AFL Autopsy RND 16: Loss To The Pussies

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Does anyone know within a quarter if the field umpires change ends?

I can imagine if one umpire sees things in a certain way, or positions a bit differently or is more lenient, combined with mistakes getting made, you could end up with the third quarter scenario.
Kind of a perfect storm. Where one umpire is adjudicating to the letter of the law or beyond and another less so.

TBH I highly doubt umpires come out and try and be biased towards one team, sometimes s**t just happens.

I’m actually more disappointed how much the team dropped their bundle and let Geelong spread and transition out of defence.
 
That 3rd quarter was some of the most corrupt umpiring I've ever witnessed. By far the worst umpired game I've seen since Anzac Day 2019.

I'll be honest, I can whinge and sook about the umpires during games quite often.. but as soon as the final siren goes, I usually can move on extremely quickly. But this one's stuck with me and just leaves a shocking taste in my mouth.

At the risk at sounding like a huge nuffie - surely I'm not the only one who thinks that this is just ridiculous. Some of the umpiring we have copped over the last 5-10 years has been baffling. And honestly, sometimes it has got me thinking...

It's no secret that we're one of (if not THE) most hated club in the land, and that's obviously become even more amplified since the saga. I seriously think it's something that could be creeping into the psych of individual umpires, even if its just on a sub-conscious scale. At the end of the day, they're just big footy fans/nuffs like the rest of us, and I genuinely think any pre-conceived disdain could easily play a role from time to time.

So I'm either one massive conspiracy nuffie, or it was just one of the most awful displays of umpiring of all time.. but it was just so blatantly one-sided that it's almost hard to question if it was even simply bad umpiring.
It all started in 2004…
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nah they're correct under the new world order we're under. No prior opportunity doesn't matter because Ridley had one arm free and was expected to make an effort to dispose of the football. (I mean, it was HTB under the old rule too. But Jordan would have been given time to try to kick it when he was on the ground). All this talk of "quick whistles" don't apply here because of the free arm. He's given just enough time to hang himself. If both arms had been caught, it would have been called ball-up straight away. Instead, it's HTB. It's better to tackle one arm than to catch both of them now. It's stupid but anyone with half a brain knew this was gonna happen. the AFL's not gonna call it a mistake. complete stupidity but here we are.
What counts as incorrect disposal?
 
So the AFL now just not reviewing decisions all of a sudden?! ****ing hell, lolololol
they're just not doing a recap on the AFL website anymore, and by extension, the discussions between the AFL and AFL clubs over decisions stays behind closed doors until someone leaks it to the media. you can see the previous ones here: https://www.afl.com.au/search?term=Footy Feed Extra&sort=publish_from&type=VIDEO

what they say over incidents that happen in the last quarter will probably be different though. if something happened near the end of the game on a Friday night, we'd usually hear something about on Saturday about it being ticked off or not. I'd assume that will continue
 
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What counts as incorrect disposal?

no prior opportunity

  • a legitimate hand-ball or kick must be attempted. your attempt does not to have be successful, but it needs to be a genuine attempt
  • if the ball is knocked out of the tackle, it is play on
(and other clauses which I won't go into)

basically, the player with the ball gets the benefit of the doubt.

prior opportunity
- must successfully dispose of the ball

Ridley didn't make an effort to legally dispose of the ball within a reasonable time. Pinged. Stewart (supposedly) didn't have prior, so it was play on after it was knocked out.

So Ridley got done because of the changes made because of the charlie curnow/mac andrews tackle a few weeks ago. Prior to that, Ridley likely would have been given a chance to attempt a legal disposal of the ball when brought to the ground, but now the reasonable time window has been shortened because of the pissing and moaning that happened. I thought the change was bull-**** at the time and my opinion hasn't changed.
 
no prior opportunity

  • a legitimate hand-ball or kick must be attempted. your attempt does not to have be successful, but it needs to be a genuine attempt
  • if the ball is knocked out of the tackle, it is play on
(and other clauses which I won't go into)

basically, the player with the ball gets the benefit of the doubt.

prior opportunity
- must successfully dispose of the ball

Ridley didn't make an effort to legally dispose of the ball within a reasonable time. Pinged. Stewart (supposedly) didn't have prior, so it was play on after it was knocked out.

