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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
Sport
Australian Associated Press and Guardian sport

‘Jumping at shadows’: NRL coaches go to war with League chiefs over on-field concussions

Newcastle Knights star Kalyn Ponga was one of the players forced off for a concussion check by the NRL’s independent doctors in round one.
Newcastle Knights star Kalyn Ponga was one of the players forced off for a concussion check by the NRL’s independent doctors in round one. Photograph: Matt King/Getty Images

NRL chief executive Andrew Abdo says the independent doctor in the bunker is here to stay, insisting the game has it right when it comes to identifying possible on-field concussions.

Debate has raged following Kalyn Ponga’s removal from the field in Newcastle’s 20-12 loss to the Warriors on Friday night with the game on the line, after he slid into Addin Fonua-Blake’s hips. Ponga said he was fine and did not need to be checked.

Veteran coaches Wayne Bennett and Ricky Stuart have since called for the independent doctor to be scrapped. Canberra fullback Sebastian Kris and Canterbury winger Jacob Kiraz also appeared unhappy when asked to leave the field.

Abdo would not comment on specific incidents or coaches’ calls, with all head injuries reviewed by the game’s chief medical officer after the round. But he said there was no way the game would be rolling back its management of concussions by taking away the independent doctor in the bunker.

“We’re not going to take a backward step on player safety,” Abdo told AAP. “We have a responsibility to monitor all head injury events during matches. The club doctors do it on the field, the independent doctor does it from the bunker.

“There is never a convenient time for a player to be removed from the field to be checked. But player safety and thinking about the long-term wellbeing of the player is what comes first.”

Abdo also stressed that clubs had not been left out of the process, with team medicos on the sideline holding as much power as the independent doctor to spot indicators of concussions and remove players for assessment. He also argued that by having the doctor in the bunker, the NRL merely had extra eyes on each player with instant access to replays from different angles.

“There are a team of people looking for when a player needs to be assessed,” Abdo said. “They will make calls based on certain things. It’s not a case of whether or not a player feels like they are fine. It’s a case of whether or not our policy dictates they need to be assessed.”

Abdo admitted he had become frustrated by commentary around concussions this weekend, and denied suggestions the game had become more cautious this year.

He said players were still being monitored for the same indicators after head knocks as last year, with decisions ranging from on-field checks, 15-minute off-field assessments and immediate removal from the match. “The policy hasn’t changed and it has been applied the way it always is,” Abdo said.

Abdo was also confident the process of having club doctors carry out on-field assessments was the right one. “These are all highly trained people and they are all carrying the wellbeing of the player at their core,” Abdo said. “A lot of people have made comment that this is a trust issue. This is not a trust issue.”

But after venting spleen on the NRL’s independent doctors after his side’s one-point loss to the Cowboys, Canberra Raiders coach Stuart said trust was precisely the issue and that the NRL and Rugby League Players Association (RLPA) “don’t trust coaches”.

Stuart was incensed by fullback Sebastian Kris being summoned to the sheds by the doctor in the second half after contesting a high ball. The Raiders No 1 returned to play the remainder of the match but Stuart claimed his absence had an impact.

“Do you think I’d let a player play if they had a concussion or is concussed?” Stuart steamed. “When he’s (Kris) down getting his leg attended to… there was no fatigue and no pain in his eyes in regards to when he came off, he was very coherent.”

“That didn’t help us in that game,” Stuart griped, before doubling down on officials. “The RLPA, they don’t trust coaches. All they want to do is come talk to me about how much more time off the players are going to get and how much more money.”

The famously cantankerous Raiders coach is not the only mentor to take issue with the independent doctors’ in round one, with the Bulldogs’ Cameron Ciraldo “confused” over a similar incident and Knights coach Adam O’Brien accusing doctors of “jumping at shadows” when his star Kalyn Ponga was forced off on Friday night.

Dolphins master coach Wayne Bennett, has also called for the current system to be scrapped, urging the NRL to trust clubs to make the right decisions. “The solution is make the clubs more accountable,” Bennett said. “Get the guy out of the box, because that’s why the NRL put him in there, to be trusted enough to make the right decision. If you make clubs more accountable, you don’t need an independent doctor.

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