Since you've openly admitted you watch little to no matches a week, yet claim to be an expert on the matter, I think I'm going to back in mine and Rowsus' interpretation of how a tackle is rewarded, gathered from watching several matches a week for many years, over your interpretation.
A lot of the tackles you're claiming usually can get counted as tackles, yes, but they get fixed during the quarter time breaks. -4 (a tackle is 4 in DT) is the most common change to see occur to a players DT score during the breaks.
How thought of you to analyse one of my comments from months ago.
It's all relative. Just because I don't mean as many games as before, or that in my opinion I 'rarely watch games nowadays", it doesn't mean the number of games isn't enough for me to identify a number of inconsistencies in the scoring, it just means I watch 1 game a week instead of 3, and when I do watch, I watch carefully.
If I can find such quantity of unexplained scoring in 1 games, then imagine what happens and how triggered I'll be if I had to watch more games. You understand this notion right?... Watching 1 game a week out of a possible of 9 (11%) to a normal person should be "rarely watched", but 1 game a week accumulated for 22 rounds, and many years combined is easily large enough of a sample to base my opinions on.
It's not just me either, IDIG and many others have also identified similar sort of scoring behaviour.
Rowsus is a fantastic statistician, and he deserves credit where it belongs. However if I recall correctly, he does not live in Australia all year around, and the foreign country where he resides in does not have access to all AFL matches either. I'm not sure how many games he watches a week, and it's also fair enough that he relies on online articles if he doesn't have the opportunity to watch the games and observe himself, but that sort of authority/knowledge doesn't apply here, and one should not blindly accept his opinion without individual assessment just because
-it's what Rowsus said-