There is no dispute that there is a significant difference between men's and women's comp in the rate of knee injuries, like there is a difference in cardiac arrest rates, breast cancer rates, dementia rates, prostate cancer rates.I wouldn't have any idea of other sports but to me the amount of ACL's is huge and there is certainly a massive difference between the AFL and AFLW.
But this is a physiological difference, not an AFLW crises, and there will always be a difference in the rates, short of not allowing women to play in the AFLW, or changing the rules so that you cannot change direction.
The reason I mentioned other sports is because some pundits from these sports, like to point to raw ACL numbers per season, to suggest that women shouldn't play Australian football and instead should play their, safer, sport.
However, the risk a women takes on playing AFLW is not defined by the total number of ACLs, but by the number, per player, per unit of time played.
On that basis, there is no AFLW specific ACL crises. AFL may actually be less risky than netball for instance.
Netball has been played for many many decades by women, with a knee injury rate similar to or higher than footy. Why has there never been a knee injury CRISES in netball?
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