Author Topic: AFL reveals its 9 rule changes [update]  (Read 8467 times)

Offline one-eyed

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AFL reveals its 9 rule changes [update]
« on: June 09, 2018, 03:52:20 PM »
What rule will we likely see introduced next year? Whateley reveals it.

By SEN
9 June 2018


SEN footy commentator Gerard Whateley revealed one of the rules that he believes the AFL will tick off for the 2019 season.

Whateley is a part of Steve Hocking's look of the game committee that is attempting to come up with ideas to improve the spectacle of the sport.

One of the rules Whateley believes we will see next year is a longer goal square.

"This is the one thing I think will happen, we're going to see a bigger goal square," he told SEN's Crunch Time.

"You're twice as likely to score from a kick in, so moving the goalsquare out to 18 yards, you're more likely to clear the volatile space."

Whateley has revealed what he took away from the committee.

“So the mantra is how do we break the game back open?” he said.

“There’s a couple of guiding principles and these are really important. The changes have to be progressive, they are not trying to return the game to something it’s been in the past.

“They must fit with the current charter of the game – so it takes off the table, there will be no zones, no 16 players a side, there’ll be no bonus point for 100 points, that isn’t allowed within the charter.

“And finally it must honour the heritage of the game. So we’re not going to fundamentally move away from what footy has been through the years.

“This group is not a group of free-radicals that are going to change the game to something we don’t recognise, they want the game to be the best that it can be.”

Whateley also revealed what has been discussed the most so far.

"There are variations of starting points that are extremely prominent in these conversations," he said.

"Then there are proposals around stoppages around the ground and what you'll need to keep inside 50.

"You can still run anywhere once the ball's in play."

https://www.sen.com.au/news/2018/06/09/what-rule-will-we-likely-see-introduced-next-year-whateley-reveals-it/

Apparently the four main 'ideas' that this committee came up with were:

1) 25m goalsquare.
2) Players set in zones before centre bounces (6 forwards/6 mid/6 backs).
3) Clear last touch out of bounds is free to the opposition. Otherwise it's a throw-in.
4) 4 umpires (2 following the play plus one inside each forward 50 zone).
« Last Edit: October 11, 2018, 03:54:05 PM by one-eyed »

Offline Assange Tiger 😎

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #1 on: June 09, 2018, 03:54:36 PM »
oh my god :banghead
I work in Africa and they were taking the pee out of me for saving Africa.......
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Offline Diocletian

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #2 on: June 09, 2018, 05:39:08 PM »
 :facepalm

Can't stand Whimpley....being next to Slobbotard only papers over what a massive flog he is himself, anyone can look smart in comparison if they constantky surround themselves with football types.....why the stuff are peeant journalists on the commitee anyway?
"Much of the social history of the Western world, over the past three decades, has been a history of replacing what worked with what sounded good...."

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strongandbold

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #3 on: June 09, 2018, 06:11:04 PM »
Whately is an incredibly smart man, to smart for the dullards here to comprehend.

Offline Diocletian

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #4 on: June 09, 2018, 06:23:47 PM »
Whimpley is the Stephen Fry of the AFL...a dumb person's idea of a smart person..... :shh
"Much of the social history of the Western world, over the past three decades, has been a history of replacing what worked with what sounded good...."

- Thomas Sowell


FJ is the only one that makes sense.

strongandbold

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #5 on: June 09, 2018, 07:49:32 PM »
Whimpley is the Stephen Fry of the AFL...a dumb person's idea of a smart person..... :shh

oh bless me with your knowledge all mighty one  :bow

Offline Diocletian

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #6 on: June 09, 2018, 07:50:32 PM »
In time grasshopper, in time..... :shh
"Much of the social history of the Western world, over the past three decades, has been a history of replacing what worked with what sounded good...."

- Thomas Sowell


FJ is the only one that makes sense.

Dougeytherichmondfan

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #7 on: June 09, 2018, 09:37:38 PM »
Oh god this is so off. Everything about this thread.

Lebowski

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #8 on: June 10, 2018, 12:35:13 AM »
 :facepalm

Offline Assange Tiger 😎

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #9 on: June 10, 2018, 01:28:28 PM »
 :shh
I work in Africa and they were taking the pee out of me for saving Africa.......
"Living the dream ,not as a slave to the system. If that makes me a tosser, then I'm a proud tosser... I have plenty of time to toss"

Offline tdy

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #10 on: June 11, 2018, 03:10:44 PM »
What they need is 6 or 12  in the other  forward 50 at kick outs from behinds that gives space for the kick out to go long with only 24 players to flood the defensive zone. The 60m torp to the wing would be a real option.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #11 on: June 12, 2018, 12:02:25 AM »
Change is a-coming. The only question is how much?

Jake Niall
The Age
11 June 2018


Worner's words will be viewed by many fans with cynicism, because, like all businesses, the AFL's free-to-air broadcaster is concerned largely with the bottom line. But it would also be unwise to dismiss his views, which Gillon McLachlan and his new football lieutenant Steve Hocking already know.

Without maintaining high TV ratings, AFL – and club – revenues will drop and this will mean more than simply cutting the bonuses of unpopular AFL executives. It will be harder to prop up the expansion teams and Brisbane, harder to maintain the current level of equalisation for North, St Kilda and the Dogs, harder to pay the AFL Women's players what they deserve and harder to attract the first choice athletes, female or male.

The TV rights are to the AFL what North Sea oil reserves are to Norway – they have enabled a vast welfare state and higher living standards for all.

The look of the game underpins everything.

