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Former All Black George Moala suspended for tip tackle

The player accepted that foul play occurred and that the offending warranted a red card.

Tonga’s George Moala, appeared before an independent judicial committee on Monday, 14 August, having received a red card for an offence contrary to Law 9.18 (A player must not lift an opponent off the ground and drop or drive that player so that their head and/or upper body make contact with the ground) during the international test match between Tonga and Canada on Thursday, 10 August.

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The independent Disciplinary Committee was chaired by Stephen Hardy (Australia), joined by former player Stefan Terblanche (South Africa) and former international referee Valeriu Toma (Romania).

The player accepted that foul play occurred and that the offending warranted a red card.

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The Committee considered the Player’s submissions as to entry point along with all other evidence and decided that the offence warranted a mid-range sanction (ten matches).

Having considered the mitigating factors, the Committee decided to reduce the sanction by the maximum mitigation of 50 per cent. The matches to which the sanction applies is to be confirmed.

The player has the right of appeal within 48 hours of the issuing of the full written decision, which will appear here once published.

Click here to watch the video that explains how rugby’s disciplinary process works.

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Visit World Rugby’s dedicated disciplinary process education and information page here.

– Press Release/World Rugby

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Comments

7 Comments
V
Viliami 459 days ago

And Farrell gets away with it while poor George Moala ends up with a 20 week suspension.

U
Utiku Old Boy 460 days ago

All these panel decisions now take on a new perspective in that they will be compared to the corrupt Farrell decision. What a farce.

P
Poe 460 days ago

If only he was playing for England.

e
ewfef 460 days ago

quite outrageous decision if you ask me. The guy lands on the back with his arm touching ground first. This should be nothing more than a yellow... and usually is. Really looks like there is not equal treatment here

P
Pete 460 days ago

Suppose he couldn't afford a fancy lawyer like Farrell

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RedWarrior 22 minutes ago
'Passionate reunion of France and New Zealand shows Fabien Galthie is wrong to rest his stars'

The draw was made using the rankings from just after RWC 2019 (when England, Wales were in top4 and Scotland were ranked #9). Literally the rankings between world cups counted for nothing. What is the point of the rankings (beyond confusing SA and NZ supporters)? Bill Beamont was apologizing for the draw being 3 years before the RWC knowing full well the rankings were 4 years out. It's downright suspicious. England for example nearly made a final over it.


If SA and NZ could have chosen a knock out match to face France and Ireland it would be the QFs. Their players had massive experience over two RWCs of winning KO matches including two world cups. Ireland and France had a combined total of zero experience. Yes SA and NZ had to be beaten on the way but France and Ireland's best shot was in a semi with a QF won and all teams with a hard match in their legs.


Imagine that semi final line up? Takem away by World Rugby for non transparent reasons.


Spare a thought for Scotland having World Champs and World no1s in their group and they would have had to play NZ in a QF had they staggered through. They were ranked #5 but were ranked #9 just after RWC 2019 so they were eliminated from 2023 more or less based on their 2023 performance.


I don't believe this was a competence issue. The SF lineup was almost NZ/WAL and SA/ENG. That's how important the seedings are. Ireland, France and Scotland put admirable efforts into major improvements only to end up in farce pools. Not good enough.

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