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Australia head coach Joe Schmidt unhappy at match officials over Jac Morgan clearout

Australia head coach Joe Schmidt unhappy at match officials over Jac Morgan clearout

Irish Times2 days ago
Australia
coach
Joe Schmidt
said match officials had failed to uphold player safety and hit out at a late clearout decision that ensured the
British and Irish Lions
clinched a series-sealing victory on Saturday.
Fullback Hugo Keenan's last-minute try put the Lions 29-26 up at the Melbourne Cricket Ground but the Wallabies players cried foul after Jac Morgan cleared out Carlo Tizzano in the build-up.
After a lengthy pause as the TV match official assessed multiple angles of the incident, the try was allowed to stand, giving the Lions victory and an unassailable 2-0 lead in the series.
Citing rugby's Law 9.20, which says head contact and clearouts around the neck should be penalised, an incensed Schmidt said the officials had got the decision wrong.
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'Because they're human, match officials make errors,' he said at the post-match press conference.
'We felt it was a decision that doesn't really live up to the big player safety push that they're [World Rugby] talking about.
'You cannot hit someone above ... the shoulders. But that's what we've seen and we've watched a number of replays from different angles so it is what it is and we just have to accept it.'
Wallabies captain Harry Wilson was also convinced his team were hard done by.
'Obviously I saw shoulder to the neck. Carlo was pretty sore about it,' he said.
Lions coach Andy Farrell had a different view.
'I thought it was a brilliant clearout,' he said. 'Honestly, it depends which side of the fence you come from, I would have thought.
'I can understand people's opinions, but I thought Jac was brilliant when he came on – and so were the rest of the bench.'
Schmidt said he was proud of his players but gutted by the final result after the Wallabies had taken a 23-5 lead near the half-hour mark.
While the Wallabies were bitterly disappointed that the clearout decision had gone against them, they did not need to use it as motivation for the dead rubber in Sydney next Saturday.
'You can't get more motivated than what the players showed tonight,' he added. 'You've got to keep resolve and keep going forward. We're not going to wallow in self-pity.'
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