I haven't noticed it before but the SC site provides a breakdown of their scoring system.
Is it a new feature this year?
For those without SC Plus:
handball: effective - 1.5; ineffective - 0; clanger - minus 4
handball receive: 1.5
kicks: effective - 4; ineffective - 0; clanger - minus 4
mark from own team kick: uncontested - 2; contested - 6;
mark from opposition kick: uncontested - 4; contested - 8
hardball get: 4.5
loose-ball get: 4.5
tackle: 4
free: for - 4; against - minus 4
hit-out-to-advantage: 5; gather from hit-out: 2
Note that there are no contested/uncontested possession categories apart from marks.
CD categorizes according to whether the ball is controlled by:
your team - handball, handball receives, kicks, marks
opposition team - marks, tackles
neither team: contested marks, hardball and loose-ball get; hit-out-to-advantage; gather from hit-out
Where the casual observer might get confused, as I was at one time, is in the same points being awarded for hardball and loose-ball gets.
CD considers both to be contested possessions. The hardball gets are obviously so, the loose-ball gets not so much.
CD considers any ball that is not specifically handballed/kicked to a player as a contested possession. If two players are able to compete for the ball it is a hardball get. If only one player is in a position to get the ball it is a loose-ball get,
e.g. a ball kicked into the fwd 50 bounces off hands into the clear, a small fwd runs on to the ball and kicks a goal.
The small fwd may be 20m from any other player but that possession is classed as a contested possession, loose-ball get. In theory either team could have possessed the ball and that is why it is considered a contested possession.
If, in the same situation, both a defender and a fwd compete for the ball it is classed as a contested possession, hardball get.
I doubt that this is their complete scoring system.
As far as I know CD gives points for tap-ons to advantage and differentiates between short and long effective kicks. There are probably others.
Is it a new feature this year?
For those without SC Plus:
handball: effective - 1.5; ineffective - 0; clanger - minus 4
handball receive: 1.5
kicks: effective - 4; ineffective - 0; clanger - minus 4
mark from own team kick: uncontested - 2; contested - 6;
mark from opposition kick: uncontested - 4; contested - 8
hardball get: 4.5
loose-ball get: 4.5
tackle: 4
free: for - 4; against - minus 4
hit-out-to-advantage: 5; gather from hit-out: 2
Note that there are no contested/uncontested possession categories apart from marks.
CD categorizes according to whether the ball is controlled by:
your team - handball, handball receives, kicks, marks
opposition team - marks, tackles
neither team: contested marks, hardball and loose-ball get; hit-out-to-advantage; gather from hit-out
Where the casual observer might get confused, as I was at one time, is in the same points being awarded for hardball and loose-ball gets.
CD considers both to be contested possessions. The hardball gets are obviously so, the loose-ball gets not so much.
CD considers any ball that is not specifically handballed/kicked to a player as a contested possession. If two players are able to compete for the ball it is a hardball get. If only one player is in a position to get the ball it is a loose-ball get,
e.g. a ball kicked into the fwd 50 bounces off hands into the clear, a small fwd runs on to the ball and kicks a goal.
The small fwd may be 20m from any other player but that possession is classed as a contested possession, loose-ball get. In theory either team could have possessed the ball and that is why it is considered a contested possession.
If, in the same situation, both a defender and a fwd compete for the ball it is classed as a contested possession, hardball get.
I doubt that this is their complete scoring system.
As far as I know CD gives points for tap-ons to advantage and differentiates between short and long effective kicks. There are probably others.
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