Author Topic: MRO/MRP changes for 2019 (afl site)  (Read 1480 times)

Offline one-eyed

  • Administrator
  • RFC Hall of Fame
  • *****
  • Posts: 98225
    • One-Eyed Richmond
MRO/MRP changes for 2019 (afl site)
« on: December 11, 2018, 04:52:48 PM »
MRO shake-up: Crackdown on high hits, umpire contact

AFL.com.au
Nick Bowen
Dec 11, 2018


INTENTIONAL high-impact strikes to the head will no longer be referred directly to the Tribunal but instead attract an automatic three-match suspension under a suite of changes to the MRO system approved by the AFL Commission.

From 2019, intentional conduct involving high contact will only be referred directly to the Tribunal when the impact is graded by the MRO as severe, as Andrew Gaff's strike on Andrew Brayshaw was following the round 20 West Coast-Fremantle clash.

However, the Commission has also moved to increase the range of offences that will be referred directly to Tribunal, with stomping and eye gouging now added to a list that already included offences such as striking, attempting to strike or spitting at an umpire, and serious misconduct.

The League has also reacted to the 19th man controversies that soured the SANFL preliminary final and NEAFL Grand Final this year, introducing changes to the Laws of the Game applying at state league and community level.

Clubs will now be able to call for post-match reviews if they suspect their opponent had 19 players on the field during a game, while team runners will be also be able to call for a count during games in addition to team captains and vice-captains.

North Adelaide had 19 men on the field for more than four minutes of the fourth quarter of their five-point preliminary final win over Woodville-West Torrens this year, while in the NEAFL Grand Final, Southport had 19 players on the ground for about 20 seconds in the final quarter of their clash with Sydney.

The Commission also accepted recommendations from the League's Competition Committee that there be a clamp down on striking, with more free kicks to be paid for prohibited contact, and the creation of a new offence for strikes of negligible impact.

Players who elect to bump and cause forceful head clashes will now be held strictly liable, which represents a retreat from the greater latitude the MRO gave players to bump last season, best exemplified by Ryan Burton being cleared for his bump that concussed Shaun Higgins.

There will also be a crackdown on umpire contact and on players using their studs in marking contests – as Giant Toby Greene did on several occasions last season – and in general play.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2018-12-11/mro-shakeup-crackdown-on-high-hits-umpire-contact