Lethal wants gladiator footy
05 April 2007 Herald-Sun
Andrew Hamilton
BRISBANE Lions coach Leigh Matthews wants to scrap the interchange bench and turn football into a survival of the fittest.
Matthews floated his radical proposal yesterday to eliminate the impact injuries have on the results of games.
Matthews suggested tonight's opponent St Kilda benefited from the "flaw in the system" last week when it ran over the top of Melbourne after Demons Brock McLean and Matthew Whelan were hurt in the first half.
And he said Brisbane was challenged late in its game against Hawthorn only when Nigel Lappin and Robert Copeland were on the bench nursing corks in the final quarter.
Lappin has been named for tonight's clash and is confident of playing, but he must prove his fitness this morning.
The Saints' stocks have dipped with star forward Nick Riewoldt ruled out by his hamstring and back problems.
On the eve of tonight's clash, Matthews said the interchange system had been troubling him for some time and revealed two radical plans that would reduce the impact of injuries on results:
ELIMINATE the interchange bench and return to the old substitute system.
EXTEND the bench by another two players.
The first would be considered the most left-field, but Matthews gave the impression it was his preferred option.
"It would be a survival of the fittest," he said.
"Once you are off the field, you are off for good.
"In some ways I've always liked the idea that you have to try and use the players on the field for the whole game."
"It would mean a return to the ruckman resting up forward pocket, which would be a good thing I think," Matthews said.
The four-time premiership coach said interchanges had become such a tactically important part of football that any injury gave enormous advantage to the opposition.
"The game is such a 22-man game. If you get a couple of injuries and it becomes 22 on 20, you lose," Matthews said.
"Because you don't want the game to become more dependent on it (interchange) as it is, do you increase it by a couple or go the other way and abolish it."
Matthews, one of football's most senior and respected statesmen, said the idea began to solidify in his mind last year during the soccer World Cup and was brought to the front of his mind last week when he watched the Melbourne- St Kilda match.
"When the soccer World Cup was the focus of our attention, I first asked myself what would AFL be like if we went back to the substitute system," he said.
"We'd have the good players out there for 100 per cent of the time.
"Last weekend was further reinforcement of this; it is amazing what an injury or two can do.
"Melbourne couldn't rotate in the second half and St Kilda ran over the top of them."
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