COMMENT: Angus Brayshaw's retirement isn't Brayden Maynard's fault - it's the AFL's

By Tim Miller / Editor

The shock announcement that Melbourne premiership hero Angus Brayshaw would be retiring effectively immediately just days out from the start of the season was met with two very distinct reactions from the wider football world.

The first was the usual response to a player hanging up the boots, especially if the reason is medically forced: a celebration of the 28-year old’s career, appreciation of his crucial and selfless role in the Demons’ drought-breaking 2021 flag, and sympathy that a footy life with so much left to give is being cut short

The second was, of course, to bring Brayden Maynard into the conversation, with the Dees making no secret of the fact they believe it was his collision with Brayshaw in last year’s qualifying final, for which he was controversially and to the club’s unbridled fury cleared of all charges, that caused it.

If you’re tuned into footy Twitter at all, most likely you’ve seen Maynard labelled a ‘thug’ and a ‘grub’ in the last few hours, as well as calls – I presume in jest, but it’s quite hard to tell these days – for him to either be retroactively suspended or have his premiership medal stripped from him.

But here’s the thing: blaming Maynard for what happened on Thursday, September 8 last year is the most superficial, unhelpful response to that incident.

We don’t know enough about the brain to know whether one isolated head knock, however severe, to a player with a history of concussions, was the sole reason for his medical retirement, or an inevitable final straw to break the camel’s back for a player who, like Paddy McCartin, was always going to be susceptible to a concussion ending his career.

Angus Brayshaw was knocked unconscious in a collision with Brayden Maynard. (Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

The threat of concussion, to both the AFL’s bank balance amid a swathe of lawsuits and to the wellbeing of players themselves, is never going to be addressed if we look at Maynard’s collision with Brayshaw – and yes, it was a ‘collision’, not a ‘cheap shot’, or a ‘late hit’, or even a ‘bump’ – as a lone dog act for which the only response necessary is to throw the book at him. (Though Cameron Rose may disagree with me on that assessment.)

Sure, if your only goal out of that incident is to apply vindictive, retributive justice to Maynard, an already polarising player at the most hated club in the land, then sure, making him the villain in this story works fine. The rest of us get to go on despising Collingwood, Maynard gets booed every time he plays the Demons for the rest of his career, and players continue to get concussed in all manner of ways for which the AFL is woefully unprepared to try and eradicate.

As I predicted – and lamented – last year, Maynard was cleared by the Tribunal (and by Match Review Officer Michael Christian before the AFL itself intervened and demanded an initial two-week suspension) because what he did wasn’t expressly forbidden in the league’s rules.

As of September 8 last year, a player could totally reasonably leap into the air, brace for contact and poleaxe an opponent with a shoulder to the head, and only give away a downfield free kick.

This is where the AFL stands alone: it has always deemed context the most important factor in matters of head contact, not the contact itself.

If a player’s main intent is judged to be going for the ball, then they essentially have open slather, as the footy world found out when Patrick Cripps was cleared after concussing Brisbane’s Callum Ah Chee in 2022 after leaping for the ball and ironing the Lion out with another shoulder to the head.

Countless times watching one of the rugby codes, union or league, I have been taken aback by how harshly any contact to the head, however incidental, however slight, has been treated both in-game and in doling out suspensions afterwards.

All Blacks captain Sam Cane was handed a red card in the literal Rugby World Cup final for this head-clipping tackle, for instance; and the reaction was, barring the occasional dissenting voice, that it was a tough but fair whack.

It’s surely time for the AFL to stop trying to reactively stamp out any incident which leads to a concussion, as they have done by tightening rules around the Cripps and Maynard incidents to ensure future examples are indeed suspendable, and make a broad rule stamping out any contact to the head whatsoever.

Barring the most extraordinary of circumstances – a player slipping and falling straight into the path of an oncoming knee in a marking contest, for example – any incident where a player makes contact with an opponent’s head, or leads to their head hitting the ground, is an automatic one-week suspension, with more severe incidents to duly receive further punishment.

