Numbers wrote:WaspInWales wrote:What about the deliberate knock-ons from 'attempted' interceptions? Players may make a genuine attempt to catch the ball, or they may just stick a hand out, they then fumble the ball but manage to get their foot to it before it hits the floor. That's a knock-on every single time, because of the lack of intention to kick the ball originally.
That's because the ball has gone forwards from the hand originally and was not regathered or controlled again before kicking it.
I don't know why this is being persisted with, when none of us have even given the opinion that it changed the match significantly, I would be more concerned by Mike Brown's professional foul towards the end of the game, for which he should have been yellow-carded.
So, if the ball goes backwards from an attempted deliberate, or otherwise knock-on/interception, without getting the ball under control and then kicked forwards? It's still a knock-on right?
Case in point; England Vs Wales in the pre-summer tour warm up in 2016. Biggar throws a pass to Moriarty, but Cole sticks a hand out, the ball clearly bounces backwards, Clifford picks it up and then runs in from the halfway creaming Scott Williams along the way. Try is good. Much to the protestations from the WesternMail after the match.
Had Cole tried to kick it forward, it would've been a knock-on as he didn't have control at the time. However, he left the ball, a player onside picked up the ball and did the rest.
My point is, Evans lost control the moment the ball hit his fingers and he failed to catch or be in the position to intentionally kick the ball forward.
It would be interesting to hear world rugby's interpretation of that, rather than the grounding which was obviously clear.
But hey, like you say, it doesn't matter
