EDDIE Jones has a habit of stirring the pot, and he did it in the build-up to England‘s Six Nations opener against France in Paris, when he claimed Nigel Owens has a 91 per cent ratio of home side wins in the matches he has refereed.
For the record, Jones said about the decorated Welsh whistler in an interview on BBC Radio 5: “The referee we’ve got in the first game has a 91 per cent winning record for home teams. That shows you how hard it is to win. We are going to have to play exceptionally well to win that game, and that’s a great challenge for us because we are going to have to manage the referee.”
It is not my intention here to play judge and jury regarding
Owens, who has shown on many occasions that he is a fine referee.
However, questions over the neutrality of referees is a
potentially incendiary issue in professional sport, and therefore not one that
can be taken lightly.
It seems to me that the issue in Rugby Union is not about
accusations of outright favouritism verging on cheating. It is more about an
awareness that referees have the same human frailties as the rest of us, and
are therefore the victims of subliminal influences which might make them more
favourable to one group than to another.
Most of us do not like to offend our hosts, and given that
many unions push the boat out for referees in terms of hospitality, it is not
too difficult to conclude that this might, in the most subtle ways, alter their
perception.
As an adjunct to this, I have heard more than once that the
treatment of referees and away teams at international post-match functions can
vary significantly depending on whether the home team wins. If the result goes
in their favour it will be convivial and upbeat, and if not the beer taps are
soon turned off, and be prepared to make your own entertainment.
In this instance, Jones has made an important point about
the preponderance of home wins in professional Rugby Union, at both
international and club level, and the hidden pressures on referees to lean
towards the home side.
The ‘Homer’, as in referees/ umpires favouring home teams,
has been a controversial issue across the sporting spectrum forever.
In baseball there was a study into umpires which showed how
much our perception can be influenced by the home factor.
It used statistical analysis from footage of matches to show
that the strike zone – the area of space between the batter’s knees and
mid-torso which a pitcher must throw through to get a strike – is perceived
differently by many umpires when the home side is pitching.
It suggested that umpires, from their vantage point just
behind the strike zone, are more likely to see a larger rectangular area when
the home side is pitching, meaning more strikes, which, in their minds, shrinks
to a trimmed oval-shaped area when the away side is pitching, meaning fewers
strikes.
Recent analysis of the Six Nations indicates a similar home
factor among Rugby Union referees, given the percentage of home wins. It is a
very significant factor, both in terms of the 3-2 split in home games, and in
the overall number of home wins.
For instance, from 2000 to 2016, in ten out of the 16 Six
Nations tournaments – 62.5 per cent – the title went to a team that had three
home games and two away.
In the 2017 and 2018 Six Nations campaigns the split between the results of home and away matches was even more heavily weighted, with 11 home wins compared to only four away wins, which is 73.4 per cent in both seasons.
The important question is can we find a remedy for the home
advantage conundrum? Talking to Wayne Barnes makes me think we can, and it
should be compulsory reading for all referees, elite or otherwise.
Drawing on his experience of 90 Tests, Barnes has developed
a refereeing template that is an antidote to the Homer syndrome, not because it
deliberately sets out to do so — but because it recognises the home factor,
and is based on strong, straightforward values.
“The art of refereeing is to have a clear mind every time
you make a decision,” Barnes says.
“If you read the books of Dr Steve Peters, one of his themes
is wanting to belong to the pack. So, if you’ve got an 80,000 full house at
Twickenham, encouraging you to give one decision, you’ve got to be really
strong of mind to not go with that pack.
“Has it occurred for me? I hope not, but I am not naive
enough to say that it has not happened at some point to some referees. It’s the
same in another way with the underdog – sometimes you might want to protect
that team from having 50 points put on them.
“The art of refereeing is to be able to park all those
external influences – whether it’s that the captain has played 100 times, or
that you’ve got 78,000 people waving a daffodil at you – you say at this scrum,
or at this breakdown, what is the best decision.”
It is possible that Barnes’ views have already had an airing
in refereeing circles because last season’s Six Nations bucked the home factor
for the first time, with a 50 per cent split between home and away wins, with
seven each and one draw.
The only path for our sport is, may the best team win, home or away, and Rugby Union has to hold fast to those values.
NICK CAIN