Free kick (Australian rules football) explained

A free kick in Australian rules football is a penalty awarded by a field umpire to a player who has been infringed by an opponent or is the nearest player to a player from the opposite team who has broken a rule.

Protocol

When a free kick is paid, the player's opponent stands the mark, by standing on the spot where the umpire indicates that the free kick was paid or mark was taken. The player with the ball then retreats backwards so that the ball can be kicked over the player standing the mark; the player must retreat on the angle such that he, the man on the mark and the centre of the attacking goal are in the same straight line.

A player receiving a free kick is not restricted to kicking the ball; he can play on by handballing to another player, or run around the mark where the free kick has been paid.

Examples of free kicks

Free kicks are paid for:

Playing On

A player taking a free kick is allowed to take his kick or handpass unimpeded unless the umpire calls play on. Play on will be called if:

The umpire has sole discretion over whether he believes the player has played on. Once a player plays on, he can be pursued by any opposition players. While the man on the mark can advance to hurry his disposal, he is most vulnerable to being tackled from a player pursuing from behind.

Advantage

Players may ignore the whistle that indicates a free kick has been awarded and play on, if play is continuous. If stopping play is disadvantageous to the team receiving the free kick, then advantage is paid to that team, if that team elects to take the advantage. The umpire does not decide on advantage, unless play is not continuous. An example of this is when a player tackles his opponent, the ball spills free and is collected by a player on the tackler's team and the ball is moved downfield. In this case, stopping the game for the free kick would penalise the team that earns the free kick, hence advantage is paid. A player cannot change his mind once he has elected to take the advantage. Advantage cannot be paid from a mark.

Spot

Free kicks are paid either at the spot of the foul or mark, or if the infringement is away from the ball then at the spot of the ball when the infringement occurs – whichever is closer to goal for the team receiving the free kick. The spot of the free kick can be shifted under the following circumstances:

When a free kick is spotted away from the infringement, it is awarded to the nearest player to the spot rather than to the infringed player.

50-metre penalty

See main article: 50-metre penalty. If play has stopped for a free kick or mark, and a second infringement occurs before the free kick has been taken, then a 50-metre penalty is awarded, which moves the spot of the original free kick 50 metres closer to the goal-line. The second infringement is usually against the player who has the original free kick (e.g. for slowing play down by running across the mark, or by a late hit after a mark), but the same rule applies for any second infringement occurring anywhere on the field. In the latter circumstance, the greater penalty of a 50-metre penalty or a free kick at the spot of the second infringement is applied.

The "protected area"

When a player takes a free kick, the laws of the game stipulate that a protected area exists around the person in possession. The protected area is the corridor ten metres to either side of the ball-carrier backwards from the mark, including an additional semicircle with a 20-metre width (10 metres to the left and right of behind the player with the ball) and 5 metres behind the ball carrier as well. Additionally, there is an extra five metres of the protected zone behind the player on the mark; a prominent example of this specific infringement can be seen here.[1]

The laws of the game state that no player from either team is allowed within the protected area zone until the free kick is taken or play-on is called. If a player from the attacking team is within the zone, the umpire will blow time off until he leaves the zone; if a player from the defending team is within the zone, a 50-metre penalty is applied unless the player is following an opponent within two metres.

The protected zone has varied in size and shape over the history of the game, and was most recently adjusted in 2021 to prevent any lateral movement from the player on the mark.

Staging

Players may attempt to deliberately draw contact to the head or fall forward from a push in an attempt to stage for a free kick, similar to diving or flopping in soccer and other codes.[2] [3] In the AFL, such infractions may be penalised with fines by the tribunal.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Players get 10-metre protection zone as AFL locks down rules. Peter Ryan. 8 March 2016. 9 March 2016. Australian Football League.
  2. https://www.zerohanger.com/an-over-correction-to-the-over-correction-is-desperately-needed-120983/ An over-correction to the over-correction is desperately needed
  3. https://www.espn.com/afl/story/_/id/34265509/afl-issues-warning-head-high-contact AFL issues warning over head-high contact
  4. https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/how-afl-plans-to-crack-down-on-embarrassing-incidents-of-diving-and-staging-as-josh-green-fined/news-story/7f7df5234686b7c40e042186a0b3b954 How AFL plans to crack down on ‘embarrassing’ incidents of diving and staging