SmokeyTA wrote:
if I were to attempt to punch the ball backwards to a team mate, or to in fact make any action which is neither a throw nor a knock under these rules cannot be judged as to whether it is either a forward pass because it hadn't been passed nor a knock on because it hadn't been knocked!
The rules assume every action is one or the other when that isn't the case
The rules assume every action is one or the other when that isn't the case
Punching the ball is not a throw, so if the ball went forward relative to the ground it would be a knock on.
What other action, that might actually happen on a rugby field, is "neither a throw or a knock"? If you can tell us what you're talking about, maybe we can explain it to you.
However it might be easier if you just accept that any unlisted method of punching, poking, tickling, elbowing, slapping, karate-chopping, batting, or other propelling of the ball with hand or arm which is not a PASS, will be a knock-on if the ball goes forward relative to the ground.
If instead of catching the ball I punch it forwards to the ground, this is not a "punch on" or anything else, but a simple knock-on.
If instead of catching the ball I poke it forwards to the ground, this is not a "poke on" or anything else, but a simple knock-on.
If instead of catching the ball I elbow it forwards to the ground, this is not an "elbow on" or anything else, but a simple knock-on.
If instead of catching the ball I karate-chop it forwards to the ground, this is not a "karate-chop on" or anything else, but a simple knock-on.
If instead of catching the ball I propel it forwards to the ground by means of any one of no doubt hundreds of proprietary martial arts blows from any one of the many martial arts disciplines, then while doubtless the blow I used may be an enpi uchi, or a chudan-choku-zuki, or a haito uchi, the fact that the strike does have some technical or proprietary name outside of rugby does not matter, it remains a simple knock-on.
Am I making the point any clearer?