Players call for AFL clarification on dangerous tackles

Players call for AFL clarification on dangerous tackles

Confused gamers have known as on the AFL to supply better clarification round harmful sort out guidelines main into the most important recreation of the home-and-away season.

About 90,000 followers are anticipated to attend the Anzac Day blockbuster that pits second-placed Essendon in opposition to third-placed Collingwood on the MCG.

Both sides shall be lacking key gamers after Bombers skipper Zach Merrett and Magpies vice-captain Taylor Adams have been handed one-match suspensions on the tribunal for tough conduct.

Merrett and Adams have been each charged over tackles that have been thought of careless conduct, medium impression and excessive contact, and unsuccessfully challenged the impression gradings.

GWS midfielder Tom Green this week accepted a one-match ban for the same incident.

The newest batch of suspensions have come amid an AFL crackdown on head contact and an elevated concentrate on the consequences of concussion in world sport.

Essendon vice-captain Andrew McGrath stated there was nonetheless confusion throughout the taking part in group about what actions have been permitted in tackles.

“All the players would love clarification,” McGrath advised reporters on Wednesday.

AFL Match Centre

“We play a game that’s so random and chaotic at times and you’re not exactly sure what’s allowed and what’s not allowed.

“There’s been a whole lot of circumstances in the previous couple of weeks of gamers getting executed for comparable incidents so it might be nice to get slightly little bit of clarification.

“As the cases are going, we’re sort of figuring out what’s fair and not fair and what’s being permitted.”

Earlier within the season Richmond defender Nathan Broad was hit with a four-match suspension for his sling sort out on Adelaide’s Patrick Parnell.

Hawthorn midfielder Will Day (two matches) and Geelong ahead Gary Rohan (one match) have been additionally suspended over harmful tackles this month.

Collingwood captain Darcy Moore stated gamers have been being attentive to the match assessment officer’s evaluation of incidents, in addition to tribunal choices, however admitted behavioural change would take time.

“You look back at footage of the game from five years ago and there are things that happen that are far less common now than back then,” Moore stated.

“Maybe we’re caught in one of those periods where a sling tackle is slowly being phased out of the game.

“There’s actually nobody reply to it however I feel we’re simply looking for one of the simplest ways to strike the steadiness between being a bodily recreation that is powerful to play but additionally giving due consideration to gamers getting concussions and the ramifications of that.”

Source: www.perthnow.com.au