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"Let's celebrate with a debut, yay.
Nah if the kid does well despite the team attention right now, balls of steel."
Nah if the kid does well despite the team attention right now, balls of steel."
"Well he's fucked either way "
"Is it totally wrong to hope Manly smack our asses so that more pressure is brought to bear on BA? This is the vexed question that I am struggling with. On one hand I feel guilty and disloyal on the other I am sick of this groundhog day and want this…"
"Agreed, prove will be in the pudding after the game. If we win, we have to back it up. If we lose, bye bye ba. All this talk is nothing if they don't put it into action. "
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I don't think having a concussed player on the field is much of an advantage.
Well, if by advantage you mean not having to put up with the massive disadvantage of removing key players and shuffling your team, then I guess it's an advantage. But why should the other team get an advantage just because your player got concussed? Especially if they caused it.
The HIA rule is to protect players' health, not to disadvantage his team. If the player is able to keep playing then that's his business. If he was really concussed he would be a liability.
They didn't gain an advantage, they decided against taking the disadvantage of having to take a player off the field. The player didn't do anything to deserve going off. If one of our key players got a head knock and knew he was ok to play on I would hope we'd cop the fine as well instead of losing him for what could be a pivotal moment of the game.
Every time a player is forced to leave the field for a HIA it has impact on that team. Unde your logic we should leave it to the players and trainers to make that decision and when they get it wrong pay the fine. I think you are not grasping what the NRL are trying to achieve with the concussion tests.
The NRL are just trying to cover their arses. If players didn't want to spend the rest of their lives with health issues they wouldn't be playing professional rugby league.