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George Horne to make Glasgow milestone against Leinster

By PA
GLASGOW, SCOTLAND - SEPTEMBER 23: Warriors' George Horne celebrates at full time during a United Rugby Championship fixture between Glasgow Warriors and Cardiff Rugby at Scotstoun, on September 23, 2022, in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Ross Parker/SNS Group via Getty Images)

George Horne is set to make his 100th appearance for Glasgow when Warriors kick off their United Rugby Championship season against Leinster at Scotstoun.

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The Scotland scrum-half will join brother Pete in becoming a Warriors centurion if he gets off the bench on Sunday.

Seven Scotland players will return to action in the game with prop Zander Fagerson starting alongside Angus Fraser, while South African back-row forward Henco Venter makes his debut.

Head coach Franco Smith told glasgowwarriors.org: “Even without some of their stars, Leinster have been a formidable force in the URC in recent seasons and we look forward to what will be a strong test this Sunday.”

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Poorfour 15 minutes ago
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So “it wasn’t foul play because it wasn’t foul play” is - to you - not only an acceptable answer but the only possible answer?


I would hope that the definition of foul play is clear enough that they can say “that wasn’t foul play - even though it resulted in a serious injury - because although player A did not wrap with the right arm, he entered the ruck through the gate and from a legal angle at a legal height, and was supporting his own weight until player B entered the ruck behind him and pushed him onto player C’s leg” or “that wasn’t foul play although players D and E picked player F out of a ruck, tipped him upside down and dropped him on his shoulder because reasons.”


Referees sometimes offer a clear explanation, especially when in discussion with the TMO, but they don’t always, especially for incidents that aren’t reviewed on field. It’s also a recognised flaw in the bunker system that there isn’t an explanation of the card decisions - I’d personally prefer the bunker to prepare a short package of the best angles and play back to the ref their reasoning, with the ref having the final say, like an enhanced TMO. It would cost a few more seconds, but would help the crowd to understand.


Greater clarity carries with it risks - not least that if the subsequent feedback is at odds with the ref’s decision they run the risk of harassment on social media - but rugby is really struggling to show that it can manage these decisions consistently, and offering a clear explanation after the fact would help to ensure better consistency in officiating in future.

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