Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
Get ready for forwards in a bad position handballing to defenders with a forward next to them ready to tackle to gain a positional advantage.
Sure, stop the slinging and the lifting in tackles, but don't take the hurt factor of a hard tackle out of the game. We don't want touch footy.
Here's an idea, stop messing with the rules and let players and coaches figure things out.TF is this?.........Obviously you're not a golfer. -
Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
Get ready for forwards in a bad position handballing to defenders with a forward next to them ready to tackle to gain a positional advantage.
Sure, stop the slinging and the lifting in tackles, but don't take the hurt factor of a hard tackle out of the game. We don't want touch footy.
Here's an idea, stop messing with the rules and let players and coaches figure things out.They say Burt Lancaster has one, but I don't believe them.Comment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
I know it's popular to knock all change and say everything should stay as it is, but I think AFL is a dynamic sport in part because we do review how coaching trends/playing styles impact on the game and query whether the game is at it's optimum. In my opinion, change is not in itself a bad thing and shouldn't be resisted just because.
If so, it would still be ok for a defender to kick the ball into the grandstand whenever under pressure.
I don't know if I'd go as far as Buckley, but personally I like the idea that if a player receives the ball from a team mate, the notion of priority opportunity shouldn't exist. If you get a handpass from a teammate, get tackled immediately and don't get rid of it, I reckon your team should lose the ball.Comment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
You'd go home at 3/4 time if you were down by 3 goals as the opposition would punch the ball out of bounds from the ruck contest for 20 minutesIf you kicked five goals and Tom Boyd kicked five goals, Tom Boyd kicked more goals than you.
Formerly gogriffComment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
I know it's popular to knock all change and say everything should stay as it is, but I think AFL is a dynamic sport in part because we do review how coaching trends/playing styles impact on the game and query whether the game is at it's optimum. In my opinion, change is not in itself a bad thing and shouldn't be resisted just because.
If so, it would still be ok for a defender to kick the ball into the grandstand whenever under pressure.
I don't know if I'd go as far as Buckley, but personally I like the idea that if a player receives the ball from a team mate, the notion of priority opportunity shouldn't exist. If you get a handpass from a teammate, get tackled immediately and don't get rid of it, I reckon your team should lose the ball.
The best one of recent times is making the head sacrosanct and penalising any contact made to the head, irrespective of how it was caused, realising that makes players with the ball run head first into opponents, or sliding into players legs to get the ball, and then banning sliding to make it better!
Remember when they changed the 10m minimum to 15m minimum to reduce the influence of zoning and decrease congestion? All that did was make the zone stand 5m further from the kicker. Now they want to make the minimum kick 25m.......to stop congestion.........and they think that'll mean the game will open up rather than the congestion just moving a further 10m back again.
If there's a worthwhile change, like the one that stopped the negative tactic of rushing a behind (2008 Grand Final), or allowing the kicker to kick immediately when a ball has been collected after a behind rather than wait for the flags (or the change you mention) then I'm all for it.TF is this?.........Obviously you're not a golfer.Comment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
They should have dealt with it by making behinds 2 points insteadIf you kicked five goals and Tom Boyd kicked five goals, Tom Boyd kicked more goals than you.
Formerly gogriffComment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
They could go shorter, say, only put it to 25m out but the penalty there is the other team is that bit closer to their own goal and further away from yours (albeit marginally in each case).
It makes the six points more of a premium outcome.
I'm happy enough with the way that rule is adjudicated now. If teams want to go deep they risk losing the footy and getting only a small reward. It's one of the nuances of the game that gets lost in the quest for high scores.TF is this?.........Obviously you're not a golfer.Comment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
That's the whole problem with the rushed behinds. It's such a penalty now to score a behind with the way sides can go coast to coast you would rather the ball went out of bounds, even on the full, so they're tucked into a pocketIf you kicked five goals and Tom Boyd kicked five goals, Tom Boyd kicked more goals than you.
Formerly gogriffComment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
I do appreciate what you're saying and I've thought about awarding three points for a rushed behind from time to time, and the conclusion I've always come to is it would just result in more congestion. Instead of rushing the ball, you'd have teams just killing the ball in their defensive 50's all the time or giving away free kicks for holding the ball. Imagine how infuriating the no prior opportunity taken into consideration rule would be under those circumstances.
One thing that pisses me off more than plain mistakes from my team, is when the rules make them kick it to the opposition or be constrained by having the only option being to hand over the ball and risk another goal being kicked. It's a manufactured outcome that suggests the balance is fairly and squarely tipped towards offence.
Perhaps it's just me.TF is this?.........Obviously you're not a golfer.Comment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
The AFL decided just to prevent the defense from knocking it through for 5 (but only under some circumstances) instead of correcting the score from 5 to 9If you kicked five goals and Tom Boyd kicked five goals, Tom Boyd kicked more goals than you.
Formerly gogriffComment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
Once again, appreciate where you're coming from but I think a fundamental of the game is the premium of a goal.
Which team is going to just kick the footy out on the full in case they only score a point when it's all said and done? Having the disparity between nothing, only scoring one with a soft chance the ball will be run out and a goal is probably the best thing about our scoring system. It makes teams go for broke to get the six points.
Plus, I still think teams set up to defend kick ins better than they do to defend kicks in from out on the full making them more likely to score from that scenario. But, I'm not a stats guy so happy to stand corrected.
Perhaps scoring with a basketball system of 3,2,1 type intervals would work if our field was smaller and scoring was more frequent due to quick transition from end to end, but it isn't.TF is this?.........Obviously you're not a golfer.Comment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
I know it's popular to knock all change and say everything should stay as it is, but I think AFL is a dynamic sport in part because we do review how coaching trends/playing styles impact on the game and query whether the game is at it's optimum. In my opinion, change is not in itself a bad thing and shouldn't be resisted just because.
If so, it would still be ok for a defender to kick the ball into the grandstand whenever under pressure.
I don't know if I'd go as far as Buckley, but personally I like the idea that if a player receives the ball from a team mate, the notion of priority opportunity shouldn't exist. If you get a handpass from a teammate, get tackled immediately and don't get rid of it, I reckon your team should lose the ball.
I don't mind rule changes like stopping players being rammed into the ground head first. What I detest is the AFL changing rules because they don't like the way the game is being played and they want rule changes to make the game look like the so called good old days.
No rule changes will make the game the same as it was in the 80's (thank god).FFC: Established 1883
Premierships: AFL 1954, 2016 VFA - 1898,99,1900, 1908, 1913, 1919-20, 1923-24, VFL: 2014, 2016 . Champions of Victoria 1924. AFLW - 2018.Comment
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Re: Buckleys thoughts on rule changes/reintepretations
It's like if basketball started calling it a turnover if a shot hit the ring but didn't go in, but missing everything or hitting the backboard was play on. Aside from making no sense, we would see side effects like less 3 point shots as there's every chance they will be turnovers instead of 50/50 rebounds if they miss.
In the AFL, we see less shots from the boundary or outside 50 because if it's "only" a behind, they only score 1 point and the opposition gets the ball with space and time to setup an attack. If it were 2 or 3 points, they would be more willing to have a go rather than kick to a contest in the hopes of winning the ball closer to goal for a more high percentage shotIf you kicked five goals and Tom Boyd kicked five goals, Tom Boyd kicked more goals than you.
Formerly gogriffComment
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