It was the end of 1992, the guys name was Andrew McKay, he made it clear he would only leave South Australia to play for Carlton.Mr Magic wrote:But that's a separate argument plugger.plugger66 wrote:They will never bring in a rule to say a player must speak to clubs who want to speak to him and why should they. A player should have the right to speak to whoever he likes. A mockery would be forcing a player to speak to all clubs. Players are very well paid but at the moment when they want to leave a club they have little rights. the sooner free agency is brought in the better and most of this rubbish will stop.Mr Magic wrote:But probably not stricly an infraction of the current rules, so therefore everybody on all sides of this argument is correct.fingers wrote:On the topic of Draft Tampering....if Luke is refusing to speak to clubs surely that hinders the process. Deliberately not talking to a club is an action that is prejudicial to the draft process.
I really don't care whether he has or hasn't but anything that does not make it a level playing field has to hinder the process - therefore the draft is tampered with.
Technically it's not 'tampering' because the rules don't state that a prospective draftee must talk to any/all Clubs. My guess is that those who framed the rules never envisaged that prospective draftees would try to manipulate the draft by not talking to some Clubs. It's like most AFL rules, they change when somebody exploits a 'loophole'.
But on the other hand, nobody is fooled by what Ball/Connors are attempting to do which on the face of it is at least seemingly against the 'spirit' of the anti-tampering rules.
The AFL are probably counting down the minutes to when this will all be over because in the end, it is their rules that are being made a mockery of.
It was interesting to hear Matt Fiddis (CEO of the AFLPA) be at pains to state that they (AFLPA) don't hold a grudge against St kilda over rthe Ball issue as it is, in their opinion, the AFL rules that are the problem and not St Kilda operating under those rules.
Can you imagine the public outcry if Scully or Trengrove refused to attend Draft Camp or speak to any Club other than Collingwood because that's where they want to play?
He should have gone top 3, but 12 times clubs picked other players.
McKay went to Carlton at pick 13.
He played his career at Carlton despite the the AFL finding him guilty of draft tampering.
Carlton of course would never have paid someone outside the rules would they.
It should be remembered that the AFL did NOT discover Carlton's massive breaches of the salary cap.
It was the new Collins administration at Carlton that confessed to John Elliot's cheating.
McKay is now the chairman of the match review panel.
In the same draft it was commonly believed that Brett Chalmers was in the pay of a Collingwood supporter group, he told several clubs that he would not play for them if he was drafted.
Chalmers was picked by Collingwood at pick 9 but was found to have broken draft rules.
Robert Pyman wrote to a number of clubs advising them that he would not play for them but North Melbourne took him at pick 6 anyhow.
He got to Colingwood by a trade in 1995.
Oh, did I forget the Buckley fiasco once again involving Collingwood.