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Interchange (Australian rules football)

Interchange (or, colloquially, the bench or interchange bench) is a team position in Australian rules football, consisting of players who are part of the selected team but are not currently on the field of play.

The Carlton interchange bench in a match against St Kilda, 2011.

Interchange numbers edit

AFL edit

As of the 2023 season, at AFL level, each team is permitted four interchange players, and a maximum of seventy-five total player interchanges during a game;[1] players have no limit to the number of times they may individually be changed, and an interchange can occur at any time during the game, including during gameplay. Additionally, a fifth bench player is designated a substitute, allowed to take the field only to permanently replace a player.

The players named on the interchange bench and as the substitute in the teamsheet, which is submitted ninety minutes before the commencement of the game, must be the interchange players who start on the bench, however they may be substituted immediately if the coach wishes.

Other leagues edit

Interchange rules are not uniform across all leagues. In the major state leagues, as of 2016, following interchange numbers are permitted:

In AFL Women's, in which each side has 16 players on the field instead of the 18 of the men's game, five interchange players are allowed, with a limit 60 rotations per game as of 2023. Prior to 2023, there was no limit on the number of rotations a team could make per game. The AFL, which operates the women's league, decided not to impose a limit on the number of rotations, as that league is contested during the men's AFL offseason in the southern summer.[4]

Representative teams (such as State of Origin teams), practice and exhibition matches often feature an extended interchange bench of up to six or eight players.

Substitutes edit

At different times during the history of the sport, there have been substitute players (also known as reserves) serving a function distinct from interchange players. A player who begins the game as a substitute may take no part in the game until he is substituted for another player, and the player substituted out permanently leaves the field.

The substitute rule was resisted for many years, with the prevailing view in the 1910s and 1920s being that a team should be permitted only to substitute a player in the event of an injury, but that there was no practical way to rule against a team making a tactical substitution.[5] A single substitute, known as the nineteenth man, was finally introduced by the Australian National Football Council for the 1930 season, with no restrictions on whether the substitution be used for injury or tactical reasons.[6] A second substitute, the twentieth man, was introduced in 1946,[7] before the substitutes were replaced by interchange in the 1970s. In the AFL since 2011, a hybrid interchange–substitution arrangement has often existed. Between 2011 and 2015, there were three interchange players and one substitute; under those rules, the substitute was required to wear a green vest until activated, and the player substituted out of the game donned a red vest.[8] There were no substitutes between 2016 and 2020. A true medical substitute was introduced in 2021, which for the first time placed a formal restriction on using the substitute for medical reasons only; except with permission from the AFL Medical Officer, a player substituted off for the medical substitute was ineligible to play again until at least twelve days later;[9] this rule remained in place only through 2021 and 2022, before the position reverted to a general substitute available to be used for tactical or medical reasons.[10]

Interchange protocol edit

In front of the interchange benches is the interchange area (sometimes called the interchange gate), which is a 15-metre stretch of the boundary line, roughly centred between the two teams' benches, through which all players must enter and exit the ground when being interchanged. It is marked on the boundary line with two short lines, perpendicular to the boundary, and sometimes with a slanted end. A player who interchanges outside of this area is not permitted to return for the rest of the game.[11]

Where a player leaves the ground on a stretcher, he is permitted to take the most direct route to the changerooms for medical treatment, and is still permitted to return later in the game; however, where he leaves on a stretcher, the player must wait for 20 minutes of playing time (the length of one regulation quarter) before returning. If a stretcher is brought onto the ground but the player ultimately does not need to use it, he must still wait for 20 minutes before returning.[12]

Due to new AFL concussion rules, effective from 2011 onwards, any player suspected of suffering a concussion must come off the ground and undergo a concussion test; if found to be concussed, he is not allowed to return to the field for the remainder of the game.

A player may be forced to make an interchange by the umpire under the blood rule. If an umpire sees a player bleeding, he will call time-on at the next appropriate time, stopping play until the player has left the field and been replaced.

Where the league has a provision to do so, an interchange steward is provided to monitor interchanges.

Policing interchanges edit

Headcount edit

The primary means for controlling interchanges in most leagues (but not in the AFL) is via a headcount, currently detailed in Law 5.5 of the game. To initiate this procedure, a team captain must request a headcount from the umpire. The umpire, at the opportunity, will call time on, and all players from both teams line will line-up in the centre of the ground to be counted by the umpires.

If either team has more players on the ground than it should, the general rule, according to the 2019 Laws of the Game, is that any points the team had scored up to that point during the quarter of the headcount are deducted from the score and a free kick and 50-metre penalty are paid to the opposing captain from the centre of the ground or the spot of the ball. The league may impose additional sanctions, including reversal of a match result, as appropriate. Leagues will not necessarily deduct scores during the match; in some cases, the quarter's progress score at the time of the headcount is recorded, and league officials meet after the game to assess whether or not to retrospectively cancel that score.[13][14] Provisions also exist in the rules for a league to review, identify and impose a penalty (including reversal of the match result) for having too many players on the ground in a post-match video review, without a headcount having been executed during the match.[15]

If both teams have the correct number of players, a free kick and 50-metre penalty are paid against the captain who initiated the headcount; that captain may also be reported for time-wasting and ordered off (should the rules of the league permit) if the umpire believes the captain's primary reason for calling the headcount was to waste time.[12]

Up until the 2018 Laws of the Game, the penalty for having too many players on the ground was cancellation of the team's entire score at the time of the headcount rather than just the score in the quarter of the headcount, and there was no formal allowance for a post-match review and reversal of the result if no headcount had occurred.[16] This immense penalty, which predated the interchange bench or even reserve players, was long known to be one of the great curiosities in the game's laws, and was seen so rarely that decades would usually pass without a league seeing it invoked. The rules were modernized at the end of 2018 after two high-profile incidents which, by incredible coincidence, affected separate state league finals on the exact same day: the 2018 SANFL preliminary final, when the league had no recourse to change the result of a game won by a North Adelaide team which fielded 19 men for several crucial final quarter minutes without a headcount; and the 2018 NEAFL grand final (described below) when premier Southport was caught with 19 men on the field in a headcount in the opening seconds of the final quarter. In recent years, the majority of incidents of extra players on the field have been an error by a player who was meant to go to the bench after an interval, hence the shift in rules from cancelling the team's entire score to just cancelling the score for that quarter, but with the provision for further penalty as appropriate.

Famous headcounts edit

Perhaps the most famous headcount request occurred in the SANFL in Round 15, 1975. West Torrens' champion Fred Bills, playing the last of his 313 league games (having announced his retirement earlier that week) entered the field of play before John Cassin, who was injured and lying on a stretcher, had left it. This prompted West Adelaide, trailing 11.7 (73) to 12.10 (82) in the final quarter, to request a headcount.[17] West Torrens players ran for the boundary line, while West Adelaide players wrestled with them to keep them in bounds; in the chaos, one player, identified in the match report published in The Advertiser as Norm Dare,Note 1[17] managed to leap the fence and hide under a supporter's coat to avoid detection from the umpire. Ultimately, the count was abandoned when it became impossible to vouch for who was on the field at the time of the request, and West Torrens went on to win by three goals. The incident was celebrated as one of the sport's 150 greatest moments in the 150th year celebrations in 2008.[18] The debacle was covered in a popular Secret Base video on YouTube.

The other most famous headcount occurred during the Grand Final of the 2018 North East Australian Football League season between Southport and Sydney reserves. Southport was leading by ten goals at three-quarter time but accidentally sent nineteen men onto the field to start the final quarter; Sydney called for a headcount twenty seconds later, and Southport's extra man was discovered. Sydney received a free kick and fifty-metre penalty, and play continued with nobody sure whether or not Southport's score would stand – this incident occurred when the penalty could have been annulment of Southport's entire score. Only a few minutes before the end of the game, NEAFL officials decided not to annul Southport's score, using a separate provision within the laws of the game which allowed the full penalty not to be applied if the breach had no material impact on the game. Southport won the game by 55 points.[19]

Scores which are stripped from a team due to a headcount are also stripped from the players' individual statistics. This had an impact on the 2013 VFL season's leading goalkicker medal: Frankston's Michael Lourey finished one goal behind Port Melbourne's Dean Galea for the medal, having had one of his goals annulled in a headcount earlier in the season.[20]

There have been only three headcounts, all unsuccessful, in the history of the VFL/AFL.

Notable successful headcounts around the country which resulted in the cancellation of a team's score are listed in the table below. Where scores are given, the team which suffered the head-count penalty is listed first.

League Club penalised Opponent Match Score at count Count time Final score Report
VFA Richmond Essendon Round 9, 1896 3.3 – 2.4 3rd quarter 1.4 – 9.9 [23]
Reporter District Football League Burwood Camberwell 1911 Final 16 – 10 1st quarter 30 – 32 [24]
VFA North Melbourne Preston 1911 season 47 – 13 2nd quarter 69 – 48 [25]
VFA Prahran Brighton Round 10, 1921 26 – 17 1st quarter 34 – 34 [26]
VFA Northcote Yarraville Centenary Cup, 1977 89 – ?? 4th quarter 20 – 154 [27]
O&KFL Moyhu Whorouly 2008 First Semi-Final 15–22 2nd quarter 9–81 [1]
BL&GFA Barossa District Willaston 2011 First Semi-Final 59–59 4th quarter 6–81
VFL Frankston North Ballarat Round 14, 2013 38 – ?? 3rd quarter 23 – 64 [13][28]

Interchange infringement penalties edit

In Round 6, 2008, North Melbourne and Sydney played a controversial drawn match, in which a bungled interchange late in the game left Sydney with 19 men on the field for about a minute, during which time the Swans scored the game-tying behind. Although the AFL's laws allowed for each of the Sydney players to be fined $2500 for the error, there could be no change to the match result because North Melbourne had not called for a headcount. This highlighted the impracticality of the head-count rule in a modern professional league with its rapid use of interchanges for fatigue management.[29]

A few weeks after this incident, the AFL introduced a new rule allowing the interchange steward to inform the umpires of interchange errors: specifically, when a player enters the field before the player he is replacing has left the field, or when a player is interchanged without using the interchange gate. In each case, the penalty is a free kick in the centre of the ground or at the spot of the ball at the time, whichever is the greater penalty against the offending team. If the offending team is not in possession of the ball, the umpire shall impose an additional 50-metre penalty against them. Any score or free kicks given to the opposition when an interchange infringement has occurred are cancelled.

This process is seen only at the professional AFL level; lower levels of the sport still rely on the head-count rule to police interchanges. AFL captains retain the right to call for a headcount if they believe an interchange infringement has not been detected by the interchange steward (which would most likely be after an interval), but this has not yet been exercised under the new rules.[30]

In round 10, 2023, in another game between North Melbourne and Sydney, North Melbourne conceded a significant interchange infringement free kick. With the ball in its backline and leading by three points in the final minute, North Melbourne made a 76th interchange, exceeding the interchange cap of 75. The free kick and 50-metre penalty gave Sydney a set shot from the goal line, from which Hayden McLean kicked the winning goal.[31]

Historical interchange rules and tactics edit

The number of interchanges allowed has followed the following time-line under Australian National Football Council (ANFC) rules:

  • Prior to 1930 – there was no means for either substitution or interchange. A team played with 17 on the field (19 prior to 1899) if a player was injured.
  • 1930 – the introduction of a single substitute
  • 1946 – the introduction of a second substitute
  • 1978 – the replacement of two substitutes with two interchanges

Following the disbandment of the ANFC, the following timeline indicates changes to interchange rules in the AFL. Other leagues have not followed this timeline:

  • 1994 – the introduction of a third interchange, and introduction of forced interchange under the blood rule
  • 1998 – the introduction of a fourth interchange
  • 2011 – the replacement of four interchanges with three interchanges and a substitute
  • 2013 – the introduction of forced interchange for concussed players, with the provision for temporary activation of the substitute while a concussion test is conducted
  • 2014 – the addition of an interchange cap, limiting teams to 120 interchanges per game
  • 2016 – the return to four interchanges without a substitute, reduction of the interchange cap to 90 per game[32]
  • 2021 – the reduction of the interchange cap to 75 a game,[1] and introduction of a medical substitute as a fifth bench player.[9]
  • 2023 – the changing of the medical substitute to a general substitute.

Historically, the interchange bench was used sparingly, and mostly to take poor-performing or players who were injured and unable to continue out of the game. There was a marked change in this at the top level as professionalism grew in the sport between 2000 and 2010, and the interchange bench began to be used much more frequently as a means of rotating players to manage player fatigue through the game and offer rest periods for hard working players and game time for young/old players. The average number of interchanges in the AFL doubled between 2007 (56 changes per team per game) and 2010 (113 changes per team per game) as coaches sought to give frequent rests to their running players.[33] Rule changes in the 2010s and 2020s placed restrictions on the number of interchanges, on the theory that lower fatigue levels were enabling a more defensive play style which was stifling open play and scoring, and that restricting rotations and increasing fatigue could reverse that trend.[34]

Footnotes edit

1.^ In the AFL's own account of the incident, as published on its website as part of the 150th-anniversary celebrations, the leap over the fence was credited not to Norm Dare, but to Gerry Noonan – who, like Dare, was a former Fitzroy player in the VFL who transferred to West Torrens in 1975. Additionally, the AFL's account of the incident had one other significant factual difference to the account in The Advertiser: the AFL's account indicated that the match was Fred Bills' 300th match, but the account in The Advertiser makes it unequivocally clear that it was Bills' 313th and final match.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "AFL rule changes reveal: Rotations slashed, 'man on mark' on notice".
  2. ^ Alex Malcolm (8 October 2015). "SANFL's bold new out of bounds rule and 50 rotations per game". Australian Football League. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  3. ^ "Roosters make multitude of changes". VFL Footy. 22 August 2009. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  4. ^ "AFLW 101: The Game". Australian Football League. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  5. ^ "Football council – Tied down by leagues". News. Adelaide, SA. 6 November 1929. p. 1.
  6. ^ Southerner (19 March 1930). "Teams of 19 players". Referee. Sydney, NSW. p. 17.
  7. ^ "Teams to have two reserves to replace injured players". Advocate. Burnie, TAS. 20 February 1946. p. 3.
  8. ^ Robinson, Mark; Williams, Rebecca (20 March 2013). "The AFL signs off on new concussion substitute rule". Herald Sun. Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  9. ^ a b Mitch Cleary (17 March 2021). "New rule reveal: AFL brings in 'medical sub' ahead of R1". Retrieved 17 March 2021.
  10. ^ Callum Twomey (28 November 2022). "No more medi-sub: AFL to bring in new substitute rule". Australian Football League. Retrieved 12 March 2023.
  11. ^ "Laws of Australian Football 2012" (PDF). p. 20. Law 7.2 (e): a Player who does not leave the Playing Surface as specified under Law 7.2 (d) is unable to re-enter the Playing Surface for the remainder of the Match
  12. ^ a b (PDF). Australian Football League. 2011. pp. 17–18. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 April 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  13. ^ a b Wheeler, Melanie (22 July 2013). "Player count strips Frankston of score against Roosters in VFL". The Courier. Ballarat, VIC. Retrieved 22 July 2013.
  14. ^ . Northern Football League. 2 June 2010. Archived from the original on 18 February 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  15. ^ "Laws of Australian Football" (PDF). Melbourne: Australian Football League. 2019.
  16. ^ "Laws of Australian Football 2018" (PDF). Australian Football League. 2018. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  17. ^ a b Kingston, Geoff (11 August 1975), "Fred fades out in confusion", The Advertiser, Adelaide, p. 16
  18. ^ "Moment #82: Out for the count". Carlton Football Club. 13 March 2008. Retrieved 10 September 2011.[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ Ben Collins (17 September 2018). "Player count drama in SANFL, NEAFL finals". Australian Football League. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  20. ^ "Headcount costs Lourey medal". Sportingpulse. 27 August 2013. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  21. ^ . 1999. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  22. ^ "Bluey explains bizarre 'headcount' incident". The West Australian. 18 September 2020. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  23. ^ Observer (6 July 1896). "Football – Notes on Saturday's games". The Argus. Melbourne. p. 6.
  24. ^ "Reporter District Football Competition. - THE FINAL MATCH. - the Reporter (Box Hill, Vic. : 1889 - 1925) - 15 Sep 1911". Reporter. 15 September 1911.
  25. ^ Old Boy (22 July 1921). "Football – Notes and comments". The Argus. Melbourne. p. 4.
  26. ^ Old Boy (18 July 1921). "The Association – Footscray leads". The Argus. Melbourne. p. 3.
  27. ^ Marc Fiddian (28 March 1977). "VFA details". The Age. Melbourne. p. 26.
  28. ^ "History made: first successful headcount in VFL/AFL history". afl.com.au. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  29. ^ Ralph, Jon (1 May 2008). "AFL to change bench laws". Herald Sun. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  30. ^ (PDF). Australian Football League. 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  31. ^ Kalinic, Dejan (20 May 2023). "Swans edge Roos in bizarre finish to thriller". afl.com.au. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  32. ^ Peter Ryan (3 September 2015). "Sub rule abolished, interchange cap reduced". Australian Football League. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  33. ^ Denham, Greg (30 March 2010). "Rotations sending football into a spin". The Australian. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  34. ^ "Game adjustments for the 2021 Toyota AFL Premiership Season". Australian Football League. 19 November 2020. Retrieved 20 November 2020.

interchange, australian, rules, football, interchange, colloquially, bench, interchange, bench, team, position, australian, rules, football, consisting, players, part, selected, team, currently, field, play, carlton, interchange, bench, match, against, kilda, . Interchange or colloquially the bench or interchange bench is a team position in Australian rules football consisting of players who are part of the selected team but are not currently on the field of play The Carlton interchange bench in a match against St Kilda 2011 Contents 1 Interchange numbers 1 1 AFL 1 2 Other leagues 1 3 Substitutes 2 Interchange protocol 3 Policing interchanges 3 1 Headcount 3 1 1 Famous headcounts 3 2 Interchange infringement penalties 4 Historical interchange rules and tactics 5 Footnotes 6 ReferencesInterchange numbers editAFL edit As of the 2023 season at AFL level each team is permitted four interchange players and a maximum of seventy five total player interchanges during a game 1 players have no limit to the number of times they may individually be changed and an interchange can occur at any time during the game including during gameplay Additionally a fifth bench player is designated a substitute allowed to take the field only to permanently replace a player The players named on the interchange bench and as the substitute in the teamsheet which is submitted ninety minutes before the commencement of the game must be the interchange players who start on the bench however they may be substituted immediately if the coach wishes Other leagues edit Interchange rules are not uniform across all leagues In the major state leagues as of 2016 following interchange numbers are permitted South Australian National Football League three interchange players with a maximum of fifty rotations per team per game 2 Victorian Football League five interchange players 3 In AFL Women s in which each side has 16 players on the field instead of the 18 of the men s game five interchange players are allowed with a limit 60 rotations per game as of 2023 Prior to 2023 there was no limit on the number of rotations a team could make per game The AFL which operates the women s league decided not to impose a limit on the number of rotations as that league is contested during the men s AFL offseason in the southern summer 4 Representative teams such as State of Origin teams practice and exhibition matches often feature an extended interchange bench of up to six or eight players Substitutes edit At different times during the history of the sport there have been substitute players also known as reserves serving a function distinct from interchange players A player who begins the game as a substitute may take no part in the game until he is substituted for another player and the player substituted out permanently leaves the field The substitute rule was resisted for many years with the prevailing view in the 1910s and 1920s being that a team should be permitted only to substitute a player in the event of an injury but that there was no practical way to rule against a team making a tactical substitution 5 A single substitute known as the nineteenth man was finally introduced by the Australian National Football Council for the 1930 season with no restrictions on whether the substitution be used for injury or tactical reasons 6 A second substitute the twentieth man was introduced in 1946 7 before the substitutes were replaced by interchange in the 1970s In the AFL since 2011 a hybrid interchange substitution arrangement has often existed Between 2011 and 2015 there were three interchange players and one substitute under those rules the substitute was required to wear a green vest until activated and the player substituted out of the game donned a red vest 8 There were no substitutes between 2016 and 2020 A true medical substitute was introduced in 2021 which for the first time placed a formal restriction on using the substitute for medical reasons only except with permission from the AFL Medical Officer a player substituted off for the medical substitute was ineligible to play again until at least twelve days later 9 this rule remained in place only through 2021 and 2022 before the position reverted to a general substitute available to be used for tactical or medical reasons 10 Interchange protocol editIn front of the interchange benches is the interchange area sometimes called the interchange gate which is a 15 metre stretch of the boundary line roughly centred between the two teams benches through which all players must enter and exit the ground when being interchanged It is marked on the boundary line with two short lines perpendicular to the boundary and sometimes with a slanted end A player who interchanges outside of this area is not permitted to return for the rest of the game 11 Where a player leaves the ground on a stretcher he is permitted to take the most direct route to the changerooms for medical treatment and is still permitted to return later in the game however where he leaves on a stretcher the player must wait for 20 minutes of playing time the length of one regulation quarter before returning If a stretcher is brought onto the ground but the player ultimately does not need to use it he must still wait for 20 minutes before returning 12 Due to new AFL concussion rules effective from 2011 onwards any player suspected of suffering a concussion must come off the ground and undergo a concussion test if found to be concussed he is not allowed to return to the field for the remainder of the game A player may be forced to make an interchange by the umpire under the blood rule If an umpire sees a player bleeding he will call time on at the next appropriate time stopping play until the player has left the field and been replaced Where the league has a provision to do so an interchange steward is provided to monitor interchanges Policing interchanges editHeadcount edit The primary means for controlling interchanges in most leagues but not in the AFL is via a headcount currently detailed in Law 5 5 of the game To initiate this procedure a team captain must request a headcount from the umpire The umpire at the opportunity will call time on and all players from both teams line will line up in the centre of the ground to be counted by the umpires If either team has more players on the ground than it should the general rule according to the 2019 Laws of the Game is that any points the team had scored up to that point during the quarter of the headcount are deducted from the score and a free kick and 50 metre penalty are paid to the opposing captain from the centre of the ground or the spot of the ball The league may impose additional sanctions including reversal of a match result as appropriate Leagues will not necessarily deduct scores during the match in some cases the quarter s progress score at the time of the headcount is recorded and league officials meet after the game to assess whether or not to retrospectively cancel that score 13 14 Provisions also exist in the rules for a league to review identify and impose a penalty including reversal of the match result for having too many players on the ground in a post match video review without a headcount having been executed during the match 15 If both teams have the correct number of players a free kick and 50 metre penalty are paid against the captain who initiated the headcount that captain may also be reported for time wasting and ordered off should the rules of the league permit if the umpire believes the captain s primary reason for calling the headcount was to waste time 12 Up until the 2018 Laws of the Game the penalty for having too many players on the ground was cancellation of the team s entire score at the time of the headcount rather than just the score in the quarter of the headcount and there was no formal allowance for a post match review and reversal of the result if no headcount had occurred 16 This immense penalty which predated the interchange bench or even reserve players was long known to be one of the great curiosities in the game s laws and was seen so rarely that decades would usually pass without a league seeing it invoked The rules were modernized at the end of 2018 after two high profile incidents which by incredible coincidence affected separate state league finals on the exact same day the 2018 SANFL preliminary final when the league had no recourse to change the result of a game won by a North Adelaide team which fielded 19 men for several crucial final quarter minutes without a headcount and the 2018 NEAFL grand final described below when premier Southport was caught with 19 men on the field in a headcount in the opening seconds of the final quarter In recent years the majority of incidents of extra players on the field have been an error by a player who was meant to go to the bench after an interval hence the shift in rules from cancelling the team s entire score to just cancelling the score for that quarter but with the provision for further penalty as appropriate Famous headcounts edit Perhaps the most famous headcount request occurred in the SANFL in Round 15 1975 West Torrens champion Fred Bills playing the last of his 313 league games having announced his retirement earlier that week entered the field of play before John Cassin who was injured and lying on a stretcher had left it This prompted West Adelaide trailing 11 7 73 to 12 10 82 in the final quarter to request a headcount 17 West Torrens players ran for the boundary line while West Adelaide players wrestled with them to keep them in bounds in the chaos one player identified in the match report published in The Advertiser as Norm Dare Note 1 17 managed to leap the fence and hide under a supporter s coat to avoid detection from the umpire Ultimately the count was abandoned when it became impossible to vouch for who was on the field at the time of the request and West Torrens went on to win by three goals The incident was celebrated as one of the sport s 150 greatest moments in the 150th year celebrations in 2008 18 The debacle was covered in a popular Secret Base video on YouTube The other most famous headcount occurred during the Grand Final of the 2018 North East Australian Football League season between Southport and Sydney reserves Southport was leading by ten goals at three quarter time but accidentally sent nineteen men onto the field to start the final quarter Sydney called for a headcount twenty seconds later and Southport s extra man was discovered Sydney received a free kick and fifty metre penalty and play continued with nobody sure whether or not Southport s score would stand this incident occurred when the penalty could have been annulment of Southport s entire score Only a few minutes before the end of the game NEAFL officials decided not to annul Southport s score using a separate provision within the laws of the game which allowed the full penalty not to be applied if the breach had no material impact on the game Southport won the game by 55 points 19 Scores which are stripped from a team due to a headcount are also stripped from the players individual statistics This had an impact on the 2013 VFL season s leading goalkicker medal Frankston s Michael Lourey finished one goal behind Port Melbourne s Dean Galea for the medal having had one of his goals annulled in a headcount earlier in the season 20 There have been only three headcounts all unsuccessful in the history of the VFL AFL by St Kilda captain Wels Eicke against Carlton Round 12 1924 by Essendon captain Jack Clarke against North Melbourne in Round 17 1958 by West Coast captain Guy McKenna against St Kilda in Round 22 1999 21 22 Notable successful headcounts around the country which resulted in the cancellation of a team s score are listed in the table below Where scores are given the team which suffered the head count penalty is listed first League Club penalised Opponent Match Score at count Count time Final score ReportVFA Richmond Essendon Round 9 1896 3 3 2 4 3rd quarter 1 4 9 9 23 Reporter District Football League Burwood Camberwell 1911 Final 16 10 1st quarter 30 32 24 VFA North Melbourne Preston 1911 season 47 13 2nd quarter 69 48 25 VFA Prahran Brighton Round 10 1921 26 17 1st quarter 34 34 26 VFA Northcote Yarraville Centenary Cup 1977 89 4th quarter 20 154 27 O amp KFL Moyhu Whorouly 2008 First Semi Final 15 22 2nd quarter 9 81 1 BL amp GFA Barossa District Willaston 2011 First Semi Final 59 59 4th quarter 6 81 2 VFL Frankston North Ballarat Round 14 2013 38 3rd quarter 23 64 13 28 Interchange infringement penalties edit In Round 6 2008 North Melbourne and Sydney played a controversial drawn match in which a bungled interchange late in the game left Sydney with 19 men on the field for about a minute during which time the Swans scored the game tying behind Although the AFL s laws allowed for each of the Sydney players to be fined 2500 for the error there could be no change to the match result because North Melbourne had not called for a headcount This highlighted the impracticality of the head count rule in a modern professional league with its rapid use of interchanges for fatigue management 29 A few weeks after this incident the AFL introduced a new rule allowing the interchange steward to inform the umpires of interchange errors specifically when a player enters the field before the player he is replacing has left the field or when a player is interchanged without using the interchange gate In each case the penalty is a free kick in the centre of the ground or at the spot of the ball at the time whichever is the greater penalty against the offending team If the offending team is not in possession of the ball the umpire shall impose an additional 50 metre penalty against them Any score or free kicks given to the opposition when an interchange infringement has occurred are cancelled This process is seen only at the professional AFL level lower levels of the sport still rely on the head count rule to police interchanges AFL captains retain the right to call for a headcount if they believe an interchange infringement has not been detected by the interchange steward which would most likely be after an interval but this has not yet been exercised under the new rules 30 In round 10 2023 in another game between North Melbourne and Sydney North Melbourne conceded a significant interchange infringement free kick With the ball in its backline and leading by three points in the final minute North Melbourne made a 76th interchange exceeding the interchange cap of 75 The free kick and 50 metre penalty gave Sydney a set shot from the goal line from which Hayden McLean kicked the winning goal 31 Historical interchange rules and tactics editThe number of interchanges allowed has followed the following time line under Australian National Football Council ANFC rules Prior to 1930 there was no means for either substitution or interchange A team played with 17 on the field 19 prior to 1899 if a player was injured 1930 the introduction of a single substitute 1946 the introduction of a second substitute 1978 the replacement of two substitutes with two interchangesFollowing the disbandment of the ANFC the following timeline indicates changes to interchange rules in the AFL Other leagues have not followed this timeline 1994 the introduction of a third interchange and introduction of forced interchange under the blood rule 1998 the introduction of a fourth interchange 2011 the replacement of four interchanges with three interchanges and a substitute 2013 the introduction of forced interchange for concussed players with the provision for temporary activation of the substitute while a concussion test is conducted 2014 the addition of an interchange cap limiting teams to 120 interchanges per game 2016 the return to four interchanges without a substitute reduction of the interchange cap to 90 per game 32 2021 the reduction of the interchange cap to 75 a game 1 and introduction of a medical substitute as a fifth bench player 9 2023 the changing of the medical substitute to a general substitute Historically the interchange bench was used sparingly and mostly to take poor performing or players who were injured and unable to continue out of the game There was a marked change in this at the top level as professionalism grew in the sport between 2000 and 2010 and the interchange bench began to be used much more frequently as a means of rotating players to manage player fatigue through the game and offer rest periods for hard working players and game time for young old players The average number of interchanges in the AFL doubled between 2007 56 changes per team per game and 2010 113 changes per team per game as coaches sought to give frequent rests to their running players 33 Rule changes in the 2010s and 2020s placed restrictions on the number of interchanges on the theory that lower fatigue levels were enabling a more defensive play style which was stifling open play and scoring and that restricting rotations and increasing fatigue could reverse that trend 34 Positions on the Australian rules football field B Back pocket Full back Back pocketHB Half back flank Centre half back Half back flankC Wing Centre WingHF Half forward flank Centre half forward Half forward flankF Forward pocket Full forward Forward pocketFoll Ruckman Ruck rover RoverInt Interchange Interchange InterchangeInterchange SubstituteCoach coachFootnotes edit1 In the AFL s own account of the incident as published on its website as part of the 150th anniversary celebrations the leap over the fence was credited not to Norm Dare but to Gerry Noonan who like Dare was a former Fitzroy player in the VFL who transferred to West Torrens in 1975 Additionally the AFL s account of the incident had one other significant factual difference to the account in The Advertiser the AFL s account indicated that the match was Fred Bills 300th match but the account in The Advertiser makes it unequivocally clear that it was Bills 313th and final match References edit a b AFL rule changes reveal Rotations slashed man on mark on notice Alex Malcolm 8 October 2015 SANFL s bold new out of bounds rule and 50 rotations per game Australian Football League Retrieved 18 February 2016 Roosters make multitude of changes VFL Footy 22 August 2009 Retrieved 10 September 2011 AFLW 101 The Game Australian Football League Retrieved 6 September 2018 Football council Tied down by leagues News Adelaide SA 6 November 1929 p 1 Southerner 19 March 1930 Teams of 19 players Referee Sydney NSW p 17 Teams to have two reserves to replace injured players Advocate Burnie TAS 20 February 1946 p 3 Robinson Mark Williams Rebecca 20 March 2013 The AFL signs off on new concussion substitute rule Herald Sun Retrieved 21 May 2013 a b Mitch Cleary 17 March 2021 New rule reveal AFL brings in medical sub ahead of R1 Retrieved 17 March 2021 Callum Twomey 28 November 2022 No more medi sub AFL to bring in new substitute rule Australian Football League Retrieved 12 March 2023 Laws of Australian Football 2012 PDF p 20 Law 7 2 e a Player who does not leave the Playing Surface as specified under Law 7 2 d is unable to re enter the Playing Surface for the remainder of the Match a b Laws of Australian Football PDF Australian Football League 2011 pp 17 18 Archived from the original PDF on 5 April 2011 Retrieved 10 September 2011 a b Wheeler Melanie 22 July 2013 Player count strips Frankston of score against Roosters in VFL The Courier Ballarat VIC Retrieved 22 July 2013 Round 9 JC amp the Juniors Northern Football League 2 June 2010 Archived from the original on 18 February 2011 Retrieved 10 September 2011 Laws of Australian Football PDF Melbourne Australian Football League 2019 Laws of Australian Football 2018 PDF Australian Football League 2018 Retrieved 5 October 2020 a b Kingston Geoff 11 August 1975 Fred fades out in confusion The Advertiser Adelaide p 16 Moment 82 Out for the count Carlton Football Club 13 March 2008 Retrieved 10 September 2011 permanent dead link Ben Collins 17 September 2018 Player count drama in SANFL NEAFL finals Australian Football League Retrieved 17 September 2018 Headcount costs Lourey medal Sportingpulse 27 August 2013 Retrieved 27 August 2013 1999 Review 1999 Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 10 September 2011 Bluey explains bizarre headcount incident The West Australian 18 September 2020 Retrieved 25 September 2021 Observer 6 July 1896 Football Notes on Saturday s games The Argus Melbourne p 6 Reporter District Football Competition THE FINAL MATCH the Reporter Box Hill Vic 1889 1925 15 Sep 1911 Reporter 15 September 1911 Old Boy 22 July 1921 Football Notes and comments The Argus Melbourne p 4 Old Boy 18 July 1921 The Association Footscray leads The Argus Melbourne p 3 Marc Fiddian 28 March 1977 VFA details The Age Melbourne p 26 History made first successful headcount in VFL AFL history afl com au Retrieved 25 September 2021 Ralph Jon 1 May 2008 AFL to change bench laws Herald Sun Retrieved 10 September 2011 New Interchange Procedures 2008 PDF Australian Football League 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 20 October 2011 Retrieved 10 September 2011 Kalinic Dejan 20 May 2023 Swans edge Roos in bizarre finish to thriller afl com au Retrieved 20 May 2023 Peter Ryan 3 September 2015 Sub rule abolished interchange cap reduced Australian Football League Retrieved 3 September 2015 Denham Greg 30 March 2010 Rotations sending football into a spin The Australian Retrieved 10 September 2011 Game adjustments for the 2021 Toyota AFL Premiership Season Australian Football League 19 November 2020 Retrieved 20 November 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interchange Australian rules football amp oldid 1184556022, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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