Lightning McQueen wrote:carey wrote:Has anyone seen umpiring standards as poor as they are right now in the AFL?
This is meant to be the country’s premier competition 'A multi-million dollar industry' not local amateur footy. Yet the level of officiating we’re seeing at the moment is simply the worst I've ever seen, it's a disgrace.
Some of the decisions over the weekend were baffling at best. When an umpire blows the whistle and both teams stop and look around in confusion, that says everything. Right now, it genuinely feels like a lottery at the highest level of footy there is. Disgraceful.
At almost any other level of football, when a whistle goes, players instinctively react and move with the play, they'll literally head down and sprint back to get numbers back. In the AFL at the moment, it's just a pure Lotto were both side just look at the umpire and in some cases laugh! Literally laugh.
With the cost of attending games, food and drink etc at the moment and the standard of umpiring at the minute I can see people simply not attending games. and losing interest in the greatest game in the world.
Rant over.
I'm the last bloke to bag umpires but I totally agree with you, it is as bad as it is ever been.
Of course the rules make it more challenging but I see so more poor interpretatons of the rules, it's the difference between someone who has played the game vs someone who has scientifically studied the rules.I only watch games once my SGM starts coming into to play. I've deleted all of my betting apps now so I doubt whether I'll watch too much more moving forward.
Nailed it, and I nearly don’t blame the umps themselves. They appear to be taught as robots, interpretating the Laws in a purely legal sense, without any feel whatsoever for the game, it’s as if the AFL is run by lawyers
Add in the farcical review system, when all these Law changes are supposedly to speed up the game, yet we have a clown show when play has moved on for nearly a minute, but then pulled up to
reverse a correct decision by a goal umpire. It makes umpiring almost impossible when they’re not given the licence to actually umpire.
Remove the review system, it’s comically based on 1980’s tech anyway, and just let the umps do their job. If they make a mistake, then so be it. The AFL need to be up front about poor decisions and do the hard yards to help umpires be better if the situation dictates that, or acknowledge a job well done, rather than the current farce of denying that anything needs to be changed because it’s all sweet.
Empower them to take control of the game rather than delegate to a 3rd party who is clumsily using ‘science’ rather than being in the heat of the action on the ground.
Having so many umps on the field doesn’t help, with seemingly the furthest one away making a decision overriding the closest.
The best barometer of whether the umpiring has been good has always been when afterwards you say to yourself … didn’t really notice them. The AFL has created a situation where the umpires are now
part of the action, attention is actively drawn to them rather than being in the background, just doing their job.
Yep, umpiring is at a low point, but I don’t purely blame those out there on the ground.
Dunno, I’m just an idiot.