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Flannery Will Miss The Rest Of The 6 Nations

CATEGORIES: News, Rugby | POSTED BY: | February 17, 2010 at 2:50 pm

Ireland’s Jerry Flannery will miss the rest of the RBS 6 Nations Championship after being suspended for six weeks for kicking France winger Alexis Palisson.

Flannery, who pleaded guilty and acknowledged the offence deserved a red card, has been banned until March 29, ruling him out of Ireland’s fixtures against England, Wales and Scotland.

An independent disciplinary panel found the offence, which forced Palisson from the field with a dead leg, had been reckless rather than deliberate. The Munster hooker, who has the right to appeal, was fortunate only to concede a penalty after his wild swing connected with Palisson after the Brive winger had picked up a loose ball.

Referee Wayne Barnes consulted his touch judge Stuart Terheege, who believed the challenge to be a ‘shoulder charge’ and so Flannery escaped a potential red card. But replays showed the severity of an incident which could have caused serious injury to Palisson.

Rory Best of Ulster is the likely choice to replace Flannery at hooker after recovering from neck surgery in time for the Six Nations. But losing Flannery will be a bitter blow to Ireland as they seek to pick up the pieces in the wake of the French defeat.

England at Twickenham on Saturday week is their next assignment before finishing the tournament against Wales and Scotland.

The IRFU released a statement following the verdict which said: ‘The IRFU and Ireland team management will wait to review the written judgement before considering any further possible action.’ Flannery’s suspension currently expires in time for him to play in Munster’s Magners League game against Leinster on the first weekend of April.

Munster then tackle Northampton in the Heineken Cup quarter-finals at Thomand Park on April 10.



ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Daniel Pitcher
Daniel "Pitchside" Pitcher
Twitter: @DanFM104Sport
About: Dan "Pitchside" Pitcher provides insight and commentary as the chief soccer and rugby correspondent for Sportspeak.

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