You know it's coming.
The AFL in my opinion did the right thing with the bump. You can still sort of do it but it is very risky, and they have basically made the cheap shot extinct, which is good.
They have then gone on to introduce a duty of care for tackling. Fair enough too, but it seems they have become overly strict on this.
And now we have suspensions for spoiling causing injury through lack of care.
The reason behind all of this is so the AFL can cover their arse and not get sued for negligence themselves, by showing they took reasonable steps to punish these acts and hence foster a "duty of care" mindset among the players.
So what about the speccy? How many times do we see players cop a harsh knee to the head in a speccy? James Sicily
this year for one. Harry Taylor got KO'd back in 2009 from a speccy.
I think this is a real elephant in the room. The injuries caused by a knee to the head can be pretty severe, more so than from a spoil or most of the tackle related suspensions we are seeing now.
Yet the speccy is THE iconic skill of the game. Getting suspended for taking a speccy would not pass the pub test, even if you knocked a player out. IMO
Surely the AFL won't go there. But what sort of mental/legal gymnastics are required to make their current stand justifiable, whilst not drawing the speccy into the same mire?
Or, is it not the sacred cow we may think or want it to be, and it's time is coming too?
The AFL in my opinion did the right thing with the bump. You can still sort of do it but it is very risky, and they have basically made the cheap shot extinct, which is good.
They have then gone on to introduce a duty of care for tackling. Fair enough too, but it seems they have become overly strict on this.
And now we have suspensions for spoiling causing injury through lack of care.
The reason behind all of this is so the AFL can cover their arse and not get sued for negligence themselves, by showing they took reasonable steps to punish these acts and hence foster a "duty of care" mindset among the players.
So what about the speccy? How many times do we see players cop a harsh knee to the head in a speccy? James Sicily
PLAYERCARDSTART
6
James Sicily
- Age
- 29
- Ht
- 188cm
- Wt
- 90kg
- Pos.
- Def
Career
Season
Last 5
- D
- 18.3
- 5star
- K
- 12.7
- 5star
- HB
- 5.7
- 4star
- M
- 6.3
- 5star
- T
- 1.5
- 3star
- MG
- 365.0
- 5star
- D
- 19.4
- 4star
- K
- 14.3
- 5star
- HB
- 5.1
- 3star
- M
- 5.9
- 5star
- T
- 1.0
- 2star
- MG
- 437.4
- 5star
- D
- 10.0
- 3star
- K
- 6.0
- 3star
- HB
- 4.0
- 3star
- M
- 4.2
- 4star
- T
- 2.0
- 4star
- MG
- 173.8
- 3star
PLAYERCARDEND
I think this is a real elephant in the room. The injuries caused by a knee to the head can be pretty severe, more so than from a spoil or most of the tackle related suspensions we are seeing now.
Yet the speccy is THE iconic skill of the game. Getting suspended for taking a speccy would not pass the pub test, even if you knocked a player out. IMO
Surely the AFL won't go there. But what sort of mental/legal gymnastics are required to make their current stand justifiable, whilst not drawing the speccy into the same mire?
Or, is it not the sacred cow we may think or want it to be, and it's time is coming too?