AFL Goldfields is set to meet with representatives of the Central Highlands Football League board next Wednesday to resolve the long-running player points saga.
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The Courier understands all revised point values for senior players within the competition have now been uploaded into the league’s database.
The subsequent impact of those reevaluations is now being determined.
AFL Goldfields general manager Rod Ward said Wednesday would bring an end to the process.
“We should have had an understanding of the full picture of the impact of those changes (by Wednesday) and agree on a resolution to the matter,” Ward said.
While The Courier believes there is some issues with updating online team sheets for certain matches, the CHFL website currently shows numerous instances where senior sides appear to have breached total point allocations during 2016.
According to the website, 10 of the opening 12 rounds have games that show teams over their points cap.
Daylesford is one club that has been vocal in its pursuit to have the result from the round one encounter against Beaufort overturned. The Bulldogs lost the early-season fixture, but the Crows were subsequently found to have gone over their points allocation.
It is expected potential penalties for breaches will be known by Wednesday.
The re-audit of the league’s player points system followed the discovery earlier in the season of widespread errors in footballer values.
Springbank and Skipton are other clubs that have previously been found to have breached points limits in 2016.