He ran through the line. Stood there watching what Cleary was doing before finally deciding maybe he should move as Cleary stepped back his way. Then took about 3 steps back before the contact with Carrigan occurred.
He had heaps of time to look around before Cleary had stepped back infield. If he acted then instead of bludging and watching Cleary then he would of had heaps of time.
If, after bludging, he felt he did not have time to check behind him he has the option of moving forward to remove himself from the area and then retreat once he is clear of the play.
Moving backwards blindly where play is occurring invites trouble. I coach U/14s forwards this. It is genuinely [This word has been automatically removed]ed that NRL forwards have no concept of getting out of the way.