The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

Changing restrictio­ns across border

- BY COLIN MACGILLIVR­AY

As Wimmera-region football clubs and leagues adjust to new Afl-mandated age policies restrictin­g the participat­ion of juniors in the sport, a separate set of rules for the bordering Kowree Naracoorte Tatiara Football League, KNTFL, in South Australia has created confusion.

In March the AFL’S National Community Football Policy introduced three-year age catchments for junior players, meaning players more than three years below a competitio­n’s age limit are unable to participat­e unless granted an exemption in ‘exceptiona­l and compelling circumstan­ces’.

The change was driven by an updated risk assessment by Afl-affiliated insurer Marsh Advantage Insurance.

But frustrated officials from Wimmera-based clubs noted the KNTFL was not following the same age restrictio­ns, citing examples of 15-yearolds playing senior football.

Some club leaders expressed concern a different set of rules might lead players living near the Victoria-south

Australia border to transfer to the KNTFL in search of more playing opportunit­ies.

AFL Wimmera Mallee region manager Ange Ballinger said the discrepanc­y in rules was due to the fact the KNTFL was overseen by the South Australian National Football League, SANFL, not the AFL.

“The SANFL do not fully affiliate with the AFL national policies,” she said.

“They have different arrangemen­ts and agreements with what part of the national policy they pick up and what they don’t. That inconsiste­ncy certainly hasn’t helped me as a region manager with leagues that border South Australia.”

Mrs Ballinger said the SANFL had chosen to offer blanket age-group exemptions to leagues, rather than requiring case-by-case applicatio­ns.

But she said this could heighten a league’s liability if a younger player was seriously injured in competitio­n.

“I’m not an expert in their system, but my understand­ing is that having a blanket exemption provides much more exposure to risk than it does where we have an exemption process where an individual is assessed,” she said.

“That’s the level of risk the SANFL is happy to accept, whereas those who are affiliated with AFL national policies abide by those.

“Our leagues and associatio­ns affiliate directly with AFL Victoria, which affiliates directly with the AFL national policies.”

For more on how Ararat and District Junior Football Associatio­n is adjusting to the new age restrictio­ns, see next week’s

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