Spotlight on AFL tribunal as Tigers’ Broad faces music

Spotlight on AFL tribunal as Tigers’ Broad faces music

AFL coaches Chris Scott and Ross Lyon imagine sling tackles will ultimately be eradicated, with the method an opportunity to be accelerated by Nathan Broad’s tribunal case.

Broad will entrance the tribunal on Tuesday charged with tough conduct over the deal with that left Adelaide’s Patrick Parnell concussed.

The Richmond defender faces a suspension of a minimum of three matches at a time when the AFL is underneath elevated scrutiny over its dealing with of concussion.

“We used to coach ‘tackle and dump’,” St Kilda coach Lyon instructed Fox Footy.

“Now it’s tackle and you’ve got a responsibility and duty of care.

“That (Broad deal with) is self-evident why it should not be within the sport.”

Geelong premiership coach Scott said tackles like Broad’s used to be the players’ aim when they wrapped up an opponent.

“Not solely was that OK, that was applauded,” he mentioned.

“It’s just like the bump now … the shift can be that if you are going to sling a participant to the bottom, you are liable, so do not do it.

“You’re better off taking him down with your weight.”

Lyon and Scott each have sympathy for some gamers who’re suspended for tough conduct over tackles which have gone incorrect when laid on opponents who’re off steadiness.

Port Adelaide defender Ryan Burton was banned for 2 matches after he dumped Collingwood’s Jamie Elliott in a kind of situations final spherical.

The coaches do not imagine trendy gamers are intentionally making an attempt to harm opponents in sling tackles.

“It’s an aggressive, physical game. It’s instinctive,” Lyon mentioned.

“They’re split-second decisions and we’re not machines, and the players are under extreme pressure.

“I do not assume there’s any intent to harm the participant. Those days are gone.”

Former North Melbourne champion David King described Broad’s tackle as a “horrific incident” and a “automotive crash”.

King said he would be disappointed if Broad doesn’t cop at least a five-match ban, and called for an even greater penalty.

“We’ve bought one probability to stamp this out, and sadly, Nathan Broad and the Richmond footy membership need to pay a worth,” King instructed Fox Footy.

“That’s a six-weeker for me.”

King predicted a ban of that length would deter other players from committing similar transgressions.

“If you give that six weeks, it is not going to occur once more for the yr,” he mentioned.

“The grading was careless, excessive and extreme – that is the max – so do not tiptoe via this one.”

Source: www.perthnow.com.au