Regarding the three strike policy, my understanding is that it operates separately to game day testing, e.g. when Ginnivan got his second strike it had nothing to do with game day testing. So avoiding games is neither here nor there with respect to the three strike policy.
I do agree that the three strike policy is not really doing what it claims to do. It seems the AFL's 'medical model' has taken precedence over the three strike policy to the extent that almost nobody gets a second strike, let alone a third. Some sort of review is clearly needed to bring policy and reality more into line with each other. What that change should be is probably a whole other discussion.
How do you know a player hasn’t had a second or third strike?
Better than even money chance in my book Buddy back in 2015 out of the game for months with “mental health” issues was one such possibility, Oliver last year with a 3-4 month hamstring and then the subsequent fallout once the season finished.
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