The debate about what should be done is best understood as a battle between three loose factions, both within the game and in the stands/on the couch.

First, there's The Conservatives, whose position is best summarised by that hoary old war cry: "Leave the rules alone." They hope and pray that the game will find an answer, believing in evolution, rather than revolution.

Like Tony Abbott's Tories within the Coalition, the conservatives are shrinking in number and influence. They want the game to be what it was in 1988, without recognising that it can only retain some of those elements by changing.

The second group is The Incrementalists. They do not think the game will solve its own problems, but are squeamish about anything that seems to change what they think are the fundamentals. They want minor surgery, not the removal of what they consider vital organs.

Third, there's The Radicals. They resemble advocates for serious action on climate change, in that they believe the crisis is now and that major, contentious change is essential to save Planet AFL from catastrophe.

The Conservatives, sadly, can be dismissed as a force. Few within clubs and AFL HQ think Hocking and the AFL Commission should "do nothing". To do zilch would mean relying on the altruism and ingenuity of coaches to save the game from their own handiwork and from the forces of professional sport. It will not happen.

So, the real contest of ideas is between The Incrementalists and The Radicals. Change is coming to the competition. Be prepared for it. The question is whether it will be incremental, radical or some combination.

It is quite conceivable that incremental change will come first and if that doesn't decongest the game's blocked passages, extreme rule changes – eg: zones for stoppages or 16 a side – will eventually follow.

Incrementalists want tinkering with the rules, such as further reducing interchange rotations to ease congestion (a change ex-AFL chairman Mike Fitzpatrick championed) or to clear the scrums by paying more frees. Nathan Buckley and Alastair Clarkson have both called for reducing or eradicating prior opportunity - a view that McLachlan broadly shares.

To introduce starting positions – say, three players from each team inside the 50-metre arcs – at centre bounces only is a classical Incrementalist solution to congestion. To mandate the same at every stoppage is the panacea that many Radicals want.

Three reforms can be classified as Radical options. The first is what I described several years ago as The Nuclear Option of netball-style zones. If this is to happen – Rodney Eade is one of the early advocates – it would be introduced only for stoppages, with a few players having to stand in the arc at each end (or half of the field). Once the ball's thrown up or bounced, players could move where they like.

Reducing the number of players to 16, which Geelong coach Chris Scott favours, is the second Radical solution. The other Radical remedy is not simply the reduction of rotations, but the complete elimination of interchange and its replacement with soccer-like substitutes.

It would be a massive leap of faith for the AFL to introduce a Radical rule, such as compulsory starting positions at all stoppages – a tough rule to police – without trialling it in the pre-season competition. The safest choice would be go for the Incrementalist changes, while trialling Radical options in pre-season or the VFL.

"Last touch'' out of bounds – which exists in the SANFL and Malcolm Blight is pushing – is on the border of Incremental and Radical. It sounds extreme to many of us, but the impact might not prove so.

Is Hocking an Incrementalist or a Radical? At a briefing I attended last Tuesday, he mentioned that the AFL had to careful of "unintended consequences" of some changes. It is unclear how to read that comment.

My guess is he isn't wedded to either radical or gradual measures, but is committed to change and is willing to use either, and that the change is being hatched, right now, for 2019 and 2020.

We are being conditioned to rule changes by the AFL. It is no coincidence that they have formed more committees than the Politburo, and that influential figures such as Blight, Leigh Matthews and the two Gerards, Healy and Whateley, have been brought in to the tent to hear the state-of-game spiel.

I suspect that Incrementalism will be the first port of call, with Radicalism kept in the top drawer. But nothing would really surprise. Hocking shapes as a change agent.

Whatever he, McLachlan and the Commission decide, footy won't be the same in 2019. It's just a question of whether it will get a facelift or a new face altogether.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/change-is-a-coming-the-only-question-is-how-much-20180609-p4zkjy.html

Offline one-eyed

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #12 on: June 12, 2018, 02:00:50 PM »
SCRAPPING the interchange bench and playing more, shorter games across the season was one of the ideas floated at Monday night's informal coaches' dinner in Melbourne, Brisbane coach Chris Fagan says

Coaches met at AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan's house after participating in Neale Daniher's Big Freeze 4 for MND research at the Queen's Birthday Melbourne-Collingwood clash at the MCG.

Also in attendance at the dinner were football operations manager Steve Hocking and League general counsel Andrew Dillon.

Fagan said the discussion flowed with no set agenda, with the issue of reducing congestion in games and boosting scoring popular topics.

"I think there's a genuine concern about the fact that maybe there's not enough scoring happening in footy, that people want to see more of that," Fagan told SEN on Tuesday morning.

"When you sit around a table like that there are a million and one different ideas about how it can be done.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/2018-06-12/scrapping-bench-shorter-games-on-coaches-agenda

Offline Diocletian

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #13 on: June 12, 2018, 03:24:09 PM »
I agree with dwaino's deleted post.... :shh
"Much of the social history of the Western world, over the past three decades, has been a history of replacing what worked with what sounded good...."

- Thomas Sowell


FJ is the only one that makes sense.

Offline Assange Tiger 😎

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Re: What rule changes will we likely see introduced next year? (SEN)
« Reply #14 on: June 12, 2018, 04:16:30 PM »
Big Dwayne wants to chuck it away. Can't handle premierships the big boy
I work in Africa and they were taking the pee out of me for saving Africa.......
"Living the dream ,not as a slave to the system. If that makes me a tosser, then I'm a proud tosser... I have plenty of time to toss"