Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Roos cop horror draw

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 15 Desember 2012 | 22.42

Ryan Bastinac leaves Patterson's Stadium after the Kangaroos were knocked out of the 2012 finals by West Coast. Picture: Justin Benson-cooper Source: The Sunday Times

AFTER climbing peaks in Utah, North Melbourne faces another uphill battle after being ranked with the toughest draw in the AFL.

Champion Data has ranked the difficulty of every club's 2013 draw, with the Kangaroos sitting on top ahead of Grand Finalists Hawthorn, Collingwood and the Western Bulldogs.

Every club's ranking has been reached by totalling the 2012 premiership points from each of their 22 opponents - with five opponents doubling up.

After receiving the fourth easiest draw last year, the Kangaroos' difficulty climbed after being drawn to "double-up" against three top-four sides - Hawthorn, Adelaide and Collingwood. The Roos will also face Geelong twice.

Their combined opposition reached a total of 1036 points, marginally ahead of the Hawks (1028), the Magpies (1004) and Bulldogs (998). Compounding this, the Kangaroos, along with West Coast, have eight six-day breaks - more than any other side.

See the full fixture ladder below

At the other end of the scale, Melbourne has been ranked with the easiest draw. The Demons had a combined opposition total of 912 points, the lowest tally of any club.

Gold Coast (17th) and Brisbane (16th) ranked just above the Demons with the ease of their draw.

Adelaide has also been identified as a big winner with its 2013 draw - for the second year running.

The Crows, who are ranked with the 15th toughest draw, don't play any of their fellow top-four teams twice, but have two meetings against Port Adelaide and the Bulldogs.

EASY STREET

Adelaide has been blessed for the second season. The Crows don't face any other top-four team twice, but they get to play Port Adelaide and the Western Bulldogs twice.

Premier Sydney plays Hawthorn and Collingwood twice, but doubles up on Greater Western Sydney and the mid-range Saints.

To avoid blowouts, seven of the eight finalists don't play GWS or Gold Coast twice during the year.

Carlton and Richmond each play one just finalist twice - the only sides drawn that way without finishing in the bottom four last season.

See the full 2013 fixture here

SIX-DAY BREAKS

Geelong faces a tough opening month, playing Hawthorn, Carlton and Sydney away in the first four rounds, with three consecutive six-day breaks in this time. The Cats don't play at Simonds Stadium until Round 10 because of the ground redevelopment.

North Melbourne and West Coast have eight six-day breaks - more than any other side.

HOW YOUR SIDE RANKS

(draw ranked from toughest to easiest based on total 2012 premiership points by 2013 opponents)

1 North Melbourne (1036)
2 Hawthorn (1028)
3 Collingwood (1004)
5 West Coast (988)
6 Geelong (982)
7 Sydney (976)
8 Fremantle (970)
9 Carlton (968)
10 Essendon (966)
= 11 Port Adelaide (962)
= 11 Richmond (962)
= 11 St Kilda (962)
14 GWS (942)
15 Adelaide (938)
16 Brisbane Lions (916)
17 Gold Coast (914)
18 (Melbourne)


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Boost for Eagles as Shuey signs on

STAYING ON: West Coast's Luke Shuey has re-signed with the club for two seasons. Picture: Daniel Wilkins Source: PerthNow

WEST Coast midfielder Luke Shuey has resisted the temptation to return home to Victoria, re-signing with the Eagles for two more years.

The gun midfielder was hot on the radar of several Melbourne-based clubs looking to lure home one of the competition's premier young ball-winners.

But it is understood the 22-year-old agreed to a contract worth about $500,000 a season, making the 52-gamer one of the AFL's top-paid players for his age.

Shuey, who finished second to Essendon's Dyson Heppell in last year's Rising Star award, made the commitment with one year remaining on his current deal.

It ties the classy right-footer to West Coast until the end of 2015, in a major coup for a club intent on making a genuine tilt at next year's premiership.

Shuey's manager, Nick Gieschen from Elite Sports Properties, would not comment yesterday, but is believed to have signed off on the new contract last week.


West Coast officials have lauded Shuey for his character after overcoming a nightmare injury run and the tragic death of his sister Mel shortly after he was drafted with pick No.18 in 2008.

From Oakleigh, Shuey has since become one of the club's key midfield pillars, finishing fifth in the Eagles' best-and-fairest award after his stunning 2011 season.

He backed it up in 2012 averaging 23 touches and a goal over 21 games.

Shuey was a priority signing for West Coast after the departure of fellow young midfielders Koby Stevens (Western Bulldogs) and Tom Swift (retired) at the end of the season.

Meanwhile, Champion Data has ranked West Coast's draw fifth-toughest in the AFL next season. The Dockers' draw is rated eighth-hardest.

After climbing peaks in Utah, North Melbourne faces another uphill battle after being ranked with the toughest draw.

Champion Data has ranked the difficulty of every club's 2013 draw, with the Kangaroos sitting ahead of grand finalist Hawthorn, Collingwood and the Western Bulldogs.

Every club's ranking has been reached by totalling the 2012 premiership points from each of their 22 opponents  with five opponents doubling up.

-with Rebecca Williams


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Players to speak on drugs

Eagle Adam Selwood marks in attack. Picture: Daniel Wilkins Source: The Sunday Times

WEST Coast players' delegate Adam Selwood says players are determined to have their say at next month's AFL drugs summit.

As debate swirls around the league's contentious illicit drugs policy, the AFL Players Association discussed the issue at its annual directors and delegates conference on Friday.

Selwood said players discussed the importance of their views being well represented at the summit.

"We are pretty keen and eager to make sure we have players in attendance to make sure that our voice is heard, that they understand the situation of players and everything else that goes along with it," he said.

"With the clubs, if there is an issue out there, we want to help it. And also, we're concerned with the players' wellbeing while they're in the game, but also post their career as well.

"If there are changes (to the policy), we want to be as proactive as we possibly can and we want to get as many guys in this summit to express their views."

Selwood said he was comfortable with the AFL's illicit drugs policy as it stands, but the players remained open to finding ways to improve the system.

"We are all in agreeance that the policy is set up for the right reasons and that's (to) try and help people who may have issues or that may have had an event that happened with an illicit drug," Selwood said.

"The numbers are extremely low ... Can we make the policy better?

"Obviously it has come to light in the last few months that maybe changes can be made."


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Young gun bonds as Dees feel heat

Aaron Davey shows youngster Dominic Barry the ropes on an Abrams tank at Robertson's Barracks in Darwin. Picture: Justin Sanson Source: Northern Territory News

ALICE Springs' speedster Dominic Barry feels a sense of belonging at Melbourne after completing a gruelling training venture in the Top End yesterday.

The 18-year-old joined the Demons in a pre-draft trade with Greater Western Sydney and was thrust into a nine-day camp designed to build physical and mental strength.

The squad completed a 35km trek through Kakadu National Park a week after a first training session was cut short because of sapping heat and humidity on the hottest December day in Darwin for 36 years.

Barry said there was a noticeable difference within the playing group when they left the Territory yesterday.

"It was good to bond with all the boys, because on these sort of trips there is nowhere to hide," he said.

"Alice Springs is as far (north) as I go, so I'm one of the boys that are unfamiliar with this weather and I'm in the same position as the other guys.

"Everyone is told to get out of their comfort zones on these trips, so I think everyone contributed in a way to help the team. On the walk, there were a few younger boys lifting the older ones up, and that's what it's all about."

Pic gallery: Dees' Top End commando course

Fellow Territorian Aaron Davey, 29, said the midfielder had taken his AFL journey in his stride.

"It's always good to have more indigenous boys at the club, obviously with Aussie (Wonaeamirri) and Liam (Jurrah) gone," he said. "Dom has fitted in well and gotten on with all the boys."

GEELONG recruit Josh Caddy did his best to make an immediate impact on his new captain Joel Selwood by breaking the skipper's nose at their Falls Creek training camp on Friday.


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Suns gun recruit moves like Jaeger

RISING STAR: New AFL sensation Jaeger O'Meara cools off at the end of training at Kurrawa beach. Picture: Glenn Hampson Source: PerthNow

HE'S got the rock-star name and the game to match.

Recruiters call him the next Chris Judd and say he can virtually play anywhere and do anything.

And 103 days before the WA teenager makes a likely Round 1 debut for Gold Coast against St Kilda, he's already been installed as the favourite for next year's NAB Rising Star Award.

The excitement has been building around Jaeger O'Meara since he kicked four goals in a classy WAFL debut for Perth in August 2011.

For a youngster surrounded by hype, he either does a brilliant impersonation of someone who hasn't been affected or he's not affected one bit.

With fate sending him to the Gold Coast a year earlier than draft age via the 17-year-old mini-draft, O'Meara could hardly be better prepared for his debut season.


He's spent the past 12 months getting his body and mind ready for his AFL entrance in the relative anonymity of Queensland, something O'Meara sees as a blessing.

"I like to stay pretty low-key, so it definitely suits me being on the Gold Coast. It's a lot more relaxed," he said.

"They say time flies when you're having fun, so I'm definitely having a lot of fun.''

The "next Judd" tag has been thrown at O'Meara in enough interviews for an answer to be virtually rehearsed.

"It's definitely very humbling, but I'm yet to play an AFL game," he said.

"I think those comparisons are slightly premature.''

Rising Star expectations are similarly batted away.

"It's not in my thoughts too much; I'm not much of a punter myself," he said.

What is in O'Meara's thoughts, though, is football. The Dongara product says he loves the game and has done ever since his dad put a footy in his hands at the age of five.

