by whufc » Sun Jun 03, 2012 9:29 pm
by Mr Beefy » Sun Jun 03, 2012 9:32 pm
by whufc » Sun Jun 03, 2012 9:37 pm
Mr Beefy wrote:I reckon its probably cos once upon a time they would have been swept under the carpet and/or stored in the memory bank for 'ron.
by gadj1976 » Sun Jun 03, 2012 10:24 pm
by LaughingKookaburra » Mon Jun 04, 2012 12:15 am
by Jabber » Mon Jun 04, 2012 8:54 am
LaughingKookaburra wrote:I think its no where as bad as it once was. The internet has helped bring people to justice for thuggish acts by making people more aware of incidents.
by Boosh » Mon Jun 04, 2012 9:00 am
by stan » Mon Jun 04, 2012 10:25 am
by whufc » Mon Jun 04, 2012 10:37 am
by Jabber » Mon Jun 04, 2012 10:45 am
whufc wrote:I guess my question is moreso in this day and age with the tough times financially alot of the world is going through, do you think belting someone behind play on a football field should bring stronger penalties including police involvement.
I only bring this up as a mate of mine was involved in an incident last year where he was elbowed behind play which resulted major face surgery and forced him out of work for a long period of time, his doing alright now but the incident has definatly taken a huge affect on him and his family. The oppostion was suspended for a long period BUT all he misses out on is a game of football. His an absolute jet of a bloke who would be the last person to belt someone on a footy field.
Recently another player has had been severly injury resulting in an long lay off from work etc etc.
Should there be a point where a football incident does become more than just being left on the park?
by whufc » Mon Jun 04, 2012 10:53 am
Jabber wrote:whufc wrote:I guess my question is moreso in this day and age with the tough times financially alot of the world is going through, do you think belting someone behind play on a football field should bring stronger penalties including police involvement.
I only bring this up as a mate of mine was involved in an incident last year where he was elbowed behind play which resulted major face surgery and forced him out of work for a long period of time, his doing alright now but the incident has definatly taken a huge affect on him and his family. The oppostion was suspended for a long period BUT all he misses out on is a game of football. His an absolute jet of a bloke who would be the last person to belt someone on a footy field.
Recently another player has had been severly injury resulting in an long lay off from work etc etc.
Should there be a point where a football incident does become more than just being left on the park?
No.
by Executive Member » Mon Jun 04, 2012 11:03 am
whufc wrote:Jabber wrote:whufc wrote:I guess my question is moreso in this day and age with the tough times financially alot of the world is going through, do you think belting someone behind play on a football field should bring stronger penalties including police involvement.
I only bring this up as a mate of mine was involved in an incident last year where he was elbowed behind play which resulted major face surgery and forced him out of work for a long period of time, his doing alright now but the incident has definatly taken a huge affect on him and his family. The oppostion was suspended for a long period BUT all he misses out on is a game of football. His an absolute jet of a bloke who would be the last person to belt someone on a footy field.
Recently another player has had been severly injury resulting in an long lay off from work etc etc.
Should there be a point where a football incident does become more than just being left on the park?
No.
Thanks for the anwer care to elaborate a tad.
In all seriousness im interested to hear why you think a bloke should be allowed to king hit another bloke 50-100 metres behind play and then face no other punishment than sitting a few games out which means they probably spend the day drinking and taking the piss from the sidelines.
by whufc » Mon Jun 04, 2012 11:05 am
Executive Member wrote:whufc wrote:Jabber wrote:whufc wrote:I guess my question is moreso in this day and age with the tough times financially alot of the world is going through, do you think belting someone behind play on a football field should bring stronger penalties including police involvement.
I only bring this up as a mate of mine was involved in an incident last year where he was elbowed behind play which resulted major face surgery and forced him out of work for a long period of time, his doing alright now but the incident has definatly taken a huge affect on him and his family. The oppostion was suspended for a long period BUT all he misses out on is a game of football. His an absolute jet of a bloke who would be the last person to belt someone on a footy field.
Recently another player has had been severly injury resulting in an long lay off from work etc etc.
Should there be a point where a football incident does become more than just being left on the park?
No.
Thanks for the anwer care to elaborate a tad.
In all seriousness im interested to hear why you think a bloke should be allowed to king hit another bloke 50-100 metres behind play and then face no other punishment than sitting a few games out which means they probably spend the day drinking and taking the piss from the sidelines.
assault is assault and if serious should be taken to the police if a person wishes to take further action
by Jabber » Mon Jun 04, 2012 11:29 am
by Cash 123 » Mon Jun 04, 2012 11:32 am
Jabber wrote:I can understand other views on this but my personal view is that you have a judicial system within the SAAFL to deal with the offending player.
Unfortunately when you play sport you affectively sign on to the unexpected occuring on the field, like it or not.
When I was an owner/driver with my own truck the first thing I did when I wanted to play sport as well as work is went and got income insurance, because of the unexpected.
Put it this way, I know I would never EVER seek police assistance for an on field incident that involved me, but maybe thats just the way I operate, I don't know. The minute that incident crosses the white line (so to speak eg after the game, or in the car park, etc etc) then it is a different story.
by HH3 » Mon Jun 04, 2012 11:36 am
by Bluedemon » Mon Jun 04, 2012 11:45 am
by Jabber » Mon Jun 04, 2012 11:45 am
Cash 123 wrote:
So if a player has a weapon down there sock at start of game, then during game hits you with it, thats ok because it was on the field and you wouldnt take further action. YOU MUPPET
by Jabber » Mon Jun 04, 2012 11:48 am
Cash 123 wrote:Jabber wrote:I can understand other views on this but my personal view is that you have a judicial system within the SAAFL to deal with the offending player.
Unfortunately when you play sport you affectively sign on to the unexpected occuring on the field, like it or not.
When I was an owner/driver with my own truck the first thing I did when I wanted to play sport as well as work is went and got income insurance, because of the unexpected.
Put it this way, I know I would never EVER seek police assistance for an on field incident that involved me, but maybe thats just the way I operate, I don't know. The minute that incident crosses the white line (so to speak eg after the game, or in the car park, etc etc) then it is a different story.
So if a player has a weapon down there sock at start of game, then during game hits you with it, thats ok because it was on the field and you wouldnt take further action. YOU MUPPET
by Cash 123 » Mon Jun 04, 2012 11:50 am
Jabber wrote:Cash 123 wrote:Jabber wrote:I can understand other views on this but my personal view is that you have a judicial system within the SAAFL to deal with the offending player.
Unfortunately when you play sport you affectively sign on to the unexpected occuring on the field, like it or not.
When I was an owner/driver with my own truck the first thing I did when I wanted to play sport as well as work is went and got income insurance, because of the unexpected.
Put it this way, I know I would never EVER seek police assistance for an on field incident that involved me, but maybe thats just the way I operate, I don't know. The minute that incident crosses the white line (so to speak eg after the game, or in the car park, etc etc) then it is a different story.
So if a player has a weapon down there sock at start of game, then during game hits you with it, thats ok because it was on the field and you wouldnt take further action. YOU MUPPET
I think you could also put that in the category of "crossing the white line" which I explained also, as it is something out of the ordinary.
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