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Don't sweat it numbers. I get it every week.
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Stig, do you really think I don't understand the dangers associated with our game? First of all, as a coach when one of my players puts his head over the ball and he gets his head knocked off, my blood curdles and I go off my nut on the boundary (much to the dismay of my club).You got shares in the Austin Hospital???
It's a 360 degree War Zone out there, played in the middle of winter with no time-outs.
Impact injury is the same as a car accident.............
FMD.
I agree totally with this. We now have a breed of footballers who lead with their heads, hoping to get high contact and get the free, rather than protect themselves. Case in point is the Lynch guy from the crows, a concussion or worse, waiting to happen.Stig, do you really think I don't understand the dangers associated with our game? First of all, as a coach when one of my players puts his head over the ball and he gets his head knocked off, my blood curdles and I go off my nut on the boundary (much to the dismay of my club).
Secondly, I have a teenage son that plays senior footy, do you think I don't worry about him every single time he steps on the ground? Given the tragedies we've seen involving serious head injuries.
I'm not, in any way, advocating head high or dangerous contact. I was commenting on the rules. And I stand by my comment that if a player contributes to their own high contact, it should be play on.
The players that deliberately put themselves at risk just to get a head high free kick are the ones you should be asking about shares in the Austin hospital.
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You read my mind. We can call it the Selwood rule. Let's see how quickly he stops raising his arms when the frees dry up.I'm glad this is being discussed, you'll hear a lot of people say today's footballers aren't as hard as they were "back in the day". I disagree, I think players are just as tough, if not tougher, than they ever were.
The problem as I see it, is the rules are softer, not the players. I completely agree the head must be protected, and the rules must reflect this. BUT, the head high rule, or above the shoulder has gone too far.
For me, there's one simple way to get the balance right. If a player, IN ANY WAY, contributes to his own head high tackle, then it's play on. Simple as that.
If a player ducks, bends at the knees, slides the arm, attempts the break or avoid a tackle, even if he just slips over at the wrong time. If he contributes to the high tackle, and let's face it, most times is just a hand brushing an ear or cheek, but if a player contributes to this high contact, play on, play on, play on.
If the tackler goes in high and makes contact above the shoulders, pay it, protect the head.
But players need to start protecting their own head also, and if they contribute to the high tackle, they're putting themselves at risk, you can't reward that, play on, I'm even ok with paying a free kick against the player that ducks, bends the knees etc.
Yep, the stricter interpretation has actually encouraged some players to literally put their neck on the line.Stig, do you really think I don't understand the dangers associated with our game? First of all, as a coach when one of my players puts his head over the ball and he gets his head knocked off, my blood curdles and I go off my nut on the boundary (much to the dismay of my club).
Secondly, I have a teenage son that plays senior footy, do you think I don't worry about him every single time he steps on the ground? Given the tragedies we've seen involving serious head injuries.
I'm not, in any way, advocating head high or dangerous contact. I was commenting on the rules. And I stand by my comment that if a player contributes to their own high contact, it should be play on.
The players that deliberately put themselves at risk just to get a head high free kick are the ones you should be asking about shares in the Austin hospital.
That one could have ended up very badly.Eg Simon White's broken neck
Been saying this for ages now but the problem with the modern game is the average fan no longer understands it. I reckon the AFL has a real problem on its hands because tactically the game has moved on so quickly that many media people do not even understand it. The clubs are too scared to let their tactics out yet all this does is keep us all further removed from the game. For me they need to start running programs that educate us so we all have half a chance of understanding what is going on.
If he had prior opportunity it should be holding the ball, or illegal disposal. Without prior opportunity it is play on.When a player with the ball gets tackled and the ball spills out and the umpire says it was knocked out in the tackle bloody enrages me. It's illegal disposal you idiot. Did he handball? NO. Did he kick it? NO. FFS I'm getting angry now just thinking of it
That's the thing. They hardly ever pay it when they have had prior opportunityIf he had prior opportunity it should be holding the ball, or illegal disposal. Without prior opportunity it is play on.
A good umpire is one you do not notice at all. Hate the grandstanders who seem to want to make a game about them blowing the whistle to decide the outcome of a game. Let it flow...I continue to maintain it is the umpires' lack of feel for the game that creates the issues. With the likes of Bannister, Fisher & shortly Carrazzo taking up the caper, you would hope this improves. The AFL needs to encourage as many ex-AFL players as possible to pick up the whistle & put on the OPSM shirt.
I wonder how big the Razor fan club is nowadays - he probably won more games than CFC in 2015