O'Meara's 2012 campaign for the Suns' reserves was interrupted by groin and hernia problems, but last season was always about preparing for the big time.

"They told me they don't really like to call it OP (osteitis pubis) anymore, but they term it as chronic groin pain," he said.

"I think it comes down to probably getting into the gym and heavy weights with a bit of a weak core, so I've been doing a lot of work on my core.

"I struggled with it for a little while and I just needed to get it done. I haven't felt any pain in my groin since surgery, so I'm pretty confident in it.

"That's something I've had to learn along the way. I've learnt a lot about my body in the time that I've been in rehab, so even though it was a negative, I probably looked at it as a bit of a positive as well."

Having used his time at the club to add another 7kg of muscle to his already strong 184cm frame, O'Meara is ready to go in every sense.

"I'd be happy to play anywhere, but my favourite position would be in the midfield," he said.

"I like to be in the thick of things and if there's a spot for me there then I'll be taking it with both hands.

"I feel as though I can play inside mid or outside mid, depending on where the coaches like to play me."

O'Meara, who will turn 19 on the day the Suns begin their NAB Cup campaign against Brisbane and Hawthorn, was allowed a taste of senior football during the last pre-season competition before being barred from playing in the season proper.

He didn't look out of place, but is confident he'll be far better prepared 12 months on.

"They say NAB Cup is probably AFL at about 60 per cent," O'Meara said.

"It was still pretty fast for me. It was definitely a step up from WAFL footy and I'm sure that once I do eventually get a game in the home-and-away season then it's going to be another step up."

O'Meara prefers to talk about the team rather than himself and it's clear he appreciates the timing of his entry.

With what were designed to be Gold Coast's two most difficult seasons out of the way, the Suns' lofty goals were recently outlined by chairman John Witheriff, who's targeted a premiership within three years.

"We need to improve as a team and I think this time of year is all about working hard and smashing yourself," O'Meara said.

"We've still got a few gains we need to achieve and we're going the right way about it at the moment. Hopefully by Round 1 we'll be fit and firing to go.

"The boys are coming into their third years now, so they know what AFL footy's all about and they've definitely shown that they can compete against the big clubs.

"Hopefully we can take that into this year and we can keep going with that for the next few years and maybe even win a premiership."

While O'Meara has been compared to Judd, it's another Brownlow medallist - Gold Coast skipper Gary Ablett - who he's more likely to model his game on.

"He can do everything and I'd love to maybe one day become half the player he is because obviously he's a bit of a freak," O'Meara said.

"I've got a lot to learn but I'll pick his brain as much as I can. He's obviously one of the best players in the AFL, if not the best.

"I think he's probably the ultimate package. His willingness to execute skills at AFL pace at training is something that I've taken from him.

"He leads by example and he also tells boys how they can do things better and how they can improve."


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Knee surgery for young Giant

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 14 Desember 2012 | 22.42

Dom Tyson tries to get the ball out of the pack. Picture: Tim Hunter Source: The Daily Telegraph

GREATER Western Sydney midfielder Dom Tyson will miss five months of football after injuring his knee at training.

Tyson ruptured his posterior cruciate ligament on Wednesday and will have surgery in Melbourne next week.

"It was an unfortunate incident caused by a collision with another player as part of a tackling drill," Giants sports science manager John Quinn said.

"There is slight damage to medial ligament but fortunately the ACL is intact and there doesn't seem to be too much collateral damage.

"We looked at all options and determined this was the best course of action. The recovery time from an operation like this is around five months and it is expected that Dom could be back playing in May."

Tyson was recruited from the Oakleigh Chargers with pick three in the 2011 national draft. He played 10 matches in an injury-interrupted 2012 season.

 

22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

2012 countdown: Top 10 goals

The best pictures of the 2012 AFL season

Sydney speedster Lewis Jetta celebrates his incredible goal in the Swans' preliminary final win against Collingwood. Picture: Phil Hillyard Source: Herald Sun

CARLTON speedster Chris Yarran won the official goal of the year, but an even quicker Swan might have gone one better.

Over the next 10 days we'll name the highlights, lowlights and simply strange moments of the year in footy in a countdown of top 10 countdowns (still with us?).

We kicked off the series on Monday with the best 10 AFL games of 2012, and followed that with the top 10 marks yesterday.

Today the countdown continues with the top 10 goals of the year.

Did we get it right? Vote in our poll and leave a comment below

10. James Polkinghorne v West Coast

Torpedo punts that sail through the middle are great to watch any time, and even better when your side is less than a goal down with about 30 seconds to play. That's when Polkinghorne pulled this one out of the bag from inside the centre square against the Eagles in June, pulling off one of the upsets of the season.

James Polkinghorne celebrates his match-winning goal against the Eagles. Picture: Darren England Source: Herald Sun


9. Ahmed Saad v Geelong
This might have been the moment Matthew Scarlett decided 'stuff this, I'm going to leave this to the younger blokes'. Isolated against the Geelong champ in St Kilda's forward 50, Saad gathered the loose ball, turned Scarlett inside-out and burnt him off before snapping truly from the boundary line.

Ahmed Saad kicks a goal ahead of Matthew Scarlett. Picture: George Salpigtidis Source: Herald Sun


8. Luke Breust v Collingwood
Third-man up specialist Jordan Lewis tapped a ball-up towards the boundary line where Breust gathered, spun onto his left and bounced through the goal from next to the behind post. Don't you love it when a plan comes together? It was the third of Breust's five for the day in the Hawks' big win.

Luke Breust celebrates a snapped goal with Jordan Lewis and Cyril Rioli. Picture: Michael Klein Source: Herald Sun


7. Jonathon Griffin v Richmond
An almost identical effort to Breust, with a few extra points for degree of difficulty due to heavy rain and the fact 201cm ruckmen aren't meant to do this kind of thing.

6. Lindsay Thomas v Carlton

The man who couldn't kick a goal from the goalsquare last year picked up a bouncing ball on the boundary line about 55m out and somehow wobbled through a bouncing reverse torpedo. Unfortunately for Lindsay, this game is remembered for another incident when the Carlton captain had a sudden taste for chicken wings. 5. Hayden Ballantyne v West Coast
He's an annoying little man but Ballantyne can play. He was front and centre when Matthew Pavlich spilled a mark in the western derby, pouncing on the ball then shrugging a Will Schofield tackle, dodging Sam Butler then leaving Shannon Hurn sitting on his backside wondering which way the Dockers pest went before slotting the goal on the run. You can imagine the celebration. 4. Lewis Jetta v Western Bulldogs
Hard to believe this guy couldn't buy a goal in his first season. Jetta ran on to a loose ball at half-back, puts on the afterburners and slots the goal from 45m near the boundary after two bounces. We didn't know it at the time, but it was just a teaser of what was to come.

Lewis Jetta in action during the Sydney Swans v Western Bulldogs AFL game at the SCG in Sydney. Picture: Phil Hillyard Source: The Daily Telegraph


3. Chris Yarran v Richmond
Yarran won goal of the year for his Round 1 effort against the Tigers. He took Chris Judd's handball on the wing and shrugged off Ivan Maric then stepped around Steve Morris and goaled from the forward pocket. If only Dustin Martin had chased a little harder ...

Carlton's Yarran snaps a wonder goal from near the boundary line against Richmond. Picture: Michael Dodge Source: Herald Sun


And we won't ruin the party by asking if Yarran took the ball over the boundary line during his explosive run.

Chris Yarran runs along the boundary line on the way to kicking goal of the year against Richmond. Source: Herald Sun


2. Rory Sloane v GWS
The Sloane Ranger lived up to his namesake with his solo effort against the Giants. Gathering at half-back, Sloane sprinted up the wing, taking three bounces before sending an absolute mongrel finger-breaker inside forward 50. He made up for that mistake with his follow-up, grabbing the ball off the boot of Taylor Walker and snapping truly on his left. Although Bernie Vince evidently thought he should have handballed.

Rory Sloane goals against GWS. Picture: Sarah Reed Source: The Advertiser


1. Lewis Jetta v Collingwood
Ineligible for Goal of the Year because it came in a final, but that doesn't bother us. We'll also conveniently overlook the fact Jetta should have been pinged for running too far given he bounced the ball only three times while covering about 90m. But, like a Warwick Capper hanger that technically involves a hand on the shoulder, it was just too good to take off him. And he was moving too fast for anyone to notice anyway. Jetta left scorched turf behind him after he took off from the back of the ANZ Stadium centre square and ran all the way to the goal-line. Kudos to Magpie defender Nathan Brown, who chased Jetta the whole way knowing he was no hope of catching him - and earned himself a cameo in one of footy's great highlight reels.

Sydney's Lewis Jetta burns off his Collingwood opponents to kick an amazing running goal last weekend. Picture: Phil Hillyard Source: The Daily Telegraph

Lewis Jetta at top speed on the way to one of the great finals goals against Collingwood. Source: Getty Images

Sydney's Lewis Jetta celebrates goal against Collingwood in the first preliminary final at ANZ Stadium. Picture: Phil Hillyard Source: The Daily Telegraph

Fox Sports: Vote for the biggest AFL moment of 212 here

TOMORROW: TOP 10 BRAIN FADES OF 2012

Follow Al Paton on Twitter: @al_superfooty


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Power the perfect fit for Darren

Fitness coach Darren Burgess, centre, leads Port Adelaide players through their paces. Picture: Campbell Brodie Source: The Advertiser

Fitness coach Darren Burgess, right, leads the Port Adelaide squad in the scorching heat at Grange. Picture: Campbell Brodie. Source: The Advertiser

THERE'S no point in dancing around the obvious question as you sit down with Port Adelaide's returning fitness coach Darren Burgess at the club's Alberton headquarters.

