager, New Zealander Paddy O'Brien, said the panel still gave Barnes a pass mark and reiterated he did not cost the All Blacks the game.

O'Brien said a review of Englishman Barnes and touch judges Jonathan Kaplan and Tony Spreadbury, found a series of wrong calls against the All Blacks.

A successful penalty would have been enough to win the match for the All Blacks, but Barnes did not award one penalty against France in the second half.

Barnes' has come under close scrutiny, particularly his performance late in the match in which the All Blacks -- desperate for points -- retained the ball for more than 25 consecutive phases.

An examination of that period by international media has shown repeated offences by the French which went unnoticed and unpunished by match officials.

O'Brien, a former New Zealand policeman and Test referee, has consistently supported Barnes, saying while he made mistakes he could not be held responsible for the All Blacks' defeat.

"Wayne's game's been (reviewed) by all four selectors and myself, probably under more scrutiny than any other game due to the interest in it," O'Brien said today.

"There were errors made. There was a scrum turnover not given in the first half that should have been.

"There was clearly the forward pass that was missed by all three officials and, at the end of the day, with Wayne being the referee he must take responsibility for that.

"There were two calls, one with a hand in the ruck and one with offside at a ruck in the last 10 minutes, which the touch judge should have given him.

"We've certainly reviewed the touch judges' performance and that's been reflected in our appointments for the third-fourth playoff and the final. Both of those touch judges have missed out."

O'Brien said he was not prepared to concede that Barnes, a 28-year-old former barrister who has been refereeing Test matches for less than a year, was overawed by the quarterfinal appointment.

"I think there were a lot of factors involved in New Zealand not winning that game and one of them was some issues with refereeing and touch judging -- and we've always said that -- but to blame him for the loss is completely wrong," he said.

O'Brien said Barnes would be considered for appointment to matches in New Zealand, though threats had been made against him by angry All Blacks fans.

"Wayne is going to be on the international scene for some time and he will definitely be in New Zealand within the next couple of years," he said.

"Wayne is a world-class referee and he will be appointed to any match that we think he can referee."

Tuesday, 16 October 2007

All three must quit

By JOHN MATHESON and DAVID LONG - Sunday News | Sunday, 14 October 2007

World Cup winner AJ Whetton has warned the NZRU to steer clear of Graham Henry's assistant coaches when it comes to naming the next All Blacks coach.

Whetton - a part of the victorious 1987 team - last night demanded Steve Hansen and Wayne Smith are tarred with the same brush of failure as head coach Henry.

"A World Cup is not about one individual or two or three players," Whetton said. "You're all in this together and that's paramount.

"There's been talk that if Graham stood down the two assistant coaches would be put forward (to coach the team next year).

"But they were all in this together so they should all take (the fall) together."

Henry remarkably has still not resigned despite leading the All Blacks to their worst-ever World Cup finish.

And the last coach to lead the team to a World Cup final continues to be dumbfounded by Henry's refusal to fall on his sword.

"I am surprised he hasn't resigned,'' said Mains who coached the All Blacks at the 1995 World Cup.

"Clearly his World Cup campaign was not successful.

"And given that he is on record as saying he wouldn't have changed anything about the campaign this time around, how can he expect anyone to want four more years of the same?

"All Blacks rugby can do without a repeat performance of what went on in Cardiff."

Henry yesterday told Sunday News he would not make any statements for another five or six weeks.

Mains said that wasn't good enough.

"My own view is that the sooner he resigns the better.

"Once he's gone rugby in this country can begin to heal and move forward in a positive direction."

Mains has been a long time critic of Henry's rotation and conditioning policy. And in his exclusive Sunday News column today he makes a plea for Robbie Deans to be installed as the next All Blacks coach.

Deans - whose coaching record is impressive enough - has another important credential. He was an All Black, wearing the famed jersey 19 times in the 80s.

"I can't help wonder if Graham Henry had actually worn the black jersey, would he have been so willing to mess around with the All Black ethos and traditions so much."

