England flanker James Haskell objects to use of slow-mo replays

By PA Sport

Image: James Haskell is shown the yellow card by Romain Poite

England flanker James Haskell has urged the game's authorities to abandon the policy of showing slow motion replays of incidents of foul play on the big screen.

Haskell believes the yellow card he received for a dangerous tackle on Conor Murray in the 21-10 Six Nations victory over Ireland at Twickenham last month was harsh.

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The Wasps captain feels referee Romain Poite was influenced by repeated slow-motion viewings of the challenge, making it appear more severe than it actually was.

Instead, Haskell believes officials should review incidents on a monitor on the sideline - the method used in American football - to remove the possibility of the crowd's reaction having a bearing on the decision.

"I was very disappointed because I don't think it was a yellow card. Slowing anything down makes it seem 10 times worse than it actually is," Haskell said ahead of England's Six Nations clash with Wales at Twickenham.

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"If you notice I pulled out, turned my head well away - there was no intent. He relaxed into it. He got up straight away, I got up straight away.

"I couldn't believe it when the referee called me back. I was shocked when I saw how slowly they were replaying it. Any tackle looks pretty bad when seen like that.

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Image: Haskell feels slow-motion replays make incidents look worse than they are

"One hundred per cent they should not play replays in slow motion. I firmly believe they should go to the side of the field, look at the screen and review it on their own.

"If they need to see it again then fine, but see it in fast and take the crowd out of the equation. The slow-mo was really unhelpful. It gives the wrong impression.

"Rugby's a really tough game and it's not great doing that kind of stuff because it's making a spectacle out of it when it doesn't need to be.

"Reviewing is a good idea, but playing it on the big screen, making it a big circus is not constructive."

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