Why would somebody turn his back on English Premier League club Liverpool, one of the world's biggest sport franchises, to return to Australian football with Port Adelaide?

That is no slight on Port, which is struggling financially, but Australian football is a domestic code and doesn't rate anywhere near the EPL.

An example: In Burgess's time at Liverpool, the club spent $10.4 million on a teenager who had never played a game at the highest level.

That is more than the salary cap for Port Adelaide.

Burgess, whose resume also includes time with the Socceroos during a World Cup campaign, has fielded the questions of his career move before and could not be more comfortable with his choice.

He was not sacked by Liverpool, where it was reasonably assumed he was on bigger coin than at Alberton.

Much of it had to do with his children - Harry, 23 months, and Millie, seven months - and the lifestyle choice can be appreciated.

They were both born over there, but Burgess didn't want them to miss out on growing up in Australia.

"We had a great life over there but it comes a time when you say  ...  to come back to Port Adelaide was too good an opportunity.

"It was all really amicable but I've done it," Burgess said.

"Nothing to me could ever beat going to the World Cup with the Socceroos, being a patriotic Australian soccer fan, but this is a new challenge. Maybe the biggest challenge I've ever had.

"But there's no doubt the climate plays into it. People underestimate that. Australian soccer players who go over to play in Europe - people don't appreciate how hard it actually is.

"Very few Australians have got to that real top echelon and in the north of England  ...  we had five days over 25C in my two and a half years there.

"So you have to make decisions for your family, the kids growing up here.

"I'm proud they were born in Liverpool because it's a great city and they'll always know where they came from but I want them to grow up as Aussies in the sun.

The timing was right and the opportunity to come back was too good to refuse, really

"I'm an Aussie so this is my home. I've been away travelling for the best part of seven years.

"First with the national team and then obviously spending two and a half years with Liverpool.

"And the opportunity to come back to Adelaide was only going to happen this year. The timing was right from that point of view and the opportunity to come back to Port was too good to refuse, really."

There was also a sense of obligation when he first started fielding phone calls from chief executive Keith Thomas.

Burgess left the club in a hasty, but amicable, fashion when his talent was recognised from the outside and he felt he owed the club.

Taking his profession and ambitions aside, he is also a Port man.

"The timing was right and the opportunity to come back was too good to refuse, really," Burgess said.

"It's my team. It's who I go for and it's where I started, more or less, full-time (fitness) work.

"The project that Keith sold to me was a good one, my family and I loved Adelaide. We obviously lived here previously.

"There's no doubt working in the (English) Premier League was my dream, that's why I started studying.

"And then, working for a club like Liverpool, takes it to another level because it's such a big club.

"But you have to understand that over there you play so many games that your ability to really get your teeth into a pre-season, to really periodise loads and get your hands dirty is limited because they play so many games.

"You do a hell of a lot of travelling and, with two young kids, it takes it's toll.

Does the fact that Burgess turned his back on Liverpool and the EPL, one of the biggest games on the planet, mean he has also turned his back on ambition?

Burgess argues to the contrary, saying there is no bigger challenge than what is before him today.

"It depends on how you define it," Burgess said.

"If your ambition is to work in an environment where players and the atmosphere are more glamorous and more worldly recognised - yep, stepped away from that.

"If you want to work in an environment where the work itself is more rewarding, I would say that I've stepped up by coming back to Port. It depends on how you define it.

"And in my work with the Socceroos, the three years I was there, I'd say I'd spent six months travelling and seeing every major soccer team on the planet.

"I went through five different NFL clubs, probably eight or nine NBA clubs, four or five US colleges, South American soccer clubs  ...  I got to see all of that.

"And if I got to choose anywhere to work, from a professional point of view, it would be in Australia, in the AFL. That's what motivates me. To be able to see a team grow.

"And other than the two expansion teams, this is the best team to go to for that sort of project.

"And there's a sense of owing something, because I left the club. There's no hiding from that (even though it was) in a good moment. So in a sense, I want to come back and finish that off."


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Nod to Neil Craig for shaping Crows

Former Adelaide Crows coach Neil Craig is getting credit from new fintess coach Nick Poulos for developing the current squad's work ethic. Picture: Chris Mangan. Source: The Advertiser

ADELAIDE'S new fitness coach Nick Poulos has credited Neil Craig and the previous regime for instilling a sound work ethic into the Crows squad.

With Brenton Sanderson, who still outdoes some of the players by lifting heavier weights in the gym, Poulos has set out to add a new level of punch to the squad.

But he spoke highly of the culture of the Crows, cultured both by Craig and his successor, Stephen Schwerdt, who is now working with the Gold Coast Suns.

Poulos and Schwerdt still compare notes, speak over the phone from time to time, and as much as Poulos is looking for another spark, he is quick to recognise the good work of those before him.

"He was fantastic," Poulos said of Schwerdt. "And we had a really good (fitness) team."

A point of difference: where Craig and his mentor, former national cycling coach Charlie Walsh, were big on endurance and training on stationary bikes, Poulos and Sanderson are looking for a more explosive edge.

But Poulos could not have spoken more highly of the work ethic that Craig and Schwerdt had instilled, and the culture which had been built up from their endeavours.

"This group of players is extraordinarily hard-working and I think that foundation was laid by my predecessor and previous coaches," Poulos said.

"The regime under Neil Craig is something you still have to respect.

"The players, the way they presented themselves when I first arrived at this club - it was just astounding. It was just the attitude they showed.

"They asked the right questions but still, as a playing group, they were prepared to work their a ...  s off.

"They were definitely a good running group but their strength and power needed a lot of work.

"I needed to strip it right back to basics and build from the bottom up.

"Technique is another one. To me, they are still developing."


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Watters issues challenge to Saints

St Kilda coach Scott Watters, left, and captain Nick Riewoldt watch a Denver Broncos training session in Englewood, Colorado. Picture: Dustin Bradford. Source: Getty Images

Lenny Hayes, centre, is working just as hard as every other player at St Kilda pre-season training. Picture: Chris Eastman Source: Herald Sun

LENNY Hayes turns 33 on January 14, is fresh from heart surgery, and is St Kilda's best and fairest player, the Trevor Barker medallist.

Hayes could be forgiven for coasting through what might yet be his final AFL pre-season.

Skip the odd training session, duck out early, and sidestep some of those tiresome meetings and leadership responsibilities.

But not at St Kilda, and not on coach Scott Watters' watch.

Twelve months into his tenure at St Kilda, Watters has issued every player "the challenge".

Watters, speaking on the final day of the club's Colorado training camp, says Hayes must - and will - give more.

As will every player on the Saints list.

"I watched him at a training session today and marvelled at his ability - his one-touch football, the balls coming at him at full pace and the half-volleys. His ball use (is) as exquisite as it normally is," Watters says.

"I don't see any reason why he shouldn't have another strong year like last year.

"The only difference is that last year we eased Lenny back into it, and had him in a mentoring role from a leadership point of view. But the challenge is going back to Lenny this year to put his hand up for the leadership group.

"It is not a discussion I have had with Lenny directly yet, but all our players need to be challenged regardless of age.

"I want Lenny to step up again.

"There are times to step into the leadership group and have a direct impact. One of our themes of the year is looking for the challenge, and just not wanting to accept any sort of mediocrity or complacency.

"So I am challenging all players, if they are 200-gamers or (first-year forward) Tom Lee, to find another level and challenge themselves individually."

If Twitter is a 140character summation, then wrap a bow around those words by Watters, because they encapsulate what St Kilda's new season is all about.

The Saints might have won 12 games last season - and lost five by 13 points or fewer - but you can hear the urgency in Watters' voice.

He might be a man in a hurry, but you get the feeling supporters wouldn't have it any other way.

Those who worried about the prospects of anyone stepping into the vacuum created by Ross Lyon's abrupt departure would have quickly had their fears allayed.

Watters is on his way to transforming a playing list seen to be headed for a cliff, has made minor but successful changes to the team's style of play, and recently took a strong stance on the loss of Brendon Goddard.

Saints' fans are already sold on him, and you can quickly see why.

It is not a discussion I have had with Lenny directly yet, but all our players need to be challenged regardless of age.

Nowhere at St Kilda can you find even a hint the club is resting on its laurels after three Grand Final appearances since 2008.

"There is not a player at the moment who isn't trying to push their own personal boundaries," Watters says.

"We have spoken about how it is easy to become conditioned to acceptable levels of performance.

"The media have their viewpoint on us individually and as a team. All of it is irrelevant.

"It is about them individually challenging themselves daily and as a team, and choosing their own destiny rather than listening to others."

Intentions are one thing, but turning strong words into performances invariably comes down to talent, and that is where the excitement kicks in for the club's football department.

The Saints moved on or lost nine players in the off-season - high-profile midfielder Goddard, the troubled Jason Gram, first-round pick Jason Cripps, and Dean Polo, Brett Peake, Raph Clarke, Sam Crocker, Daniel Archer, and Nicholas Winmar.

In their place came Gold Coast ruckman Tom Hickey, former Fremantle defender Dylan Roberton, WAFL key forward Tom Lee and five young national draft selections.

Goddard will take some replacing but the changes give Watters huge flexibility with his structure.

Now the forward line options include talls Nick Riewoldt, Lee, Rhys Stanley, Justin Koschitzke, Arryn Siposs, Beau Wilkes and, potentially, Sam Gilbert, as well as ground-level terriers Terry Milera, Ahmed Saad, Stephen Milne, and Adam Schneider.

