Rocknrolla69er wrote:If only abit of common sense was applied.
The refs are too letter to the law, each incident is different you could have a blatant high tackle with nasty intent fair enough red/yellow card and a subsequent ban, no arguments
But there has got to be scope for common sense applied, if a tackle situation changes and a player slips into somebody, with the tackler not being able to change his stance, then this has to be recognised, especially after watching a replay 3 or 4 times, surely common sense comes Into play.
The panel should know better absolutely no excuses, it's not fit for purpose
The issue is that the players are employees of the clubs.
It is clear that being beaten about the head causes long term brain injuries.
We can probably expect legal cases resulting in very large amounts of compensation being paid to damaged ex players.
If the games authorities and clubs are not seen to be taking very serious efforts to prevent head injuries then the game will find it impossible to get insured.
This would mean that the professional game simply stops.
No professional games, no clubs. All gone.
Hence they have no choice other than to crack down on contact with the head - accidental or deliberate contact does not change the nature of the damage.