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Home»Latest»Collingwood Magpies great Scott Pendlebury escapes without a ban from the AFL Tribunal
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Collingwood Magpies great Scott Pendlebury escapes without a ban from the AFL Tribunal

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auMarch 17, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
Collingwood Magpies great Scott Pendlebury escapes without a ban from the AFL Tribunal
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Remarkably, Pendlebury had only been fined a handful of times. Three offences that resulted in monetary penalties – for rough conduct, tripping and striking – have happened since 2022.

In his evidence, Pendlebury maintained that he had braced for impact and at no stage was he trying to bump Worrell.

Asked when he first saw the Crow, Pendlebury replied: “When the ball hits the deck and changes direction, that’s when I knew that [all the players] were going to collide.

“I brace myself for a collision at that point that I thought was going to be inevitable. If I didn’t brace myself, I thought we were going to knock each other out.”

Collingwood’s player representative, Tom Gastin, primed the veteran AFL player by asking him about the notion of duty of care for opponents.

“When you approach any contest, it’s to look after players around you as the head is sacrosanct,” Pendlebury replied.

Pendlebury said once he had chosen to brace for contact, he started to slow down.

“I think the first reaction, especially with the duty of care, is to decelerate as quickly as possible,” Pendlebury said.

“In real time it happened so quickly – I was just trying to brace for what was inevitable.”

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The veteran Magpie said he first became aware of the level of contact with Worrall the following day when he was told he’d been cited by the AFL’s match review officer.

“Once the incident happened, I didn’t think anything of it,” Pendlebury said.

“It’s never been my intention in my career to try and injure another player.”

Under further questioning from the AFL’s counsel, Albert Dinelli KC, Pendlebury emphasised that he had option but to brace for contact.

“If I feel like I don’t turn my body to brace … we’d both be “open as”, like a split down the middle,” Pendlebury said.

“I think anytime you brace for contact you have to go forward where the hit [impact] is. At that speed, I can’t go backwards.”

The 400 club (from left): Michael Tuck (426 games), Shaun Burgoyne (407), Scott Pendlebury (played his 427th on Saturday night), Dustin Fletcher (400) and Brent Harvey (432). Only Kevin Bartlett (403), who was unavailable, was missing from the exclusive club when this photo was taken.

The 400 club (from left): Michael Tuck (426 games), Shaun Burgoyne (407), Scott Pendlebury (played his 427th on Saturday night), Dustin Fletcher (400) and Brent Harvey (432). Only Kevin Bartlett (403), who was unavailable, was missing from the exclusive club when this photo was taken.Credit: Simon Schluter

Collingwood also tendered evidence showing show Pendlebury’s speed in the incident had slowed – from more than 6km/h down to nearly 1km/h.

“That amount of deceleration is inconsistent with a player trying to bump,” Gaskin said in summation.

“A bump would involve an acceleration of speed, not a deceleration of speed.

“The tribunal has the medical report. Worrell returned to play and ended up being one of Adelaide’s best players.

“We say the contact was not unreasonable.”

Pendlebury’s exemplary record was freely discussed throughout the hearing.

“If the tribunal considers that Mr Pendlebury is guilty of rough conduct, he relies on his exemplary playing record as an exceptional and compelling circumstance which warrants the imposition of a punishment other than suspension,” Gastin said in opening.

Pendlebury has never been suspended.

Pendlebury has never been suspended.Credit: AFL Photos

Collingwood even compared the records of other 400-game AFL players – Shaun Burgoyne, Brent Harvey and Dustin Fletcher – who were suspended for six, 12 and 20 matches respectively across their careers.

Tribunal regulations allow players to argue for leniency based on their record.

The relevant clause reads: “Players will not automatically receive a reduced sanction for a good record. However, if a classifiable offence is contested or referred to the tribunal, a player with an exemplary record may argue that their good record constitutes exceptional and compelling circumstances”.

The Pies veteran is due to equal former North Melbourne champion Harvey’s games record against Essendon on Anzac Day before breaking it the following week against Hawthorn.

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