St Kilda couldn't secure West Coast defender Mitch Brown but James Gwilt, 2012 revelation Sean Dempster, Sam Fisher, Tom Simpkin, Jason Blake, Gilbert and Roberton are tall defensive options.

Hickey, Ben McEvoy and, potentially, Koschitzke round out the ruck department, with the midfield strength a given.

"Our list is definitely progressing," Watters says.

"When we look at where we were 12 months ago there were some considerable vulnerabilities and it hadn't been developed for a while.

"So it's a work in progress, but with the players we have brought in we feel there is a starting point for a real foundation which complements our senior players."

You can't digest that statement without considering its relevance to Lyon's list building, but St Kilda wouldn't have revamped its recruiting department and list management if it didn't have issues.

Across every line, there is competition for a spot.

Bottom line: St Kilda won't be falling back on Raph Clarke and his ilk if injuries hit this year.

"The players look at the maths and they look around and they look at the list, and there wouldn't be too many players on our list who would feel comfortable about being in the Round 1 side," Watters says.

"Maybe it hasn't been that tight for a number of years, but it's getting tight."

The chief victim of that selection squeeze might be Koschitzke.

Hickey, McEvoy and Stanley will likely ruck ahead of him and, while Watters isn't so pessimistic about the 30-year-old, he makes no promises.

"Kosi is no different to any player on the list. I am not one that selects on emotion. Players effectively select themselves. Those who are physically prepared and absolutely exhaust every avenue over summer are the ones who show good pre-season form, and they ultimately find their way into the Round 1 side," he says..

"I make no apologies for the competition. It's the game we are in, and it's been a brutally tough and competitive pre-season so far and it will remain that way."

Goddard has three top-four best-and-fairest results (and a ninth) in the past four seasons, yet no one at the club is curled up in a corner struggling to cope with his absence.

This week, Goddard again failed to fully explain his decision to leave, but given the messy circumstances of Luke Ball's departure under Lyon, why did Watters push the money angle?

"I didn't choose to focus on that specific angle. I gave a direct answer to a direct question. I have a lot of time and respect for Brendon. We had, and continue to have, a terrific relationship," Watters says.

"Ultimately, people can speculate on the reasons for (him) wanting to leave and I will leave it to them to speculate. We made what we thought was a really strong offer to Brendon and he made a choice." 

The coach won't be wasting time on players who have left, preferring to focus on how his club climbs the ladder.

Watters believes in the club culture, which starts at the top.

It is hard to envisage Riewoldt not being reappointed captain next month.

The Riewoldt of 2011 was grumpy and sullen, battling knee issues and controversy after controversy.

Just married to partner Catherine Heard, Riewoldt enjoyed a better 2012, kicking 47 goals, and seemed to be in a good place mentally.

"We have had some brief discussions but nothing massive yet," Watters says of the captaincy issue.

"We will cross that bridge in January, but what I thought was a real bonus for the club last year was the way Nick led.

"I don't think it was given as much credence as it (deserved). He really got outside of himself, and had a really positive influence on a number of players.

"His understanding of the captaincy showed a really strong progression."


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

AFL crackdown hits players' pockets

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 13 Desember 2012 | 22.42

The most controversial fine was the $1350 given to Geelong's Josh Hunt (left) for standing on Carlton goalsneak Eddie Betts' hand. Picture: Michael Klein Source: Herald Sun

PLAYERS were fined a staggering $159,850 by the AFL this year for offences ranging from wrestling, engaging in melees, negligent contact with umpires, obscene language and obscene gestures.

Richmond players made the biggest contribution to the league's consolidated revenue for the year.

A total of 15 Tigers paid fines of $27,550, while 14 North Melbourne players were fined $25,950.

The most expensive game for the two clubs was their Round 17 clash when 18 players were fined a total of $27,000 for a quarter-time melee.

Tigers defender Steve Morris unsuccessfully appealed against the match review panel's decision to fine him $1600. It was the only fine given by the tribunal with the bulk - $158,250 - handed down by the match review panel.

Amazingly, Sydney did not have one player fined. Hawthorn had two players, who paid a total of $1800, while Carlton was third on the list with 11 players handing over $22,800.

The most controversial fine was the $1350 given to Geelong's Josh Hunt for standing on Carlton goalsneak Eddie Betts' hand. It was argued that he should have been suspended.In total, 102 players were fined while eight beat their charges.

THE LIST
Team No. players Fine amount

Adelaide 3 $2700
Brisbane 10 $10,500
Carlton 11 $22,800
Collingwood 3 $8100
Essendon 10 $15,000
Fremantle 2 $1800
Geelong 3 $3150
Gold Coast 4 $3600
GWS Giants 6 $8400
Hawthorn 2 $1800
Melbourne 6 $10,800
Nth Melbourne 14 $25,950
Port Adelaide 6 $9600
Richmond 15 $27,550
St. Kilda 2 $1800
Sydney 0 -
West Coast 2 $2700
Western Bulldogs 3 $3600
TOTAL 102 $159,850
 


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Hawks boast AFL's top list

Lance Franklin celebrates as the Hawks win their 2012 preliminary final. New stats suggest they are the team to beat next season. Source: Herald Sun

Hawthorn coach Alastair Clarkson announces Brian Lake has been traded to the Hawks and boosted their defensive powers. Picture: Nicole Garmston. Source: News Limited

THE flag is Hawthorn's to lose, according to a new list-ranking system devised by the AFL's official statisticians.

Champion Data says Alastair Clarkson will coach the most talented list in 2013 as the Hawks seek redemption for last season's heartbreak at the hands of Sydney.

The 2013 AFL Prospectus - the ultimate number-cruncher for football fanatics - has laid bare the quality of each club's playing roster.

Using Champion Data rankings points as a base, for the first time players who played at least five games in the last two years have been given a value.

The top ranked player in each position is rated at 100 points and the bottom rated at zero points, with every other player assessed relative to those in the same position and scaled to fit in-between.

Gold Coast's Gary Ablett, for example, is the top-ranked midfielder and judged to be worth 100 points. The fact the next best onballer, Collingwood's Scott Pendlebury, is back on 92 points highlights how far ahead Ablett is.

Hawthorn's galaxy of stars has given it an average player rating of 56.34 - ranked No.1 in the AFL. The Hawks have star power on every line and have taken their vulnerable defence to a No.2 ranking by acquiring Brian Lake.

But the sleeping giant may well be West Coast, who rank second on the quality index at 54.98. The Eagles bat deep, with 17 players ranking in the top 35 per cent of their positions - two more than any other club.

Premier Sydney sit third with an equal league-low 28 players fitting the five-game criteria in the last two years, highlighting its injury management or good luck.

Incredibly, the Swans have only five players - Jude Bolton, Jarrad McVeigh, Andrejs Everitt, Gary Rohan and Lewis Jetta - who were taken in the top 20 of a national draft when originally brought into the AFL system.

They have killed the bottom-out theory up.

Fremantle are a surprise fourth, driven by a much-improved midfield and a forward line ranked third in the competition despite a lack of key position power.

Collingwood sit fifth, but look ominous. The battle-hardened Pies are now the No.1 list for experience, while remaining only the fifth oldest.

The Magpies boast the best midfield in the AFL with Pendlebury and Dane Swan, but there are questions over their forward line, which ranks just 14th.

Carlton is ninth on the quality ladder and while its midfield strength is no secret (ranked third), its forward line was surprisingly judged to be the second-best in the league.

Jarrad Waite, Eddie Betts and Jeff Garlett boost the Blues' rating, but with Waite often injured and without a legitimate back-up, lack of depth may become an issue.

- 2013 AFL PROSPECTUS order at championdata.com.au for $39.95 (RRP). Free delivery for pre-orders before Christmas (within Australia). Deliveries around mid-January, in bookstores February.

HOW YOUR CLUB RATES

ADELAIDE
Defenders 6th
Midfield / Rucks 4th
Forwards 7th
LIST QUALITY 6th

-

BRISBANE
Defenders 9th
Midfield / Rucks 14th
Forwards 15th
LIST QUALITY 14th

-

CARLTON
Defenders 14th
Midfield / Rucks 3rd
Forwards 2nd
LIST QUALITY 9th

-

COLLINGWOOD
Defenders 5th
Midfield / Rucks 1st
Forwards 14th
LIST QUALITY 5th

-

ESSENDON
Defenders 7th
Midfield / Rucks 10th
Forwards 5th
LIST QUALITY 8th

-

FREMANTLE
Defenders 10th
Midfield / Rucks 5th
Forwards 3rd
LIST QUALITY 4th

-

GEELONG
Defenders 1st
Midfield / Rucks 8th
Forwards 12th
LIST QUALITY 7th

-

GOLD COAST
Defenders 15th
Midfield / Rucks 17th
Forwards 16th
LIST QUALITY 16th

-

GREATER WESTERN SYDNEY
Defenders 16th
Midfield / Rucks 18th
Forwards 18th
LIST QUALITY 18th

-

HAWTHORN
Defenders 2nd
Midfield / Rucks 9th
Forwards 1st
LIST QUALITY 1st

-

MELBOURNE
Defenders 12th
Midfield / Rucks 16th
Forwards 8th
LIST QUALITY 13th

-

NORTH MELBOURNE
Defenders 11th
Midfield / Rucks 11th
Forwards 9th
LIST QUALITY 11th

-

PORT ADELAIDE
Defenders 18th
Midfield / Rucks 12th
Forwards 17th
LIST QUALITY 17th

-

RICHMOND
Defenders 13th
Midfield / Rucks 6th
Forwards 6th
LIST QUALITY 10th

-

ST KILDA
Defenders 8th
Midfield / Rucks 13th
Forwards 13th
LIST QUALITY 12th

-

SYDNEY
Defenders 3rd
Midfield / Rucks 2nd
Forwards 11th
LIST QUALITY 3rd

-

WEST COAST
Defenders 4th
Midfield / Rucks 7th
Forwards 4th
LIST QUALITY 2nd

-

WESTERN BULLDOGS
Defenders 17th
Midfield / Rucks 15th
Forwards 10th
LIST QUALITY 15th


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Saints in second pitch for Mitch

St Kilda still want to bring in West Coast's Mitch Brown despite an abortive attempt to sign him recently. Picture: Daniel Wilkins Source: PerthNow

ST KILDA coach Scott Watters has signalled his determination to lure West Coast defender Mitch Brown to the club in 12 months after the recent aborted trade.

