There was annual speculation that poorly performing teams manipulated their results after they were eliminated from finals contention in order to ensure they remained below the eligibility criterion and received a priority pick under the 1993-2011 format; this was referred to as "
tanking." There are a wide variety of behaviours which could be considered to be tanking. These include: • Instructing the players to deliberately lose matches • Employing unusual tactics in matches, including using players in positions where they do not usually play • Playing younger players who do not yet have much experience at AFL level but, when speaking about 's 2007 priority draft pick, assistant coach
Tony Liberatore said he personally thought it was wrong to play younger players in place of senior players whose niggling injuries would not be bad enough to force their omission if the team were playing finals, and in 2009 a betting agency temporarily suspended betting on the wooden spoon when it became concerned about the potential legal ramifications if tanking or other corruption were ever proven.
Statements alluding to tanking In 2011, sacked coach Dean Bailey stated that he coached to "ensure the club was well placed for draft picks" in 2008 and 2009, and admitted to playing players in unusual positions, but he never claimed that the team had deliberately lost matches. In both cases, the statements were seen as an admission of guilt to tanking by some, but in the absence of an explicit directive to deliberately lose, acceptable by others,
Notable matches in the tanking debate ;Round 22, 2007 – Melbourne vs Carlton , which was expected to be used on
Matthew Kreuzer, who was playing as a ruckman and key forward for the
Northern Knights The
Round 22, 2007 match between and , nicknamed the
Kreuzer Cup, was the most controversial match in the tanking debate. It was the last match of the regular season, and both Melbourne and Carlton had a record of 4–17, meaning that whichever team won the match would lose the chance at a priority draft pick, and both clubs had already avoided the ignominy of the
wooden spoon, as had secured it with a final record of 3–18–1. Overall, this meant that there was no benefit for either club to win, but a significant benefit to losing. The stakes were particularly high in Carlton's case, because the club had also received a priority pick in the 2006 season; as such, if it lost this match, it would receive the No. 1 draft pick as its priority pick. In Melbourne's case, the priority pick it could have received would be the No. 18 pick; the No. 1 pick would go to wooden spooners Richmond if Melbourne lost the match. The match became known as the Kreuzer Cup, named after
Northern Knights' ruckman
Matthew Kreuzer, who had been expected to be (and was eventually, by Carlton) selected with the No. 1 pick in the
2007 AFL draft. The match was high scoring, played with low intensity, poor skills and very little defensive pressure, and two players (Carlton's
Heath Scotland and Melbourne's
Travis Johnstone) gathered more than 40 disposals. Melbourne had a five-goal lead by quarter time, and ended up winning the match 21.13 (139) to 15.18 (108). Carlton went on to recruit Kreuzer with the No. 1 pick in the draft. ;Round 18, 2009 – Melbourne vs Richmond Melbourne entered the match with a record of 3–14. Because it had received a priority draft pick in 2008, it had the potential to receive a priority draft pick at the start of the draft if won no more than one of its final five matches. The match was close for much of the game, but Melbourne kicked away to lead by a few goals in the final quarter. Richmond was then able to make a comeback, and an
after-the-siren goal by
Jordan McMahon gave Richmond a four-point win. The
Herald Sun later accused Melbourne coach Dean Bailey of making positional changes in the final quarter which were so nonsensical that they could only have been designed to ensure Richmond would make a comeback: this included moving key defenders
James Frawley and
Matthew Warnock into the forward-line, resting key midfielders, and using
Brad Miller as a ruckman. In late 2012 and early 2013, Melbourne was thoroughly investigated for its conduct in this and other games which occurred in late 2009. The club was found not guilty of tanking, but were found guilty of bringing the game into disrepute and fined $500,000, with Bailey (who was fired as coach in 2011) being suspended for 16 matches and football operations manager Chris Connelly being suspended for 12 months (22 matches). ==See also==