I'm not sure someone is going to deliberately grub because they can get 3 weeks instead of 4. In the end it's only going to be marginal things that would make a significant difference.
Maybe they would but I'm sure a player with that attitude will end up rubbed out of the game due to suspension anyway.
I’m not saying they would be a deliberate grub because the suspension would be reduced.
I’m saying that a grubby act in the 70th minute of a dead game could just mean the guy goes to the sheds 10 minutes early, then plays next week. Where is the punishment in that?
Do we then get players fronting the judiciary and arguing what the context of the game was at the time and should the suspension be reduced or not as a result?
Or do we get refs making judgement calls about whether to bin players or not, based on whether they should cop a suspension?
Do we get the Eels arguing that their player should avoid suspension because he got binned, and when a Sharks player got binned for the same offence in a tight game he avoided suspension?
I am just playing devil’s advocate. In theory I agree I’d prefer the player to get punished in the game he committed the act in. But that is if the game is a live contest.