The Saints were desperate to recruit Brown, but an obstinate Eagles coaching panel refused, despite conceding they couldn't guarantee him a game next year.

In the end, a last-gasp deal looked likely to be struck until West Coast's nominal replacement - Essendon's Cale Hooker - decided against leaving Windy Hill.

Brown will be out of contract at the end of next year, and Watters revealed the Saints would have significant salary cap space.

Both Jason Gram - now departed - and veteran forward Justin Koschitzke are on hefty deals that expire after next season, with Brendon Goddard rejecting a three-year contract to make him St Kilda's highest earner. It means for the first time in his stint at St Kilda, Watters can afford a big fish.

"There is still work to do (on our list) but we feel better placed than 12 months ago, and at the end of next year we will be in a pretty aggressive position to potentially make further changes," he told the Herald Sun.

"The reality is Mitch is a contracted player, so we respect the stance West Coast took. So we have no bitterness towards them. We had a player desperate to come to our club and saw him as a good prospect when he was ultimately playing at a club he didn't really want to be at, so that's part of the business.

"There is no doubt in 12 months' time we will be looking to add to our key defensive posts."

With free agency, trade and draft periods now over, the AFL will review its processes, but AFL chief Andrew Demetriou has already thrown his weight behind the new set-up.

Hawthorn was furious that it received no real compensation for Clinton Young, and could put forward the potential remedy that clubs get compensation for restricted free agents but not unrestricted free agents.

The free agency period was also seen to drag on too long, but overall almost every player bar Brown was able to get to their destination of choice.


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Truth of AFL drug testing

AFLPA chief executive Matt Finnis lays it down about the code's Illicit Drugs Policy. Source: Herald Sun

ILLICIT drugs will be an issue in football for as long as they are an issue in society. There will always be debate on the best way to combat illicit drug use by a small minority of AFL players.

Unfortunately it seems there will always be people who want to spread misinformation about the issue and muddy the waters with sensationalised claims.

The first mistake made by people who should know better is to besmirch our game by collapsing the use of performance enhancing and illicit drug use (colloquially known as party drugs).

The Illicit Drugs Policy is not about performance enhancing drugs. The AFL is subject to the WADA policies and testing regime that all other sports are subject to.

For the AFL Players' Association the use of illicit drugs outside competition is a serious health issue, and is the reason why we signed up to Australia's first and most significant policy to monitor the use of illicit drug-taking.

The AFL's Illicit Drug Policy has the support of the players who recognise that drug use is a serious issue. That is why they have agreed to be tested out of competition - in their private lives.

This is a measure that few, if any, employees in other fields submit to.

Despite this there are always accusations that the testing policy is too soft, or is about protecting players from the consequences of their actions.

This couldn't be further from the truth. The IDP is about identifying players with drug problems and supporting them.

If you discovered your child, sibling, or friend was damaging their health with illicit drugs, would you immediately call the police and tell their employer, or would you try to get them the help that they need?

The policy's approach to players who test positive to illicit drugs out of competition provides a balance that first requires players with drug issues to get help, and then punishes them if they reoffend.

The IDP does not apply to players recording positive to illicit drugs in an in-competition test, they face immediate sanctions because of the potential performance enhancing effects of some illicit drugs.

Let's dispel some other myths about the IDP.

Are all players randomly tested for illicit drug use? Yes.

Are players target-tested on the basis of at-risk periods and personal circumstances? Yes.

Are players' hair samples taken upon return from annual leave to discover possible illicit drug use during holiday periods? Yes.

Is the senior medical officer at a club notified of every positive test result, including the player's identity? Yes.

Is the club chief executive notified if there are multiple positive test results among players at a particular club in a short period of time? Yes.

Are all players who record a positive test subjected to a medically-based intervention followed by further target-testing? Yes.

We do not need posturing and speculation by officials and the media about abuse by certain players or the behaviour of young footballers in general, to understand the dangers posed by illicit drugs

We certainly do not need the contributions of those who might choose to elevate brand and reputational issues above the genuine welfare of players.

It is ridiculous and self-serving to blame the testing regimen for the fact that a small minority of players have used illicit drugs.

In developing the policy the players were fully aware that it was only one part of creating a workplace culture with clear values and standards to be upheld.

The idea that a club is powerless to act on illicit drugs because the CEO or president isn't informed when a player first fails a drug test is a cop out.

We recognise there will be room for improvements to the policy.

The decisions which young men and women make to experiment or regularly use illicit drugs remain a mystery to many of us - particularly so when such decisions risk a person's career and reputation, let alone their health and possibly their life.

But these decisions are made by people of all ages outside the AFL.

To try and exaggerate the level of drug use by AFL players, or to argue it is unique to the code, or to say the problem is the Illicit Drugs Policy puts blame in all the wrong places.

A sensible discussion, with the support of players and the involvement of experts would surely be the way to go. It is a discussion that our players and their association have been happy to have.


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Top doc at AFL drugs meeting

Medical Director Dr Peter Harcourt has been called in by the AFL Players' Assn to discuss illicit drugs in the game. Picture: Andrew Tauber Source: Herald Sun

THE AFL Players Association has invited league medical director Dr Peter Harcourt to provide his insight on the illicit drugs issue at a meeting today.

The players will discuss the illicit drugs policy at their annual meeting of directors and delegates in Melbourne.

Players Association chief Matt Finnis said it would help clarify the players' contribution to the AFL's drugs symposium next month.

"One of the benefits of the policy is we can invite Dr Peter Harcourt along to share his insight and experiences in administering the policy," Finnis said.

"He can talk to the players about the experiences of the players he is dealing with who have tested positive, he can talk about changes in trends, any concerns he has, any recommendations in relation to its on-going use.

Dr Harcourt's invitation came as Finnis urged critics to stop focusing on the illicit drugs policy as the problem in the debate.

Collingwood premiership player and reformed drug addict Gavin Crosisca was the latest to buy into the debate this week, urging the AFL to revamp its drugs policy.

"It concerns the players that people are quick to focus on the policy as being part of the problem when, in fact, the policy is part of the solution," Finnis said.

"A policy is not the panacea. It's just part of a framework, which is also dependant upon the way in which clubs develop cultures and behavioural standards."

Finnis believed the policy had been successful, but the players were open to ways in which it could be improved.

"If you look at it in terms of a global picture, you would have to say the policy has been successful over its existence," Finnis said.


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

We want to get better: McVeigh

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 12 Desember 2012 | 22.42

Sydney Swans co-captain Jarrad McVeigh faces the media with new signing Kurt Tippett. Picture: Phil Hillyard. Source: The Daily Telegraph

SYDNEY co-captain Jarrad McVeigh was quick to make a fuss over Kurt Tippett as the club assessed the signing of the former Crow ahead of his first training session with his new club yesterday.

When addressing the signing, the Swan's key message was improvement.

"We want to improve as a group," McVeigh said.

"Just because we won the premiership doesn't mean we don't want to get better.

"We see Kurt as a long-term player and we're rapt to have him at the club.

"After a hectic couple of months, we can get out there today and get back to what back to what he knows best and that's playing footy.

"It's an exciting time for the club. We do want to improve as a group and to get a player of Kurt's calibre - we need to boost our big guys department, in the forward line and ruck.

"We see Kurt as a one of those players and a long-term player for us.

"We know the way he plays, we know he trains hard and works hard and we expect that from him.

"He'll earn the players' trust the way he goes about it over the next few months and hopefully when he can get out on the park he'll have the players' trust and we can get on with it."


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Open up on AFL drug use: Crosisca

Former Collingwood footballer Gavin Crosisca is urging the AFL to change its policy on drug use. Picture: Ian Currie. Source: Herald Sun

REFORMED drug addict Gavin Crosisca has urged the AFL to revamp its illicit drugs policy, warning players are no longer afraid of the penalties.

Crosisca is determined to help the fight against drugs.

The former Collingwood player, who has been clean since May 2011, recently confessed he had spent 25 years as a player and coach addicted to amphetamines, cannabis and alcohol.

Crosisca, 44, yesterday volunteered to be involved in the AFL's drugs symposium next month, hopeful the league would assemble a panel of drug and alcohol experts and throw the forum open to the public.

The 1990 premiership player said if the AFL stuck with a three-strikes drugs policy, there must be greater disincentives for first and second strikes and fewer loopholes.

Crosisca, an assistant coach at Carlton as recently as 2008, is concerned that players can dodge strikes by repeatedly self-reporting drug use, and avoid tests while receiving counselling for a second strike.

My addiction was hidden ... if someone had confronted me it would have brought the issue to attention more quickly

"The AFL have been doing the best they can, but this is a great opportunity to bring this into the public forum, and do more," he told the Herald Sun.