Mitch Duncan ironing out Robbie Fox last year? Two weeks – no longer should Fox lowering his body height by going to ground be enough to clear the Cat. He chose to bump, and the consequence is on him.

Want an even harsher example? Dan Butler also gets a week for the chasedown tackle on Nick Blakey that caused so much controversy last year.

Yes, this will fundamentally change a key part of the game, but it would now be incumbent on any tackler to keep their feet or suffer the consequences. Just as it would be if a tackle like that slipped high, or the tackler fell into the tacklee’s back, there should be no leeway if a player’s head makes contact with the ground.

Sure, it’s harsh – but as we’ve seen with Brayshaw, players are retiring, many with long-term symptoms as with former West Coast player Dan Venables or Western Bulldogs flag hero Liam Picken.

Football has changed more than any other widely played sport over the last 100 years, with new rules frequently added and the game altering its style an aesthetic with every new generation. Harsher measures to protect the head will not be the death knell of the game.

And sure, some players may struggle to adjust quickly, and suspensions will increase as a result, just as red cards for head-high contact in rugby have exploded in frequency in recent years.

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But Rome wasn’t build in a day; players, and the league, will adjust their techniques and adapt to the new way. And if they don’t, well, they’ll be missing a lot of footy.

If Brayshaw’s retirement isn’t enough to convince the AFL that cracking down completely and utterly on all head-related incidents is the only solution, then nothing well.

Blaming Maynard won’t fix the problem – unless you have a widely different view of what the ‘problem’ is than the bitter truth.

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-26T03:16:25+00:00

AxeMaster

Roar Rookie


You mean commenters who expresses an opinion like I did, well why would I sue anyone for that......what the hell are you on about man? If your talking about Patricio Dangerfield or Matthew Richardson, then they both agree with me....nuff said.

2024-02-24T20:24:30+00:00

Maxy

Roar Rookie


I got interrupted on the weekend,taped the game and will watch it today

2024-02-24T08:47:31+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Exactly. Brayshaw didn't react because he ,weirdly enough, wasn't expecting Maynard to launch into the air and whack his head with his shoulder. The ill-informed who say ,here and elsewhere, that thinskulled types shouldn't play, obviously have a false idea about concussion-causing collision. One collision, thinskulled or not, can be disastrous . It could be you or your daughter, thickskulled or not. No romance about toughness can bring back mental clarity once it's lost.

2024-02-23T20:33:56+00:00

Mr Right

Roar Rookie


Best comment on this article Rowds. Whatever a player's intention are, if a player comes in with that much force, they must get it right. If they don't and illegal contact occurs, then multiple week suspensions should be handed out. It's not rocket science.

2024-02-23T20:07:30+00:00

Mr Right

Roar Rookie


What type of bouquet did Patrick Cripps sent AhChee in 2022, Daisey’s or Daffodils? The AFL should have changed the rule after that incident & Brayshaw would probably still be playing in 2024. https://www.afl.com.au/news/817981/blues-huge-boost-captain-patrick-cripps-free-to-play-as-ban-overturned

2024-02-23T11:22:15+00:00

Charlie Keegan

Roar Guru


I never said I was above criticism, just that Michael Christian isn’t a good MRO.

2024-02-23T06:31:44+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Roar Rookie


Pretty sure there are first named Keegans out there Charlie.

2024-02-23T06:21:42+00:00

Cavaquinho

Roar Rookie


Call me crazy but I actually think this issue may have had its genesis on the 25th September 2021. Football followers everywhere watched as Brayshaw, Petracca, Oliver et al run directly down the ground kicking goal after goal in an humiliation of Western Bulldogs. Cynical viewers of the game (to my shame, I was one of them) were shouting at the screen urging Western Bulldogs to employ a big-bodied player to run directly at those three Melbourne players and deliver an old-fashioned shirt-front to stop the momentum. In short, very much like Maynard did to Brayshaw last year. (We probably didn’t envisage the jump, just the bump.) I believe the Collingwood “brains trust” (pardon the term Mr Brayshaw) remembered and reviewed that game from 2021 and had every intention of charging at Brayshaw, Petracca & Oliver and stopping Melbourne getting momentum early in the game and avoiding Western Bulldog’s fate in the 2021 Grand Final. Like a lot of things that seem like a good idea at the time I am sure there are people who prepared the Collingwood team last year that feel very bad about the outcome for Brayshaw. I would like to think that protecting the head is an idea whose time has come.

