Jon Anderson says the ugly maul around stoppages is killing the game of AFL Herald-Sun
March 08, 2014 9:00PMDEFINITION OF BAD: “A rolling maul in rugby can be described as a play in which a mass of players gathers around a ball carrier being tackled and attempts to gain possession of the ball when it is released”.
Ninety seconds into last year’s AFL Grand Final and 28 players are within 40 metres of the ball, deep in Hawthorn’s forward pocket.
Twenty seconds later 24 of them have congregated in a 10m circle just out from the Hawks’ goal.
In rugby it would be known as a rolling maul, a happening of great beauty to those who subscribe to that code being the one of choice in heaven.
In the AFL it’s a cancerous cyst and one that threatens to detract from its aesthetic appeal unless something gives soon.
Those who hoped the “rolling maul” might be a passing aberration would have been sent further into depression over a NAB Challenge series where some of the worst matches in recent history were showcased.
It has reached the stage where a pair of reasoned legends in Leigh Matthews and Kevin Bartlett have expressed their concerns, Matthews suggesting some players being restricted to their respective forward 50ms while Bartlett has regularly called for drastic reductions in interchange rotations.
Some see Matthews and Bartlett as alarmists, lacking the patience for the next stage of the game to evolve. I see them as concerned fans who want our code to remain superior to its rivals.
And to that end those persons selected to the Rules Review Committee this week (Wayne Campbell, Michael Christian, Hayden Kennedy and John Worsfold) accept massive responsibility.
Worsfold is one who has shown a desire for highlighting individual contests whereas Christian believes the current interchange cap of 120 is as low as it should go.
Hopefully Worsfold will take his hip and shoulder to each and every meeting. Maybe he could suggest no interchanges be allowed between the time a goal is kicked and the bounce to restart the game.
That would get rid of eight players charging to the interchange bench for a ninety second rest and force coaches to makes moves during general play.
Who knows we might even end up with a Gary Ablett or Dane Swan taking their rest in the forward line where their goalkicking abilities would add to the spectacle.
Bring on the opening round next Friday between Collingwood and Fremantle and may it showcase the rare qualities of Australian Rules. Sadly I doubt that it will.
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