"I have had a good look at the AFL's illicit drugs policy and it's about five years old and there is a real opportunity for them to revamp that.

"My addiction was hidden. Looking back, if someone had confronted me it would have brought the issue to attention more quickly. After your first strike someone needs to be told, not just AFL club medicos and the club doctor.

"Kids need help straight away, even if it's a one-off.

"The reason why players aren't afraid of it is there are no consequences.

"They aren't strong enough for them to be fearful of it.

"For a second strike you get a $5000 fine and a suspended six-match sentence and your club chief executive finds out.

"But without your coach knowing, or at least your welfare officer or chaplin, we are just hoping."

Players cannot play while receiving counselling after a second strike, but Crosisca said only a freak occurrence, such as Hawthorn's Travis Tuck being caught by police with drugs, would lead to three strikes.

Crosisca, who regularly attends Narcotics Anonymous meetings, has had extensive discussions with people in the drug and alcohol fields about the AFL's issues.

"I would be the first to put my hand up and would love to be involved in some way in the (symposium)," he said.


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Drug test wake-up call for Pies

Collingwood onballer Dayne Beams - one of the players woken by an early morning drug test in Utah. Picture: Wayne Ludbey. Source: The Advertiser

COLLINGWOOD'S overseas pre-season camp has been interrupted by an early morning drugs test.

The Pies were woken at 6.30am yesterday in Utah's Park City for surprise blood and urine testing.

A group of players, including Harry O'Brien, Dane Swan, Scott Pendlebury, Dayne Beams and Darren Jolly, were all made to undergo tests in the team hotel before sunrise.

The rude awakening - ironically on a designated "sleep-in" day - caused a flurry of Twitter activity.

O'Brien tweeted: "Nice 6.30am wake up call from the drug testers. @swandane noted: "They aren't the most popular people right now."

Vice-captain Pendlebury said: "630 blood test and drug test isn't ideal on the day u get a sleep in. #bigfan".

It caused coach Nathan Buckley to chime in with: "That's life as a professional H #smallpricetopay".

Collingwood players were tested on at least one earlier trip to Arizona and drug testers showing up at clubs' pre-season camps isn't unusual.

The tests come ahead of an AFL-agreed drugs symposium after calls for action by Collingwood chief executive Gary Pert.

Pert last month raised serious concerns about a growing illegal drug culture in football.


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Kurt must earn Swans' respect

Kurt Tippett prepares for his first training sessions with the Sydney Swans. Picture: Matt King. Source: Getty Images

KURT Tippett can't relax just yet.

After an incredibly turbulent off-season, the 25-year-old power forward must now overcome another major hurdle before he can settle into his new Sydney home - earning the respect and trust of the most fiercely loyal playing group in the AFL.

Tippett officially became a Swan yesterday after wearing Swans colours and training with teammates for the first time. But he is not one of the boys, yet.

Swans co-captain Jarrad McVeigh said yesterday Tippett still has to prove himself.

"We've got a set of behaviours that we like to live by and we'll go through all that kind of stuff over the next few months," McVeigh said.

"All the boys that come through, you want to earn the respect of your peers and that's what you want out of footy.

"You do that by training hard, doing all the right things and then when game day comes you look after your mate and if Kurt can do that and the other boys can do that they'll get a game."

(Kurt will) earn the players' trust the way he goes about it the next few months

He has not got off to a great start, suspended for the Swans' first 11 matches of the AFL season, including all pre-season matches which will only see him available to debut for the club in round 13 against Port Adelaide on June 22.

Tippett was banned from playing any form of football by the AFL for his involvement in salary cap breaches and draft tampering with former club Adelaide.

However, McVeigh said the club has no trepidation about Tippett's character.

"We see Kurt as a long-term player for us," he said.

"We know the way he plays. We know he trains hard and works hard. We expect that from him. He'll earn the players' trust the way he goes about it the next few months.

"Hopefully, in round 12 or whatever it is that he can get out on the park, he'll have the players trust and we can get on with our business."

Tippett yesterday admitted it has been a difficult few months for him since leaving Adelaide in a messy exit, but vowed to earn the trust of his teammates through determination on the training pitch.

"It's been a long off-season with a few little challenges," he said.

"It's fantastic to be here and meet the players and coaches. I'm looking forward to playing football.

"There was a little bit of time where I guess my future was a little bit unclear, but it's fantastic to be here. I look forward to playing football, settling in, training hard, preparing myself well and earning the guys trust over summer.

"It's been a challenge for myself and my family, but I'm happy to put all that behind me now and I'm really excited to be here in Sydney.

"I've got to come in with a good attitude towards getting better and making sure I'm at my best when I can play."

Tippett has signed only a two-year deal with the club after nominating terms for a two-season deal in the pre-season draft for fear of being plucked by a team he did not want to go to.

However, the Swans will commence talks with Tippett's manager Peter Blucher as early as next month to discuss extending his deal to four years - as the club originally hoped to do.


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Jetta's journey proof of value

Sydney Swans star Lewis Jetta celebrates after the siren in the 2012 AFL grand final. Picture: Phil Hillyard. Source: Herald Sun

INDIGENOUS educator Gerard Neesham says AFL clubs should keep faith with talented Aboriginals, pointing to Sydney star Lewis Jetta as the poster boy for second chances.

The issue of indigenous recruitment has flared again, with a handful of talented players overlooked in recent drafts because of perceived problems with their character.

The Herald Sun revealed yesterday Essendon could not consider Perth teenager Dayle Garlett, because he went on a 4am bender in Perth only three days before the pre-season draft.

Garlett will return to play at WAFL club Swan Districts. That club's football manager, Phil Smart, criticised AFL clubs for being hypocritical.

He attacked AFL multicultural manager Jason Mifsud, saying his club had not received a phone call from the league official for two years, despite Garlett's problems.

Neesham, whose Clontarf Academies have helped 3000 indigenous boys across 54 schools, said AFL clubs should not back off.

"The classic is Lewis Jetta," Neesham said.

"We picked him up and put him in our program when he was turning 16 and he finished year 12 at 19.

"Lewis wasn't even at school . . . he was disconnected from mainstream society and then he came into our program and became a fantastic story."

Smart said Mifsud needed to spend more time at grass-roots level.

"We have had a couple of issues with a couple of boys who were in the AIS and we have had no contact from Mifsud," he said.

"We have had contact from (game development manager) Kevin Sheehan, who has been very helpful, but Mifsud is in charge of indigenous development and we have not had one phone call from him."


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Garlett wrecks chance to be a Bomber

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 11 Desember 2012 | 22.43

Dayle Garlett, left, in action for WAFL club Swan Districts. Pcture: Kerris Berrington. Source: PerthNow

A LEADERSHIP group decision on Monday night and a 4am bender in Fremantle last weekend combined to dash Perth teenager Dayle Garlett's hopes of being drafted by Essendon.

Garlett trained with the Bombers last week and, while his form did not overwhelm them, they were still considering him until his weekend exploits.

The Bombers were aware Garlett's return to Perth at the weekend would be a test of his dedication.

But Garlett, whose reputation has tarnished his exceptional talent, effectively sealed his fate with his night out on the town.

Essendon's leadership group was consulted and voted against Garlett being given a place on the list.

The Bombers instead selected Gippsland Power midfielder Will Hams after a brilliant 2km time-trial performance and put delisted forward Ariel Steinberg on the rookie list.

Another Perth teenager, Shannon Taylor, impressed Essendon with his character, but because of his fitness he will play for WAFL club Claremont next season in the hope of making the AFL in 2014.

Profiles of every recruit in the Draft Tracker

AFL recruiters across the league are saddened by the lack of progress of a band of junior WA players who seemed likely to set the competition alight until their progress flat-lined in recent seasons.

They include Garlett, Taylor, and Chris Yarran, who was awarded the Kevin Sheehan Medal at the 2010 Under-16 Championships but was not taken in any draft this year.

One AFL recruiting boss yesterday suggested AFL multicultural boss Jason Mifsud catch the first plane to Perth to investigate the continuing problems with indigenous recruitment.

But Mifsud said last week it was untrue to say AFL clubs had gone cold on indigenous talents.

"It is a bit narrow isolating it to indigenous players because I think, equally, there would be other talented players who are being asked to improve their level of dedication and discipline," he told the Herald Sun.

"It is only 20 years ago that AFL lists were made up of one per cent of indigenous players.

"We should not forget we've come a long way in a short period of time."
 


22.43 | 0 komentar | Read More

It's Goodes news week for Brett

Western Bulldogs pick up Brett Goodes, the brother of dual Brownlow Medallist Adam, at the pre-season and rookie draft.

Brett Goodes, brother of superstar Swan Adam Goodes, is now a Bulldog. Picture: Michael Klein. Source: Herald Sun

REMINDED that people love a fairytale, Brett Goodes chuckles. "I suppose that's what some people are calling it," he says.

"Yeah, I suppose that's what some people are calling it," Goodes said yesterday.

The 28-year-old journeyman has copped enough knockbacks and years of being ignored by the top level to know it's much less magical than that.

"You look back at it and a lot of the people you played footy with didn't persevere," Goodes said. "So I suppose it's a great reward for a lot of hard work. I think it can be a bit of a right place, right time industry. I think in this case it's certainly one of those situations."

A dream Goodes had given up on long ago became a reality yesterday when the Western Bulldogs plucked him with its sole pick in the rookie draft.

"I was pretty excited just to tell some family members who know how hard it's been over the years to finally get an opportunity," he said.

A brother of Sydney superstar Adam, Goodes' road to the AFL has been a long one.