Henry could still keep job

Sunday News | Sunday, 14 October 2007

Graham Henry has been instructed by the NZRU not to resign as All Blacks coach as they attempt to buy time to save their preordained plans for the home assault on the World Cup in 2011.

It's an open secret the NZRU planned to give the head coaching job to Steve Hansen,  after the World Cup.

But those plans had been drawn up with a World Cup win in France in mind.

After last week's dismal loss to France in Cardiff, the NZRU's top brass chairman Jock Hobbs and CEO Chris Moller asked Henry not to resign.

It was in those discussions where it became apparent Henry was determined to stay in the job and right the wrongs of France in New Zealand in four years.

I understand Henry is still a favourite with "the suits" because of his pre-World Cup record and favourable work with sponsors.

But reappointing Henry would have consequences for All Blacks rugby.

It would see Robbie Deans, offered the Wallabies coaching job and if he took it on, the NZRU would have no one to blame but themselves.

Retaining Henry would be hard to sell to the New Zealand public.

On one hand they would have to convince the rugby nation to reinvest in Henry's failed policies while at the same time having to justify not selecting Deans.

It would verge on the criminal to snub Deans.

Unbelievably, NZRU staffers have been quoting website polls that have Henry leading Deans in the "preferred coach" category.

But two days after John Mitchell's side crashed out of the 2003 World Cup, TVNZ's Holmes Show ran a poll asking if Mitchell should be sacked. A resounding 82 percent said he should remain in the job.

There is a natural sympathy for the All Blacks from fans when they suffer disappointment.

And the NZRU is banking on that vibe to continue through to the release of an independent inquiry to be set up into what when wrong at the World Cup.

But the rugby nation already knows what went wrong. Henry had intervention on a mass scale his rotation and conditioning policies making sure of that but delivered the worst World Cup finish in history.

The inquiry is simply a delaying tactic nothing more, nothing less.

It's widely knows that CEO-in-waiting Steve "Teflon" Tew has a strained relationship with Deans. The pair worked together at the Crusaders and Deans' would challenge him regularly.

But who is given the All Blacks reins needs to be a rugby decision and not a political one. Deans is without a doubt the best man to be charged with winning the World Cup in 2011.

His coaching record speaks for itself four Super rugby titles. But it's intangibles like loyalty that should see him win the board's backing.

www.rugbyheaven.co.nz

The joke's on 'arrogant' ABs, says Davies

Sunday, 14 October 2007

Former Welsh and British Lions star Jonathan Davies says the All Blacks paid the price for their arrogance with an early exit from the rugby World Cup and that Wales do not need New Zealand coaches.

In his column in the Independent on Sunday, the former first five-eighths is highly critical of the All Blacks' and the team officials' attitude.

"There are two good jokes in circulation. Firstly, what do you call the seventh and eighth place in the 2007 World Cup? The answer: the Bledisloe Cup," he said.

"Joke No 2 -- where are the world's most under-achieving coaches? Answer: New Zealand. Where have the Welsh Rugby Union's top three officials gone looking for a new coach? Answer: New Zealand.

"... I suggest that now is hardly the best time to go worshipping at that particular shrine.

"What happened to New Zealand and Australia last weekend is still difficult to grasp, as was the arrogance they brought with them into the tournament. This applies to the All Blacks especially. They never used to be like that. Supremely confident, yes, but never arrogant.

"It applied to the coaching staff as well. They had the best 30 players in the world under their control and carefully regulated their preparations over the past year, at the expense of all other considerations. It is beyond belief that they got it so wrong."

Davies said coach Graham Henry's rotation policy didn't work and the reduced game time for players was a "big minus".

When it came to the crunch, they didn't have the game awareness or the mental toughness to impose their superiority and there were no excuses, he said.

"They had far more possession and territory than France but couldn't cope with the pressure. Much of what went wrong with both New Zealand and Australia can be traced back to their Super 14 competition, which has been held up over the past few years as the epitome of what rugby should be."

