Umpires admit holding error, but Tigers left holding the bag
Michael Gleeson | May 1, 2007
The Age
THE umpires who awarded West Coast twice as many free kicks as Richmond last Saturday had made an error with the holding-the-ball rule, a review has found.
But the error was not as Tigers captain Kane Johnson and the black-and-gold army suspected. In fact, Richmond was given one too many free kicks for holding the ball.
The AFL umpires director, Jeff Gieschen, said the review of the match, which yielded 30 free kicks to West Coast and 14 to Richmond, delivered a favourable report of the umpires' game.
"We were happy with the effort — it was an average performance, it was not a bad game, it was not a fantastic game," Gieschen said.
He said umpires coach Rowan Sawers reviewed each of the holding-the-ball decisions after Johnson said the inconsistency of the rule had mystified players.
"West Coast received a total of seven holding-the-balls and they were all correct … and Richmond received four free kicks against West Coast for holding the ball and one of those was unwarranted," Gieschen said.
"So in terms of holding the ball, 11 were paid and we had one error and that was an unwarranted to Richmond. So they picked up one they should not have got."
Gieschen said the raw stuff count was irrelevant to the umpires' performance. What mattered was accuracy.
"It was 17-6 at half-time and finished up 30 to 14 but there is nothing to say stuff counts have to be even. stuff counts are based around what is presented to the umpire in the game. There is nothing to say they need to be even or nothing to say they need to be close," he said.
"What is relevant is were there major errors one way or the other? And at the weekend, there were not major errors one way or the other, it was just Richmond infringed more than the West Coast Eagles."
Richmond was sent a letter yesterday asking the club to explain comments by Johnson after the match when he noted the free kicks were "out of whack".
On the statistics alone, Johnson was right and although he said what each Richmond player and Tigers fan felt at the game, it might not be sufficient to save him from an AFL fine.
Gieschen, a former Richmond coach, said the umpires had made errors on free kicks for both teams but nothing out of the ordinary.
"Certainly, we had some errors to Richmond and we had some errors to West Coast we had a couple of missed free kicks for the Eagles and a couple of missed free kicks for Richmond. We paid Richmond some unwarranteds and we paid West Coast some unwarranteds but that is typical of any game," he said.
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