Marlborough Express

The ‘60-minute wrestling match’

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racking up a league season-high individual tally of 32.

Netball doesn’t have a judiciary process or match review panel yet, as the game hasn’t produced the uglier incidents that occur in the football codes.

‘‘Along comes profession­alism, and the more they train, and the harder the hits, and the more intense it will get,’’ said Briony Akle, coach of the ladder-leading NSW Swifts. ‘‘We’ve often spoken about what happens if one player got ousted one week.’’

Both Akle and her Giants’ counterpar­t Julie Fitzgerald stressed games were normally devoid of any malice.

‘‘I think netball is just played at the highest intensity and there’s never any malice aimed for one particular player if they are injured,’’ Akle said.

Fitzgerald said she had expected a hard but fair contest against Firebirds.

‘‘There’s a difference between what you would classify as a dirty match and a game that’s really hard fought,’’ Fitzgerald said.

‘‘When you come up against (the) Firebirds, you know that it’s going to be really hard fought, but it’s going to be a fair contest.

‘‘There’s no intent for anyone to go in and cause any damage. It’s just a real hard contest for the ball.’’

Fitzgerald, who has coached in all three of the major netball competitio­ns in Australia over the past 20 years, didn’t think a match review panel or judiciary system was needed. ‘‘I think nothing is ever deliberate,’’ Fitzgerald said.

‘‘Players can get a little bit overzealou­s and need to pull it back in, but I don’t think there is ever any malice involved.’’

Akle is hoping her England internatio­nal shooter Helen Housby will return for next Saturday’s home match with the Vixens, after she missed last weekend’s two-goal loss to secondplac­ed Sunshine Coast Lightning.

Lightning, coached by the Silver Ferns’ Noeline Taurua, closed the gap to the Swifts to three points after last weekend, with third-placed Vixens another point back.

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