So Ridley got done because of the changes made because of the charlie curnow/mac andrews tackle a few weeks ago. Prior to that, Ridley likely would have been given a chance to attempt a legal disposal of the ball when brought to the ground, but now the reasonable time window has been shortened because of the pissing and moaning that happened. I thought the change was bull-**** at the time and my opinion hasn't changed.
I reckon I could find easy 20 free against Essendon this year where the ball had been knocked out in the tackle and they get done
Out players know they are going to get pinged regardless of the rules. I actually find it quite disgusting
 
I reckon I could find easy 20 free against Essendon this year where the ball had been knocked out in the tackle and they get done
Out players know they are going to get pinged regardless of the rules. I actually find it quite disgusting
I can kind of accept the Ridley decision since they changed interpretation mid season (don't get me started) but the Stewart one has to be HTB. That was more HTB than Ridley (who actually had no prior but because the tackle held his arm to the side, it is somehow looked at differently). There was another HTB that should/could have been paid to us to in 3Q with a shot on goal. And of course there is Draper and Menzie.

I don't think things are rigged, but we had one of the worst runs of luck in a 10-15 minute block you could see. They were all shots on goal decisions too.

The one thing that encourages me is that we keep winning the I50 counts (GCS, Blues and Cats games). Our forward line has massive issues (without an elite small and proper KPF) but I would rather the problem be about conversion than getting the ball. One way to address the issue is having Martin in forward half of course but why do something sensible.

We recruited for need fairly well last year. Need to back it up again this year.
 
I don’t blame them but they can’t spit the dummy either. There was a game to be played and they needed to stay focussed. There are many other teams breathing down our neck and the next 2 games will potentially kick Ess out of the 8. The frees were bad and I’m furious but the team had to compose themselves at 3/4 time. Many teams been on the receiving end of bad calls but you cannot capitulate. It should make you more determined to win despite the odds. Anyway.
 
no prior opportunity

  • a legitimate hand-ball or kick must be attempted. your attempt does not to have be successful, but it needs to be a genuine attempt
  • if the ball is knocked out of the tackle, it is play on
(and other clauses which I won't go into)

basically, the player with the ball gets the benefit of the doubt.

prior opportunity
- must successfully dispose of the ball

Ridley didn't make an effort to legally dispose of the ball within a reasonable time. Pinged. Stewart (supposedly) didn't have prior, so it was play on after it was knocked out.

So Ridley got done because of the changes made because of the charlie curnow/mac andrews tackle a few weeks ago. Prior to that, Ridley likely would have been given a chance to attempt a legal disposal of the ball when brought to the ground, but now the reasonable time window has been shortened because of the pissing and moaning that happened. I thought the change was bull-**** at the time and my opinion hasn't changed.
Okay, so what constitutes "a genuine attempt"? Just playing devil's advocate here.
 

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I don't think things are rigged, but we had one of the worst runs of luck in a 10-15 minute block you could see. They were all shots on goal decisions too.

Yeah that was what I thought about saying on the night, you had the three incorrect ones, and then we were on the wrong side of a bunch more that, ok yeah maybe the correct call was made, but there's plenty of times you see them called the other way (Stewart, the out of boards not called, etc etc). It's like kicking 10 behinds in a row. Just insane.

Okay, so what constitutes "a genuine attempt"? Just playing devil's advocate here.

This is where "dropping the ball" comes into play. deliberately dropping the ball is not a genuine disposal or genuine attempt. so that's one. but more generally, I think we can all tell when the player has tried to kick the ball or hand-ball verses when they're pretending to hand-ball it but want the ball-up call, or when they get tied up and it's not for a couple of seconds before they try to hand-ball it. In Ridley's case, it was easy because he didn't try at all. my problem there is, I don't think it was reasonable to have expected an attempt. He's been spun and turned towards the boundary before he's even got full control of the ball. His legs and arms aren't in sync. if Jordan had tried to drop the ball onto his foot, it probably would have been play on, even though a successful kick there would have gone about 3 meters. My problem as a whole with this new rule interpretation is that we really do have the case where players will be better off not getting the ball and instead they should try to lay tackles like the one tyson stengle did. I think that's just bad for the game. I think there needs to be certain circumstances where because the hand-ball is no longer an option for the player, the umpire calls for the ball-up straight away, even though technically a kick could be attempted. Working out that exact circumstance is a little harder
 
Yeah that was what I thought about saying on the night, you had the three incorrect ones, and then we were on the wrong side of a bunch more that, ok yeah maybe the correct call was made, but there's plenty of times you see them called the other way (Stewart, the out of boards not called, etc etc). It's like kicking 10 behinds in a row. Just insane.



