FKAS wrote:fivepointer wrote:Liebenburg was going forward, not paying any attention to where Bassett was. It was dozy, dangerous play.
Looked a straight red to me, as did the other two.
By going forward so you mean walking backwards looking at the ball that was coming down pretty much on top of him but for the flying Bassett? It's a bit dozy but it's an innocent mistake, since when do we give red cards for innocent mistakes? The first two red cards are very reckless from players that can see the incident clearly in front of them and chose to act the way they do.
The third is a tired forward who gets surprised by a winger fresh of the bench and blindsided. I was generally the winger in those situations and if cards had been given out like that in the Leicestershire leagues we'd have won a lot more games because the opposition would have been playing with less players.
I think you need to watch the incident again - Liebenberg is clearly running forwards. He is blindsided, but it is clearly established that it's the man on the ground's responsibility to be aware of players jumping and Bassett's leap isn't reckless in the slightest, but a genuine attempt to catch the ball.
I can't believe anyone is defending the Brookes red card. It's dropping the shoulder with force into someone's head - how would that not be a red card? The argument of "oh, he can't make a legal tackle because of the other tackler" is utter mince - if you can't make a legal tackle because of the positioning of other players, then the answer is not "Make an illegal and dangerous tackle as hard as you can", it is to not make any tackle.
"I couldn't make a legal tackle, so I had no choice but to make an illegal one." Beggars belief that anyone's even considering that as an excuse.
Feels odd to be disappointed by a Leicester win, but I agree that we absolutely should have got the bonus point. Kicking for goal, not once but twice, when we were 19-3 up, in complete control, and with a dominant maul was absurd, especially given Henry was clearly having an off day with the boot.
Puja