2023 World Rugby U20 Championship
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Wales are ready for us -
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On the gear obviously
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While continuing to consult with stakeholders on this topic, World Rugby can confirm that it will operate a TMO Bunker trial at the World Rugby U20 Championship 2023, hosted in South Africa in June to enable further evaluation. The trial will be based on the following principles:
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Clear and obvious red cards for foul play involving contact with the head will receive a red card resulting in the player being permanently being removed from the game and unable to be replaced
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For any incident where a red card is not obvious, a yellow card will be issued and dedicated foul play reviewers in a central bunker review the incident using all available technology and footage
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Once 10 minutes has elapsed, the yellow card is either upheld and the player returns to the action or it is upgraded and the player permanently leaves the field, unable to be replaced
Consideration will be given to furthering the trial in the test arena ahead of Rugby World Cup 2023 in France if the trial is deemed successful and further adoption is supported by the elite rugby stakeholders, including importantly match officials, players, unions and competitions.
For clarity, orange cards and 20 minute red cards will not feature at the World Rugby U20 Championship.How the technology will work
The smart ball is tracked in 3D and real-time with beacons positioned around the pitch to determine the exact position of the ball up to 20 times per second and provide immediate feedback on every kick, pass and throw.
At the World Rugby U20 Championship, the smart balls will assist match officials with the following use cases where visual assessment alone can be challenging and time-consuming:
Throw forward
Assist with decision making on forward passes by measuring the relative velocity of the ball relative to the player as it leaves their hands, so indicating whether the ball has been ‘thrown forward’ in the act of passing.
Made touch location
With an accurate location for where the ball makes touch, the Gilbert smart ball ensures the lineout is taken from the position the ball exited the pitch.
Touched in flight
Informing decision-making around whether a ball was touched in flight (e.g. partial charge down) by recognising changes in spin and trajectory caused by a touch of the ball.
Ball over try-line
Live location of the ball will determine whether the ball has reached the try-line.
Lineout throws
Provide instantaneous feedback indicating whether a lineout throw is not straight by measuring the angle of the throw from release to being touched by a player.
A direct feed will be made available to the Television Match Official, who will be able to use the information to provide feedback to the referee.
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@Machpants you'd hope there is an allowance for margin of error, cos how many lineout throws are not actually straight? I've always felt if the other team doesnt contest, then not straight doesnt matter.
The 2 best parts is on forward passes and crossing the touchline, but even then, particularly on the former there are going to be some marginal ones surely? Best hope they dont apply it to scrum feeds too, cos those are always tough to adjudicate on....
But yeah, agree, will likely slow the game down further, may as well remove the ref from the field of play completely, just have them on the sideline watching and calling from there
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@Stargazer said in 2023 World Rugby U20 Championship:
The first game between Argentina and Italy has been played!
Full time result:
Argentina 43 - 15 ItalyFrom 11.30pm on Sky Sport 2:
England v IrelandFrom 12.00am on Sky Sport 1:
France v JapanBig win for the Argies
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Why the fuck would you have two matches on at the same time?
Dolts
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@MiketheSnow Yeah, that will happen several times during this tournament, unfortunately.
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Great match