Scenarios when an alert should not be acted on

Scenario 1:

A match kicks off at 14h05 and an alert displays on the iPad 2 minutes into the match with a timestamp of 13h48. The timestamp indicates that the incident occurred during the warm-up and only appeared on the iPad after kick-off. Therefore, the MDD should clear the alert and the player would not undergo an HIA1.

Scenario 2:

A women’s match kicks-off at 14h00 and an alert is registered on the iPad at 14h35, with a recorded magnitude of 55g and 3000rads/s². From reviewing the magnitude of the impact you can see it is below the women’s threshold (≥ 65g; ≥ 4500rads/s²), therefore, the MDD should clear the alert and player not undergo HIA1. Post-match, Prevent will look into this case and prevent this happening again for this player's iMG.

Scenario 3:

A women's match kicks off at 16h00, and an alert appears at 16h12 for Laura Smith from England, registering 68g and 4675rads/s². Upon approaching the bench, the team doctor confirms that Laura is not on the field but is in the in-goal area practicing kicks, as she's on the bench. You notice her IMG is in her sock. This alert should be cleared by selecting CLEAR ALERT, with a reminder to Laura from the team staff to keep the mouthguard in her mouth and avoid placing it in her sock during warm-ups.