Reginald Perrin
Shouting at clouds
- Oct 19, 2010
- 19,021
- 25,484
- AFL Club
- Tasmania
- Other Teams
- Coney Island Warriors South Fremantle
Was one of my favourite rules when boundary umpiring, especially when I picked it up and the field umpire wasn't even aware of the rule (long time ago, country league).
I understand there has been some amendments to the rule/interpretation about the ball being in play when the player crosses back over the line, but I am noticing more and more examples in AFL of playing on outside the boundary which I believe should be penalised.
1. OOTF - Player was standing outside the boundary line when the umpire called play on due to time taken to take his kick.
2. OOTF - Player was standing outside the boundary line and changed the direction of play to kick backwards. I have seen this more than once, with one a few weeks ago where the player actually ran nearly 10 metres toward his own goal parallel to the boundary line before crossing.
3. Player took a mark inside the field of play but his momentum carried him over the boundary line where he stayed to get distance between himself and the man on the mark. He played on and ran for about 5 metres out of bounds before kicking back into play, field umpire called play on.
Perhaps the umpires know something I don't, but there is something fundamentally wrong with using space outside the legal field of play for advantage.
I understand there has been some amendments to the rule/interpretation about the ball being in play when the player crosses back over the line, but I am noticing more and more examples in AFL of playing on outside the boundary which I believe should be penalised.
1. OOTF - Player was standing outside the boundary line when the umpire called play on due to time taken to take his kick.
2. OOTF - Player was standing outside the boundary line and changed the direction of play to kick backwards. I have seen this more than once, with one a few weeks ago where the player actually ran nearly 10 metres toward his own goal parallel to the boundary line before crossing.
3. Player took a mark inside the field of play but his momentum carried him over the boundary line where he stayed to get distance between himself and the man on the mark. He played on and ran for about 5 metres out of bounds before kicking back into play, field umpire called play on.
Perhaps the umpires know something I don't, but there is something fundamentally wrong with using space outside the legal field of play for advantage.





