No.PurpleJesus wrote:I'm looking at it like this, at the most basic level. Fact 1: Baker admitted to making contact with Farmer. Fact 2: Said contact broke Farmer's nose and concussed him to the point he couldn't stand up by himself, let alone walk off the ground.
The conclusion I draw from that is that whatever Baker did, whether it was to stop and prop, headbutt, or full on punch Farmer in the face, was severe enough that it caused enough damage to force Jeff from the ground and put him in doubt for a game a week later. You cause that sort of damage, you deserve to be suspended whether the evidence is video or witness accounts.
There are three gaps in your logic: namely, (1) that Baker admitted to making contact with Farmer, but the contact to which he admitted was not the contact that broke Farmer’s nose; (2) you lump reportable offences (headbutt, striking) in with non-reportable offences (stop and prop more than 5m from the ball) in determining whether Baker caused injury to Farmer; and (3) severity of damage is relevant only to questions of penalties, not to questions of guilt.
In terms of willed acts and intent, all the evidence shows is that Baker deliberately and with intent laid a shepherd on Farmer, NOT that he deliberately and with intent broke Farmer’s nose.
So Baker deliberately and with intent performed a legal act, the unintended consequence of which was a serious injury to Farmer.
When I say “a legal actâ€