French referee Mathieu Raynal said he “100 per cent” stood by his much-criticised decision to penalise Australia’s Bernard Foley for time-wasting against the All Blacks earlier this month.
The Wallabies were leading the Rugby Championship test 37-34 in Melbourne when Raynal awarded them a penalty close to their own posts with less than two minutes on the clock.
Foley was preparing to kick the ball into touch but Raynal decided he was not moving quickly enough and instead awarded the All Blacks a free kick. The visitors scored the winning try from the ensuing scrum.
“I always take responsibility for what I do. I take responsibility for this decision 100 per cent,” Raynal told French media after being named the country’s referee of the year earlier this week.
Champions Cup permutations: What is on the line for Leinster, Munster and Ulster in final pool matches?
Ken Early: If Mikel Arteta really loves Arsenal’s players, he should let them play
Mauricio Pochettino picks combustible player for questionable US experiment
Some threw toilet rolls - others, sausages. How it might look if you were a fly on the wall at Mack Hansen’s Media Training
“I had the necessary reasons to take it. I know it’s a decision that makes people talk, that makes a lot of noise, but I try to free myself from this context of pressure to make what seems to me the fairest calls.
“This is the heart of my job. And sometimes, it creates tensions, frustrations, controversies but I take responsibility for it. Things are never white or black but often grey.”
The all but unprecedented decision triggered a huge uproar Down Under with former Wallabies lining up to call it a “disgrace” and Rugby Australia writing to World Rugby to express their concerns.
Raynal said he had avoided the news as much as possible in the days after the match.
“There was criticism but a lot of support,” he added. “To be honest, I deleted newspaper and social media apps so as not to follow everything that was going on. To preserve myself, I only kept Candy Crush.”
(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2022