I can t envisage any system in the future where someone is suspended and is eligible for the Brownlow, he said. So I can t imagine that changing. Evans will next present his proposed new system to the AFL Commission in order to have it rubber stamped, most likely for 2015.The changes are expected to see more players dealt fines for minor incidents and eradicate carry-over points. We looked at this last year and came up with a model we thought had some merit, Evans said. But it wasn t quite right, it had a few chinks in it, and we re running that system in parallel this year just to see how that would pan out and it s something again we ll open up (for) debate at the end of the year. But it does look at what we do with the things at the very low end of the grading scale, and it looks at how the match review panel go about grading an incident to come up with a set number of weeks. Fyfe s head clash with Gold Coast s Michael Rischitelli was graded as medium impact, negligent conduct and high contact.Asked if he could have escaped with a fine under the new system, Evans said: No, and it ll be difficult for people to make an assessment of the system until we re ready to really reveal it. For headhigh contact incidents, I think they re always going to come under scrutiny in whatever system we have.