Send off rule.
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Re: Send off rule.
It's a fine line. About the only way I could see it being effective is if they are off the ground for the same amount of time, as suggested by Eade on the couch. Eg. Hall would of been sent off for the game for as long as Staker was off.
Only problem with that one is if clubs play politically. Say they keep Staker off the ground for the entire game, as Hall provides a dangerous option for The Swans up forward. Hall & Staker off = win to Eagles.
Probably the sensible thing is to simply leave it. It could turn out to be a disastrious rule, as umpires could make mistakes with sending off the wrong player (through retaliation) or as I said above, with clubs 'fixing' it.
In this day and age it's rare we see incidents like last Saturday Night. Therefore, I think we'd be better placed to leave it as it is. I doubt we'll see something as big as this for a long time to come and I think it's a potentially harming exercise to try and accommodate for the 'what ifs'.[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
First quarter of a grand final and Barry Hall is getting towelled up by Lake, so he flattens him. Lake is concussed and is gone for the game.
After quarter time, having naturally being allowed to stay on the field, Hall runs riot, kicking 5 goals and setting up 4 more. Meanwhile, we play the game one short.
We lose by 2 goals. Barry Hall retires with another premiership medallion around his neck and goes on to a prosperous and profitable boxing career.
He doesn't even bother fronting up to the tribunal to receive his 20 match suspension.
Just that it didn't work for Alastair Lynch as they lost the GF.Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
It's a fine line. About the only way I could see it being effective is if they are off the ground for the same amount of time, as suggested by Eade on the couch. Eg. Hall would of been sent off for the game for as long as Staker was off.
Only problem with that one is if clubs play politically. Say they keep Staker off the ground for the entire game, as Hall provides a dangerous option for The Swans up forward. Hall & Staker off = win to Eagles.
Probably the sensible thing is to simply leave it. It could turn out to be a disastrious rule, as umpires could make mistakes with sending off the wrong player (through retaliation) or as I said above, with clubs 'fixing' it.
In this day and age it's rare we see incidents like last Saturday Night. Therefore, I think we'd be better placed to leave it as it is. I doubt we'll see something as big as this for a long time to come and I think it's a potentially harming exercise to try and accommodate for the 'what ifs'.Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
No doubt it would of been fair on Saturday Night, but what if a player fakes? Let's say a player cops one in the chest and drops to the ground. They come off the ground and would usually be right to play in at least a quarter's time. However, his side's coaching panel realises it puts them in a better position to win if he stays off, forcing the offender to sit on the pine too.
It's a very fine line and it's asking too much of the umpires IMHO. They make enough mistakes as it is, and they simply don't have the time to sift through reality & make believe. It's too hard a call to make, and you can be sure that eventually some sides would start doing this.
Why? We want this game to be better and fairer so not allowing for a sending off rule in these cases to me seems stupid.
Perhaps a 'time limit' punishment would be better. Eg. 20 minutes on the pine. Still, it's placing a lot of responsibility on the umpires to strictly enforce a rule which balances on very thin rope. They find it difficult enough dealing with the hands in the back rule.W00F!Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
Honestly, be constructive or stop abusing your keyboard.Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
No doubt it would of been fair on Saturday Night, but what if a player fakes? Let's say a player cops one in the chest and drops to the ground. They come off the ground and would usually be right to play in at least a quarter's time. However, his side's coaching panel realises it puts them in a better position to win if he stays off, forcing the offender to sit on the pine too.
Throwing a punching like that should be a send off, no matter if you miss, connect, knock out or just brush the opponent. It was a king hit.
It's a very fine line and it's asking too much of the umpires IMHO. They make enough mistakes as it is, and they simply don't have the time to sift through reality & make believe. It's too hard a call to make, and you can be sure that eventually some sides would start doing this.
In theory, the send off rule would seem appropriate but IMO introducing such a rule only opens up further loopholes. It creates opportunities for clubs to 'fix' such situations - eg. player a constantly nags player b, player b sends an elbow to the chest, player a fall's down and dramatises. Result = player a + b are off the ground, with a clear advantage to player a's side.Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
Can someone please explain something to me?
Why is 'consequence' a consideration when determining a sentence/punishment, instead of intent? What I mean is: there is a great outcry (which I agree with, just to clarify) because Barry Hall punches someone and knocks him out. How is this different from another player swinging punches wildly but failing to connect, or connecting but not knocking his opponent out? (We see this excused all the time under the heading 'handbags')
The action is the same, the intent is the same, the 'brain snap' is the same... is Barry Hall punished for actually having a better punch? Does this mean that the smaller and crappier a puncher you are, the less restrained you have to be, and the bigger and more skilled you are, the more 'condemned' you are if you actually react? Barry's punch was over in a split second. There are guys out there who react and swing MANY punches wildly without actually connecting. Surely they should be getting seven weeks per INTENDED punch?
My point is that there is a huge level of hypocrisy in the game, based on who the 'perpetrator' is. If a Chris Judd swung at a Barry Hall and not knocked him out because
a. his punch was weak or missed, and
b. Barry is a big boy and can take a punch
it wouldn't even have made the match review panel, and the media would be talking about how Barry probably provoked the Golden Boy in the first place and deserved it.
