Super Goal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Super Goal is an innovation used in the Australian Football League's pre-season competition in the sport of Australian rules football.

The Super Goal was introduced before the 2004 Wizard Cup, and is awarded nine points instead of the regulation six. For a goal to be considered a Super Goal, the grounded foot of the player must be outside the 50-metre arc. If the goal is kicked from a set shot, the mark must be outside the 50 metre arc. If a fifty-metre penalty takes the spot of the mark from outside the fifty-metre line to inside it, nine points will still be awarded for an accurate kick; this is to prevent players from moving the mark and preventing any chance of a nine-point score in a close game.

The Super Goal is also used in EJ Whitten Legends Games between Victoria and the All-Stars, although the distance from which they must be kicked is reduced to 40 metres.

In recent pre-season competitions, a video umpire has been in place to determine if the score was a super goal or not in the event that the field umpire could not make the distinction himself. Amendments are generally made during the game, though a Super Goal awarded to Brisbane Lions midfielder Luke Power in the 2007 NAB Cup semi-final win over the Geelong Football Club was amended after the siren to a regular goal. Though this did not affect the result of the game, it caused confusion amongst betting agencies which had taken bets on the final margin of the game.[1] Nevertheless, the umpire has not always been used for contentious decisions occasionally resulting in the incorrect score being awarded.

The umpire signal for the 9-Point goal is for the Field umpire to give the 'All Clear' and raise 9 fingers to the goal umpire. The goal umpire then raises both arms into the air and waves 2 red flags.

Another innovation related to the Super Goal is the sponsor NAB paying $1000 to the club a player first joined as a junior for every Super Goal he scores in the NAB Cup. However, the Brisbane Lions rookie Colm Begley, who kicked a Super Goal in the 2007 semi final, joined the Lions as an international rookie, having played Gaelic football through his youth. There is lighthearted debate as to where the $1000 should go.[2]

The system favours the players who have the ability to kick the ball long distances, with Essendon's Scott Lucas, Melbourne's Paul Wheatley and Collingwood's Ryan Lonie among those to have enjoyed the rule more than most.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Punters not 'all clear' on correct cup scores. heraldsun.news.com.au (2007-03-13). Retrieved on 2007-03-15.
  2. ^ Show Who The Money?. lions.com.au (2007-03-14). Retrieved on 2007-03-15.