Frank Lomani receives lengthy ban for elbow, Jone Koroiduadua gets two weeks

Tue, Apr 9, 2024, 11:41 PM
Nathan Williamson
by Nathan Williamson
Frank Lomani is red carded after a blatant strike in Round 7 of Super Rugby Pacific 2024

Fijian Drua scrumhalf Frank Lomani will not be available until the final round of the regular season after receiving a six week ban.

Lomani elbowed Josh Canham during the defeat to the Melbourne Rebels at AAMI Park, receiving a red card.

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The scrumhalf was assessed at the top-end range, with his sentence reduced after an early guilty plea.

"Having conducted a detailed review of all the available evidence, including all camera angles and additional evidence, including from the player and submissions, the Foul Play Review Committee upheld the Red Card and found the Player to have contravened Law 9.12," FPRC Chairman Stephen Hardy ruled. 

"The entry point for the offence was 10 weeks (assessed as Top-End range for intentional and deliberate physical abuse of striking with an elbow to the back of the victim player’s head and causing injury, where the victim player was in an incredibly vulnerable position with limited ability, if any, to defend himself). 

"The Player was given a discount for entering an early guilty plea (and other relevant mitigating factors), reducing the suspension from 10 weeks to 6 weeks.  The Player is therefore suspended up to and including 26 May 2024.”

“In providing the Player the Sanction, the Foul Play Review Committee emphasised that this sort of incident is not tolerated in any form of the game.”

He will return for the final round of the regular season, ironically against the Melbourne Rebels in Fiji.

As for Koroiduadua, he only received two weeks for his headbutt in the final moments of the defeat.

It was deemed at the low-end entry point due to 'limited contact with the head', with a clean record and 'off-field mitigating factors' seeing the incident reduced from six to two.

“The FPRC deemed the act of foul play merited a low-end entry point of 6 weeks primarily given that the Player and victim player were “head to head” prior to the incident, and that the Player’s head appears to have made limited contact with the head of the victim player and rather made contact with the chest area of the victim player.   There was also no injury to the victim player," Hardy said.

“The Foul Play Review Committee emphasised that had there been more forceful head contact made, the entry point may well have been higher than low-end. The entry point for the offence is 6 weeks.

The Foul Play Review Committee applied a discount of 3 weeks for entering an early guilty plea (and other relevant mitigating factors including the Player’s otherwise unblemished disciplinary record), reducing the suspension from 6 weeks to 3 weeks.

"Further, where a matter is determined to be low-end offending, there are off-field mitigating factors, and the sanction would be wholly disproportionate to the level and type of offending involved, a sanction below 50% of the sanction may apply. 

"To that end, the Foul Play Review Committee considered a sanction of 3 weeks would have been wholly disproportionate to the level and type of offending involved, and applied a further reduction of 1 week to the sanction, resulting in a total sanction of 2 weeks.”

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