Quote ="Kelvin's Ferret"According to the RFL's own published guidelines TJs' [url=http://www.therfl.co.uk/~therflc/clientdocs/Communication.pdfcan call a forward pass[/url, and they [url=http://www.therfl.co.uk/~therflc/clientdocs/Touch%20Judging%202007.ppt#309,24,Handcan signal for a forward pass[/url.
Now if the RFL aren't telling the truth and the TJ saw it, started to signal it, and then thought [i"oops I better pretend I haven't seen that because I'm not supposed to notice, so I'll put my arm back down and hope nobody notices that I noticed" [/ithen it's ridiculous, but not his fault. But the idea that he didn't see it doesn't make sense to me, if he didn't see it (and he'd have blind not to have), then why bother reacting to it (unless of course he did see it and forgot that he's not supposed to see it, which is even more stupid)?
He gave himself away with the way he acted, it was just fluke that he happened to be in line with me when he did it, usually I wouldn't have noticed, but once he did, then he couldn't undo it. There's very little point in arguing this further, I can't change what he did, anymore than I can pretend I didn't see him react to the clear forward pass.'"
At the top levels, where officials have comms, they just stand where it happened after telling the ref. Doesn't tend happen in SL or any rep aussie stuff with comms. Of course if the comms malfunction or there are no comms, then a signal may be used.
The ref can overrule the TJ. On doing video work, we hear the officials conversations. I've heard on may occasions a touchie calling "forward" or "4's offside". Only for a ref to say "It's fine. I'll take that one". When this happens the touchie catches up with play.
Maybe that's what happened in your game, and you're right in what you've said. And maybe your TJ was going to signal, but told the ref.