While the commission is responsible for directing AFL policy, it has, on occasions, become directly involved in on and off-field matters relating to AFL competitions, players, coaches and managers. Sometimes these interventions have been in controversial circumstances.
On the field • The "
Line in the Sand" match in 2004 in which 18 players were reported on 26 charges arising from a third-quarter brawl. Four Hawthorn players were suspended for a total of 15 matches while Essendon's
Justin Murphy was suspended for one match. •
2006 Aurora Stadium Siren Controversy – investigated the disputed finish to the St. Kilda vs. Fremantle match played at
Aurora Stadium on 30 April 2006. The result was that the AFL commission overturned the drawn result to award
Fremantle four premiership points instead of two. • The six-match suspension handed to defender
Tom Jonas for intentionally striking 's
Andrew Gaff in
round 9 of the 2016 AFL season. • The five-match suspension handed to forward
Jeremy Cameron for his crude hit on fullback
Harris Andrews in
round 14 of the 2018 AFL season. Cameron became the first player in league history to be sent straight to the tribunal more than once in his career. • The two-match suspension handed to captain
Ben Stratton, one each for repeatedly pinching 's
Orazio Fantasia and for stomping
Shaun McKernan, in
round 13 of the 2019 AFL season. • The initial three-match suspension handed to forward
Toby Greene for intentionally making contact with umpire
Matt Stevic at three-quarter-time in the Giants' one-point victory over in the
second elimination final. A successful appeal from the AFL saw the suspension increased to six matches. • The three-match suspension handed to player
Jeremy Finlayson after he admitted to making a homophobic slur towards an player in
round four of the 2024 AFL season. • The five-match suspension handed to player
Dan Houston for his crude bump on 's
Izak Rankine in
round 23 of the 2024 AFL season.
Off the field The commission has become involved when players or a club bring the game into disrepute, including: •
Salary cap breaches by the
Carlton Football Club in 2002 which hampered the club from rebuilding its playing list in the following years. • 2007 investigation into the
West Coast Eagles party in
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States, after the
2006 AFL Grand Final. During the Las Vegas parties,
Ben Cousins rehabilitation from drug addiction,
Daniel Kerr's criminal charges and the hospitalisation of
Chad Fletcher after choking on his own vomit were part of the issues following the overseas trip. • The trading out of
Brendan Fevola from the
Carlton Football Club over his behaviour at the
2009 Brownlow Medal function. • The sacking of player
Daniel Connors over repeated off-field infringements during his playing career with the club, including a drunken rampage in Sydney in 2010 and "failing to meet club expectations on a number of occasions" in 2012. • Claims during 2012 that
deliberately lost matches towards the end of the
2009 season so it could attain a
priority draft pick at that year's
end-of-season draft. • 2012 overhaul of the
Port Adelaide Football Club including the sacking of senior coach
Matthew Primus and president Brett Duncanson • 2013 investigation into reports of the
use of illegal supplements by the
Essendon Football Club • 2013 overhaul of the
Melbourne Football Club including the sacking of senior coach
Mark Neeld • The club-imposed five-match suspension handed to player
Toby Greene for intentionally assaulting a security guard at a Melbourne nightclub during the club's bye week in 2014, in between which the Giants suffered two defeats in excess of more than 100 points. • The six-month suspension handed to player
Lachie Whitfield for attempting to evade a random drug test during the 2016–17 off-season, which took in missing the first eight matches of the
2017 AFL season. Ex-GWS employees Graeme Allan and Craig Lambert were both suspended for twelve months each, while the club was also stripped of its first-round draft pick in the
2017 AFL draft. • The three-match suspension handed to player
Nathan Broad for leaking a photo of a topless woman wearing his premiership medallion without her consent in the weeks following the club's
2017 AFL Grand Final victory. • The season-ending suspension handed to
Sydney Swans player
Elijah Taylor for a major breach of
Western Australia's strict quarantine rules while the club was in the state during the
2020 season and his subsequent dismissal from the club at the end of the season for assaulting his ex-partner. • 2021 overhaul of the
Carlton Football Club including the sacking of senior coach
David Teague and chief executive officer Cain Liddle • a reprimand handed to player
Tom Green in the wake of comments he made criticizing Match Review Officer
Michael Christian and the
AFL Tribunal on a since-deleted club podcast. • the investigation into the Greater Western Sydney Giants' 2024 post-season function in which several players behaved inappropriately in a private setting, including the use of distasteful costumes and inappropriate skits. Captain
Toby Greene was fined $5,000 for his lack of leadership,
Josh Fahey was suspended for four matches, and five other players were suspended for two matches each for their roles in the scandal. • the conviction of player
Noah Balta for an assault on a man outside a pub in
Mulwala, New South Wales, in December last year which saw him handed a three-month curfew during which he must remain at his home address between 10:00 pm and 6:00 am, thus excluding him from playing in Richmond's night matches during that period.
Expansion The AFL undertakes assessments of expansion clubs and awarding new licences including: •
Gold Coast Suns •
Greater Western Sydney Giants •
Tasmania Devils (
to commence play in 2028) The AFL owns a stake in the Gold Coast and Greater Western Sydney clubs.
Member club viability The AFL manages a special fund called the Competitive Balance Fund (CBF) since 2004 as a grant of up to
$5 million per club to ensure that member clubs remain financially viable. The system was later changed to the Annual Special Distribution (ASD) of
$6.3 million shared among all clubs, as well as allowing for grants and special concessions, such as payments, to ensure that the AFL member clubs remain viable in the short term. In 2006, the AFL approved a $2.1 million special financial assistance package for
Carlton. In response to clubs increasingly relying on and applying for special funding, in 2008, the AFL recommended removing the fund altogether, ==See also==