Collingwood’s Billy Frampton wins Tribunal appeal after dangerous tackle on Melbourne’s Brody Mihocek, reasons, blog, video, latest news


Collingwood has successfully overturned Billy Frampton’s three-game ban for the dangerous tackle which broke the neck of ex-teammate Brody Mihocek.

The King’s Birthday incident was graded as careless, severe impact and high contact but the Tribunal found Frampton was not primarily to blame for the incident.

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Mihocek suffered a fractured neck in the incident and needed to be stretchered off the MCG. He is now up and walking, after initial fears the injury could’ve been even more severe.

The Magpies argued it was not a careless act by Frampton, and instead was an unfortunate football accident – which the Tribunal agreed with.

The Tribunal did not agree with the AFL’s case a reasonable player would have released Mihocek when the tackle began to go poorly.

TRIBUNAL HEARING

Nick Pane represented the AFL with Myles Tehan representing Collingwood in front of Jeff Gleeson (Tribunal chair), Scott Stevens and Jordan Bannister.

“He (Mihocek) had a little stumble and I realised he was pretty low to the ground. So I sort of slowed my approach, trying to get him safely avoiding his head, and it just played out from there,” Frampton explained.

“He curled up and sort of drove into me … immediately I just wanted to make sure I didn’t his head, so reaching over the top of him, coming from the side, trying to get him safely.

“He was low, hunched over so I didn’t want to come over with a swinging, overarm tackle, so sort of went over the top of his head to miss his head and then sort of grabbed the ball to make sure that was pinned.

“I thought I had him pinned and I felt him drive through, as players we learn to drive through tackles, sort of push through into me and come through the other side of the tackle.

“I felt him sort of driving and it all sort of fell apart from there, I guess.

“It felt like I had him in a pretty stable spot and then with him driving and trying to press his way out of the tackle, I felt like it sort of raised me up and lifted me up, and then at that point I’m suspended in the air just holding onto him. And with his momentum I think it sort of collapses, through no fault of my own.

“I thought it would be a quick holding the ball and didn’t expect to get lifted and definitely not to fall over.”

The tackle from Billy Frampton that forced Brody Mihocek to be stretchered off the MCG.Source: Fox Sports

Frampton continued: “I didn’t think it would be a high impact landing at all but with the driving, it sort of spiralled a bit into a bit more of an out-of-control landing.

“I don’t know what else I could’ve done. I approached cautiously with his care front of mind, I didn’t want to hit him in the head, I didn’t want to go front on – that was genuinely what I was thinking at the time.

“He said he needed help, he couldn’t move, which was quite a distressing thing to hear – he said that a few times straight away, which is why I reacted the way I did to call some people over.

“I felt horrific, obviously, he’s a good friend of mine … I would never in a million years want to hurt another player, especially not Brody. It was a pretty stressful couple of days for me but now that I’ve heard he’s trending in the right direction, it’s sort of taken a bit of the load off.”

The AFL argued Frampton was pushing downward pressure on Mihocek’s back but he says it was more of a pulling motion and “latching onto his hip”, though concedes he had “marginal” pressure on Mihocek’s back.

The AFL suggested Frampton could’ve stopped pulling Mihocek to the ground with his left arm, but Frampton said his left arm couldn’t have been contributing to the downward pull as they began to go to ground because of its positioning.

He was asked if he thought he could’ve released his right arm he says “if I knew exactly where his head was, potentially, but I can’t see where his head is and I know that his hands are free. I didn’t think this was a high-risk position and I’m not pinning him. I thought he would’ve been able to protect himself.”

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Frampton said he couldn’t have “processed the information” that Mihocek’s head was well below the rest of his body.

“I was thinking I’m well within my rights to make the tackle. He has voided prior opportunity by ducking his head, so I’m within my rights to make my tackle. The whole time I thought it was a legal tackle,” he said.

“I didn’t think at the time he was in a position to get hurt.

“It’s incredibly unlucky how it’s all played out. I don’t think I can be able to foresee any of that.”

He clarified he knew Mihocek’s head was low at the start of the tackle but when Mihocek drove into him, Frampton said: “I think I approached it the right away and avoided it and then the way he’s pressed up to me, in a sense I couldn’t really change anything.”

The AFL argued this tackle was inherently dangerous, that Mihocek was vulnerable and he was rotated into the ground with excessive force.

Pane said a “reasonable player” could’ve released the tackle to not pull Mihocek down with him, and while Mihocek’s arms were free he could not have braced to avoid the impact with the ground.

He also argued Frampton ought to have known from the angle of Mihocek’s body “he was going to be coming towards the ground at quite a significant angle, and therefore having an arm free was going to be of little benefit to Mihocek”.

“I’m not suggesting he shouldn’t have instigated a tackle … once the tackle had begun and he was aware of where Mihocek’s head was and the angle of the rest of his body, he should’ve then released his arms so he wasn’t contributing to the impact,” Pane said.

Pane conceded each player was contributing to the force but said “I don’t think the footage supports Frampton’s evidence that he didn’t contribute in any way to the force”.

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Collingwood made the point the challenge was made “after very careful thought and deliberation, not least because of Mihocek’s status as a former Collingwood champion and the very serious injuries suffered”. They shared their deep concern for Mihocek’s health.

They point to the rules around prior opportunity which now include players driving their head in an attempt to discourage incidents like this – and the fact a free kick was paid against Mihocek.

The Magpies say Frampton’s actions entering the tackle are consistent with him seeking to exercise his duty of care, and that he was “very careful with where he put his arms in order to avoid Mihocek’s head” as Mihocek “initiates contact and applies forward momentum”.

“The tackle started as one thing but turned into another because of Mihocek’s actions in driving through in the way he did and in a way that was not expected or reasonably foreseeable to Frampton,” Tehan said for the Magpies.

“That spiralling out of control is not something that ought reasonably be the responsibility of born by Frampton. What occurred in our submission was not foreseeable and incapable of being anticipated.”

The Magpies accept it’s open to the Tribunal to find Mihocek was in a vulnerable position because his head was down, but “he did not have limited opportunity to protect himself” given his arms were free.

“Any force was not in fact excessive,” Tehan said.

He added: “The way Mihocek acted changed the tackle in a way Frampton couldn’t control.”

Pane argued for the AFL that Frampton “was in a position to see that the tackle had changed and was in a position to modulate and moderate the force that he was applying.

“Once it changed, he should have done more.”

Follow Billy Frampton’s Tribunal appeal live below! If you can’t see the blog, tap here.


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