Jump to content

Interchange cap confirmed for 2014


olisik

Recommended Posts

I hate most rule chanes that have made the game a mess with free kicks getting paid willy nilly where nobody has any idea which way thy are going. But this actually makes sense to me.

Although it doesn't excuse KB and Demetriou's behaviour.

I hate soft frees for very minor incidental contact, such as a hand brushing a shoulder, etc. and unfortunately the recent NAB games have been full of them. It makes my blood boil.

If only they umpired every game like they do Grand Finals, where they only pay blatant free kicks.

Note: I appreciate that it's the best umpires that officiate in the GF, but you get my drift.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Never ever leave the game in the hands of coaches.

Not one coaching contract would list an item called " how the game looks"

They have to win at all costs that is their chief responsibilty.

There has never been a coached sacked because he produced a game plan that made the game look like crap.

They get sacked for not winning games pure and simple.

That is what drives them.

I pay no heed to Malthouse, Neeld and company when they complain about these changes.

In this area they have no credability.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Never ever leave the game in the hands of coaches.

Not one coaching contract would list an item called " how the game looks"

They have to win at all costs that is their chief responsibilty.

There has never been a coached sacked because he produced a game plan that made the game look like crap.

They get sacked for not winning games pure and simple.

That is what drives them.

I pay no heed to Malthouse, Neeld and company when they complain about these changes.

In this area they have no credability.

It's kind of true what you say 'old', but where is the advantage here, that's the bit I don't get. Pretty much every coach is speaking out against the changes. By the way, on the surface I think the cap seems a good idea but back to the coach's. If only one or two were speaking out you would have an educated guess that it didn't suit there team, there mix of players or game structure, they would be talking though their self interest but if all of them are who is getting an advantage.

Is their problem that they are all egomaniacs who are freaking out because there view is not being taken as gospel (in Malthouses case that probably stacks up), are they fearful of losing any influence they still have on game day or do they actually have a point here. The win loss thing does't stack up at all in this debate.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Never ever leave the game in the hands of coaches.

Not one coaching contract would list an item called " how the game looks"

They have to win at all costs that is their chief responsibilty.

There has never been a coached sacked because he produced a game plan that made the game look like crap.

They get sacked for not winning games pure and simple.

That is what drives them.

I pay no heed to Malthouse, Neeld and company when they complain about these changes.

In this area they have no credability.

Never ever leave the game in the hands of current coaches.

IMO ex coaches (over 40 Yrs old) should form 30% of the rules of the game committee with input from the supporter base, & from former commentators & former players.

The majority of the committee should be aged over 40 Yrs of age.

leave the game in the hands of the elders of the game. to maintain its character.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's kind of true what you say 'old', but where is the advantage here, that's the bit I don't get. Pretty much every coach is speaking out against the changes. By the way, on the surface I think the cap seems a good idea but back to the coach's. If only one or two were speaking out you would have an educated guess that it didn't suit there team, there mix of players or game structure, they would be talking though their self interest but if all of them are who is getting an advantage.

Is their problem that they are all egomaniacs who are freaking out because there view is not being taken as gospel (in Malthouses case that probably stacks up), are they fearful of losing any influence they still have on game day or do they actually have a point here. The win loss thing does't stack up at all in this debate.

the changes upset the pathway the coaches have engineered their teams & styles for.

Badluck.

Their destroying the game.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Never ever leave the game in the hands of current coaches.

IMO ex coaches (over 40 Yrs old) should form 30% of the rules of the game committee with input from the supporter base, & from former commentators & former players.

The majority of the committee should be aged over 40 Yrs of age.

leave the game in the hands of the elders of the game. to maintain its character.

Accept your correcting dee-luded

Link to comment
Share on other sites


The average last year was about 130 not 160. The Crows were the only team that averaged as high as 160 I believe.


I'm aware of that. I did say "where 160 is not unusual". Perhaps could've phrased it better but it doesn't detract from my point that 80 seems like a big drop.

Anyhow, it's happening, and if it results in opening up the game without a significant impact on injuries then I think it will be deemed a success. I expect the intial period to be pretty rocky, but we will at the very least find out the extent of Neeldy's tactical nous in adapting to it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


less players = less congestion

.. exactly.

reduce the interchange, not the rotations.

Bring the rules back to where they where in the early nineties, except allow 2 emergencies for bad injuries.

Don't make more rules to correct the rule changes that went bad. Just back pedal.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

.. exactly.

reduce the interchange, not the rotations.

Bring the rules back to where they where in the early nineties, except allow 2 emergencies for bad injuries.

Don't make more rules to correct the rule changes that went bad. Just back pedal.

this could work.

I do not like the situation where a player needs to come off because of fatigue and cannot because a cap has been reached.

It is dangerous. The game will continue to get quicker incremently so i will never like a finite cap per quarter. But dropping from 4-2 may address both sides.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

this could work.

I do not like the situation where a player needs to come off because of fatigue and cannot because a cap has been reached.

It is dangerous. The game will continue to get quicker incremently so i will never like a finite cap per quarter. But dropping from 4-2 may address both sides.

In the early nineties WYL, if you took my meaning, I think it was 2 on the interchange bench.

then the coaches screamed they wanted "More"..... 3.

Then at some stage it went to 4 on the interchange bench..... & then, later the game went Pro'..

.... later again came more money in the rich clubs football dept purse, so they went headlong into 'sports science'...

...and here we are with a 'Field of Schemes', instead of a game of football.... we have a game of handball + ring-a-ring-a-rosy, & rolling malls.

Hell.... why don't we just play British Bulldog instead...

and the laws of the game committee & the AFL, are too scared about the coaches screaming Blue murder in the 'media'...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I hate soft frees for very minor incidental contact, such as a hand brushing a shoulder, etc. and unfortunately the recent NAB games have been full of them. It makes my blood boil.

If only they umpired every game like they do Grand Finals, where they only pay blatant free kicks.

Note: I appreciate that it's the best umpires that officiate in the GF, but you get my drift.

I agree 100%, the problem is that umpires are instructed to pay a free kick if they see it no matter what.

That's the fundamental issue which I believe leads to poor umpiring. As you say the Grand Finals have the best umpiring because the consequences are so high they pay decisions only if they are certain it is there.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

In the early nineties WYL, if you took my meaning, I think it was 2 on the interchange bench.

then the coaches screamed they wanted "More"..... 3.

Then at some stage it went to 4 on the interchange bench..... & then, later the game went Pro'..

.... later again came more money in the rich clubs football dept purse, so they went headlong into 'sports science'...

...and here we are with a 'Field of Schemes', instead of a game of football.... we have a game of handball + ring-a-ring-a-rosy, & rolling malls.

Hell.... why don't we just play British Bulldog instead...

and the laws of the game committee & the AFL, are too scared about the coaches screaming Blue murder in the 'media'...

tumblr_lwma33g76e1qjql2lo1_400.jpg

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I might be by my lonesome, but I disagree with the coaches and their whining. I'm happy to have less rotations, more fatigue and the game opening up. Six or 7 years ago 40 rotations was the norm. I'll also get to see the better players on the ground for longer.

It works for me.

Agree see the real footballers and less short sharp impact athletes. I think there will be less congestion as fatigue will kick in and we will see more 1 on 1 contests. Part of me would like to see gradual change where the cap starts at 120 and after two seasons is dropped to 80.

It wont kill the game, it continues to evolve and players adapt

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Of course, the coaches are complaining. They've built their game plans around the flood, press, stoppages and packs.(which they, and they alone created) They've reduced the sport as a spectacle as far as I'm concerned. Roos, Wallace, Eade, Malthouse and Lyon are the main culprits (By the way, 4 of these 5 are excellent coaches, but that's not the point)

The coaches in the main are the ones who have changed and manipulated the way the game is played - not the AFL. The coaches do not care about the game as a spectacle - they are simply there to win matches. They don't care how the game looks and never will. Why they are even involved in this debate is questionable.

In some ways, I'm glad that the coaches are moaning. It says to me that the new restrictions will have an effect.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites


Just be careful. The coaches aren't complaining because their game plans are ruined but because they fear players careers will be ruined. They might not change their plans one bit.

If someone has a reasonable suggestion about how you make Afl players work less hard but still win games then let me no. I don't think a coach will suddenly say its ok guys save your energy we aren't worried about forward pressure any more.

Also as a tactic if we are bottom 4 this year do we limit ourselves to 80 rotations per game in the last 5 or so weeks to get an advantage?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Of course, the coaches are complaining. They've built their game plans around the flood, press, stoppages and packs.(which they, and they alone created) They've reduced the sport as a spectacle as far as I'm concerned. Roos, Wallace, Eade, Malthouse and Lyon are the main culprits (By the way, 4 of these 5 are excellent coaches, but that's not the point)

The coaches in the main are the ones who have changed and manipulated the way the game is played - not the AFL. The coaches do not care about the game as a spectacle - they are simply there to win matches. They don't care how the game looks and never will. Why they are even involved in this debate is questionable.

In some ways, I'm glad that the coaches are moaning. It says to me that the new restrictions will have an effect.

So, what? Do you want to get rid of coaches? Either they're here for a good reason and we let them do their jobs, or they shouldn't be here at all and we get rid of them. Actually now that I think about it, that seems like a pretty good philosophy for life.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just be careful. The coaches aren't complaining because their game plans are ruined but because they fear players careers will be ruined. They might not change their plans one bit.

If someone has a reasonable suggestion about how you make Afl players work less hard but still win games then let me no. I don't think a coach will suddenly say its ok guys save your energy we aren't worried about forward pressure any more.

Also as a tactic if we are bottom 4 this year do we limit ourselves to 80 rotations per game in the last 5 or so weeks to get an advantage?

Players come & go, get injured or don't get injured. some have long careers & some don't.

the game isn't about the players. its about the supporters.

Its the peoples game.

Some who are involved in the game are trying to claim ownership, as if its there's, mr Malthouse... he who wants a 6 man bench...

When you hear about past players who have lost interest in the game as it is, & can't watch it, you better take notice.

... the Tail is out & its wagging hard.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

So, what? Do you want to get rid of coaches? Either they're here for a good reason and we let them do their jobs, or they shouldn't be here at all and we get rid of them. Actually now that I think about it, that seems like a pretty good philosophy for life.

lets let the ironing witch of the West, Gina Rhinehardt run WA then. she can have the west... and give Clive Palmer Qld... lets see how the people feel in 10 years.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just be careful. The coaches aren't complaining because their game plans are ruined but because they fear players careers will be ruined. They might not change their plans one bit.

If someone has a reasonable suggestion about how you make Afl players work less hard but still win games then let me no. I don't think a coach will suddenly say its ok guys save your energy we aren't worried about forward pressure any more.

Also as a tactic if we are bottom 4 this year do we limit ourselves to 80 rotations per game in the last 5 or so weeks to get an advantage?

The coaches aren't always truthful. ^_^ If you want to believe them, fine - I don't. The coaches will have to reign things back. Without adequate rest players will not be able to race up and down the ground for 2 hours. Teams will get run over in the last quarter if they are worked too hard in the 1st half. It stands to reason.

So, what? Do you want to get rid of coaches? Either they're here for a good reason and we let them do their jobs, or they shouldn't be here at all and we get rid of them. Actually now that I think about it, that seems like a pretty good philosophy for life.

Of course I don't want to get rid of coaches. It's about the aesthetics of the game isn't it? Or am I missing something?

I'm simply saying that the reason the game is sometimes difficult to watch is because of the coaches. I'm specifically talking about the flood, press, stoppages, packs, rolling mauls and 36 players in one quarter of the ground. Now, if people enjoy watching that sort of stuff, fine. I don't find it particularly engaging.

The coaches need to be reigned in and good on the AFL for doing so.

In a lot of other ways I do not like the AFL. :blink:

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 interchanges per quarter equates to about 4 minutes rest per player per quarter. (on average) And each player may have to take his 4 minutes rest in one hit.

I can't see how this won't slow the game down (especially towards the end of the 3rd quarter). Any coach who wants to employ the flood and the press on a continuous basis (under these circumstances) is going to be playing with fire.

The coaches are not going to take undue risks. Why would they risk their players getting injured (by fatiguing them) during a match. It's a long season as well.

Edited by Macca
Link to comment
Share on other sites

lets let the ironing witch of the West, Gina Rhinehardt run WA then. she can have the west... and give Clive Palmer Qld... lets see how the people feel in 10 years.

I think Gina Rinehart and Clive Palmer are in the "shouldn't be here at all category."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Demonland Forums  

  • Match Previews, Reports & Articles  

    TROUBLE by The Oracle

    Situated roughly in Australia's geographic centre, Alice Springs has for many years been a troubled town suffering from intermittent crime waves, particularly among its younger residents. There was a time a little while ago when things were so bad that some even doubted the annual AFL game in the town would proceed.  Now, the hope is that this Sunday’s Melbourne vs Fremantle encounter will bring joy to the residents of the town and that through the sport and the example of the participants,

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons

    Welcome to Demonland: Luker Kentfield

    With the Melbourne Football Club's first pick in the 2024 AFL Mid-Season Draft and pick number 11 overall the Demon's selected Western Australian key forward Luker Kentfield from Subiaco.

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 196

    TRAINING: Tuesday 28th May 2024

    Veteran Demonland Trackwatcher Kev Martin returned to the training track to bring you the following observations from Gosch's Paddock this morning. Beautiful morning for training. The dew has dried, out from AAMI, quiet chatting. Maysie does his heart symbol. 7 in rehab, Turner, Hore, Sestan, BBB, Petty, Spargo and Schache. All in runners. Melky weighted and change of angles work. Salem has his individual program. White cap (no contact), Howes, Woewodin and Sparrow

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports

    GALLANT by KC from Casey

    The world “gallant” is not one that is readily acceptable to losing teams in our game of football so when it was used in the context of the Casey Demons’ loss to Sandringham in yesterday’s match at Casey Fields, it left a bitter taste in the mouth.  The Demons went into the game against the St Kilda affiliated Zebras with the advantage of playing on their home turf (not that this has been a major asset in 2024) and with very little else going in their favour. The Saints have close to a full

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Casey Articles

    MEANWHILE by Whispering Jack

    … meanwhile, at about the same time that Narrm was putting its feet on the accelerator to obliterate the long-suffering Euro-Yroke combination, I heard someone mention in passing that Kuwarna was leading Waalitj Marawar by a whopping 46 to 1 halfway through the second quarter of their game over in Adelaide. “What is football coming to?” I asked myself.  In front of my eyes, the Demons were smashing it through the midfield, forcing turnovers and getting the footy to their forwards who w

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Match Reports

    PREGAME: Rd 12 vs Fremantle

    The Demons head back on the road for the fourth time this season as the travel to Alice Springs to take on the Fremantle Dockers at Treager Park on Sunday afternoon. Who comes in and who goes out?

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 195

    PODCAST: Rd 11 vs St. Kilda

    The Demonland Podcast will air LIVE on Monday, 27th May @ 8:30pm. Join George, Binman & I as we analyse the Demons victory at the MCG over the Saints in the Round 11. You questions and comments are a huge part of our podcast so please post anything you want to ask or say below and we'll give you a shout out on the show. If you would like to leave us a voicemail please call 03 9016 3666 and don't worry no body answers so you don't have to talk to a human. Listen & Chat LIVE

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 30

    VOTES: Rd 11 vs St. Kilda

    Captain Max Gawn has a considerable lead over reigning champion Christian Petracca in the Demonland Player of the Year Award. Steven May, Alex Neal-Bullen & Jake Lever make up the Top 5. Your votes for the win against the Saints. 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 54

    POSTGAME: Rd 11 vs St. Kilda

    After a very wasteful first half of footy the Demons ended up cruising to a clinical victory over the Saints by 38 points at the MCG and ultimately reclaimed a coveted spot in the Top 4.

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 401
  • Tell a friend

    Love Demonland? Tell a friend!

×
×
  • Create New...