Geelong Advertiser

Slide rule a margin for players to exploit

- JON RALPH

AFLPA president Patrick Dangerfiel­d has urged players to stop milking the sliding rule for free kicks as he questioned the league’s new fines system.

The new AFLPA president is now concerned about rule changes that dilute the rugged contact-based game he loves.

Several players have milked the sliding rule, brought in to stop injuries after Lindsay Thomas broke Gary Rohan’s leg with a low, sliding approach to the ball.

Instead of going in low for the ball, they deliberate­ly topple over a player — who in some cases is reaching for the ball — rather than sliding.

“Sliding to the knees is the perfect one; we have had a few instances of that a few years ago and all of a sudden we change a rule,” Dangerfiel­d said.

“Now, I think there are players who exploit it and fall to ground easily and the player who is putting their head over the ball and hunting the ball is disadvanta­ged.

“It is something we need to continue to work on.”

Dangerfiel­d said the AFL must continue to protect the head but believes the fines levied are out of control.

If a player accepts guilty pleas on three incidents in a year that draw fines, he will have paid $10,000 through a $2000, $3000 and $5000 fine.

“It is a huge whack to pay fines; some of them are 10 grand at the moment. There is a real balance we need to find with regard to player fines,’’ he said.

“Jimmy Bartel brought this up around football acts. I don’t think players should be fined for football acts.

“If it’s a bump in the rules of the contest, because the AFL doesn’t want to suspend players and they revert to fines instead and think that will deter them.

“I don’t think we have got it quite right, especially with some acts where you say, ‘This is a contested game’, and there are instances that you can’t control.”

Dangerfiel­d will play in today’s Adelaide Oval clash against Port Adelaide despite a corked calf that hampered him in the win over St Kilda.

The Cats star was limping with an ice pack as he ended the match on the bench but trained this week and is no doubt.

Dangerfiel­d told 5AA he was a certainty to take his place in the side.

“I will be playing. I might just be getting old. I copped a good knock last week and given the state of the match there was no real need to push it too hard,” he said.

“Rest up, ice it up and I trained, so it’s all right to go.”

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