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Hansen wants apology for Lions ref call

3 minute read

Former All Blacks coach Steve Hansen has never received the apology he wants from World Rugby after a ref call swung the 2017 British and Irish Lions series.

All Black coach STEVE HANSEN during the New Zealand All Blacks Captain's Run at Eden Park in Auckland, New Zealand.
All Black coach STEVE HANSEN during the New Zealand All Blacks Captain's Run at Eden Park in Auckland, New Zealand. Picture: Phil Walter/Getty Images

Former All Blacks coach Steve Hansen is dismayed World Rugby has never apologised for the refereeing decision that snatched victory over the British and Irish Lions from his grasp.

Hansen said he remained "annoyed" three years after the third Test ended ended in an anti-climactic 15-15 draw at Eden Park, leaving the high-powered series squared 1-1.

The result swung on a 78th-minute ruling, when the hosts were handed a penalty and opportunity to break the deadlock close to the posts after Lions hooker Ken Owens was deemed offside.

However, referee Romain Poite was convinced by fellow-Frenchman and assistant referee Jerome Garces to downgrade the ruling to a scrum.

Hansen, who stood aside after last year's World Cup, has been subdued in his criticism but opined in an interview with Sky TV this week that World Rugby should have acknowledged the match officials got it wrong.

"I have always understood that the referee will make mistakes. So he's made a mistake and he's got that wrong," Hansen said.

"The thing that annoyed me most about that incident, and still does to this day, is that we haven't had an apology from World Rugby."

New Zealand Rugby requested an explanation from the game's governing body in the immediate wake of the series but has never received a reply.

Hansen believed World Rugby referee boss Alain Rolland was wrong to never address the issue, something that Poite had done in person.

"We've had conversations (with Romain) and we just said, 'move on, Romain, you can't change it, it's not your problem.

"All we wanted was for the head of the rugby referees to say, 'look, sorry we've got that wrong'. And then you can turn around and say to the players, 'OK boys, the decision was wrong, but we've just got to cop it'."

Lions coach Warren Gatland recently raised the prospect of a "fourth Test" being played between the teams next year and hyped as a series decider before the combined outfit embarks on its scheduled tour of South Africa.

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