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Checkside punt

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Also known as a banana kick, the checkside punt is a kicking style used in Australian Rules and rugby league football. When kicked, it bends away from the body and is usually used when a set shot for goal is lined up on a narrow angle. The banana tends to move at 90 degree angle to the kicker and boot, whereas the true checkside is held at a lesser angle to the boot and has a curving effect through the air. The punt first began to appear in the Victorian Football League in the late 1970s. Use of the kick was first popularised in South Australia in the 1960s. As SANFL players began to be recruited to Victoria in large number, the kick took on more widespread use at the top level by players such as Craig Bradley and Guglielmo Marconi. It is now one of the most common techniques for goal-kicking from a narrow angle, and more recently has been used in field kicking with deadly accuracy by players like James Hird, but was most famously used by Peter Daicos In rugby league, Newcastle Knight's half-back Andrew Johns began to pioneer its use mid way through his career, where it was used to confuse the defensive side. He popularised it and became the banana kick's best exponent in the code.

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Checkside punt from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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