Davies said while the Super 14 was exciting to watch, it was far removed from the vital realities of what successful rugby was about.

He said "winning ugly" was a newish phrase in the game but every World Cup, bar the first one in 1987, was won ugly.

"The inaugural 1987 tournament was won pretty, and that was by New Zealand.

"That was, I believe, the finest rugby side ever to step on to a pitch. A team with Buck Shelford, Sean Fitzpatrick and Grant Fox, and they could win any way they liked. I was there with Wales and they stuck 50 points on us playing fancy stuff. But they were just as capable of playing tight and fierce. Whichever style they played, it was awesome.

"If you had said then that 20 years later they would still be in search of their second win, no one would have believed you. If you had forecast that in 2007 they would not make the semifinal, you would probably have been locked up." – NZPA

Poll's shock result: Henry should stay

Tuesday, 16 October 2007

Most rugby fans think Graham Henry should be retained as coach despite the All Blacks making an early exit from the World Cup, according to a survey conducted by UMR Research.

New Zealand posted their worst World Cup result when losing in the quarter-finals to France this month, leaving Henry's position tenuous at best as the New Zealand Rugby Union reviews the failed campaign.

Previous coaches John Hart, in 1999, and John Mitchell, in 2003, did not stay in the post after New Zealand's semifinal exits at World Cup tournaments.

UMR Research conducted the telephone survey of 750 New Zealanders aged 18 and over between last Thursday and Monday.

It said 61 percent considered Henry deserved to be reappointed, with 33 percent saying it was time to give someone else a ago.

Crusaders coach Robbie Deans was seen as the man most likely to be appointed should Henry lose the job, with 30 percent identifying Deans as their preference.

However, a majority of 56 percent said they were unsure who should replace Henry, while his assistants since 2004, Steve Hansen and Wayne Smith, gained the support of just 3 and 2 percent, respectively, of those surveyed.

In a head-to-head selection between Deans and Hansen, Deans won the support of 47 percent and Hansen 18 percent, with 35 percent unsure.

New Zealand's 18-20 loss to France in Cardiff was put down as one bad game by what otherwise was a champion team by 63 percent, compared to 27 percent who said it was a result of deep-seated weakness in the team.

UMR Research said when asked a similar question after New Zealand's demise at the semifinals stage of the 2003 World Cup, 38 percent blamed it on a deep-seated weakness in the team.

Responses to the survey came from 533 of the 750 people approached who said they were "very interested" or "fairly interested" in rugby. The survey had a margin for error of 4.2 percent. – NZPA

Laporte says ABs still 'best in world'

By MARC HINTON - RugbyHeaven | Tuesday, 16 October 2007

Do not adjust your screen, you are reading these words. France coach Bernard Laporte says New Zealand remain the best team in the world, despite the All Blacks' latest World Cup failure.

Laporte's reassurances of New Zealand's "true" position in the world game's pecking order will come as slim reassurance after his French side knocked the All Blacks out at the quarter-final stage of the current World Cup.

It was the New Zealand team's worst ever World Cup performance, and came as yet another thunderously disappointing conclusion to a four-year period where they had otherwise dominated the international game.

But it appears Laporte remains an admirer of Graham Henry's team, even if his Bleus were able to tip them up 20-18 in the Cardiff quarter-final, a result that shocked the watching rugby world.

Laporte, whose French side were eliminated in the weekend's semifinal by England and now face a bronze medal playoff against Argentina, feels no team can rival the New Zealanders when they're on top of their game.

"They have the power and the genius, something that no one else has," Laporte told reporters in Paris this week.

"They are the best team in the world. We beat them but if we had played them the next day and the following days, there was a great chance we would have lost.

"The All Blacks are the only team who can put 30 points on everybody else."

The French coach has been bagged by his home media for the conservative and defensive approach he took into the semifinal against England, won 14-9 by the defending champions.

But he used New Zealand's ultimate failure at the hands of his own side as a graphic example of the fact that it's defence, and not sparkling attack, that wins big matches at the World Cup.

