The bump is pretty much becoming a bygone era. Though technically, it’s still a legal act if and only if, no head knocks!
Case in point, the Houston-Rankine case:
Rankine running forward to catch a loose ball, then gets shirt-fronted by Houston. Rankine falls back, head impacts ground, concussed.
Umpires called it “play on”, few seconds later, thankfully there was a mark, and then play was stopped to carry Rankine off.
3 days later, we find out the umps “play on” call is now translated by the tribunal as “a 5 weeks suspension”.
I’m getting kind of sick of this paradoxical situations, where it’s deemed a legal act on-field, then becomes a murderous act when assessing it post-match. So..
Should the AFL just come out and say “the bump is now no longer allowed in AFL. If you do it you will get weeks off, regardless of whether a concussion occurs”?
Case in point, the Houston-Rankine case:
Rankine running forward to catch a loose ball, then gets shirt-fronted by Houston. Rankine falls back, head impacts ground, concussed.
Umpires called it “play on”, few seconds later, thankfully there was a mark, and then play was stopped to carry Rankine off.
3 days later, we find out the umps “play on” call is now translated by the tribunal as “a 5 weeks suspension”.
I’m getting kind of sick of this paradoxical situations, where it’s deemed a legal act on-field, then becomes a murderous act when assessing it post-match. So..
Should the AFL just come out and say “the bump is now no longer allowed in AFL. If you do it you will get weeks off, regardless of whether a concussion occurs”?