Melbourne will continue to work with Kysaiah Pickett on honing his on-field aggression after the livewire forward was suspended for the third time in 12 months.
The Demons star will miss Thursday night's blockbuster against the Brisbane Lions at the MCG after receiving a one-match ban for making rough conduct on Adelaide's Jake Soligo.
Pickett jumped off the ground and made contact with his opponent's head during Melbourne's 15-point win at Adelaide Oval on Thursday.
It adds to two suspensions Pickett accumulated last season, including one for an incident with Carlton captain Patrick Cripps in Melbourne's semifinal loss last year and a two-match ban early in the season for a big bump on Western Bulldogs gun Bailey Smith.
"This isn't the first conversation that we've had [with Pickett]," Demons coach Simon Goodwin said on Wednesday.
"He's certainly modified the way he goes about it. He's a high-pressure, high-intensity player, and we love what he brings.
"He has modified what he does … he will continue to improve in that space.
"What we don't want is one of our best players missing games of footy, so we'll keep working with Kozzy.
"What he has got an appetite to do is learn, get better and do it better and that's what we love about him."
At the tribunal on Tuesday night, the club argued Pickett did not intend to bump Soligo but instead was bracing for impact, but tribunal chairman Jeff Gleeson upheld the medium contact charge after less than half an hour of deliberation.
"The contact had the potential to cause injury. A concussion or facial injury was a realistically possible outcome," Gleeson said on Tuesday.
"The impact to Soligo's head was plain to see. He was knocked off his feet and immediately held his face in obvious pain or discomfort."
Pickett did not face the tribunal, but submitted a written statement.
"I was tracking the ball after the centre bounce and was moving towards it when Jake Soligo took possession," the 22-year-old said in the statement.
"When I got close, I raised both of my arms in the air and reached to intercept the ball after Soligo handballed.
"My intention was to catch the ball. I collided with Soligo and then followed the ball to make the next contest until the umpire blew the whistle.
"I had no intention of bumping Jake Soligo. I was trying to intercept the ball in the air."
The decision comes after the AFL recently amended its smother rule.
Pickett's former teammate, Angus Brayshaw, was knocked out with a concussion during last year's finals when he collided with an airborne Collingwood vice-captain Brayden Maynard, who was attempting to smother the ball.
Brayshaw, 28, was forced into premature retirement on medical advice this year because of multiple concussions suffered throughout his career.
The rule has now been tweaked so that when a player elects to leave the ground in an attempt to smother, any high contact with an opponent that is graded as low impact will be deemed to be careless.
It comes as the AFL deals with an ongoing class action from dozens of former players against the league relating to concussion.
Last week, Richmond star Liam Baker unsuccessfully went to the tribunal to challenge his one-week rough conduct ban, also for high contact.
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AAP