"There have not been many great matches," he told reporters.

"Who has played any (attacking) rugby? The only ones are the All Blacks."

And look where it got them. A few empty words of assurance from a French coach. And not much else.

www.rugbyheaven.co.nz

Unbreakable French recall shades of '99

France's heartstopping defeat of the All Blacks is a result that does not bear rational explanation, at least not at this moment in time.

October 6, 2007 10:59 PM - blogs.guardian.co.uk/sport > Andy Bull

It isn't right that a man should have to write in this situation: I should be jumping up and down, returning the lunatic embraces of the French journalist sat next to me, screaming my vocal chords sore, sitting and staring and soaking this up, gasping for air and asking myself whether I've imagined everything I've just seen.

Because I've just sat through one of the most astonishing matches in the history of rugby. Really. I say that without a trace of hyperbole. By the time the Cup is finally won, this tournament will have had at least two finals because it is impossible to believe that any game could surpass this one for drama, intensity and passion. It was utterly startling.

So the best team in the world have once again been knocked out of the World Cup by the French. Of course there are shades of 1999, but this French team is a very different animal to its predecessor - this is the team that Bernard Laporte has been building for the last seven years (during which time they have won just one of their 11 games against the All Blacks).

So often castigated for the manner in which he had robbed them of their flair and sought to replace it with something more pragmatic, Laporte was totally vindicated in Cardiff this evening. The manner in which his team defended during the last five minutes was breath-stealing, it sucked the air out of a crowd of 71,000 people. Defending a two-point margin in the face of a relentless, churning All Black assault, you would think almost any team would buckle. France didn't. Ninety-nine was a triumph of irrepressible attack, this was a triumph of unbreakable defence.

Through the first half, New Zealand were undeniably superior, displaying a complete range of methods of attack. With a 13-point lead, there was surely only one direction the match was heading. Even now, with Raphael Ibanez giving a post-match interview on the big screen, the manner in which France came back doesn't seem credible.

New Zealand were superb, and the first half of the match was a lesson in how to dictate play. France's kicking game, a tactic they'd broadcast through the week looked deeply flawed. Both Lionel Beauxis and Jean-Baptiste Elissade had missed kicks at goal. The line-out was being dominated by the superb Ali Williams, who helped steal five French throws. France were simply not in the match.

So what the hell happened in their dressing room at half-time?

Certainly the penalty count was heavily against New Zealand, but they appeared to be coping with almost every situation the game presented. Luke McAllister, who had been the best back on the pitch by a distance in the first 40 minutes, was sin-binned for obstruction.

And again New Zealand responded by taking control of the match: they advanced down field and camped in the French 22. And then? Well, the French really started to play.

It was not the loose, broken dashing madness that characterised their victory in '99, it was something more controlled and clinical. A three-man overlap down the right nearly evaporated into nothing, the ball was tossed left and again held back. But the try came, and the scores were level.

Still New Zealand didn't tighten up: they regained the lead after Rodney So'oialo finished an irresistible series of drives.

And then came the crucial series of changes. France's bench had an astonishing array of talent on it, New Zealand's seemed rather impoverished by comparison. The introduction of Nick Evans, with the match boiling over into its most intense final minutes, seemed to exemplify that disparity.

I dipped my head and when I looked up Frederic Michalak was on the pitch, storming free down the left wing, and then setting up Yannick Jauzion with on off-load of startling spontaneous ability. France had the lead, and McAllister's missed conversion after So'oialo's try suddenly became the margin that would end New Zealand's World Cup. That in itself was a cruel twist of fate given his game-breaking performance in the first 40 minutes.

This was not the kind of result that bears rational explanation, at least not at this moment in time. New Zealand made 36 tackles out of 47; France made 178 out of 197; New Zealand had 72 per cent of possession.

In short it was a glorious nonsense of a result. It confounded everybody's expectations, as well as the bookies' odds, and it has left me absolutely flabbergasted.