AFL set to trial 20-metre kick rule
Breaking News - The Age
January 16, 2007 - 8:09PM
The AFL will trial a 20-metre kick rule during the 2007 pre-season competition in a bid to encourage longer kicking and more contested play.
Players will now have to kick a ball at least 20 metres for it to be marked, instead of 15, under a law to be introduced during the NAB Cup, which starts on February 23.
In a further modification to be used during the pre-season competition, players will only be prohibited from kicking backwards in their defensive half of the ground.
Players will now be able to kick backwards to a teammate in the forward half of the ground without fear of umpires calling play-on.
Previously players were only allowed to pass backwards in their team's forward 50-metre arc.
The new rule modifications will not apply to the home and away season or for practice games once teams have been eliminated from the NAB Cup.
The AFL hopes extending the distance a kick has to travel before it can be marked will encourage players to boot it longer instead of chipping it short to teammates.
Continued short kicking and possession football has been a blight on the game in recent years, with many fans bemoaning the lack of contested marks in games.
"Player skills in finding targets for a mark under the current 15-metre rule have got better and better in recent years and the trial rule may encourage longer kicking and contested possession," said AFL football operations general manager Adrian Anderson.
"We will examine the impact of the trial rule and whether it increases contested marks, long kicking and contested possession."
The AFL modified the kicking-backwards rule after several coaches told the league outlawing backwards kicks in the forward half of the ground encouraged teams to flood an opposing side's attack.
Flooding has been a tactic which has also had its detractors in recent years.
The NAB Cup will also be the first time umpires give more protection to players with their head over the ball.
Late last year the league decided to penalise players who bump an opponent whose head is over the ball by making it a reportable offence.
The league brought in the rule to protect players whose head was in a vulnerable position.
http://www.theage.com.au/news/Sport/AFL-set-to-trial-20metre-kick-rule/2007/01/16/1168709749810.html