Cleary Bennett trade blows in fiery post-game press conferences
Ivan Cleary and Wayne Bennett have locked horns in an extraordinary post-script to South Sydneyâs finals victory over Penrith, with the Panthers coach all but accusing Bennett of manipulating match officials with his public comments and Bennett firing back to suggest it was Cleary who had been âmouthing offâ.
The Rabbitohs put themselves into another preliminary final with a gritty 16-10 upset victory in Townsville on Saturday night but the post-game press conferences would prove to be as dramatic as any of the action that unfolded on the field.
It all revolved around a story in the Sydney Morning Herald where Cleary went public to defend his sideâs tactics after he discovered Bennett had privately questioned referees over what he alleged to be illegal block-plays to shield Panthers halfback Nathan Cleary from kick pressure.
In reply, Bennett said Penrith employed the tactic at training and in games and urged the NRL to take note. He also hit out at the leaked story after he approached officials for clarification following his sideâs loss to Penrith in round 23, a match in which Cleary launched a series of towering bombs that confounded South Sydneyâs wingers.
On Saturday, Cleary said he didnât want to take the matter public in the first place but felt he had no choice given Bennettâs questions to NRL officials. He said coaches should be banned from commenting about match officials before games and had no doubt it had an impact during his sideâs defeat.
âI was probably guilty of trying to put our case forward this week, only because I had to, I had to respond. Itâs probably not the forum to talk about it but the NRL has to make a decision on whether theyâre going to allow coaches to deliberately manipulate referees and try to influence them. Coaches do it because they can. We get fined afterwards but pre-game, itâs pretty much open slather,â Cleary said.
âOur boys were being spoken to about stuff on the run that we never get done for, so Iâd suggest that type of thing has an influence. As I said, I was guilty of it myself because I had to respond. But I think the game could do itself a favour and come down on any coach who wants to deliberately influence a match official before a game.â
Cleary didnât accuse Bennett by name but when asked whether he felt Bennettâs pre-match comments were acceptable, he replied: âHas he been sanctioned for it? No.
âIf you allow it to happen, it will happen. Itâs up to the NRL. If they donât care, thatâs fine. I probably shouldnât have brought it up but I believe in it.
âThe referees department spend way too much time going through complaints from coaches every week. Yeah, I occasionally do it, probably one out of 10. How is the refereeâs department supposed to get better when they are constantly having to deal with clubâs complaining?
âItâs not just tonight, it goes on all year. Itâs obviously heightened at finals time. Itâs allowed to happen so I canât knock anyone doing it. If you allow public manipulation and indirect influence, then I would say you are only human if you are a referee. â
Blake Taaffe had a wobble early, but was calm under the high ball for the rest of the night.Credit:Getty
Bennett was having none of it, saying it was Cleary who dragged the matter into the public domain and suggested his initial query after the round 23 clash was leaked to the Panthers because Cleary used to be a consultant to the NRL referee department.
âI didnât start the conversation publicly. I said nothing publicly. This happened three weeks ago. I sent some information to the referees for clarification. I wasnât going public with anything until Penrith came out with the public statements and I just responded to those. I wasnât going to sit back and not stand up for my team and my players,â Bennett said.
He said he agreed that coaches should be banned from making public comments that could influence referees but defended the right for coaches and clubs to seek rule clarifications from the NRL.
âI couldnât agree with him more on that (public comments) but thatâs why I didnât say anything. I didnât say anything for three weeks. We played them three weeks ago, he was the one that came out and started mouthing off.
âJust get that in perspective. So if heâs critical, heâs critical of himself. But South Sydney had no say whatsoever until he came out and talked it all up.
âThereâs no public manipulation. I saw an incident in the game that I didnât like. Surely itâs my right to ask the referees what their interpretation of that is... thatâs what I did, thatâs the process. If thatâs manipulating the game, youâre all kidding yourselves.
âThatâs manipulating nobody. And if the referees canât handle that - and Iâm sure they can - Iâm sure Iâm not the only coach to question a decision. Thatâs what they are there for but keep it in house. I didnât put it on the front page, I never said a word. Three weeks ago I did it. Three weeks.
âWe should have that right (to speak to the NRL about rules). You canât take that away from us. The public comment? Yeah, Iâm a fan of (ending) that. But I didnât start this one. â
When Bennett again insisted he didnât start this particular fire, he was asked who did?
âIvan did. He worked for them, he worked for the referees before he went back into coaching. Iâve got to assume heâs got some mates there still. Thatâs not my department. Iâm just telling you the background of it.â
For Bennett, the view was much better from the winning side of the desk and he couldnât help but find some enjoyment in the drama of it all.
âIt was good theatre, wasnât it?â Bennett said. âGot everybody pumped up a bit?â
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