Good to know Blakey has not got concussion. He is the bright light in our back half at the moment. His enforced absence would be ..... depressing!
Rd 13 vs St Kilda @ SCG - Match Thread
Collapse
X
-
Not sure if anybody saw the clip from Kane Cornes this week where he pointed out numerous examples of the “breach” Sheldrick committed in our game that weren’t paid.
It wasn’t the point of his piece (he was talking about there being no replacement for Brad Scott in the AFL so there is no rudder with football decisions) but I think it makes it more egregious that the 50 was paid just after Gulden and also just after the marking infringement against Hickey wasn’t paid a 50.
And this is the issue as I see it for AFL fans and the umpiring at the moment - we see highly technical 50m paid at critical times, but someone crashes into a back of player very late and there's nothing paid. We see flavour of the month frees paid like the Butler dangerous tackle, but see blatant breaches of the most fundamental skills of the game go unpunished. We see obvious and flagrant holding and other interference of some players go unwhistled but other players who get the benefit of free kicks for the most trivial of contact. Sure, thus it's always been to some extent, but it seems very bad indeed at the moment, and that umpiring performance last week was among the very worst I've ever seen - there must have been upwards of a dozen clangers every quarter.
Frankly, we deserve better.
- - - Updated - - -
If 2023 has taught us anything, it is how quickly things can change in football. Absolutely ludicrous to write off 2024 as 'blooding new players'. We haven't suddenly gone from grand finalists to fallen off a cliff. It is a deeply disappointing season this year sure - but we can easily rebound next year and be right back up there again next year.Comment
-
Wow - Lance has not kicked a fourth quarter goal in 2023.
Comment
-
This was the clip I was referring to
"I don't think the game has ever been more confused than what it is right now." Kane Cornes on how the game's failure to appoint a new footy boss has led to mass confusion for fans, players and...
- - - Updated - - -
This was the clip I was referring to
He ate more cheese, than time allowedComment
-
Rd 13 vs St Kilda @ SCG - Match Thread
Re the two very costly 50 metre penalties last week (which have been referenced various times in this thread).
I too thought the match had some horrible umpiring, both for and against us.
But (as I said earlier) the 50 metre penalty against Sheldrick was correct. Sheldrick ran in from the side cutting off the St K player’s option of swinging out and playing on. It is irrelevant whether the St K player wanted, or had any intent, to do that. It is a clear breach of the stand and protected area rules - whether we like those rules or not.
In the Gulden case, I have now watched the replay multiple times and am no longer as aggrieved as I was originally by this decision.
If you watch and listen to the replay (below) it was Lloyd who (unsuccessfully) contested the mark with Owens. Gulden was standing facing the contest, presumably hoping to crumb the ball if it came to ground. As a result it was Lloyd who landed on The Mark and who seemingly at first intended to stand it (he raised his arms). So it was Lloyd, not Gulden, whom the ump told to ‘stand’.
Lloyd then ran off to defend closer to the goal square and Gulden turned around to take over. The problem was that Gulden was well in front of the mark - which he should have known as he had been looking straight at the marking contest.
I still think/agree it was harsh not to give Gulden more time to adjust. But Gulden at the best made a mistake. Or at the worst was deliberately trying to hold up play to allow Swans players time to organise their defence.
I expect St K supporters might suggest the latter. And that might have been what the ump thought.
There are learnings for Swans players from both 50 metre penalties. I hope they don’t repeat these errors in future matches.
Comment
-
Re the two very costly 50 metre penalties last week (which have been referenced various times in this thread).
I too thought the match had some horrible umpiring, both for and against us.
But (as I said earlier) the 50 metre penalty against Sheldrick was correct. Sheldrick ran in from the side cutting off the St K player’s option of swinging out and playing on. It is irrelevant whether the St K player wanted, or had any intent, to do that. It is a clear breach of the stand and protected area rules - whether we like those rules or not.
In the Gulden case, I have now watched the replay multiple times and am no longer as aggrieved as I was originally by this decision.
If you watch and listen to the replay (below) it was Lloyd who (unsuccessfully) contested the mark with Owens. Gulden was standing facing the contest, presumably hoping to crumb the ball if it came to ground. As a result it was Lloyd who landed on The Mark and who seemingly at first intended to stand it (he raised his arms). So it was Lloyd, not Gulden, whom the ump told to ‘stand’.
Lloyd then ran off to defend closer to the goal square and Gulden turned around to take over. The problem was that Gulden was well in front of the mark - which he should have known as he had been looking straight at the marking contest.
I still think/agree it was harsh not to give Gulden more time to adjust. But Gulden at the best made a mistake. Or at the worst was deliberately trying to hold up play to allow Swans players time to organise their defence.
I expect St K supporters might suggest the latter. And that might have been what the ump thought.
There are learnings for Swans players from both 50 metre penalties. I hope they don’t repeat these errors in future matches.
https://twitter.com/foxfooty/status/...760607232?s=21Comment
-
Re the two very costly 50 metre penalties last week (which have been referenced various times in this thread).
I too thought the match had some horrible umpiring, both for and against us.
But (as I said earlier) the 50 metre penalty against Sheldrick was correct. Sheldrick ran in from the side cutting off the St K player’s option of swinging out and playing on. It is irrelevant whether the St K player wanted, or had any intent, to do that. It is a clear breach of the stand and protected area rules - whether we like those rules or not.
In the Gulden case, I have now watched the replay multiple times and am no longer as aggrieved as I was originally by this decision.
If you watch and listen to the replay (below) it was Lloyd who (unsuccessfully) contested the mark with Owens. Gulden was standing facing the contest, presumably hoping to crumb the ball if it came to ground. As a result it was Lloyd who landed on The Mark and who seemingly at first intended to stand it (he raised his arms). So it was Lloyd, not Gulden, whom the ump told to ‘stand’.
Lloyd then ran off to defend closer to the goal square and Gulden turned around to take over. The problem was that Gulden was well in front of the mark - which he should have known as he had been looking straight at the marking contest.
I still think/agree it was harsh not to give Gulden more time to adjust. But Gulden at the best made a mistake. Or at the worst was deliberately trying to hold up play to allow Swans players time to organise their defence.
I expect St K supporters might suggest the latter. And that might have been what the ump thought.
There are learnings for Swans players from both 50 metre penalties. I hope they don’t repeat these errors in future matches.
https://twitter.com/foxfooty/status/...760607232?s=21Comment
-
The ump then made a lightning-fast decision that Gulden wasn’t adjusting his stand quickly enough and called the 50-metre penalty. That is the bit that is arguably harsh - we really have no grounds for complaint about the umpiring of any of the rest of this incident.
As I said earlier, I suspect taking the chain of events as a whole, at that point the ump decided Gulden was deliberately trying to slow down play. That may have been quite unfair. However Gulden does need to be more attentive to correct positioning when standing The Mark in future. And to move quickly if told to come back.Comment
-
Every umpire: "Player x, back 2 metres" (count to 2) "Player x, back 2 metres" (count to 1, blow whistle if not moving), or
Every umpire: "Player x, back 2 metres" (count to 2, blow whistle if not moving)
Whatever they come up with, harsh or lenient- as long as it's consistent.I knew him as a gentle young man, I cannot say for sure the reasons for his decline
We watched him fade before our very eyes, and years before his timeComment
-
If you watch/listen to the video, the ump did give Gulden instruction: he blew his whistle twice, called out ‘Errol, come back here’ and ran across to indicate where The Mark was to be set. It was at that point that Gulden turned around to move back. (Actually it was more a shuffle back.)
The ump then made a lightning-fast decision that Gulden wasn’t adjusting his stand quickly enough and called the 50-metre penalty. That is the bit that is arguably harsh - we really have no grounds for complaint about the umpiring of any of the rest of this incident.
As I said earlier, I suspect taking the chain of events as a whole, at that point the ump decided Gulden was deliberately trying to slow down play. That may have been quite unfair. However Gulden does need to be more attentive to correct positioning when standing The Mark in future. And to move quickly if told to come back.
The umpire needs to be comfortable with where the player is before calling "stand". Or once he's called "stand", he has to ignore any misgivings he has about where the player is standing.Comment
-
Rd 13 vs St Kilda @ SCG - Match Thread
But he'd already told him "to stand". And if you move once told to stand, it's a 50m penalty against.
The umpire needs to be comfortable with where the player is before calling "stand". Or once he's called "stand", he has to ignore any misgivings he has about where the player is standing.
In my view lots for the players to think about in this incident.
Ps: in fact there was possibly/probably grounds for a 50-metre penalty the moment Lloyd ran off after being called to stand. Gulden was standing in the protected zone that had already been delineated by the umpire’s call to Lloyd, and he made no attempt to move out of it.
Pps: And “if you move once told to stand, it's a 50m penalty against” then the umpire should have called a 50-metre penalty as soon as Lloyd ran off. The umpire gave us some latitude there which we didn’t capitalise on because Gulden didn’t stand in the right place.Last edited by Meg; 14 June 2023, 05:03 PM.Comment
-
If you watch/listen to the video, the ump did give Gulden instruction: he blew his whistle twice, called out ‘Errol, come back here’ and ran across to indicate where The Mark was to be set. It was at that point that Gulden turned around to move back. (Actually it was more a shuffle back.)
The ump then made a lightning-fast decision that Gulden wasn’t adjusting his stand quickly enough and called the 50-metre penalty. That is the bit that is arguably harsh - we really have no grounds for complaint about the umpiring of any of the rest of this incident.
As I said earlier, I suspect taking the chain of events as a whole, at that point the ump decided Gulden was deliberately trying to slow down play. That may have been quite unfair. However Gulden does need to be more attentive to correct positioning when standing The Mark in future. And to move quickly if told to come back.
Sent from my SM-G965F using TapatalkWe have them where we want them, everything is going according to plan!Comment
-
Rowbottom’s game against the Saints was his best performance ever according to Champion Data including PBs of 17 contested possessions, 9 clearances.Comment
-
Comment
-
Comment
Comment