The AFL has sanctioned five clubs for COVID-related breaches, with Sydney apologising after copping a $100,000 fine.
Key points:
- An audit by the AFL has revealed five clubs breached COVID protocols through the season
- Each club has been hit with a fine, with Sydney’s $100,000 penalty the heaviest
- The breaches are in regard to discrepancies surrounding RATs
The Swans, Collingwood, Richmond, Brisbane and St Kilda have all been sanctioned for failing to comply with the league’s COVID-19 protocols.
The AFL said penalties were given for breaches including not undertaking a Rapid Antigen Test (RAT) within specified time periods, and uploading an image taken of a previous RAT undertaken by that person or someone else.
Sydney’s $100,000 fine is the heaviest sanction, with $50,000 of the penalty to be included in next season’s soft cap, which covers football department spending.
Collingwood have been fined $50,000, with $25,000 to be included in this season or next year’s soft cap.
Half of Richmond’s $25,000 fine will be included in the soft cap this year or next.
Brisbane and St Kilda have also been reprimanded and given suspended $25,000 fines.
The AFL’s general counsel Andrew Dillon said none of the clubs obtained a competitive advantage from their breaches.
“While 13 of the clubs complied with the requirements, the five clubs failed to comply as required,” he said in a statement on Tuesday night.
“The sanctions they have been handed reflect the seriousness that we take in relation to the health and safety of players, staff and the wider community.”
Sydney’s chief executive officer Tom Harley apologised to the AFL and the wider community for his club’s breaches.
“It is disappointing that our club has not fully adhered to these important AFL protocols,” he said in a statement.
“This behaviour falls well short of the standards we expect.
“And we have ensured the importance of this process is now well understood and complied with across the entire football club.”
The AFL’s Dillon said the sanctions came after a league compliance audit.
When deciding penalties, the AFL took into account the number of instances of non-compliance, the time period of the breaches and previous breaches of COVID protocols, he said.
AAP
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