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Ground rules
As most will have seen Josh Caddy is set to miss this weeks important Hawthorn clash after accepting a 1 match ban for striking David Mackay on Thursday night, this act occurred during an attempt to spoil the ball and could be put down to being clumsy or reckless in his attempt. I think most would however agree that if you concuss someone you are pretty much writing your own ticket, the argument here is not that Caddy should be free to play but whether should be determining sanctions based on intent not outcome.
In the Easter Monday clash Hawthorn's James Sicily was offered a one match ban for kneeing Joel Selwood in the head whilst the later was laying on the ground, with the contact ruled low impact to the head. This was not a football act and could be considered worse than Josh Caddy's strike.
The MRP actually does have a potential loading for potential to cause injury and had this to say regarding Sicily
Match Review Officer Michael Christian assessed the incident as intentional conduct with low impact to the head, resulting in a one-match ban being offered, but he had the option of lifting the impact to medium under the clause of potential to cause serious injury.
"(Football operations manager) Steve Hocking and I discussed that and certainly considered (medium impact)," Christian told Melbourne radio station SEN on Tuesday.
"I suppose when we're thinking about the potential to cause (serious injury), the forcefulness of the contact was the key issue. It wasn't overly forceful. He didn't drive his knee into Joel's head.
Click to expand...
If kneeing someone in the head does not have the potential to cause serious injury then what does? Key word there potential if he did drive he knee into Selwood's head then he likely would have caused actual injuries rendering the potential injury clause moot.
The third case to look at is Adelaide's Richard Douglas who ran past the ball to concuss Zac Merrit during their round 1 clash with Essendon this was assessed as Careless and medium the same as Josh Caddy.
So the question is should the MRP be assigning sanctions based on intent with a loading for actually causing injury or is the current system working?
The 3 incidents in question
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As most will have seen Josh Caddy is set to miss this weeks important Hawthorn clash after accepting a 1 match ban for striking David Mackay on Thursday night, this act occurred during an attempt to spoil the ball and could be put down to being clumsy or reckless in his attempt. I think most would however agree that if you concuss someone you are pretty much writing your own ticket, the argument here is not that Caddy should be free to play but whether should be determining sanctions based on intent not outcome.
In the Easter Monday clash Hawthorn's James Sicily was offered a one match ban for kneeing Joel Selwood in the head whilst the later was laying on the ground, with the contact ruled low impact to the head. This was not a football act and could be considered worse than Josh Caddy's strike.
The MRP actually does have a potential loading for potential to cause injury and had this to say regarding Sicily
Match Review Officer Michael Christian assessed the incident as intentional conduct with low impact to the head, resulting in a one-match ban being offered, but he had the option of lifting the impact to medium under the clause of potential to cause serious injury.
"(Football operations manager) Steve Hocking and I discussed that and certainly considered (medium impact)," Christian told Melbourne radio station SEN on Tuesday.
"I suppose when we're thinking about the potential to cause (serious injury), the forcefulness of the contact was the key issue. It wasn't overly forceful. He didn't drive his knee into Joel's head.
Click to expand...
If kneeing someone in the head does not have the potential to cause serious injury then what does? Key word there potential if he did drive he knee into Selwood's head then he likely would have caused actual injuries rendering the potential injury clause moot.
The third case to look at is Adelaide's Richard Douglas who ran past the ball to concuss Zac Merrit during their round 1 clash with Essendon this was assessed as Careless and medium the same as Josh Caddy.
So the question is should the MRP be assigning sanctions based on intent with a loading for actually causing injury or is the current system working?
The 3 incidents in question





