THREE players from two clubs face one-match bans after the AFL Match Review Panel assessed incidents from round seven matches.

Geelong's Mathew Stokes, and Essendon pair Nathan Lovett-Murray and Adam McPhee, have all been offered one match suspensions, none of which can be reduced with an early plea because of poor previous records.

Cats premiership forward Stokes was charged with striking Brisbane Lions' Michael Rischitelli in the first quarter of Saturday's match at Skilled Stadium, while Lovett-Murray was charged for striking Port Adelaide goalsneak Daniel Motlop at the Telstra Dome on Sunday evening. McPhee was charged with making forceful front-on contact against Travis Boak in the same match.

Three other match day reports from round seven were thrown out, with West Coast's Chad Fletcher (reported for striking Carlton's Nick Stevens), St Kilda's Justin Koschitzke (booked for striking Richmond's Troy Simmonds) and Western Bulldogs' Stephen Tiller (reported for making front-on contact against Sydney's Tadhg Kennelly) having no case to answer.

West Coast's Adam Selwood and former teammate Chris Judd have been fined $900 each for wrestling in the second quarter of Judd's emotional 'homecoming' match for Carlton against the Eagles at Subiaco Oval on Friday night.

The Match Review Panel assessed the following incidents and decided no further action was required:

* Contact between Selwood and Blues' spearhead Brendan Fevola;

* Contact between Eagles' defender Beau Waters and Carlton's Eddie Betts;

* Contact between Collingwood's Marty Clarke and Hawthorn's Simon Taylor;

* Contact between Richmond's Luke McGuane and St Kilda's Nick Riewoldt;

* Contact between Melbourne's Clint Bartram and Fremantle's Shaun McManus.

In related news, AFL Football Operations Manager Adrian Anderson announced the AFL had imposed a $5000 financial sanction on the Essendon Football Club after an approach to the umpires by captain Matthew Lloyd during the quarter-time break of the round seven match against Port Adelaide at Telstra Dome. 

Under AFL Regulation 16.3, players are not permitted to approach the umpires at any quarter break, or when the umpires are entering or leaving the ground.