The tribunal failed the game with the Hodge suspension

By Josh Barnes / Roar Rookie

There was much positive talk about the changes to the AFL tribunal process before the 2015 season.

The new style, removing the calculation of points for events that often can’t particularly be categorised was a sensible change.

However, with the Hodge suspension, the tribunal has let the game down.

When a loose ball bounced towards Brisbane’s goal square on Saturday, Steven May and Tom Rockliff were in pursuit. May used his body to take Rockliff off the ball and essentially make it a sure thing he won a crucial contested possession in his back 50.

May caught Rockliff high, there is no doubt about that, but while the result of the contact could have been disastrous for Rockliff, the process to the contact wasn’t inherently wrong.

It was well within the rules for May to bump Rockliff off the ball to make sure he won it, the contact unfortunately for both players, ended up being high.

When Luke Hodge stood up after a contest, turned around to face Andrew Swallow and brought his elbow to Swallow’s chin, it was definitely not within the rules.

In no part of the process of Hodge turning, swinging his elbow through and connecting with Swallow could it be argued he was doing anything within the rules or the spirit of the game.

While Hodge maintains he wasn’t aiming to connect with Swallow’s face, even if he had hit Swallow in the chest it would have been unnecessary contact in a dead ball situation. The exact kind of action the AFL has to set a standard on as unacceptable in the game of football.

It could be reasonably argued that May deserved his suspension – he did take Rockliff out of the match with his bump. There is no reasonable argument however, that May and Hodge deserved the same sentence. May made a mistake, but his intentions weren’t out of place, had he made contact with Rockliff’s chest it would have been textbook body work in a contest. Hodge also made a mistake, but his intensions were nothing but hazardous and violent.

If a group of young players of our game were to sit down and watch both incidents, it would be interesting to see what a coach would tell them.

As an 11-year-old I vividly remember being taught how to use my body to win a contest, not to the extreme May took it, but to place my body in a way that wins the contest and doesn’t allow my opponent to win it.

This is exactly what young players need to be taught if they plan on playing football for a long time. A coach should applaud May’s intentions, but point out his technique needs some refining.

No coach should say anything that is not condemning about Hodge’s actions. Pure violence – where the ball is not in play – has no place in our game, at any level.

Hodge should have been punished severely, and while I applaud him making a clear apology to Swallow, he should have condemned his own behaviour in front of the press.

Had Hodge stood outside the tribunal and made it clear that his action was not a part of our game and made it clear to any children watching that it shouldn’t be a part of society, he would have shaken off this incident and used it for good.

The continued problem of young adults engaging in senseless violence is yet to stop impacting society, by ruining lives on both ends of the contact.

It would not be uncommon for a young man to swing his elbow towards another on a Saturday night at the pub, which is a problem that must be tackled by the leaders of our society.

Footballers don’t mean to be role models, but they are. It would be devastating to think that a young fan saw Hodge’s actions and shrugged it off as accidental high contact. This was a chance for Hodge and the AFL to make it clear that violence in this respect is awful and should never be inflicted on others.

The tribunal giving May and Hodge three weeks each is undoubtedly wrong. The processes – May challenging his original two match ban, Hodge pleading guilty to his offence – don’t cover for the end result.

In no style of football should winning the ball – albeit illegally – be the same issue as completing a cowardly act of thuggery. Hodge isn’t a thug, but that action was thuggery, and he should be sitting on the sidelines for at least a month.

This was an opportunity for the tribunal to make it clear that unwarranted violence doesn’t belong in football or society and they failed. Hopefully it is an outlying case this season and the new style of the tribunal will learn from it.

The Crowd Says:

2015-05-07T11:31:12+00:00

geoff

Guest


hodge has been very lucky over the years.

2015-05-07T09:00:29+00:00

Pete

Guest


Hardly the same as the Yarran incident - Hodge went from facing away to facing Swallow during the action - yes it was bad - but not standing and aiming his strike like Yarran did (and Yarran's was attempt number two after missing with his first crack). Also to the comment suggesting Durea should have got a week - what about Hawkins strike on Birchall I thin it was - just because the media called it a 'jumper punch' because they wanted good old Tommy to get off - didn't change the fact he rattled Birchall's head - twice - and got nothing - Durea no worse than what we see every week when players run back after a goal and constantly slam into people on there way past. I also note Stevie J got nothing when was reported last - but funnily enough if he had been suspended for a week he wouldn't perhaps have been injured the next week so maybe the footy gods evened that one up.

2015-05-06T13:09:22+00:00

ben

Guest


You're a moron. If you want to make comparisons then compare Hodge incident to Yarran earlier in the year. In my opinion Yarran's is far worse and yet Hodge got the same penalty. It is all politics and clearly the afl was looking at the Sydney game when they suspended him.

2015-05-06T12:40:35+00:00

Mark

Guest


Too much politics? It's an important issue. Sounds like your brain can't handle more than two thoughts at once.

AUTHOR

2015-05-06T06:45:12+00:00

Josh Barnes

Roar Rookie


I mentioned that, and while it makes sense that the tribunal should offer harsher sentences to those who challenge - if they fail the challenge - even so, May and Hodge's incidents shouldn't have warranted the same penalty after both made their decisions.

AUTHOR

2015-05-06T06:43:36+00:00

Josh Barnes

Roar Rookie


thanks i agree, although it's easy to say the punishment should fit the crime every time, that's often not the case. In these two cases, I don't think the punishment fit the crime though.

2015-05-06T03:34:09+00:00

David

Guest


They didn't get the same suspension. May chose to contest which added an extra week.

2015-05-06T01:12:55+00:00

Katfish

Roar Guru


The old MRP failed because it punished players for the damage done rather than the incident. The new MRP has failed in this instance because of the same reason. Your point about the young players is perfect- players should be punished for the action. In no way was May's bump and Hodge's elbow equal. Duryea should've at least got a fine for his hit on Swallow.

AUTHOR

2015-05-06T00:50:03+00:00

Josh Barnes

Roar Rookie


I understand where they come from, but my point is that shouldn't be the case, particularly in this instance. Fair enough on the second point, but I refuse to take my hand off it

2015-05-05T22:02:27+00:00

WhereIsGene

Guest


The MRP & Tribunal has always based penalties largely upon the damage done to the victim. Rockliff has a broken jaw. Swallow played out the game without issue until he was later concussed in a separate incident. Had Swallow been the one with his jaw broken Hodge would have been looking at a much stiffer penalty. As for your suggestion the Tribunal needed to be harsher on Hodge to send the message "violence doesn't belong in society", I think you really need to take your hand off it. There's already too much politics in sport and the last thing we need is more.

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