Fans' call: three plus sub is way to goBy Adam McNicol
Mon 16 August, 2010ALMOST 12,000 people have so far responded to the AFL rules survey, with many supporting the introduction of a substitute as a way to reduce the number of rotations in games.
At present, 51.7 percent of respondents believe the league should reduce the number of interchange players to three and complement them with one substitute.
The option to cap the number of interchanges to 80 per game has also proved popular, with almost 39 percent of voters favouring that idea.
But less than 10 percent of votes have supported a system involving two interchange players and two substitutes.
Footy fans have until Wednesday to complete the survey.
“A lot of the comments provided by people demonstrate that they’ve thought about it carefully and have been genuine with their feedback, and we’re very grateful for that,” AFL operations manager Adrian Anderson said on Monday.
“When it comes to the interchange situation, there are some mixed responses.
“We will continue explaining why we think it is an important issue for the laws committee to look at, and fairness is a key aspect of that.
“Melbourne was no doubt disadvantaged by having Aaron Davey out of the game early and not being able to rotate as much as Hawthorn.
“You always get examples when a team can still win with injuries, but our research shows the increasing rotations are making it harder to win when you go a player down than it was in the past.”
There have been clear-cut responses to a number of other potential rule changes put up for discussion, while the idea to change the scoring system has also garnered little support.
Almost 80 percent of respondents believe a ball that hits the goal post should always be registered as a behind.
Around 75 percent believe a ball that hits the behind post should always be treated as having gone out of bounds on the full.
“We’ll certainly factor that into our analysis,” Anderson added.
“One in five voters actually supported a change, but you’d have to say the clear majority want the scoring system to stay the way it is, even if that produces more errors.”
Almost 73 percent of voters are in favour of the player, not the umpire, deciding when to implement the advantage rule after a free kick.
Nearly 60 percent of respondents favour a free kick being paid against a player who drags the ball under an opponent.
And around 60 percent support the boundary umpires awarding free kicks for holding and high contact at stoppages.
“What we usually see in surveys of this nature is that there’s a big tendency to vote for not changing anything,” Anderson said.
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