2024-02-23T03:21:44+00:00

PeteB

Roar Rookie


Haha you must have went to the same school as Peter Dutton or perhaps work at Sky News. Great material for a scare campaign :laughing:

2024-02-23T02:32:54+00:00

The Iron Dingo

Roar Rookie


What a crock - what does peripheral vision have to do with a bloke coming straight at you? Brayshaw had no chance to react. Let me guess - Collingwood supporter? Not too quick on the uptake?

2024-02-23T02:30:13+00:00

The Iron Dingo

Roar Rookie


What about commenters that lack any sense of what's going on around them? What happens to them? Who are you going to sue?

2024-02-23T01:00:31+00:00

AxeMaster

Roar Rookie


Wrong wrong and wrong again. If players lack any sense of what’s happening around them….then they’re not up to the AFL standard. No doubt Brayshaw will be suing the AFL down the track though…..probably Maynard too.

2024-02-23T00:58:09+00:00

AxeMaster

Roar Rookie


This is what happens when players without peripheral vision just run along willy nilly. Look at the replay, the guy was clueless and how do you get knocked out from a genuine smothering attempt anyway. Adios Brayshaw.

2024-02-23T00:30:02+00:00

Naughty's Headband

Roar Rookie


Yeah righto. You blokes are delusional. You expect players to go hard and then you pretend they're monsters for playing footy. The reality is that Brayshaw's brain was already banged up -that's why he got concussed, not because of a very normal piece of contact.

2024-02-22T23:03:51+00:00

The Iron Dingo

Roar Rookie


Yeah - this idea that some Collingwood fans are trying to put about that it was just unlucky and Maynard was protecting himself is absurd. I doubt that he was specifically aiming to knock Brayshaw out but at the start of a big final he was definitely trying to "make him earn it" and we all know the rest. Definitely failed any sort of duty of care.

2024-02-22T22:27:22+00:00

PeteB

Roar Rookie


I don’t know where this should end up Tim as far as other types of incidents go. But the Maynard incident is pretty clear cut. He had his eyes on Brayshaw from start to finish, charged at him, jumped off the ground and hit him in the head. The so called attempt to smother was crude at best, low probability, poorly executed and ultimately unsuccessful. Maynard knew what he was doing and was in total control of his actions. He should have copped a hefty suspension.

2024-02-22T22:24:11+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


If l was in Adelaide I'd be there. See how Nicks operates under less pressure. He's too conservative for mine

2024-02-22T22:08:04+00:00

Pumping Dougie

Roar Guru


It’s not the AFL’s fault. Some blokes have very fragile heads. Angus Brayshaw and Paddy McCartin are the two clearest examples of blokes who could be concussed by a feather. Brayshaw should have quit footy 7 or 8 years ago when it was clear his brain was significantly more vulnerable than most others to contact. Responsibility lies with himself for persisting. Good on him and good luck to him – I can understand why he (and Paddy McCartin) wanted to persevere, but it was clear to spectators that they should prioritise their long-term health and give the game away. … And Maynard has nothing to answer for.

2024-02-22T22:06:57+00:00

Charlie Keegan

Roar Guru


The MRO who’s a former Collingwood player and has two first names, really they should have fired him because of that

2024-02-22T22:05:46+00:00

Charlie Keegan

Roar Guru


The afl needs to stop defending the good blokes of the afl, and start assuming guilt at critical junctures. Maynard needed to be suspended if only because he completely disregarded his duty of care to other players and now he has forced a player into retirement.

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