@ said:
@ said:
@ said:
There are provisions to check for forward passes that lead to tries!
If they check for every other detail a blatant and obvious forward pass can also be determined.
I thought it was the one thing the bunker could not adjudicate on?
They can't..it does seem silly..something to do with inertia as most passes do go forward..they say they can't determine whether the pass was out of the hand backwards which is fine or thrown forward which is not due to Camera angles …
I IQed the game and step up my own little rockin n rollin bunker for the Moses pass from one side it looks ok from the other open side to me he clearly flicks the ball forward out of his hand...I guess that's why they let the refs n touchies make the call..
Yes you said it, because different angles give different apparent views, due to the 3D space. I mean if 4/5 angles show it forward, it's probably forward, but you can't introduce a rule that you only apply to some passes, "the obvious ones". Then you get into all these semantics about not going to the video for borderline passes.
IIRC, when video refs were first introduced they ruled on forward passes, but then it became such a mess that they removed that judgement.
As to why they can't rule on forwards, it's purely the physics. Anything to do with a flat plane is reviewable on TV - offsides (you just draw a line across the field), grounding, feet in touch etc.
But remembering TV is a 2D representation of a 3D reality. With passes specifically, there are 4 dimensions to deal with: not just the lateral concept of backwards wrt the turf (1 dimension), but up/down, diagonals and then the relative position of passer and catcher.
I've previously referenced this good clip that shows how relative player position has an impact on how the vision appears.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=box08lq9ylg
I am of the understanding that they don't have enough video angles to triangulate whether or not a pass was forward with the current technology. Cricket has Eagle Eye which can determine 3D space for referred LBWs, but that is a fixed point on the field, not the entire field.
Tennis uses Hawkeye but again that's only dealing with 1 plane, i.e. ball touching the court.
So apart from needing a million cameras to be sure a pass was forward, I understand the next best possibility is actually to have the football monitor itself, i.e. insert a chip with some sort of GPS and gyro, which can feed back when it moves forward wrt its former position. But even that would be fraught with challenges - how does the footy know whether it's being held or not (i.e. run forward vs passed), what about passes that travel forward relative to the ground but backwards relative to the passes due to momentum etc
They were talking about this years ago but obviously it's either not feasible or not ready yet, because I'm sure a reasonable-priced solution to forward passes would be popular for both elite rugby codes?