The NRL is considering considering limiting the use of freeze-frame and introducing a captains challenge in a shake-up of the controversial bunker.Amid a swell of anger over the $2 million video review system, NRL chief executive Todd Greenberg has promised an end-of-season review to look at a raft of potential overhauls.Video referee Bernard Suttons decision to overturn a try to Brisbane forward Herman Eseese in their round-21 loss to the Sydney Roosters on the grounds of a double movement proved the flash point for a fresh round of criticism levelled at officials.Eseese appeared to roll over the line, with the momentum of defenders Blake Ferguson and Dylan Napa, however the bunker poured over the movement in slow motion and concluded he had made a second effort.The use of freeze-frame technology was slammed with many fans and commentators arguing it appeared to be a legal try when viewed at regular speed.Greenberg, while supporting the bunker and the manner in which it had sped up the game, said the NRL was examining whether freeze-frame should be allowed to be used when ruling on incidents such as double movements.Theres a real challenge. Our forefathers who wrote the rule book back in 1908 almost certainly never considered freeze-frame technology, Greenberg told Triple M on Saturday.Theres no doubt our sport and other sports are having a real challenge in how we implement best practice technology into the modern-day game while using a rule book that was written without the concept of technology.What that means in a roundabout sort of way is that - should we adjudicate on all the issues that were adjudicating on in the game? Or are things like double movements and other things not the right things to look at because its so hard to interpret a rule book with the use of technology?Greenberg said he was also looking at introducing the captains challenge that had been used in the under-20s competition since 2012.Allowing players to challenge contentious decisions has been used in cricket and tennis and Greenberg has flagged it as a possible way to quell unrest over video review decisions.Whether you put the onus back onto the players, thats a decision that were going to look at over the course of the off-season and making sure that you take some of that controversy away, Greenberg said.The one thing that the technology has provided, and will continue to provide in all sports, is to take away the howler, to take away the one that is missed that everybody gets upset about.No doubt it does that but then youve got to be careful youre not micro-managing the game.Wholesale Stars Jerseys . -- Yogi Ferrell orchestrates pretty much everything in Indianas offence. Fake Stars Jerseys . Once again Jordan Cieciwa (@FitCityJordan) and I (@LynchOnSports) go head to head in our picks. Last weekend at UFC Fight Night 32 my #TeamLynch got the best of #TeamJC by a score of 9-6. Let us know which side youre on for UFC 167 use the hashtag #TeamLynch or #TeamJC on Twitter. https://www.cheapstarsonline.com/ . The FA rejected Wilsheres appeal that the length of his punishment was "clearly excessive" and said Thursday his suspension begins with immediate effect. He will miss league matches against Chelsea on Monday and West Ham on Dec. Custom Dallas Stars Jerseys . Roman Josi had a goal and an assist to lead the Predators to a 4-1 victory over the Dallas Stars on Monday night. Stars Jerseys 2020 . Burris threw two TD passes, including a key 15-yard fourth-quarter strike to Bakari Grant that effectively countered a Toronto comeback bid and led Hamilton to a 33-19 victory.What will go down in history is not always clear at the time of an event. The Wales vs. Australia match played 50 years ago this week on Dec. 3, 1966 is unfailingly memorable for those of us of a certain age -- three days before my seventh birthday, it is the first international match that I remember.And Australias 14-11 win was recognised at the time as a great moment for the tourists. It had seemed an ill-fated tour. Captain John Thornett was struck down by impetigo and prop Ross Cullen sent home after a biting incident in the match against Oxford University, alienating team members like flanker Jules Guerassimoff who felt that the tour management had treated him badly.The results, starting with a 17-14 defeat by North Eastern Counties in their opening match, had been poor, with as many defeats as victories in the 13 matches before their first international. Defeats against Cardiff, London Counties and South of Scotland were followed in the week before the international by a 9-8 loss to a Swansea team otherwise experiencing one of the worst seasons in their history and a 12-3 defeat by Pontypool, Cross Keys and Newbridge. That display was reckoned by manager Bill McLaughlin to be the worst performance by any Australian team that I have seen, and probably in the history of the game.Rarely in sport, reckoned the Playfair Rugby Football Union, Had anything been reckoned as so much of a foregone conclusion. Wales, led by brilliant No. 8 Alun Pask, had won the last two Five Nations championships. And they had never lost to Australia -- or at least not to a team called Australia.There was the anomaly of the 1927 New South Wales Waratahs, who had toured Europe in Australias place when the other state unions were in abeyance. Known in Wales as the Wara Tegs after the Welsh for fair play, they had won 18-8 at the Arms Park in a match for which the WRU, like the rest of the Five Nations, had awarded full caps. Australia, though, did not regard it as a full international.The 1966 match saw Wales award four new caps -- at centre, outside-half, lock and back row. It was to be, the Playfair recorded, a magnificent match of open rugby which did a very great deal for the game, badly in need of some sort of fillip at that particular moment. The Daily Telegraphs Michael Melford acclaimed the most exciting international match in a long time.Australia led 9-6 at half-time in spite of conceding the first try to Welsh flanker Haydn Morgan, who by winning his 27th cap became Waless most-capped back row at the time. Wallaby outside-half Phil Hawthorne, who played much of the match with a fractured cheekbone, equalised with a drop goal -- these were still the days of the three-point try -- before Australian fullback Jim Lenehan, a veteran of their 1958 touring team, and Welsh counterpart Terry Price exchanged penalties. Then Lenehan, coming into the line, scored the try which gave Australia their interval lead.That advantage was extended to 14-6 early in the second half when wing Alan Cardy crossed for a try converted by Hawthorne. Wales hit back with a try from centre John Dawes, converted by Price, but were unable to close the gap in a furious finale.Welsh writer John Billot records that manager McLaughlin wept tears of pure joy at the end, overcome by a historic moment for Australian rugby. Playfair reckoned the key to their win was skipper Ken Catchpole, a scrum-half rated by infoormed critics like his All Black contemporary Chris Laidlaw as one of the greatest of all time, who was at his most commanding, and Australias attack were built on his quick and long passing.dddddddddddd.John Dawes was later to recall his astonishment at the pace with which Australia launched attacks from all quarters of the pitch and that the sheer speed of their interpassing took his breath away. Yet in spite of this foretaste of what Wallaby teams would offer on a regular basis from 1984 on, the tour continued to be a mixed bag.The Wallabies went on to lose to Scotland, Ireland, Western Counties, West Midlands, Llanelli and Munster and to drop three matches out of four, including the Test, in France. But there were also spectacular wins over England, highlighted by a hat trick of drop-goals by Hawthorne, and in a rousing contest against a powerful Barbarians teamTheir most memorable achievement was downgraded in 1986 when the Australian Rugby Union retrospectively awarded Test status to the Waratah matches of the 1920s -- although New Zealand continues to deny Test caps to the All Blacks who played against them.Of Wales four debutants, only the centre was still in the team at the end of the Five Nations. The Australia match was also the end for flanker Morgan, superb try or not, and scrum-half Allan Lewis, first choice for the Lions in New Zealand a few months earlier. Both, like skipper Pask, were Abertillery players. He too would be gone before the end of the season, and the Gwent valleys club has rarely since commanded selectorial attention.Nor would one of the debutants, Newbridge flanker Keith Braddock, reappear after being dropped following Wales defeat against Ireland, his third cap. It was a different story for the other three.The outside-half was Barry John, then with Llanelli, while the centre was Gerald Davies. Both rank among Welsh rugbys immortals. The lock was another Scarlet, Delme Thomas. He counts among the very, very good, and was an unusual debutant since he had already been to New Zealand with the Lions and played Tests as a lock and prop.All three would overcome this unpromising beginning to make immense contributions to the Welsh golden age shortly to come. John, dropped after one more match, became a fixed point after David Watkins went north in 1967, while Davies true greatness became apparent following his switch to the wing in 1969.Thomas, injured in the final trial a few weeks later, took a while to displace the long-established Brian Price, but by 1968 had become a dominant line-out presence in the tradition of Roy John. All three were also members of the 1971 squad which took the Lions to unprecedented -- and still to be emulated -- heights in New Zealand, while Thomas led the Scarlets when they beat the All Blacks in 1972.A fair few careers began in the 1966-7 season as Wales awarded 14 new caps. The historic tendency for most countries to bring in groups of new players at the start of each season or tour means that it is far from unknown for brilliant international trajectories to have a shared starting-point. But rarely have three such luminous careers begun for the same team on the same afternoon. Fifty years on, it is far from clear which of Australia or Wales should regard this match more fondly. ' ' '