whufc wrote:There is definitely a disconnect between the laws of the game stating a bump is legal yet the interpretations the tribunals especially in incidents where there is no high contact.
With that said i can completely understand why the AFL is as strict as it is. We all know the damage caused by concussion. Then the most irking one for me is when people say 'todays players are soft etc'. We know when it comes to car crashes its the size and speed that does damage, its no different on a football field. 90% of footballers these days are 6ft monsters who run like the wind with barely an inch of fat on them, their not smoking darts at half time etc. Even Houston is 6ft 1, 88kg (apparently) and would have body fat % under 10. His a machine!
Personally i think we are now at a point in the game where the AFL just needs to start cutting the 'grey areas' out. Potentially the only answer is that the bump is illegal and that tackling is the only legal action when 'attacking' a player with the ball. It would take a generation to come to fruition and maybe that would happen naturally anyway. Do juniors practice bumping, cant say ive seen our juniors practicing it?
The players need ribbons hanging off of their shorts so the umpires know when then have been "tackled", if you don't remove the ribbon it can be a free against for contact.
One simple solution which won't eradicate the problem but will soften the blow, make helmets mandatory.