Wales to file a complaint with World Rugby over referee Romain Poite’s performance



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Wales will complain to World Rugby about Romain Poite’s refereeing performance in their 24-13 defeat to England.

Head coach Wayne Pivac was frustrated with a series of decisions throughout the game, but was especially upset that Poite ignored what he considered flagrant foul play on Dan Biggar.

Pivac awarded the Welsh fly-half to be tackled in the air in preparation for Henry Slade’s first-half try.

“We have been doing it every week, to be honest with you. Behind the scenes we review our players’ performances and in doing so we collect the things we send to World Rugby, ”said Pivac.

“We will certainly do it on this particular occasion because I was not happy with England’s first attempt.

Dan Biggar was clearly caught up in the air. The TMO comes in and says that, but the man in the middle dominates him.

“We then asked him to take a look before the conversion was taken, but our captain was fired from 20 meters away.

“That was disappointing. You put that aside and I thought it was a reasonable first half to go to the locker room. “

The Welsh front row also took the wrong side of the French referee, as the hosts racked up 12 penalties throughout the match.

A decision in the first half left tight-headed prop Samson Lee totally stumped after he was the man to ping even though his opponent Mako Vunipola appeared to lose his balance.

The Fall Nations Cup is here as a busy month of international rugby.

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Pivac found England guilty of destabilizing the scrum prior to kickoff, but was rarely penalized for doing so.

“Clearly the team that managed to overcome the problem, which was England, was rewarded,” said the Wales manager.

“For me, it is quite simple. If a prop loses its balance and falls, then it has caused the scrum to drop. That happened a couple of times.

“Penalties could have gone either way, but six points came out.”

When Pivac was told that the Welsh scrum had been a weakness during the fall campaign, he refuted: “This is a totally different set of circumstances.

“He is a different referee and I think it was quite clear for everyone to see that when they managed to overcome the weight and won the commitment, all the penalties were in their favor.

“With the footage the referee was looking at, he felt they were the dominant scrum, but in the matchup both teams are supposed to be square and stable.

“That was not the case. We would have liked the scrums to be restarted or given a free kick for doing that.



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