• Please bear with us. We have moved to a new provider, and some images and icons are not working correctly. We are working hard to fix this

Jumper Dummy Throw

smeagol


Referees in America
Came up in my society's group chat, and found that there's nothing in law accounting for it

At a lineout, the jumper catches the ball off the top. Jumper then dummies a pass; the defensive line buys it and comes up, now offside because the ball hasn't left the lineout.

General consensus is to manage it - make sure the arm stays out indicating the lineout is not over, and giving the defense a chance to get onside.
 
If he is dummying the throw then he probably isn't conforming to Law 18.29.c

[LAWS=]29. Once the lineout has commenced, any player in the lineout may :
C: Lift or support a team-mate. Players who do so must lower that player to
the ground safely as soon as the ball is won
by either team.
Sanction: Free-kick.
[/LAWS]

I would warn the first time (bring him straight back down), then FK, then PK.
 
Manage it, so that they are taking no part of the game whilst in an offside position (Definitions), and can retire immediately to their offside line (in spirit of 18.36). Throwing-in team (if not failing 18.29c noted by Phil) have the advantage of the opposition back-line back-pedalling, rather than being on their toes ready to respond.
 
The backline is one thing, you've also got the defending lineout participants to consider.

If the tail gunner ends up next to the SH when the ball eventually comes off the top, this won't be a "manage" situation. Unless the pause at the top is egregious (ie > 2 or 3 seconds), I'd view this as a valid tactic (like any other dummy pass).
 
If he is dummying the throw then he probably isn't conforming to Law 18.29.c

[LAWS=]29. Once the lineout has commenced, any player in the lineout may :
C: Lift or support a team-mate. Players who do so must lower that player to
the ground safely as soon as the ball is won
by either team.
Sanction: Free-kick.
[/LAWS]

I would warn the first time (bring him straight back down), then FK, then PK.
so you are saying you CAN'T pass off the top eg to the receiver?
Because the jumper isnt being brought to ground ?
 
so you are saying you CAN'T pass off the top eg to the receiver?
Because the jumper isnt being brought to ground ?

No. not saying that, what he can't do is be held up there with the ball, because he cant be touched while he is in the air, so just holding him in the air with the ball isn't allowed.
Either he passes away from the top, straight away.
Or gets brought back down to ground, with the ball, straight away.
 
ah - I didnt read the OP as being held up there. i read it as

lift
catch
immediate dummy (rather than pass off the top)
down

but Id agree - you cannot lift and hold and wait
 
No. not saying that, what he can't do is be held up there with the ball, because he cant be touched while he is in the air, so just holding him in the air with the ball isn't allowed.
Either he passes away from the top, straight away.
Or gets brought back down to ground, with the ball, straight away.
How long is "straight away"? Same as "without delay"?
 
TO TEAMS: Don't take the p*ss, we all know what a reasonable amount of time looks like. If you gain an advantage by the delay -or 'draw in' an infringement, then you cannot be surprised if I penalise you!
 
teams will be doing this with a complete expectation that the ref probably won't allow it. So they won't complain when you tell them not to
 
Back
Top