Valheru
Coach
- Messages
- 19,182
It didn’t cause a concussion, but it certainly didn’t miss his head!
Which is why he was penalised.
Contact to the head is not an automatic suspension.
It didn’t cause a concussion, but it certainly didn’t miss his head!
Which is why he was penalised.
Contact to the head is not an automatic suspension.
No doubt, that helped a lot. Don’t know who was on the judiciary panel but I’m assuming Sean Garlick wasn’t on it, which would’ve also helped.
2 poster children for CTE and a bloke who is scared of Justin Hodges, if that doesn't give you faith in the system nothing will.The judiciary panel on Tuesday night was Ben Creagh, Dallas Johnson and Bob Lindner. Lindner was not there in person but by video link.
Source: https://www.nrl.com/news/2021/04/20/live-nrl-judiciary---mitchell-radley-momirovski-plead-cases/
Melbourne should be carpeted for commenting on a matter before the judiciary.the NRL & MRC would look silly if they persist with Radley's charges after Melbourne publicly stated they've milked the situation. I doubt he'd get off if this doesn't happened
Melbourne should be carpeted for commenting on a matter before the judiciary.
the NRL & MRC would look silly if they persist with Radley's charges after Melbourne publicly stated they've milked the situation. I doubt he'd get off if this doesn't happened
Get rid of the points system. I'm sure anyone and everyone could pick this apart (be gentle) but I'd like to see something like the following.
Charges
Different types of charges (high tackle, dangerous contact, etc) should just be for categorisation/labelling purposes.
The way charges are determined should not be different based on the type of charges, but rather be based on a classification of the action, i.e. one of the following: accidental, careless, reckless and intentional.
The NRL can release to the public the guidelines for each of these four areas, and then the charge sheet can have a one/two liner on each charge to say why it fit into that classification.
Fines/suspensions should be based on the classification above
"Grade 1 (Accidental)" should always and only ever be a monetary fine, a percentage of their full-time equivalent pay. The NRL manage the salary cap, they know how much is should be for every player. A "fine unit" could be 1 weeks pay, or something as agreed upon with the Players Association.
- 1st charge in past 12 months: 1 fine unit
- 2nd charge in past 12 months: 2 fine units
- 3rd+ charge in past 12 months: 3 fine units
"Grade 2 (Careless)" should be a low-level match suspension:
- 1st charge in past 12 months: 1 match suspension
- 2nd charge in past 12 months: 1 match suspension + 1 weeks pay
- 3rd+ charge in past 12 months: 2 match suspension + 1 weeks pay
"Grade 3 (Reckless)" should be a mid-level match suspension:
- 1st charge in past 12 months: 3 match suspension
- 2nd charge in past 12 months: 3 match suspension
- 3rd+ charge in past 12 months: 4 match suspension
"Grade 4 (Intentional)" should be for individual acts of violence, dangerous tackles, etc that should be referred immediately to the judiciary and judged individually on its merits. Minimum suspension is 6 matches.
This should be reserved for things like Hopoate on Galloway, Williams on O'Neill, etc.
So why did the Bulldogs' player cop as much as he did given the Cowboys and Valentine Holmes did the exact same thing?
It's because of Hetherington's priors which loaded him up with a 170% increase. This was his charge sheet -
View attachment 47797
Source: https://www.bulldogs.com.au/news/20...84.332758728.1619056656-1450041289.1616978796
He has a really bad judiciary record with something like 6 charges in just over 2 seasons of play. If he didn't he would have been on the base penalty of 3 weeks max.
Fair enough then. Call it 'low', 'medium', 'high' and 'extreme'. Not too concerned with the wording. They're just categories. My point was more consistency across the various type of offences.You can't do it that way as you have to use what is listed in the laws of the game (which is section 15, Law 1 which deals with misconduct -
View attachment 47796
Source: https://www.playrugbyleague.com/media/10100/nrl-international-rules-book-2020-a5-v2-web.pdf
As such "accidental" is not listed, whilst the other three only cover tackles which come into contact with the head or neck.
You would have to re-word the above to be able to level charges like you suggest.
Yobbo, the loadings are what takes into account prior incidents. That is why, when combined with carry over points, Latrell wound up with a 4 week suspension. He was hit with a Grade 2 charge, which is the medium level, but due to 2 prior non-related incidents gave him a 40% increase so he wound up with 420 points and hence a 4 week suspension. If he didn't have those priors it would have been, at worst, 3 weeks.
People forget they brought in this table and gradings for one reason, as people used to carry on about inconsistencies between player a getting 5 weeks for a high tackle whilst players b, who's was considered far worse, only got 2 weeks. No reasons were given by judiciary as to why they imposed those sentences either.
Everyone carries on about their team's player being "hard done by" regardless of what system is sued. Heck I could imagine you could have a judiciary of Jesus Christ considering it and people would accuse him of being "biased and unfair".
I understand all that. My point is more around consistency in terms of weeks/fines as opposed to percentages. It's too complicated. You shouldn't be missing 4 weeks for an innocuous hit, regardless of priors. A sin-bin in the game, followed by a one week suspension and a $25k fine for repeated offences would've done more harm to him then having a month off at full pay.
There are currently 9 different gradings for high tackles. That's complicated.Sorry but I disagree with your assertion that "its complicated". Charges are based on 100 points = a 1 match suspension. Hence if the base charge, as in Latrell's case, was Grade 2 which attracted a 300 points as the base penalty. It was due to an extra loading which added due to his priors which meant if he fought it and lost he was looking at a 4 match suspension, and that I spelt out in the charge sheet so at all stages you know what the end punishment, at any stage, may be.
There are currently 9 different gradings for high tackles. That's complicated.
I like this. Well thought out, not complicated with common sense.Get rid of the points system. I'm sure anyone and everyone could pick this apart (be gentle) but I'd like to see something like the following.
Charges
Different types of charges (high tackle, dangerous contact, etc) should just be for categorisation/labelling purposes.
The way charges are determined should not be different based on the type of charges, but rather be based on a classification of the action, i.e. one of the following: accidental, careless, reckless and intentional.
The NRL can release to the public the guidelines for each of these four areas, and then the charge sheet can have a one/two liner on each charge to say why it fit into that classification.
Fines/suspensions should be based on the classification above
"Grade 1 (Accidental)" should always and only ever be a monetary fine, a percentage of their full-time equivalent pay. The NRL manage the salary cap, they know how much is should be for every player. A "fine unit" could be 1 weeks pay, or something as agreed upon with the Players Association.
- 1st charge in past 12 months: 1 fine unit
- 2nd charge in past 12 months: 2 fine units
- 3rd+ charge in past 12 months: 3 fine units
"Grade 2 (Careless)" should be a low-level match suspension:
- 1st charge in past 12 months: 1 match suspension
- 2nd charge in past 12 months: 1 match suspension + 1 weeks pay
- 3rd+ charge in past 12 months: 2 match suspension + 1 weeks pay
"Grade 3 (Reckless)" should be a mid-level match suspension:
- 1st charge in past 12 months: 3 match suspension
- 2nd charge in past 12 months: 3 match suspension
- 3rd+ charge in past 12 months: 4 match suspension
"Grade 4 (Intentional)" should be for individual acts of violence, dangerous tackles, etc that should be referred immediately to the judiciary and judged individually on its merits. Minimum suspension is 6 matches.
This should be reserved for things like Hopoate on Galloway, Williams on O'Neill, etc.