NEWS Judiciary: Live blog - Carrigan Four Week Suspension

Super Freak

Super Freak

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Jan 25, 2014
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I'm not arguing the type of tackle I'm arguing against the below

View attachment 19415

His argument was Carrigan's lack of duty of care so it makes sense he would bring that up. Carrigan didn't need to join the tackle, he made the choice and his choice was to join the tackle and to make that type of tackle which resulted in Hastings suffering a broken ankle and being ruled out for months.
 
Wolfie

Wolfie

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Jan 14, 2015
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No matter how people want to dress it up, its a shit decision. You could find so many worse tackles that got less or even not got cited. Until they fix up the consistency in their decision making people will be annoyed with the system.
 
theshed

theshed

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Aug 28, 2010
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To be honest he probably could do with the rest. He’s been playing at red line since before origin.

He’ll be better for the rest. Hopefully the team will kick on without him and he’ll come back just in time for finals.
 
BroncsFan

BroncsFan

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So far this year we've done it without Haas, but can we do it without Patty??

Could be a glimpse into who is more important to the team
 
Cult

Cult

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His argument was Carrigan's lack of duty of care so it makes sense he would bring that up. Carrigan didn't need to join the tackle, he made the choice and his choice was to join the tackle and to make that type of tackle which resulted in Hastings suffering a broken ankle and being ruled out for months.
But if held wasn't called he also didn't have to not join the tackle? The onus is on the ref to call held, not the player to decide not to finish off a tackle.
 
broncos4life

broncos4life

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But if held wasn't called he also didn't have to not join the tackle? The onus is on the ref to call held, not the player to decide not to finish off a tackle.
The other issue I have with the held call is the narrative the media are now pushing where the tacklers should stop as soon as held is called. When I am at the ground I use sports ears so hear everything the refs say and I have lost count of the times the ref has called held and the tacklers stop only for the player to offload and the ref lets it keep going.
 
Cult

Cult

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The other issue I have with the held call is the narrative the media are now pushing where the tacklers should stop as soon as held is called. When I am at the ground I use sports ears so hear everything the refs say and I have lost count of the times the ref has called held and the tacklers stop only for the player to offload and the ref lets it keep going.
Because it all depends on the flow of the game. If a team is behind we have to let them catch up and that means calling held but letting them offload if they need to. It's like letting the 15th placed team be offside all night and score a double movement try just because they were dudded the week before. It's theater.
 
broncos4life

broncos4life

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Sports ears....?

Let's you hear the commentary, the refs or both at the same time. Only works in the stadium.

1659481578387
 
McHunt

McHunt

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The Honourable Justice GJ Bellew
Judiciary Chairman
2 August 2022

Summary of reasons: Justice Geoff Bellew


The decision of the panel was unanimous and did not require a casting vote from the Chairman pursuant to Rule 89.​
The panel took into account that by his plea of guilty, player Carrigan had acknowledged that he had:​
  1. made contact with player Hastings in circumstances where such contact carried with it an unacceptable risk of injury; and
  2. acted carelessly, or in other words failed to play with the level of care that the responsible playing of the game requires.
In the panel’s view, there were a number of characteristics which rendered the offence a serious one. They included the fact that:​
  1. player Hastings was placed in a highly vulnerable position at the time that the contact was made by player Carrigan, and was unable to protect himself;
  2. player Carrigan applied a significant level of force, and his actions gave rise to a commensurately high risk of injury;
  3. that risk materialised, with player Hastings suffering a serious injury which will require internal fixation surgery and which, on the medical evidence, will render him unfit to play for a period of up to 5 months; and
  4. the force was applied by player Carrigan at a time when player Hastings was already held upright by two other players.
As to the last matter, and the issue of the involvement of other players in the tackle, the panel considered the opinion of Dr McMeniman that player Hastings’ injury was “significantly exacerbated by the other two tacklers pushing [player Hastings] backwards” and that this combination “produced the significant forces required to sustain (player Hastings’) injury”.​
The panel also noted Dr McMeniman’s opinion that the contribution made by the other two tacklers “increased the likelihood” of such injury. The panel accepted that the other two players made some contribution to the force which was applied and took this into account as a mitigating factor.​
At the same time, the panel was mindful of the fact that neither of the other two players had committed any illegal act, and that player Carrigan had acted carelessly by placing himself in the position that he did, in circumstances where he must have been aware that the other two players would attempt to put player Hastings to the ground.​
The panel took into account player Carrigan’s plea of guilty and his limited history of offending.​
However, the panel considered that, consistent with the published policy of the National Rugby League of which all clubs were put on notice more than two years ago, it was necessary to again make it clear to all players that dangerous contact of this kind in particular has no place in the game given the risk of injury that it presents.​
The fact that such risk materialised in the present case was, in the panel’s view, a stark indicator of why such dangerous contact is simply unacceptable.​
In the panel’s view, it followed that there was a fundamental need for the penalty in this case to carry with it a strong element of both personal and general deterrence, so as to make it clear to all players, including player Carrigan, that the commission of this offence is likely to result in the imposition of a substantial penalty.​
The penalty was less than what it would otherwise have been having regard to the plea of guilty and the contribution of the other players involved in the tackle.​


 
theshed

theshed

Just a Game
Aug 28, 2010
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So far this year we've done it without Haas, but can we do it without Patty??

