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I understand that the Lonie brothers have signalled their intention to return to the AFL, by nominating for this years draft.
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If it means no more BS incorrect and soft decisions, then yes.
You make a good point about the Hodge incident. It seems like MRP doesn't even know what the **** they're doing. People wouldn't have as much of a problem with these calls if they were at least consistent within their own rules.I'm not so sure. Douglas and Fyfe were clear victims of the Thomas rule change. Whether or not you agree with that rule change it at least had a clear principle behind it that head clashes still count as bumps and all players had an intent to bump.
The Viney decision is more about the outrage over bumps that's been evident for some years now and has just been building up year after year. For the last couple of years any contact between a shoulder and a head has been instant suspension. The Viney case is really the next level continuation of the Ziebell case where it doesn't matter what a player was doing - going for the ball, bracing for contact etc - they are gone regardless. The outlier here is the Hodge double decisions where some how he got away with one for being a genuine contest and then a second because Roughy was in his way. His defensive was no other reasonable course of action and inevitable contact. Funnily 2 of the 3 tribunal members were the same ones as last night.
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He's not saying they're similar, just that it is part of the domino effect of outlawing accidents. It's not that hard to grasp...What the hell is Brad Scott going on about - he seems to want to bring everything back to Lindsay Thomas.
Lindsay Thomas changed direction had eyes for the man, jumped off the ground and took him out. There was an accidental head clash, but the headclash could easily have been avoided if Thomas hadn't leapt off the ground, or elected to bump in a situation where it wasn't warranted.
Compare that with Viney - two blokes going for the ball and due to the vagaries of the oval ball one gets it first (sort of) and two blokes run into each other.
I do believe Scott has a persecution complex.
What Thomas did is miles from what Taylro Hunt (and Fyfe) did - and not on the same planet as Viney.
What possibly could give you that idea? Was it the closing of the roof?What the hell is Brad Scott going on about - he seems to want to bring everything back to Lindsay Thomas.
Lindsay Thomas changed direction had eyes for the man, jumped off the ground and took him out. There was an accidental head clash, but the headclash could easily have been avoided if Thomas hadn't leapt off the ground, or elected to bump in a situation where it wasn't warranted.
Compare that with Viney - two blokes going for the ball and due to the vagaries of the oval ball one gets it first (sort of) and two blokes run into each other.
I do believe Scott has a persecution complex.
What Thomas did is miles from what Taylro Hunt (and Fyfe) did - and not on the same planet as Viney.
What possibly could give you that idea? Was it the closing of the roof?
But I agree it's way way different to Viney of which the best comparison is Hodge last year.
But whilst Thomas was nastier and meaner than Hunt and Fyfe it was a similar action. You can't ban mean head clashes but leave in nice head clashes, the rule on head clashes has to be clear and as Scott says 85% of coaches wanted them gone. They should either throw out head clashes or grade simple non dangerous ones as 50 points and a reprimand and the worse ones with injuries at 150 points. No head clash should be more than one week as by default they were accidents.
Interesting post.
Schimma was nothing more than a champion who played the game fairly. Can't recall him ever throwing a cut lunch in anger. A man to be respected.
Henwood was probably the other way...he actually didn't mind throwing his weight around.
The thing with it though is if the appeal stands, the integrity of and the independence of the Tribunal process comes into question, as does the integrity of those who sit in judgement. Is that what we really want?
Bingo, I'd be very surprised if this one wasn't overturned.Sounds like the appeal will be successful going by Demetriou's comments.
I think the AFL are worried about an even bigger backlash from the media, players and supporters if this decision isn't overturned and so they should be.
He's not saying they're similar, just that it is part of the domino effect of outlawing accidents. It's not that hard to grasp...
The headclash part was an accident though. What if Thomas himself was knocked out from it? Do you still suspend or just laugh at him? What if a player breaks someone's ribs in a particularly strong tackle? Do you see the issue here?Thomas' bump wasn't an accident. He chose to change direction and jump into a bloke when the ball was running out of bounds.
That's a far cry from Fyfe, Hunt or Viney.
Unless you are contesting the ball in the air (like Jordan Lewis a few years back) - if you elect to jump off the ground you take what comes your way IMO.
Should have been thrown out but once found guilty the grading of medium for impact with a broken jaw is surprising.High = broken neck, severe = decapitation?
The headclash part was an accident though. What if Thomas himself was knocked out from it? Do you still suspend or just laugh at him? What if a player breaks someone's ribs in a particularly strong tackle? Do you see the issue here?
Interesting post.
Schimma was nothing more than a champion who played the game fairly. Can't recall him ever throwing a cut lunch in anger. A man to be respected.
Henwood was probably the other way...he actually didn't mind throwing his weight around.
The thing with it though is if the appeal stands, the integrity of and the independence of the Tribunal process comes into question, as does the integrity of those who sit in judgement. Is that what we really want?
This is my reading of it too. I am hoping it is just a bit of flying the flag in the media and not wanting to give away our case before the appeal is heard but if not we could be in trouble.
Melbourne cannot afford to make this a crusade against the tribunal, we need to focus on the particular deficiencies of the case presented("realistic alternative" vs "realistic aalternative way to contest the ball"). If we do that we stand a really good chance of beating this.
If on the other hand we go in with "the whole damn system is out of order" nobody knows what the result will be.
Still more logical than what the MRP comes up withIn honour of the AFL's adoption of the "May the Fourth" Star Wars themed round, Melbourne will be running the Chewbacca defense;
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Yep, Schimma was very fair, Henwood was at the opposite end.
I was just wondering about Shimma & Co's thought process's.
Typical.
Let's attack great football people and play the man. Geez I love football..shame there's so many idiots.
I'm assuming you mean that this was the reason he was sent directly to the tribunal by the match review committee (sort of reads like Viney elected to take it straight to them). If so, I think that was done because it was a tough one to classify.
Just like in real life, when if you punch someone in the head and they die you're up for manslaughter....
and if you punch someone in the head and they laugh and walk off you're a free man.
SAme punch, same action, different results, different punishment.
It's all about intent guys. People laughing at comparisons to the Douglas hit aren't looking at the bigger picture. Douglas intended to bump, and bumped fairly. He didn't hit him head high. The only reason it was looked at is because there was an accidental headclash (or whiplash and head hitting the ground). Watch the Hawks/Cats games from a couple of weeks ago or any final and you'll see 100 bumps (not head high) in a game reasonably similar that don't get looked at simply because the player wasn't hurt. Think of it this way, if a big strong ruckmen tackled a small forward, fairly, around the body, and broke his ribs, do we ban the ruckmen? Players are told to tackle hard and sometimes accidents will happen. The same with the Thomas/Douglas bump. If you're saying that an accident in the event of a bump is different than an accident in a result of a tackle then what does that say about the bump? Is it not valid? Douglas didn't have the option to tackle, you can't tackle a player running towards the contest without the ball, that's what a bump or really, a shepard, is designed for.
How does this relate to Viney? It's about the bigger picture. He's been banned because of the injury to Lynch. He wasn't banned because of intent, just like Douglas wasn't banned because he hit a bump, he was banned because of an accident where the player was injured. People all cried in outrage last year that Thomas should have been rubbed out, simply because he hit a bump that wasn't high that resulted in an accidental head clash. What if Thomas was concussed instead? Would people want to suspend him still? What if if two players from the same team are going back with the flight of the ball and clash heads? That, just like Thomas, Douglas and Viney is an accident, so why is it any different?