So really you have no point other than being contradictory. The judges conclusion as released makes no sense in logic because they concluded that thymosin was used by Essendon; they conclude that it was the illegal one; then they decide that they can't on balance state that any individual player took illegal sunstances because essentially there are no records that show what they got.
The Essendon position is that they don't know what the players got.
IMO the judges applied a standard higher than that required and ultimately discounted that the breach of obligations of the players - a offence that had been also largely ignored by the media.
If you knowingly breach a condition of the drug regime and find yourself the subject of a disgraceful program in which the AFL tribunal believes illegal drugs were used, then I reckon the benefit of the doubt is lost by your willful breach...
The tribunal is many things, but internal disciplinary committees always struggle with the perception test...
Link please? Unless you provide evidence to what you just stated that is just your opinion. So until you actually provide some evidence you have no real point apart from your opinion.




