Carlton’s Acres, North’s Logue both cop one-game bans

Carlton’s Acres, North’s Logue both cop one-game bans

Carlton and North Melbourne will every be with no suspended participant for his or her Good Friday conflict after the AFL Tribunal rejected challenges from each golf equipment.

Kangaroo key defender Griffin Logue and Blue Blake Acres each had one-game bans for tough conduct confirmed by the tribunal on Tuesday night time after incidents stemming from spherical three.

Acres copped his for a bump on GWS participant Brent Daniels, his argument that he was making an attempt to smother a kick quite than bump his opponent rejected.

The Carlton winger mentioned a pectoral damage he’d suffered earlier within the contest had stopped him lifting the arm that made contact together with his opponent.

His lawyer mentioned he was seeking to keep away from making contact with Daniels attributable to his damage, Acres’ actions weren’t unreasonable in contesting the soccer, and impression was “glancing”.

The AFL mentioned Acres moved in direction of Daniels quite than the ball and any contact wasn’t incidental within the act of smothering.

Tribunal chair Jeff Gleeson agreed and upheld the ban.

“Acres may have at one point intended to smother, but it was not his intent just prior to or at the moment of impact,” he mentioned.

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“The angle of his approach to the contest was at the last moment towards the player.”

Logue’s ban compounds defensive points for the Kangaroos forward of their battle with Carlton twin towers Charlie Curnow and Harry McKay, with fellow key again Ben McKay nonetheless sidelined with a foot damage.

Logue’s defence was that he was solely ever trying to win the soccer and didn’t intend to “bump” Day, with his eyes locked and his head over the ball at the point of collision.

No free kick was awarded against Logue and his lawyer noted no Hawthorn players remonstrated with him after the incident, and Day was not injured.

But Gleeson dismissed his arguments and said he had made a specific decision to bump.

“After initially making ready to bend low to select up the ball, (Logue) modified his intention, didn’t try to select up the ball, however as an alternative selected to bump,” he mentioned.

“He may and may have gone decrease and nearer to the ball together with his arms in an try to select up the ball quite than selecting to bump.”

Before the hearing, Kangaroos coach Alastair Clarkson said they were challenging the ban for an “evaluation on what’s allowed within the recreation”.

“In this instance, we think this is in play and in a split-second the decision’s had to be made and that decision in our view was around (Logue) trying to protect himself more so than trying to take a player out,” Clarkson mentioned.

Source: www.perthnow.com.au