OPINION: This is not what shoulder charge ban is for
Billy Slater will miss the grand final if he can't beat a shoulder charge ban at the judiciary.
Opinion
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BILLY Slater should only be suspended for consistency's sake, but the episode that could rob the Melbourne Storm, Queensland and Australian champion fullback of a grand final swansong exposes what is wrong with the should charge ban.
Slater was penalised for a shoulder charge on a try-line bound Cronulla Sharks winger Sosaia Feki in Friday night's preliminary final at AAMI Park.
Slater stopped Feki from scoring in the game, which the Storm won 22-6, but was penalised and charged with a grade one offence.
It carries a one-game ban, which means unless Slater can beat the charge at the judiciary he will miss the grand final.
A rule is a rule, and on that basis alone Slater deserves to miss the decider. He made no attempt to tackle. I believe he braced for a collision it appears he's led with the shoulder.
I miss the shoulder charge, and I'd love to see it back in the game. My ideal scenario is if a player makes any contact to the head, they are sin-binned or sent off, and cop a five-game suspension. If it doesn't hit the head, it's fair game.
It's not perfect, but it puts the onus on the defenders and carries a significant punishment if that player gets it wrong, and avoids penalising players for what is a heavy, harmless hit.