This is where "dropping the ball" comes into play. deliberately dropping the ball is not a genuine disposal or genuine attempt. so that's one. but more generally, I think we can all tell when the player has tried to kick the ball or hand-ball verses when they're pretending to hand-ball it but want the ball-up call, or when they get tied up and it's not for a couple of seconds before they try to hand-ball it. In Ridley's case, it was easy because he didn't try at all. my problem there is, I don't think it was reasonable to have expected an attempt. He's been spun and turned towards the boundary before he's even got full control of the ball. His legs and arms aren't in sync. if Jordan had tried to drop the ball onto his foot, it probably would have been play on, even though a successful kick there would have gone about 3 meters. My problem as a whole with this new rule interpretation is that we really do have the case where players will be better off not getting the ball and instead they should try to lay tackles like the one tyson stengle did. I think that's just bad for the game. I think there needs to be certain circumstances where because the hand-ball is no longer an option for the player, the umpire calls for the ball-up straight away, even though technically a kick could be attempted. Working out that exact circumstance is a little harder
Appreciate your thoughts on this!
 
It is not a conspiracy when legitimately the umpiring was so bad that the media have spent all week on it and the general consensus seems to be that it was so blatantly bad that changes need to be made. I've never seen such a united uproar over one team receiving the 'dodgy' side of a few calls. Even most neutral fans could see that the 3rd quarter was so unbelievably biased that most teams would struggle to recover.

I know that I wasn't alone in not even really watching the 4th quarter.. I was still in complete disbelief over what I'd watched in the 3rd. I actually think the commentators were too. It was such a shocking run of decisions that basically ended the game in a matter of 10 minutes.

If Scott is telling the truth (and there is nothing to suggest he isn't) then the AFL have admitted to at least 4 clear errors in a 6 minute stretch of play, 2 of which resulted in goals and another 2 that resulted in us not having shots on goals. So the AFL has admitted to a possible 24 point swing in 6 minutes in a game where both teams, to that point, had a combined score under 100. I meant that is just unbelievable.

No team, especially not our team, can overcome a 25% handicap in a quarter of football. Time to move on but I think more needs to be done. I think they need to start addressing the fact that our game is not immune to corruption. Aussies hate to think about it.. but match fixing is rife in every league in the world.. I don't think it is a huge stretch to say it might happen here.

As to the overall mess that is the HTB.. needs a complete overhaul. It is a lottery right now. I'd make it old school. If you have had prior and do not dispose of the ball correctly (even if it is 'knocked out' in the tackle) then it is HTB. Essentially once you take possession and have a clear opportunity to dispose of it then you must do so. I'd also make it clear, that the player has a clear limit (like 3 seconds) to dispose of the ball once tackled, that stops the current 360 swing about. It will lead to more free kicks initially but it might get the game moving faster. Right now tackling is almost redundant because it doesn't result in a positive outcome for the tackling team.
 
It is not a conspiracy when legitimately the umpiring was so bad that the media have spent all week on it and the general consensus seems to be that it was so blatantly bad that changes need to be made. I've never seen such a united uproar over one team receiving the 'dodgy' side of a few calls. Even most neutral fans could see that the 3rd quarter was so unbelievably biased that most teams would struggle to recover.

I know that I wasn't alone in not even really watching the 4th quarter.. I was still in complete disbelief over what I'd watched in the 3rd. I actually think the commentators were too. It was such a shocking run of decisions that basically ended the game in a matter of 10 minutes.

If Scott is telling the truth (and there is nothing to suggest he isn't) then the AFL have admitted to at least 4 clear errors in a 6 minute stretch of play, 2 of which resulted in goals and another 2 that resulted in us not having shots on goals. So the AFL has admitted to a possible 24 point swing in 6 minutes in a game where both teams, to that point, had a combined score under 100. I meant that is just unbelievable.

No team, especially not our team, can overcome a 25% handicap in a quarter of football. Time to move on but I think more needs to be done. I think they need to start addressing the fact that our game is not immune to corruption. Aussies hate to think about it.. but match fixing is rife in every league in the world.. I don't think it is a huge stretch to say it might happen here.

As to the overall mess that is the HTB.. needs a complete overhaul. It is a lottery right now. I'd make it old school. If you have had prior and do not dispose of the ball correctly (even if it is 'knocked out' in the tackle) then it is HTB. Essentially once you take possession and have a clear opportunity to dispose of it then you must do so. I'd also make it clear, that the player has a clear limit (like 3 seconds) to dispose of the ball once tackled, that stops the current 360 swing about. It will lead to more free kicks initially but it might get the game moving faster. Right now tackling is almost redundant because it doesn't result in a positive outcome for the tackling team.

I'd think the AFL constantly messing around with the rules and the interpretation of those rules, to the point that the players come to a complete halt because they believe it's a free but the current interpretation has changed mid-season and they have NFI anymore, is a big part of the issue.

The rules need to be clear and simple. No, the umpires won't get 100% of the calls right because they don't have the luxury of sitting at home watching it on TV from the best possible angle, but asking them to interpret and assess intent is just a recipe for this kind of inconsistency.

Things like calling tackles quicker instead of ending up with the weird Ridley situation where he'd had no prior, didn't have a hand free to handball, and was getting swung around with his feet trapped under the defender (exactly how you see a Tom Scully ankle injury). Which was supposed to happen at some point this season, but then didn't happen because Curnow or something. 'Intending' to dispose of the ball is also weird as hell, if you have prior, and don't dispose of it correctly, why is what you 'intended' to do relevant?
 
It is not a conspiracy when legitimately the umpiring was so bad that the media have spent all week on it and the general consensus seems to be that it was so blatantly bad that changes need to be made. I've never seen such a united uproar over one team receiving the 'dodgy' side of a few calls. Even most neutral fans could see that the 3rd quarter was so unbelievably biased that most teams would struggle to recover.

I know that I wasn't alone in not even really watching the 4th quarter.. I was still in complete disbelief over what I'd watched in the 3rd. I actually think the commentators were too. It was such a shocking run of decisions that basically ended the game in a matter of 10 minutes.

If Scott is telling the truth (and there is nothing to suggest he isn't) then the AFL have admitted to at least 4 clear errors in a 6 minute stretch of play, 2 of which resulted in goals and another 2 that resulted in us not having shots on goals. So the AFL has admitted to a possible 24 point swing in 6 minutes in a game where both teams, to that point, had a combined score under 100. I meant that is just unbelievable.

No team, especially not our team, can overcome a 25% handicap in a quarter of football. Time to move on but I think more needs to be done. I think they need to start addressing the fact that our game is not immune to corruption. Aussies hate to think about it.. but match fixing is rife in every league in the world.. I don't think it is a huge stretch to say it might happen here.

As to the overall mess that is the HTB.. needs a complete overhaul. It is a lottery right now. I'd make it old school. If you have had prior and do not dispose of the ball correctly (even if it is 'knocked out' in the tackle) then it is HTB. Essentially once you take possession and have a clear opportunity to dispose of it then you must do so. I'd also make it clear, that the player has a clear limit (like 3 seconds) to dispose of the ball once tackled, that stops the current 360 swing about. It will lead to more free kicks initially but it might get the game moving faster. Right now tackling is almost redundant because it doesn't result in a positive outcome for the tackling team.
Well said. We have been pretty resilient this year and given the absurdity of the umpiring the guys don't deserve to be hanged on that. Given the decisions were all one way it is only fair to believe some sort of corruption. There was another game against Brisbane a few years back and early when our players competed (fairly) there was routinely some sort of infringement. The guys eventually approached the contest differently - with hesitation. My mate who trains some Dockers texted me "You guys have been umpired out of this match".
 
I’m not one to go on about umpires but last weeks 3rd quarter got under my skin. I haven’t dwelled on umps decisions all year but I definitely ranted that night about it. I haven’t mentioned the umpires from last week until now as I think eventually you have to move on. But I am still stinging from the aftermath which is unusual for me. Can totally understand if the players lost composure and I will not judge them on the 4th qtr because of that fact.

The thing that irks me the most is that I don’t think the games are fixed so I expect a certain baseline of professionalism with the umpires. Never in my life have I seen what resembled the most insipid and one sided display that I have ever seen from the adjudicators.

Yes the players should adapt but they are not that team yet and I for one won’t be over critical of them because of the way it affected me.
 

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AFL Autopsy RND 16: Loss To The Pussies

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