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Wasps’ James Haskell is shown a red card after a high tackle on Harlequins’ Jamie Roberts at the Stoop on Saturday, and now waits to hear of his punishment.
Wasps’ James Haskell is shown a red card after a high tackle on Harlequins’ Jamie Roberts at the Stoop on Saturday, and now waits to hear of his punishment. Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images via Reuters
Wasps’ James Haskell is shown a red card after a high tackle on Harlequins’ Jamie Roberts at the Stoop on Saturday, and now waits to hear of his punishment. Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images via Reuters

Whether verbal or physical, rugby can’t hide from its discipline problem

This article is more than 6 years old
Mathieu Bastareaud and James Haskell are the latest players in the dock for offences that, while nothing new in the game, are on the rise and suggest a growing trend of poor behaviour

The moral high ground has long been a dangerous place to call home. Rugby union, particularly in the amateur era, used to pitch its tent there regularly and still occasionally lectures its football brethren on class and integrity. The old cliche about rugby being a game for hooligans played by gentlemen is still casually recycled on a regular basis.

Today’s footballers, frankly, should sue next time anyone with an oval-ball background seeks to use a superior tone. The weekend delivered more fresh ammunition: Toulon’s Mathieu Bastareaud has issued an apology for the homophobic abuse he appeared to direct at the Benetton lock Sebastian Negri but the reputational damage has been done, both to him and his sport. So much for noblesse oblige and sportsmanlike conduct.

Rugby’s noble image has, in truth, always been a subjective issue. Few who played in the south-west of France or in south Wales on a wet Wednesday night in the amateur era ever came across much in the way of soft play or kindly advice. “Do that again and you’ll live up to your name,” was the threat famously directed at Dai Young, the great Lions and Wales prop, only partly in jest. Part of rugby’s appeal used to be its twilight world, to borrow from AC/DC’s back catalogue, of dirty deeds done dirt cheap.

Plenty of people, in short, behaved badly but few beyond the participants ever heard about it, save for a few ribald after-dinner speeches a quarter of a century later. Now, with microphones and TV cameras practically inserted up the players’ nostrils there is no hiding place. A big Frenchman abuses a Zimbabwean-born Italian in the last minute of a relatively low-profile pool game and thousands have already passed judgment on social media before the pair reach the dressing rooms.

Bastareaud now finds himself staring down the barrel of a lengthy ban and rightly so. The only small consolation to which he can cling is that rugby’s sanctions are consistent only in their unpredictability. Last week Joe Marler received a six-week suspension for a shoulder to the head of TJ Ioane; some argued he should not even have received a red card. This week it is James Haskell’s turn in the dock following his sending-off for clattering high into Harlequins’ Jamie Roberts. Those insisting he was unlucky must have forgotten all the World Rugby directives last year specifically instructing referees to show zero tolerance towards players who, deliberately or not, catch opponents on the head.

Roll up, roll up: welcome to modern rugby’s moral maze. Bastareaud aside, the definition of serious naughtiness has never been more confusing. Catch a leaping player a split-second early in the air and you could receive anything from a penalty to a lengthy ban; clear out a ruck even a fraction too high and the same uneasy game of disciplinary roulette applies. You need the judgement of a Nasa scientist to be absolutely spot-on every time; either way an opponent will probably try to convince the referee otherwise.

The Bastareaud case, whether he was provoked or not, clearly belongs in a different category but imagine you are a member of rugby’s judiciary. Is abusing someone verbally a worse sin than attempting to gouge their eyes out? Is swearing at the referee a significantly more serious crime against the game’s core values than, say, faking injury or attempting to get an opponent sent off? Maybe the answer is a new catch-all offence, beyond mere unsportsmanlike conduct, carrying an entry-level punishment of six weeks for anyone guilty of tarnishing rugby’s good name, whether by word or deed.

The worsening picture is not all about money’s corrupting influence, either. Only last November the Scottish Rugby Union dished out a record 347 weeks of suspensions to 14 players, a coach and an official from Howe of Fife RFC following a grim initiation ceremony on a team bus which reportedly left one player with internal injuries. In September an 18-year-old Australian received a 10-year ban after striking the referee in the face during a local under-19s final.

No sport can ever be immune to bad publicity but rugby, given its physical nature, treads a more precarious line than most. The game’s traditional code of respect between players, coaches and officials – “Scrum please, sir” – has certainly never felt more frayed. To castigate everyone for the bigoted language of one individual might feel unfair but, when they look themselves in the mirror, rugby’s guardians should be honest enough to admit there is a growing problem. Never mind the moral high ground; rugby is on an increasingly slippery behavioural slope.

French education

The most intriguing new signing in the buildup to this season’s Six Nations may just be the former France hooker Marc Dal Maso, who will help to coach England’s scrum on a part-time basis. Judging by the illuminating interview he gave to the Mail on Sunday, not least on the subject of his continuing struggles with Parkinson’s disease, which requires him to take 15 tablets per day, there will be few dull moments. Try this one: “Scrums are like Canada Dry and ginger ale; different but all the same.” Or this: “The Japanese have the best body position in the world because their players are much more flexible.” Or even this: “For the English, it is a big advantage that all of the world’s referees speak in their language.” A glorious force of nature is heading England’s way.

One to watch

The final pool weekend of Europe’s Champions Cup will struggle to outdo the penultimate round for drama and eye-catching results. This Saturday’s keynote game is arguably the visit of Toulon to Scarlets, such impressive winners over Bath last Friday, with only the winners certain to progress. It is a sign of just how stirringly the Scarlets have been playing that a Toulon victory in west Wales would almost feel like an upset. With no Welsh region having reached the quarter-finals since Cardiff Blues six years ago, it will also be instructive to see how many fans turn up.

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