THE GAME is being stopped for an average of 41 seconds each time score review technology is deployed, the AFL has revealed. 

Before the season, the AFL said it expected the game to be delayed for no longer than 40 seconds when replay technology was in use. 

There have been 64 scoring reviews this season, and nine times the umpire's call has been corrected - or 14 per cent.

And there have been 8161 scoring shots across all games in 18 rounds, with just two scoring errors.

Gieschen and It's Your Call host Wayne Schwass looked at the three reviews from Saturday night's Carlton-Richmond match, which involved Eddie Betts, Bryce Gibbs and Brock McLean.

"We are happy with what's trending," Gieschen said.

"In that game [Carlton versus Richmond], there were three and they were all close calls, all correct calls.

"Had we got any of those wrong, the result could have been different with a four-point ball game."

Other decisions looked at in this week's episode include the Richmond runner gifting a free kick to Carlton on Saturday night and a second-quarter down-the-field call against Geelong involving Josh Hunt and Andrew Mackie.

They also looked at the tunnelling decision involving Essendon's David Hille and Hawthorn's Ben Stratton, and a holding-the-ball call on Adelaide's Nathan van Berlo.