He started with North Ballarat Rebels in the TAC Cup, spent a year at Port Adelaide in the SANFL, went to VFL club North Ballarat Roosters, trained with North Melbourne, went back to North Ballarat and travelled to Darwin to work for AFL NT and play at the NT Thunder.

Profiles of every recruit in the Draft Tracker

In a story eerily similar to James Podsiadly at Geelong, Goodes had been employed by the Dogs since last year as their player wellbeing manager while playing VFL with Williamstown.

But that job description started to change on the Dogs' trip to London for last month's exhibition game.

"I had a brief, informal, chat with Macca (coach Brendan McCartney) in London and he just said, 'Have you ever thought about maybe having a run around with us?'," he said.

"I was a little bit shocked but I just thought, 'What do I have to lose?' It was a win-win situation.

"I'm out on the track a bit anyway in my role, and as long as the players and coaches were happy for me to do it, I was happy.

"It all eventuated ... I had a good two weeks and I think they were surprised with how well I was testing and then it all started to become a bit more real."

A running defender with excellent foot skills, Goodes will add aggression to the Dogs' back half after a VFL season in which he won state honours and a place in the team of the year.

He beat former Essendon midfielder Brent Prismall to the rookie spot. It emerged last night Prismall was under consideration for Goodes' player welfare position.


22.43 | 0 komentar | Read More

Finals or bust for the Tigers

Former Demon Ricky Petterd is one of several recycled players snapped up by Richmond. Picture: Michael Klein. Source: Herald Sun

RICHMOND hasn't become the Visy Tigers because it is ready to win a premiership.

It has topped up with enough recycled players to make Jeanne Pratt proud because it can't even beat Gold Coast.

Kurt Tippett might have finally arrived at Sydney yesterday, but the headline act of the pre-season and rookie drafts was still Damien Hardwick's Tigers.

You can't recruit Sam Lonergan, Ricky Petterd and Orren Stephenson without immediately heaping expectation upon the AFL's most persistent underachiever of the past 30 seasons.

Richmond knows it and those Twitter wags yesterday suggesting a Visy sponsorship know it.

In all, Richmond has added six recycled players in the space of one

off-season hit, with Aaron Edwards lured in the trade period and Troy Chaplin and Chris Knights added through free agency.

Not even the reality the six players were effectively taken for the swapped No.74 pick it took to get Edwards will stop some from believing Richmond is getting ahead of itself.

But inside Punt Road this off-season, the reality is very different.

Hardwick was totally aware that as injuries finally hit Richmond in the last half of the 2012 season, they had no one left to turn to.

No back-up for Ivan Maric when his groins started screaming, no

second-forward option when Jack Riewoldt got sore and Tyrone Vickery busted up his shoulders.

Profiles of every recruit in the Draft Tracker

And no midfield depth when Dustin Martin was suspended and Nathan Foley's troublesome achilles flared up again.

It saw the Tigers win just three of the last eight games, unable to beat Gold Coast for a second successive year and only drawing the Round 23 clash against easybeats Port Adelaide.

Petterd and Edwards won't tear a game apart, but they might draw enough attention from Riewoldt to let him explode.

Ditto for Sam Lonergan and Knights in the midfield rotation, who will allow Brett Deledio, Martin and Trent Cotchin to spend more time forward of centre.

So while the recruiting spree will add heat to the Carlton-Richmond Round 1 clash, it is really about ensuring that first finals campaign since 2001, not the Tigers setting their sights on a flag.

If the pre-season draft was a total fizzer yesterday, it doesn't mean there weren't clubs strengthening premiership aspirations.

Collingwood's recruitment of Ben Hudson is inspired. He won't win it the flag through heroics, but he might just keep Darren Jolly fresh enough, or teach Brodie Grundy and Jarrod Witts enough as a ruck coach, to make that critical difference in September.

Sydney's dynamic forward line with Tippett has already been well-documented.

Put simply, they should be the short-priced flag favourites rather than Hawthorn.

Richmond might be the pre-season spruik given yesterday's efforts, but by Round 15, Tippett might already be worth every cent he was paid.


22.43 | 0 komentar | Read More

Tigers primed for top four: King

Former Bomber Sam Lonergan is one of three recycled players picked up by Richmond in the pre-season draft. Picture: Jon Hargest. Source: Herald Sun

RICHMOND should be aiming for a top-four finish after yesterday's dramatic influx of recycled players, former assistant coach David King says.

"They need a slice of luck and they need some midfield players to come along with Trent Cotchin, but they are certainly in very good shape to attack the top four," he said.

"If (Reece) Conca and (Dustin) Martin spike up and become good players the world is their oyster."

Richmond, which has not made the eight since 1991, yesterday rookie-listed former Geelong ruckman Orren Stephenson, ex-Essendon midfielder Sam Lonergan and delisted Melbourne forward Ricky Petterd.

The Tigers also picked up Adelaide half-forward Chris Knights and key defender Troy Chaplin as free agents and swapped pick 74 for North Melbourne forward Aaron Edwards in the trade period.

The club last night warned against outlandish expectations, however.

Head of football Craig Cameron said the Tigers were simply adding experience to a team that was at times close to the youngest in the competition last year.

Profiles of every recruit in the Draft Tracker

"Apart from the expansion sides last year we were either the youngest or second-youngest list, depending on which side we played," he said.

"In the last four years we have been keen to improve our average games of experience and bringing some more mature players in helps.

"We have brought a whole heap of younger players in over the last four years, including four 18-year-olds at the national draft, and one more 18-year-old as a rookie yesterday.

"So we have looked after our future in terms of the national draft and we have taken (experienced players) as rookies."

King believes the club should dare to dream big, given the new acquisitions and Richmond's recent recruiting successes.

"The number one thing is their list has improved and that brings a level of expectation," he said.

"The list rebuild has been done very wisely but with the guys they have got in, if they can get similar output from the fresh faces as they did last year they are every chance to shoot for the top four."

Richmond, which has set as its goal a finals berth next year after 11 consecutive barren Septembers, also took Murray Bushrangers midfielder Cadeyn Williams.

Stephenson has been taken as back-up for first-choice ruckman Ivan Maric but Petterd has been a dangerous forward when injury-free and Lonergan will add midfield depth.


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

No concerns on Tippett's concussions

Kurt Tippett is finally a Swan. Picture: Sarah Reed Source: adelaidenow

SYDNEY coach John Longmire says Kurt Tippett's late-season resurgence means the club will enter next season unconcerned over the forward's concussion history.

Tippett's long and tortured journey to the Harbour City was completed yesterday when the Swans secured the former Crow with pick 11 in the pre-season draft.

His 11-match ban for his role in Adelaide's salary cap saga has overshadowed his struggles with several head knocks last season.

But Longmire said doubters only had to look at the Crows' last game of 2012.

"We saw the way he came back. Whilst he took a few weeks to get going, by the end of the year he was in really good form," Longmire said yesterday.

"Anyone who saw that preliminary final (against Hawthorn) last season when he kicked four goals and contributed to a number of others could see the impact (he had) and the condition he was in and we're confident that going forward he'll be a very important, key player for us.'

Despite Tippett's Swans debut unlikely to happen before Round 14, Longmire said the club was excited about the impact he would have in the long-term.

"What he brings ... he's only 25 years of age, a 202cm key position forward who this year had over 70 shots at goal," he said.

"We think he can add some real fire power in our front half and importantly not only do it next year, but the years beyond. We think he's got some good footy ahead of him."

Profiles of every recruit in the Draft Tracker

Greater Western Sydney threw a lifeline to delisted Carlton defender Bret Thornton, a year after doing the same with Thornton's former Blues teammate Setanta O'hAilpin.

Thornton, an 11-year 188-game veteran at Visy Park, was dumped by Carlton at the end of last season. The Giants also re-drafted veteran ruckman Dean Brogan, who was initially delisted to make room for Tippett.

Richmond signalled its intent for finals success next year by bringing in a bevy of recycled talent to Punt Road.

The Tigers yesterday added Ricky Petterd, Orren Stephenson and Sam Lonergan to its list after securing Chris Knights, Troy Chaplin and Aaron Edwards earlier in the off-season.

Collingwood took a chance on twice-retired ruckman Ben Hudson to support veteran Darren Jolly in a move that could prove critical to its premiership chances.

Hudson joins the Pies - where he will also act as ruck coach - after stints at Adelaide, Western Bulldogs and Brisbane.

Hawthorn also opted to boost its ruck stocks by taking Jonathan Ceglar after the delisted Collingwood big man had impressed the Hawks during pre-season training.

"We just felt that we needed more ruck depth and Jonathon fills that," recruiting manager Graham Wright said.

West Coast opted for delisted Demon Jamie Bennell, despite the small forward still recovering from a knee reconstruction.

The Eagles had been interested in Bennell as a teenager before he was drafted by Melbourne in 2008.

"It's great to get another opportunity and I am really looking forward to it," Bennell said.

"I am about five months down the rehabilitation path after a reconstruction on my left knee, and after training on my own it will be good to get into a professional environment."

Among those to miss out on pre-season and rookie selection were talented, but troubled teen Dayle Garlett, Brent Prismall, Cameron Wood and Josh Toy. Delisted Port pair Steven Salopek and Jacob Surjan were also overlooked.


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

Giant step with NSW bloodlines

Written By Unknown on Senin, 10 Desember 2012 | 22.43

NSW country boys Joe Redfern and Zac Williams will be selected by the GWS in today's rookie draft. Picture: Phil Hillyard Source: The Daily Telegraph

THE GWS Giants will field eight players from country NSW and ACT in 2013 with the club set to add two more bush babies to their list as the first graduates from their million-dollar academy.

