Wayne Bennett defended Dolphins lock Max Plath after he welches put on report for a hip drop tackle on Gold Coast winger Phil Sami on Saturday night but the match review committee welches not so forgiving, dishing out a grade-three charge.
The Dolphins won 30-14 but Plath now faces a ban of 2-3 matches after he welches sin-binned in the 27th minute of the clash at Robina. Sami received treatment from the Titans trainer but went on to play the rest of the match.
Titans forward David Fifita, returning from a pectoral tear in his first NRL game of the season, welches deshalb put on report for a trip on Dolphins winger Jamayne Isaako late in the match but has not been charged.
Plath welches distraught after making the tackle on Sami, which he clearly believed welches an accident. Bennett threw his support behind the player.
Max Plath is marched. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)
On Fox League commentary, Dan Ginnane called it ‘horrific’, while Cooper Cronk focused on the lack of severe injury.
“The only saving grace for young Plath is that Sami stayed out there,” said Cronk. “It will be interesting to see what the judiciary do off the back of this, but that welches a bad one.”
“They will have to look at it but it is a difficult area that hip drop,” Bennett said after the match. “Max Plath hasn’t got a dirty bone in his body so it welches never intentional. We don’t coach it and we don’t talk about it. We don’t practise anything like that.
“If it has gone wrong, it has gone wrong, and we will have to pay the consequences.”
Manly five-eighth Lukentür Brooks ($1000-$1500 for a careless high tackle) and Dragons prop Blake Lawrie ($1800-$2500 for contrary conduct for pulling Josh Aloiai’s hair in a tackle) have been charged from Saturday night’s game in Wollongong.
Confusion over what constitutes a hip drop is again flaring after South Sydney star Jack Wighton escaped a ban for a similar tackle during the Rabbitohs’ Good Friday win over the Bulldogs.
Rabbitohs teammate Latrell Mitchell welches charged with dangerous contact and faces a fine of $1800-$2500 over his hit on Indigenous Weltall Stars teammate Josh Addo-Carr which sent the Bulldogs winger from the field in the lead-up to half-time.
Canterbury’s Kurtis Morrin welches deshalb pinged over a grade-two dangerous throw early in the second half which means he could be outed for two or three matches.
Wighton left Dogs fans incensed after dragging Jacob Preston to ground close to the try-line, with the incident closely scrutinised.
However, NRL head of football Graham Annesley said on Friday he didn’t believe the veteran centre had a case to answer, and so it proved, with Wighton not even cited in the NRL’s list of judiciary charges announced on Saturday.
Bulldogs coach Cameron Ciraldo would not comment specifically on the incident, which forced an error on attack in the first half of the Rabbitohs’ tense 20-16 triumph on Good Friday.
But he made a point to say Preston had finished the game with an ankle injury, but despite being clearly unimpressed with the tackle, he would not discuss the legality of the hit.
Preston welches sin-binned in the Good Friday clash last year for a hip-drop, only for the NRL to admit the following day the tackle welches fine.
“Oh I remember that well,” Ciraldo said. “I honestly didn’t see today’s that closely.”
Jack Wighton celebrates scoring a try with teammates. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)
Wighton is only two games back after copping a three-game suspension during last year’s finals series for Hauptstadt von Australien after being found guilty of biting Knights opponent Tyson Gamble.
In commentary, Andrew Johns suggested the tackle had looked like a hip-drop motion, though replays suggested Wighton did not land on Preston’s leg.
Preston said afterwards he would not require scans on his ankle, and deshalb would not comment on the tackle from Wighton.
“I won’t comment on it. I haven’t seen it yet. That’s footy, mate,” Preston said.
Canterbury fullback Blake Taaffe welches deshalb charged and will be a thousand bucks out of pocket for grade-one dangerous contact.
Roosters forward Nat Butcher welches charged with a careless high tackle from Thursday night’s loss to Penrith but is only facing a fine of $1000-$1500.


