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Laporte

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  • Billy TellB Offline
    Billy TellB Offline
    Billy Tell
    wrote on last edited by
    #32

    I heard that Wayne Barnes shot JFK from the grassy knoll.

    CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to Billy Tell on last edited by
    #33

    @Billy-Tell said in Laporte:

    I heard that Wayne Barnes shot JFK from the grassy knoll.

    And was the inventor of the Covid Vaccination chip.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • No QuarterN Offline
    No QuarterN Offline
    No Quarter
    wrote on last edited by
    #34

    Sorry guys but this is the conspiracy hill I've chosen to die on, that game was a stitch up from start to finish. Laporte seemed like a shady motherfucker at the time and this has only solidified my position.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • boobooB Do not disturb
    boobooB Do not disturb
    booboo
    replied to Dan54 on last edited by booboo
    #35

    @Dan54 said in Laporte:

    Really we somehow got the loss in 2007 being brought up? FFS there was no corruption, (Barnes an inexperienced, young ref) made a mistake or 2 during the game, and ABs made more and lost the game.Nothing more or less, Henry actually later said he had at first thought there was something no right, but said after he calmed down he realised he was just to upset. Barnes says of the missed forward pass, andwondered at times if it was only forward pass missed during the WC.

    1. Agree. But we're still not over Dallas and Deans.
    2. Righto.
    3. There were two in the same movement.
    taniwharugbyT Dan54D 2 Replies Last reply
    2
  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #36

    @booboo you forgot the main point...THIS.IS.THE.FERN we can go from anywhere to anywhere with the faintest of connections

    No QuarterN 1 Reply Last reply
    6
  • Dan54D Offline
    Dan54D Offline
    Dan54
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #37

    @booboo said in Laporte:

    @Dan54 said in Laporte:

    Really we somehow got the loss in 2007 being brought up? FFS there was no corruption, (Barnes an inexperienced, young ref) made a mistake or 2 during the game, and ABs made more and lost the game.Nothing more or less, Henry actually later said he had at first thought there was something no right, but said after he calmed down he realised he was just to upset. Barnes says of the missed forward pass, andwondered at times if it was only forward pass missed during the WC.

    1. Agree. But we're still not over Dallas and Deans.
    2. Righto.
    3. There were two in the same movement.

    😁 Fair enough too , I mean I should of stopped to think who was impacted!
    And as taniwha probaly rightly points out, we can go anywhere on Fern, what the heall was I thinking!😖

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • No QuarterN Offline
    No QuarterN Offline
    No Quarter
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by
    #38

    @taniwharugby said in Laporte:

    @booboo you forgot the main point...THIS.IS.THE.FERN we can go from anywhere to anywhere with the faintest of connections

    The name Laporte triggered a deep-seated trauma within me

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    replied to No Quarter on last edited by
    #39

    @No-Quarter said in Laporte:

    Here we go - stuff article from 2012. Damning stuff

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/sunday-star-times/latest-edition/7370102/Henry-suspected-match-fixing-after-07-loss

    All Blacks coach Graham Henry was so stunned by the lopsided penalty count in the 2007 Rugby World Cup quarter-final loss to France he urged the New Zealand Rugby Union to call for an investigation into referee Wayne Barnes' performance.

    In his biography, 'Graham Henry Final Word', by veteran author Bob Howitt, Henry reveals he briefly contemplated match-fixing as the only logical explanation for the All Blacks' upset 20-18 loss.

    He analysed the game on video for his report to the rugby union and found Barnes had awarded only two penalties to New Zealand during the game.

    His gut feeling, according to his biography, was that the video "would confirm that referee Wayne Barnes and his touch judges, Jonathan Kaplan from South Africa and Tony Spreadbury from England, hadn't exactly covered themselves in glory at the Millennium Stadium, that they had missed an obvious forward pass when France scored its match-winning try - a pass so forward everyone in the stadium had witnessed it except the referee - and that Barnes had been pretty lenient on the French at the breakdowns, probably costing the All Blacks the game".

    His analysis was that France deserved to be penalised up to 40 times.

    The video had three different angles and featured statistical breakdowns of lineouts, scrums, penalties, tackle counts, territory and possession. On those statistics, the All Blacks dominated. They had an overwhelming 73 per cent territorial advantage, winning 166 rucks to France's 42 and making only 73 tackles compared with France's 331.

    A mind-boggled Henry was so stunned by his findings he told the rugby union it should "pressure the International Rugby Board to institute an inquiry".

    He also said it was ''incomprehensible'' the IRB did not have strategies in place to investigate bizarre matches.

    Howitt writes: "He knew if a comparable situation had occurred in other sports, it would be investigated. But there existed a blissful purity about rugby, or at least that's how everyone wanted to perceive it. It wasn't politically correct to even suggest the match officials might have favoured one team."

    The rugby union chose not to push for an investigation.

    He's sounding a bit Sith Ifrican here ...

    I moved on. Got up the next day, flew home and then watched the semi's and quarters in a pub with my friends.

    Henry, Smith, Hansen kept their jobs. And ultimately, delivered a world cup, and set the base for the following one as well.

    At the end of the day, we still should have won. We didn't.

    canefanC CatograndeC 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    replied to MajorRage on last edited by
    #40

    @MajorRage said in Laporte:

    @No-Quarter said in Laporte:

    Here we go - stuff article from 2012. Damning stuff

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/sunday-star-times/latest-edition/7370102/Henry-suspected-match-fixing-after-07-loss

    All Blacks coach Graham Henry was so stunned by the lopsided penalty count in the 2007 Rugby World Cup quarter-final loss to France he urged the New Zealand Rugby Union to call for an investigation into referee Wayne Barnes' performance.

