Thanks for joining us on what has been a historic day for the game of Australian rules football.
Sadly, I doubt we have heard the last of this sad and sorry saga.
This was published 10 years ago
Thanks for joining us on what has been a historic day for the game of Australian rules football.
Sadly, I doubt we have heard the last of this sad and sorry saga.
The decision to find the Essendon 34 guilty of being administered a banned drug could lead to Jobe Watson being stripped of his 2012 Brownlow Medal, with AFL chief executive Gillon McLachlan revealing the Commission will consider the issue at a meeting in February.
As the AFL began dealing with the Court of Arbitration for Sport's decision to suspend the players for 12 months, McLachlan admitted on Tuesday Watson's grasp on the medal was up for debate.
Stick with us, Essendon chairman Lindsay Tanner urged members, as he slammed the hefty ban on 34 past and present players as "manifestly unfair."
Tanner said having 12 of their most senior players sit out the 2016 season would not necessarily mean the team would be uncompetitive.
AFL Commission Chairman Mike Fitzpatrick's full statement on the Essendon decision:
As tough as this sanction feels, the AFL accepts the decision of the Court of Arbitration for Sport. We feel very disappointed for the players.
The program at the Essendon Football Club in 2012 was a stain on our game - and it has had a terrible impact on the players, the Club, and the reputation of the AFL.
It has struck at the very heart of our game – the integrity of the competition, and the health and safety of the players.
The players have received a very harsh punishment today in having a doping violation recorded, and a suspension until November 2016. We feel for the players, and will be offering whatever support we can through the Players Association in the coming months.
AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan's full statement on the Essendon decision:
The AFL Commission met this morning via telephone hook-up to consider the decision announced today by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
The AFL accepts and acknowledges the decision of CAS and its ruling has significant implications for the Essendon Football Club and its ability to field a side during the 2016 Toyota Premiership Season, due to the number of players that have been suspended, as well as implications for four other clubs in our competition that have had players suspended.
Firstly, I wish to reiterate what our Chairman has said - the AFL is fully committed to clean sport, for the sake of all players from all clubs in our competition.
This is a devastating decision for the past and present players of the Essendon Football Club, and the AFL feels deeply for them.
Opposition leader Bill Shorten has sided with the current and former Essendon players found guilty of doping offences and who will miss the entire 2016 season, insisting they are "paying a big price for other people's decisions".
"These players put their trust in people, and I believe have been systematically let down and now they are carrying the can," the Labor leader told reporters.
The Xavier Campbell-Lindsay Tanner press conference has now ended.
Campbell: Sponsors such as Kia and Fujistu committed to the club.
Campbell: "We'll meet with the AFL tomorrow to come up with a timeline for securing top-up players."
Campbell: "To think that these two decisions can be so vastly different on the same evidence is bemusing and hard to understand."