The following is an article written in the The Sunday Times Online (a British publication) and provided to the USA Rugby staff by our CEO:
Stolen without permission from the from The Sunday Times Online, and rewritten into the American form!
October 14, 2007
It’s a man’s game being a rugby ref
Jeremy Clarkson
Unbelievable. What a match. Having proved to the Australians that they aren’t even any good at sport, we took on the French in the semi-finals . . . and won.
Or lost. It’s hard to say for sure because today’s Friday and the match hasn’t happened yet. But one thing’s certain: When it does I’ll be there, glued to the screen, with my boy and some beers, talking a load of absolute codswallop.
The problem is I like rugby very much; I have many opinions about who should do what and when, but never having played, I don’t have the first clue what’s actually going on. I have no idea why the forwards play at the back and the backs at the front. Nor do I understand what’s meant by “the blind side”.
I can’t see why one side of the pitch is blind and the other is in full view. It all makes no sense.
Rugby makes even less sense when 140 tons of beef land in a big muddy lump on top of the ball and you have no idea what on earth is going on in there. Not until the referee blows his whistle, does some signing for the deaf, and decides someone at the bottom of the pile has let go too soon, or not at all, or come in from the side, or made the ball go forwards… and as a result, another big muddy lump is formed to get the game going again.
Despite all this, though, you have to love the collisions, the moments when someone with thighs made from oak and a chest the size of a tugboat smashes into a winger with such ferocity you wonder how the little fella’s skeleton hasn’t just disintegrated into a million pieces.
That and the fights. Those cherished moments when a man mountain smashes his fist, the size of a Christmas ham, into someone else’s face, and all hell breaks loose. Brilliant.
Which brings us to the referee who, instead of wading into the melee and showering the participants with red cards, simply asks everyone to calm down, pauses while the more badly injured have their noses and ears sewn back on, and then restarts the game.
Compare this attitude to the nonsense we see in football (soccer). Flick someone’s earlobe in a game of football and some jumped-up little gnome, sweating like a rapist, will mince over and order you off the pitch.
What’s more, a rugby referee is not so drunk on power that he won’t go to the video ref if he’s not sure. The commentators complain about this but I think it’s marvellous: The chap knows how important this game is to the players, and wants to make certain he gets the decision right.
Football refs are not allowed to consult technology even though, so far as I can see, they never ever get a decision right. No really. They don’t notice when the ball goes over the goal line, they send players off for breathing, and do nothing when Ronaldo hurls himself to the ground and claws at his face as though he’s been showered with acid.
And you can’t argue with these power-crazed idiots because then you get sent off as well.
Do you know a football referee? Do you know anyone who knows a football referee? Have you ever even met anyone who sold a dog to someone who knows a football referee? No. And don’t you think that’s weird? I know an astronaut. I’ve even met someone who makes a living from sexing the Queen’s ducks. But I’ve never met a football ref.
Perhaps they’re bred on farms, like The Boys from Brazil. Either that or they all hide behind meaningless day jobs in PC World, emerging only on a Saturday like a troop of SuperNazis with their too-tight Hitler Youth shorts and their silly whistles.
It’s not just football either. The unseen referees in Formula One motor racing distinguish themselves each year by getting every single decision wrong. Only the other week a Polish driver was made to come and sit on the naughty step because he had the temerity to try and overtake a rival.
Then there’s Wimbledon. Half a trillion pounds’ worth of electronic projections say the ball was out. But sometimes, and I often feel for the hell of it, the umpire calls it in.
And then docks the player points if he objects. But what’s the player supposed to do? He’s been on a court, solidly, since he was old enough to vomit. He’s never been out with a girl, he’s never had a beer, he’s never been allowed to masturbate. He’s dedicated his whole life to this match, and this moment, and now some jumped-up, power-crazed lunatic has denied him the point.
Of course he’s going to be angry. Of course he’s going to throw his racket on the floor.
If I were in charge of tennis, I would allow aggrieved players to actually punch the officials in certain circumstances.
Either that, or I would get them all down to Twickenham to see how it should be done.
They’ll no doubt note rugby refs josh and joke with the players. They give off a sense they’re pleased to be out there and – by constantly issuing instructions during rucks and mauls – they’re on hand to help the players reduce infractions, as much as they are to enforce the laws.
I was going to say the referee is the most important feature in rugby. But obviously that’s not true. The most important feature in the game, of course, is watching Australia lose.
Again.
I really shouldn’t be the announcer I was and attempt to read ahead while reading this aloud to someone else. The tears blocked my vision of the words on the screen and I continually lost my place in the text. I really should turn in my “announcer’s license!”