Twitter
Advertisement

Rugby World Cup: Wales considered faking injury in semi-final, admits Gatland

Still fuming about the red card shown to openside flanker Sam Warburton for his tackle on French winger Vincent Clerc, the coach cited the incident as an illustration of why referee Alain Rolland's dismissal of his captain was against the spirit of the game.

Latest News
article-main
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

Wales considered faking an injury to a player to force a move to uncontested scrums during their rugby World Cup semi-final defeat to France last weekend, coach Warren Gatland said on Tuesday.

The Welsh lost starting prop Adam Jones to a calf injury and flanker Sam Warburton to a red card in the first quarter of the Eden Park match, which they lost 9-8 after playing for more than an hour with 14 men.

With replacement prop Paul James already on the pitch, an injury to him or the other prop, Gethin Jenkins, would have automatically triggered a situation where neither team would be allowed to push at the scrum.

That would have been a considerable advantage to Wales, whose seven-man pack was coming under huge pressure at the scrum and conceded one of three penalties France's Morgan Parra converted when the front row collapsed.

Still fuming about the red card shown to Warburton for his tackle on France winger Vincent Clerc, Gatland cited the incident as an illustration of why referee Alain Rolland's dismissal of his captain was against the spirit of the game.

"We had already lost Adam Jones, and we discussed in the box, did we fake an injury to one of our props to go to uncontested scrums?" he told reporters on Tuesday.

"But morally, I made the decision that was not the right thing to do.

"We could have easily done that in the first 25-30 minutes. But in the spirit of the game, in the spirit of the World Cup semi-final, I didn't think that was the fairest or the right thing to do.

"That's why I honestly believe Alain Rolland made the wrong decision, I think the right decision would have been a yellow card.

"Under the terms of the rules and regulations, he is perfectly entitled to give a red card, but every game is different and you have got to take into account the circumstances, situation and the intent.

"In that situation, given the circumstances and his experience, the yellow card was the right decision."

The International Rugby Board (IRB) and referees' chief Paddy O'Brien have offered their full support to Rolland and reiterated their "zero tolerance" policy on spear tackles.

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement