Hi folks,Whilst it is always difficult to see good sportsmen(and...

  1. 5,411 Posts.
    Hi folks,

    Whilst it is always difficult to see good sportsmen
    (and women) coming to the end of their career in the
    highest grades of their chosen sport, there should also
    be some thought given to the advantages of making
    room for new blood to come in, at the lower ranks.

    Leaving the onus on selectors is no way to determine
    the end of a first class career ..... some obvious biases
    have surfaced in the past, all to the detriment of the
    potential future stars of sport.

    Cricket and AFL are two sports that need to have an
    age cap in the first class game ..... say 36 for cricket
    and 30 for AFL.

    Now that will raise some heckles, but for the good of
    both games, it should be done, as the benefits are
    quite obvious ........ for example:

    If you have played in first class cricket from 20 years
    of age ..... you know you have 16 years to get the
    most out of the game and have something planned for
    retirement.

    This also allows new talent to be filtered through in
    a continuous stream, thereby maintaining a high
    standard at all times.

    Leaving retirement decisions to selectors is not
    the answer.

    -------

    Likewise in AFL ..... to maintain the best playing
    standard and fitness level, a constant stream of new
    blood needs to be encouraged to enter the game.

    By having a mandatory cap on age, then the
    tempatation to leave ailing players on the field,
    so that they can make it past milestone matches
    played, is avoided.

    We have a quite a high standard of team fitness,
    moral and playing skills ..... let's keep it that way,
    by eliminating those, that are past their "use by" date.

    happy days

    yogi







 
arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch. arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch.