NRL releases new footage to prove Melbourne Storm weren't robbed of a try in grand final
Social media is awash with claims the Storm were dudded against the Penrith Panthers.
The NRL has moved to dispel claims the Melbourne Storm were robbed in the grand final against Penrith, releasing new footage that shows Jack Howarth never got the ball to the ground. The Panthers won their fourth-straight premiership on Sunday night, beating the Storm 14-6 in a hard-fought finale.
But the big talking point after the game was whether or not the Storm were wrongly denied a try to Howarth in the second half. With the Panthers up 10-6, Howarth muscled his way over the line and claimed to have grounded the ball.
But on-field referee Ashley Klein sent it to the Bunker as no-try, and Grant Atkins upheld that decision. However one camera angle shown by Channel 9 appeared to show the point of the ball making contact with the ground, sparking a social media frenzy that the Storm had been robbed.
Was that ball down? The bunker said no try to Howarth...
📸 - Channel 9
Live blog: https://t.co/B6dm0SxQtF
Listen live: https://t.co/14XMOz6egW #NRLGF pic.twitter.com/UGIPF8gB5l— ABC SPORT (@abcsport) October 6, 2024
But the NRL quickly moved to shoot down those claims, showing a new frame-by-frame angle to the media that proves Howarth's own arm was underneath the ball the whole time. In somewhat of an optical illusion, the replay shown by Channel 9 and screenshots circulating on social media make it appear as if Howarth's arm is the point of the football.
finally able to clip it + zoom. 1st angle looks like a grounding but its actually his pasty white arm. 2nd angle shows it clearer. #NRLGF pic.twitter.com/X4s2XwXgJf
— Matto ∆ (@MightyRoosters) October 6, 2024
NRL boss explains controversial Melbourne Storm no-try
The new angle released by the NRL shows Howarth's arm making contact with the ground, not the ball. The NRL's head of football Graham Annesley said on Sunday night: "When I saw it live I was saying what everyone else was saying, I thought I saw the ball on the ground.
"It's only when we go back and look at it clearly that you can see the different colour between the arm and the ball. The ball is sitting on top of the arm, which then gets lifted up.
"They (the Bunker officials) are looking at this over and over again before they announce their decision, while we generally have one replay. We don't have time to clinically examine it like this but the bottom line is that the decision was correct."
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New footage emerges to shown Storm weren't robbed
As Annesley pointed out, the Bunker has access to different camera angles than what is shown to TV viewers. In commentary for Channel 9, Brad Fittler said he believed the arm was underneath the ball the whole time.
However he was in the minority, with Andrew Johns saying: “Let’s have a look here. I am sure the ball gets down. Now. It is down. It’s on the ground. He gets the ball down there. The ball gets down on the ground right there.”
Social media was also awash with claims the Storm had been wrongly denied, until the new footage started to do the rounds later on Sunday night. Scott Bailey of AAP wrote: "If ever there was an argument for broadcasters to show what the bunker sees, that was it. The NRL have shown media footage that clearly shows Howarth did not ground the ball. But that's a tough sell to everyone who just turned off the TV.
"I’m sure they will release 4K footage. But the vision shown to media at the ground shows it to be no try. Understand a lot of people may not believe that, but Annesley is adamant it was correct call."
And here are the two bits of vision that the NRL say shows the ball was not grounded. #NRLGF pic.twitter.com/DUTF4xRzsG
— Scott Bailey (@ScottBaileyAAP) October 6, 2024
Arm is clearly under the ball pic.twitter.com/OWHnjSQWnN
— Dean Ritchie (@BulldogRitchie) October 6, 2024
This is the image the NRL say shows the ball is on top of Howarth’s arm. I’m sure they will release 4K footage.
But the vision shown to media at the ground shows it to be no try.
Understand a lot of people may not believe that, but Annesley is adamant it was correct call. pic.twitter.com/WmD8uzjCJW— Scott Bailey (@ScottBaileyAAP) October 6, 2024
NO TRY: NRL just showed media video footage of why Jack Howarth is NOT score. Was his right arm that hit ground
— christian nicolussi (@mrchrisnico) October 6, 2024
Fair play to the NRL. We’ve been shown a high resolution replay and there is no point when the ball touches the ground. Jack Howarth did NOT score. I thought it was definitely a try at the time
— Martin Gabor (@MartinJGabor) October 6, 2024