CURLY wrote: ↑Fri 26 Feb 2021 9:11am
The rule is ridiculous. The umpire allows the player with the ball the chance to play on while the defender must not move surely as soon as a player plays on the umpire must allow th player to move off his mark.
In a world of perfect umpiring the rule would be fine and it would make it easier for the kicker to use the corridor rather than being corralled to the flanks, leading to more excitement and higher scoring.
But CURLY as I suspect you already know, umpires make mistakes and are inconsistent.
If the moment the kicker moved off the line the umpire called play on that would be fine as the man on the mark would have a good chance to stop him running through the line.
But if the umpire is positioned well he should be side on to the kicker ready to observe goal square infringements.
From there he simply can't tell if the kicker is deviating from the line until it is profound, and by the time he blows play on the kicker can easily run past the stationary man on the mark.
Some umps will be watching the kicker, others the man on the mark, or darting their eyes between both.
How big a deviation constitutes a play on?
How do you call that from side on?
How big a movement of the man on the mark constitutes a 50m penalty?
AND ...
How do you get all umpires to make consistent calls in the same timeframe?
This rule can ONLY lead to fan fury and frustration.
Games WILL be decided on fine line interpretations of this rule.
Another SHOCKING rule from S. Hocking.
The only certaint
It will inevitably lead to mistakes and inconsistencies.
The rest of Australia can wander mask-free, socialise, eat out, no curfews, no zoning, no police rings of steel, no illogical inconsistent rules.
They can even WATCH LIVE FOOTY!