Apples and oranges. Who threw the first punch is your preoccupation, not mine. My thesis is that enforcement of penalty is what determines the level of violence, not rules of engagement. I use O'Keefe to illustrate. He throws punches at will in IR, he did the same in 2005, but not in AFL because he isn't penalised in IR. If he'd been red carded, as he should have, then he wouldn't have had his nose bloodied because he would have been off and subsequent nastiness wouldn't have occurred. Yellow cards are slaps across the wrist with a wet lettuce, they all take breaks anyway. Preoccupation with who threw the first punch misses the point. The Australians announced their intentions, not only through the press but through history of the games. Instead of copping it, the GAA blokes stood up to them. As to who did what to whom, that's romantic nonsense. The players will do what they can get away with and the Australians get away with murder.
If you read the post immediately above yours you'll see I've changed my mind about O'Mahoney because I looked at it in slo mo and it seems to show him landing on whoever's back with both knees. He was yellow carded for it so he was punished, if a yellow card is punishment.
Finally, to clear up a misconception, I was born and grew up in the in the western suburbs of Melbourne of mixed stock. I'm not Irish.
Yes they do get away with more then they do in the AFL, however, they also copped more then what they would in the AFL. In the AFL a punch would never have been thrown by any player.... However, O'Keefe couldn't just sit back and let him or a team mate be punched. Perhaps if he knew that he was going to be suspended he wouldn't have hit the Irish guy, however the fact is that in the AFL it would never have got that far, because the first punch would never have been thrown!
I think that there needs to be stronger penalties for stuff that goes on in IR, but that being said - the knee in the first week was sited by the Aust member of the discipline panel, not by the Irish members. So who is setting the precedent for going soft on lack of discipline??? Whats more all the Irish were coming out and saying that there was nothing in it...?? Sort of reeks of hypocracy - one minute saying that they need to crack down on violence, the next minute they're pining for a guy to get off after committing a violent act.... You can't have it both ways!
As for red cards/yellow cards - we have neither in the AFL... Tribunal citings is what keeps the cheap shots out of the game - the same process is in the IR - but as mentioned above, it seems to be heavily watered down (thanks at least partly to the Irish).
Perhaps if the tribunal had cracked down on the cheap shots in the first match, the boundaries in the next would have been much more obvious and less likely to be crossed - the Irish pretty much made a cross for their own back!!
Its not just the Australians that get away with murder - the Irish do as well. Is kneeing, head butting, throwing punches allowed in the GAA??
In the end, what Aust did to the Irish was no worse then what the Irish did to the Aust, in fact it was probably less serious. Just that Aust was more noticeable because they were stronger then the skinny irish.