Could be a glimpse into who is more important to the team
We have done it without Patty. He has only played 13/19 games this season. Payne has played 15.

But I’m interested to find data around your theory so let’s go:

Patty:
13 games
8 wins
5 losses
61.5%

broncos without Patty: 4W/2L
Or 66.6%

Haas
15 games
9 wins
6 losses
60%

Broncos without Haas: 3W/1L
or 75%

Our record when missing both Payne and Patty: 2W/1L
or 66.6%

Our record when both Patty and Haas play: 7W/5L
58.3%

So what does this tell us? absolutely nothing probably. But statistically our best chance of winning is to not have Haas in the team and we are better off either way by at least 1 of them not playing. Importantly we must avoid having both Haas and Patty in the team at the same time at all costs.
 
Wolfie

Wolfie

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Jan 14, 2015
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So far this year we've done it without Haas, but can we do it without Patty??

Could be a glimpse into who is more important to the team
I think we will be ok. We aren't as reliant on one player in the forwards anymore like we used to be.
 
Organix

Organix

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Sep 19, 2012
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The Honourable Justice GJ Bellew
Judiciary Chairman
2 August 2022

Summary of reasons: Justice Geoff Bellew


The decision of the panel was unanimous and did not require a casting vote from the Chairman pursuant to Rule 89.​
The panel took into account that by his plea of guilty, player Carrigan had acknowledged that he had:​
  1. made contact with player Hastings in circumstances where such contact carried with it an unacceptable risk of injury; and
  2. acted carelessly, or in other words failed to play with the level of care that the responsible playing of the game requires.
In the panel’s view, there were a number of characteristics which rendered the offence a serious one. They included the fact that:​
  1. player Hastings was placed in a highly vulnerable position at the time that the contact was made by player Carrigan, and was unable to protect himself;
  2. player Carrigan applied a significant level of force, and his actions gave rise to a commensurately high risk of injury;
  3. that risk materialised, with player Hastings suffering a serious injury which will require internal fixation surgery and which, on the medical evidence, will render him unfit to play for a period of up to 5 months; and
  4. the force was applied by player Carrigan at a time when player Hastings was already held upright by two other players.
As to the last matter, and the issue of the involvement of other players in the tackle, the panel considered the opinion of Dr McMeniman that player Hastings’ injury was “significantly exacerbated by the other two tacklers pushing [player Hastings] backwards” and that this combination “produced the significant forces required to sustain (player Hastings’) injury”.​
The panel also noted Dr McMeniman’s opinion that the contribution made by the other two tacklers “increased the likelihood” of such injury. The panel accepted that the other two players made some contribution to the force which was applied and took this into account as a mitigating factor.​
At the same time, the panel was mindful of the fact that neither of the other two players had committed any illegal act, and that player Carrigan had acted carelessly by placing himself in the position that he did, in circumstances where he must have been aware that the other two players would attempt to put player Hastings to the ground.​
The panel took into account player Carrigan’s plea of guilty and his limited history of offending.​
However, the panel considered that, consistent with the published policy of the National Rugby League of which all clubs were put on notice more than two years ago, it was necessary to again make it clear to all players that dangerous contact of this kind in particular has no place in the game given the risk of injury that it presents.​
The fact that such risk materialised in the present case was, in the panel’s view, a stark indicator of why such dangerous contact is simply unacceptable.​
In the panel’s view, it followed that there was a fundamental need for the penalty in this case to carry with it a strong element of both personal and general deterrence, so as to make it clear to all players, including player Carrigan, that the commission of this offence is likely to result in the imposition of a substantial penalty.​
The penalty was less than what it would otherwise have been having regard to the plea of guilty and the contribution of the other players involved in the tackle.​


guess we're going to be seeing consistent rulings on this for approximately 1.8 weeks
 
Huge

Huge

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Mar 7, 2008
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Because it all depends on the flow of the game. If a team is behind we have to let them catch up and that means calling held but letting them offload if they need to. It's like letting the 15th placed team be offside all night and score a double movement try just because they were dudded the week before. It's theater.
What's the eater?

You mention it with your last sentence.
 

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