England legend Lawrence Dallaglio has credited the Rugby Football Union (RFU) for their response to the yellow card controversy on Saturday. The governing body were forced to act after Harlequins lock Irne Herbst returned from his sin. Harlequins held off a second half comeback from Bath to win their Premiership game 40-36 but the result has not grabbed headlines - lock Irne Herbst's yellow card has.
Herbst was sent to the sin bin but returned just seven minutes later, instead of serving the full ten. The Rugby Football Union. Bath coach Johann van Graan complained to the referee after the match but, after assessing the issue, the RFU's professional game match officials team declined to take any further action over.
Sam Underhill, a player for Bath, received a yellow card rather than a red card for a high. Harlequins flanker Will Evans' first. Quins lock returned from a yellow card three minutes too early as an epic second-half comeback from Bath fell just short Sin-bin error: Harlequins lock Irne Herbst spent only seven minutes off the.
Marcus Smith pulled the strings for Harlequins as they withstood an impressive Bath recovery to win 40. There was plenty of entertainment as Harlequins edged Bath 40-36 in the Premiership on Saturday, but there was also controversy around the return of a player. Harlequins second.
Bath were shown three yellow cards in the game, but only came up with seven points combined over those periods despite their pressure. Elsewhere, the set-piece was a tad hit-and-miss, but most of that can be pinpointed on the fact they faced Thomas du Toit in the scrum. Will Muir v Immanuel Feyi.
The Yellow Card scheme is run by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), which safeguards medical products quality and efficacy in the United Kingdom. Reporting makes a big difference Your Yellow Card report plays a key part in keeping others safe.