    In his biography, 'Graham Henry Final Word', by veteran author Bob Howitt, Henry reveals he briefly contemplated match-fixing as the only logical explanation for the All Blacks' upset 20-18 loss.

    He analysed the game on video for his report to the rugby union and found Barnes had awarded only two penalties to New Zealand during the game.

    His gut feeling, according to his biography, was that the video "would confirm that referee Wayne Barnes and his touch judges, Jonathan Kaplan from South Africa and Tony Spreadbury from England, hadn't exactly covered themselves in glory at the Millennium Stadium, that they had missed an obvious forward pass when France scored its match-winning try - a pass so forward everyone in the stadium had witnessed it except the referee - and that Barnes had been pretty lenient on the French at the breakdowns, probably costing the All Blacks the game".

    His analysis was that France deserved to be penalised up to 40 times.

    The video had three different angles and featured statistical breakdowns of lineouts, scrums, penalties, tackle counts, territory and possession. On those statistics, the All Blacks dominated. They had an overwhelming 73 per cent territorial advantage, winning 166 rucks to France's 42 and making only 73 tackles compared with France's 331.

    A mind-boggled Henry was so stunned by his findings he told the rugby union it should "pressure the International Rugby Board to institute an inquiry".

    He also said it was ''incomprehensible'' the IRB did not have strategies in place to investigate bizarre matches.

    Howitt writes: "He knew if a comparable situation had occurred in other sports, it would be investigated. But there existed a blissful purity about rugby, or at least that's how everyone wanted to perceive it. It wasn't politically correct to even suggest the match officials might have favoured one team."

    The rugby union chose not to push for an investigation.

    He's sounding a bit Sith Ifrican here ...

    I moved on. Got up the next day, flew home and then watched the semi's and quarters in a pub with my friends.

    Henry, Smith, Hansen kept their jobs. And ultimately, delivered a world cup, and set the base for the following one as well.

    At the end of the day, we still should have won. We didn't.

    I moved on, right onto TSF and have been here ever since!!! #neverforget2007

    1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to MajorRage on last edited by
    #41

    @MajorRage said in Laporte:

    @No-Quarter said in Laporte:

    Here we go - stuff article from 2012. Damning stuff

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/sunday-star-times/latest-edition/7370102/Henry-suspected-match-fixing-after-07-loss

    All Blacks coach Graham Henry was so stunned by the lopsided penalty count in the 2007 Rugby World Cup quarter-final loss to France he urged the New Zealand Rugby Union to call for an investigation into referee Wayne Barnes' performance.

    In his biography, 'Graham Henry Final Word', by veteran author Bob Howitt, Henry reveals he briefly contemplated match-fixing as the only logical explanation for the All Blacks' upset 20-18 loss.

    He analysed the game on video for his report to the rugby union and found Barnes had awarded only two penalties to New Zealand during the game.

    His gut feeling, according to his biography, was that the video "would confirm that referee Wayne Barnes and his touch judges, Jonathan Kaplan from South Africa and Tony Spreadbury from England, hadn't exactly covered themselves in glory at the Millennium Stadium, that they had missed an obvious forward pass when France scored its match-winning try - a pass so forward everyone in the stadium had witnessed it except the referee - and that Barnes had been pretty lenient on the French at the breakdowns, probably costing the All Blacks the game".

    His analysis was that France deserved to be penalised up to 40 times.

    The video had three different angles and featured statistical breakdowns of lineouts, scrums, penalties, tackle counts, territory and possession. On those statistics, the All Blacks dominated. They had an overwhelming 73 per cent territorial advantage, winning 166 rucks to France's 42 and making only 73 tackles compared with France's 331.

    A mind-boggled Henry was so stunned by his findings he told the rugby union it should "pressure the International Rugby Board to institute an inquiry".

    He also said it was ''incomprehensible'' the IRB did not have strategies in place to investigate bizarre matches.

    Howitt writes: "He knew if a comparable situation had occurred in other sports, it would be investigated. But there existed a blissful purity about rugby, or at least that's how everyone wanted to perceive it. It wasn't politically correct to even suggest the match officials might have favoured one team."

    The rugby union chose not to push for an investigation.

    He's sounding a bit Sith Ifrican here ...

    I moved on. Got up the next day, flew home and then watched the semi's and quarters in a pub with my friends.

    Henry, Smith, Hansen kept their jobs. And ultimately, delivered a world cup, and set the base for the following one as well.

    At the end of the day, we still should have won. We didn't.

    Sport in a nutshell and why we watch it.

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • BonesB Online
    BonesB Online
    Bones
    replied to Dan54 on last edited by
    #42

    @Dan54 said in Laporte:

    Really we somehow got the loss in 2007 being brought up? FFS there was no corruption, (Barnes an inexperienced, young ref) made a mistake or 2 during the game, and ABs made more and lost the game.Nothing more or less, Henry actually later said he had at first thought there was something no right, but said after he calmed down he realised he was just to upset. Barnes says of the missed forward pass, andwondered at times if it was only forward pass missed during the WC.

    Classic fern.

    Thread started about corruption linked to France in the rugby world cup and morphs into a thread about corruption linked to France in the rugby world cup. Staggering.

    Dan54D 1 Reply Last reply
    6
  • Dan54D Offline
    Dan54D Offline
    Dan54
    replied to Bones on last edited by
    #43

    @Bones yep or started as a post linked to corruption of a frensh official morphs into an excuse of why we lost a game we stuffed up. Guess not as staggering as I thought at first.😁

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • sparkyS Offline
    sparkyS Offline
    sparky
    wrote on last edited by
    #44

    Deans scored.

    nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to sparky on last edited by
    #45

    @sparky said in Laporte:

    Deans scored.

    So did Mils

    1 Reply Last reply
    1

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