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re: the send-off rule, EVERY other team sport (apart from netball) has a provision for a send off rule of sorts - soccer, rugby, hockey, basketball etc..., because of the anomaly that some have already pointed out of being able to do ANYTHING within a match and get away with it for the remainder of the match. AFL is an anomaly in this sense, and those who think abusing the loophole is 'fanciful' need only remind themselves that in this game, it is only a matter of time before coaches start exploiting any and every loophole (kicking backwards and maintaining possession ad infinitum, interchange madness) available that only a few years ago would have been deemed 'fanciful'. That footy is actually relatively slow in the uptake of tactical innovation doesn't mean that it will never happen.
pps. And for those who say it has 'never' happened, you have very short memories. PLENTY of teams have already tried to clean up players (Brodie Holland on our Monty being only the latest example, plenty of examples from other grand finals that I can remember in the last twenty years) early in important games, because the short-term gain far outweighs the potential -- and much delayed -- penalty.Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
Can someone please explain something to me?
Why is 'consequence' a consideration when determining a sentence/punishment, instead of intent? What I mean is: there is a great outcry (which I agree with, just to clarify) because Barry Hall punches someone and knocks him out. How is this different from another player swinging punches wildly but failing to connect, or connecting but not knocking his opponent out? (We see this excused all the time under the heading 'handbags')
The action is the same, the intent is the same, the 'brain snap' is the same... is Barry Hall punished for actually having a better punch? Does this mean that the smaller and crappier a puncher you are, the less restrained you have to be, and the bigger and more skilled you are, the more 'condemned' you are if you actually react? Barry's punch was over in a split second. There are guys out there who react and swing MANY punches wildly without actually connecting. Surely they should be getting seven weeks per INTENDED punch?
My point is that there is a huge level of hypocrisy in the game, based on who the 'perpetrator' is. If a Chris Judd swung at a Barry Hall and not knocked him out because
a. his punch was weak or missed, and
b. Barry is a big boy and can take a punch
it wouldn't even have made the match review panel, and the media would be talking about how Barry probably provoked the Golden Boy in the first place and deserved it.
--
re: the send-off rule, EVERY other team sport (apart from netball) has a provision for a send off rule of sorts - soccer, rugby, hockey, basketball etc..., because of the anomaly that some have already pointed out of being able to do ANYTHING within a match and get away with it for the remainder of the match. AFL is an anomaly in this sense, and those who think abusing the loophole is 'fanciful' need only remind themselves that in this game, it is only a matter of time before coaches start exploiting any and every loophole (kicking backwards and maintaining possession ad infinitum, interchange madness) available that only a few years ago would have been deemed 'fanciful'. That footy is actually relatively slow in the uptake of tactical innovation doesn't mean that it will never happen.
pps. And for those who say it has 'never' happened, you have very short memories. PLENTY of teams have already tried to clean up players (Brodie Holland on our Monty being only the latest example, plenty of examples from other grand finals that I can remember in the last twenty years) early in important games, because the short-term gain far outweighs the potential -- and much delayed -- penalty.
With Holland i doubt his intention was to take out Monty from the match. Sure it was shit to see him do it but it wasn't a strategy.[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
First quarter of a grand final and Barry Hall is getting towelled up by Lake, so he flattens him. Lake is concussed and is gone for the game.
After quarter time, having naturally being allowed to stay on the field, Hall runs riot, kicking 5 goals and setting up 4 more. Meanwhile, we play the game one short.
We lose by 2 goals. Barry Hall retires with another premiership medallion around his neck and goes on to a prosperous and profitable boxing career.
He doesn't even bother fronting up to the tribunal to receive his 20 match suspension.
If it is an important game and one player is stupid enough to do it, the other team will do it back. May end up with a 5 on 5 game......But heck it hasn't happened in basically 150 years so of course it will happen soon.Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
Half time, Hall playing well. Minson runs up to Hall and decks him (ala Leigh Matthews incident).
If it is an important game and one player is stupid enough to do it, the other team will do it back. May end up with a 5 on 5 game......But heck it hasn't happened in basically 150 years so of course it will happen soon.
BTW Hall himself is advocating for a send off rule.
Its only been the last 10-15 years the game has been cleaned up. Before that it was kill or be killed. Fair enough if you think might happen and the player in Stakers shoes might be ready but not in this era of football.Last edited by LostDoggy; 18-04-2008, 11:08 AM.Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
If he really believed in it he would have taken himself off...
Anyway maybe I'm wrong. Hell knows, every rule change in the past few years has led to a prevalence of diving and faking which is rewarded ad nauseum, so we may as well punish the proper violent acts on the field as well.
Can't wait til Ray Chamberlain gets the power to send players off.
Anybody for 1 on 1?Park that car
Drop that phone
Sleep on the floor
Dream about meComment
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Re: Send off rule.
Lynch tried it a few years back. The 1945 wasn't a bad GF either. The 76? VFA GF was great TV but maybe not a great advertisement for the game. Sure there have been other instances.
BTW Hall himself is advocating for a send off rule.
Its only been the last 10-15 years the game has been cleaned up. Before that it was kill or be killed. Fair enough if you think might happen and the player in Stakers shoes might be ready but not in this era of football.
Sure the Hall one looked simple enough but what if the ump was on another angle and it looked like a big hit but was actually just a push?
To many things can go wrong for something that basically just doesn't happen in the game.Comment
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Re: Send off rule.
Umpires are only responsible for about 20% of reports.
Are you really advocating that someone should be sent off 20% of the time?Comment
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