The club will today promote 18-year-old NSW products Zac Williams, from Narrandera, and Joseph Redfern, from Wagga Wagga, drafting the pair through the 2012 AFL rookie draft in Melbourne.

 Giants academy manager Lachlan Buzzard believes it is a sign of things to come and expects NSW to explode as a talent pool for AFL clubs in the next few years.

 "It gives hope to a lot of kids that there's a pathway for them," he said.

 In 2011, every player on the club's rookie list played a game of AFL football and the club is again confident Williams and Redfern can make the huge step to play AFL in their first year as senior players.

 Williams, who graduated from Narrandera High School in November, was the only player from NSW to be asked to the annual AFL draft camp in Melbourne and was the best NSW performer at the 2012 Under-18 national championships.

 The hard-running Indigenous Australia half-back has been part of the Giants academy since the start of 2011 and moved to Sydney three weeks ago.

 The Giants academy and Sydney Swans youth academy were designed in response to the worrying lack of junior talent advancing to AFL level.

 Kurt Aylett (Leeton), Josh Bruce (Canberra), Anthony Miles (Howlong), Sam Schulz (Culcairn) and Jacob Townsend (Leeton) are also local products.

 Williams and Redfern are just two of many NSW products expected to be snapped up in today's rookie draft with the Swans also expected to promote Sydney locals from their academy, including Swan star Kieren Jack's brother Brandon, from Pennant Hills.


22.43 | 0 komentar | Read More

Port passes but gives Liam lifeline

Liam Jarrah arrives at the Port Adelaide Football Club for a trial training run. Picture: Sarah Reed Source: The Advertiser

FORMER Port Adelaide and Essendon star Che Cockatoo-Collins has called for the Power to commit to drafting Liam Jurrah next year if he fulfils his part of the bargain after the club decided to pass on taking Jurrah in today's pre-season and rookie drafts.

Cockatoo-Collins said he understood Port's decision, with new coach Ken Hinkley and the board taking into account reaction from sponsors and members.

But he called on the club to give Jurrah a clear path to returning to the AFL.

"Liam's given his commitment," Cockatoo-Collins said.

"He's been to all of the training sessions, done everything that's been asked of him and presented in a good shape  ... they now need to show a commitment to him if he does everything that's asked of him.

"It would give Liam a clear line of sight.

"They've done it with players before, like (former Fitzroy player Stephen) Paxman."


Cockatoo-Collins' call comes as some of the game's most respected indigenous voices remain hopeful Jurrah can return to the game.

Jurrah, 24, was invited to train with the club over summer after quitting Melbourne last year and has already forged some bonds with players at Alberton but Port felt that it was neither in its, nor Jurrah's, interest to rush a return.

Not only does he have a court case hanging over his head over aggravated assault charges that will be decided in the Northern Territory in March, there are also some concerns over his fitness because of lingering injuries.

But the club has vowed to do what it can to help Jurrah, who wants to live in Adelaide where he's close to family, to return to the AFL.

Cockatoo-Collins, who alongside Michael Long was a flag bearer for indigenous players in the 1990s, said he would be shattered if the game gave up on Jurrah.

"The main thing is for people to become better educated to understand what he's going through," Cockatoo-Collins said.

"It's taken him a long time to get where he is and he's travelled a road that's been a lot harder than other (indigenous) players.

"Treating everybody the same is not the same as equality."

Port Adelaide's assistance measures include:

RECRUITING Jurrah to the Port Adelaide Magpies in the SANFL next season.

WORKING with the AFL and the AFL players' union to help him with his court case.

OFFERING a paid job with Power Community Ltd in community development and

HELPING Jurrah in his rehabilitation from injury.

Port Adelaide football manager Peter Rohde said the Power would do what it could for Jurrah to get back to AFL football - even if he did not eventually land at Alberton.

"We believe these measures will enable Liam to have the best possible opportunity to find his way back into the AFL system in great physical condition, with proven form at SANFL level and with those non-football matters fully dealt with," Rohde said.

"All going well, that could be through any club in the AFL but we would love it to be with Port Adelaide if everything works out."

AFL community engagement manager Jason Mifsud applauded Port for its efforts.

It wasn't lost how Jurrah had taken a different path from most indigenous players, having come from the red centre with English as a second language.

"Liam Jurrah has the talent to play at AFL level, as he has shown already in his career, and can also be a strong example for many players from remote communities that it is possible to play at the highest level, no matter what part of Australia you hail from," Mifsud said.

"Liam is dealing with very serious off-field issues and these matters need to be resolved as the key priority in his life. He has expressed the desire to return to play at AFL level and we are appreciative of Port Adelaide's moves to support him."

Kurt Tippett's arrival at Sydney will be one of the few highlights of a pre-season draft where many clubs will pass on the 17 total picks.

A handful of Melbourne clubs are expected to pass on pre-season picks today and instead secure players on expanded rookie lists.

Richmond (pick 5), Carlton (pick 7) and Collingwood (picks 11, 16) will instead take rookie selections.

Clubs must contract players for two years in the pre-season draft, but can take them on one-year deals as rookies.

Carlton will rookie-list Andrew Collins, leaving space to elevate rookies Tom Bell and Ed Curnow in March. The Blues had asked ex-Essendon midfielder Kyle Reimers to train with them, but he instead returned home to play in the WAFL.

Richmond will rookie-list former Geelong ruckman Orren Stephenson, while the Dogs seem to be favouring Brent Prismall over Adam Goodes's brother Brett.

Collingwood has already foreshadowed its determination to pass on its pre-season picks and take several untried juniors, alongside journeyman ruckman Ben Hudson and delisted defender Peter Yagmoor.

West Coast could make the shock selection of former ruckman Mark Seaby as ruck back-up.

Essendon looks set to overlook Dayle Garlett, feeling he has not convinced them of his training standards in the week he has spent at the club.

- with Jon Ralph
 


22.43 | 0 komentar | Read More

Judd takes a step aside

Former captain Chris Judd requests exclusion from Carlton's new-look leadership group.

Superstar Chris Judd is stepping aside at Carlton. Picture: Wayne Ludbey Source: Herald Sun

CHRIS Judd says he is looking forward to playing football without the burden and public glare of the Carlton captaincy.

As revealed by the Herald Sun last month, Judd, 29, has decided to step down from the leadership role to cash in on his twilight years.

The dual Brownlow medallist revealed he would not be part of Carlton's next leadership group under coach Mick Malthouse.

Judd's replacement will not be named until late February, but midfielders Marc Murphy, Andrew Carrazzo and Kade Simpson are vying for the job.

"I am looking forward to getting back to enjoying the essence of footy and not having as much responsibility around the club," Judd said yesterday.

"I certainly won't be pushing any less hard to bring success and will still have an active role, however it just won't be in an official leadership capacity."


Judd was frustrated at times last year - a season marred by his "chicken-wing tackle" furore - and was keen to offload some of the leadership responsibility in Malthouse's first year.

The champion midfielder is challenging an AFL ruling that his $200,000-a-year third-party payment from packaging giant Visy must be included in the club's salary cap next year for the first time.

The feud with the AFL will not affect his teammates, though, because the Blues can accommodate the $200,000 within their cap.

Jon Anderson: Three in frame to lead Blues

In a letter, the AFL offered Carlton a stay of proceedings over its total player payment position until the dispute was resolved.

Judd's management met outgoing AFL football operations boss Adrian Anderson last week, and the Blues star now has a 14-day cooling-off period before a probable grievance hearing.

The dispute shows no sign of being resolved quickly now Anderson is departing and grievance tribunal chairman Jack Rush has joined the St Kilda board.

The Blues are hoping for a reversal of the league's ruling because the contract is identical to a deal approved by salary-cap investigator Ken Wood several years ago.

The AFL has said Carlton had repeated warnings that Judd's deal was likely to be excluded from the salary cap when it was renewed.

But Carlton is believed to have been told mid-year by Wood that the new deal probably would be approved after some minor details were resolved.

Judd has played 239 games and is still considered one of the game's best midfielders.

It is understood Malthouse wants to spread more of the leadership responsibility on younger shoulders.

Carlton's football manager Andrew McKay paid tribute to Judd yesterday.

"Chris has been outstanding in his role as captain and we respect his decision to step down," he said.

"His discipline and professionalism around the club has really set a benchmark for all players to adhere too and although he won't officially be a leader anymore, we expect his influence to continue."


22.43 | 0 komentar | Read More

Shrinking talent pool for AFL clubs

Kurt Tippett is hoping he survives until pick No.11 in today's pre-season draft so he ends up at his preferred destination at Sydney. Picture: Sarah Reed Source: adelaidenow

FOOTBALL insiders call today the Kurt Tippett draft, because the biggest question is whether Tippett will last to No.11 in the pre-season pick to end up with Sydney.

Apart from that, the focus is on the shrinking drafts.

Both the pre-season and rookie drafts will be completed within an estimated 30 minutes this morning, with only 20-odd untried players likely to join the system through the rookie draft.

Clubs now have room for four rather than six rookies and many are re-committing to players they had to cut to take part in the national draft.

Two prominent South Australians are in that category: Nick Joyce will be picked up by the Crows after being temporarily axed and Dean Brogan is expected to be re-drafted by Greater Western Sydney, which dropped him to have a crack at departed Crows forward Tippett.

AFL national talent manager Kevin Sheehan said although tight, the rookie draft still offered hope for younger players.


And with the Gold Coast and Greater Western Sydney established, Sheehan expected there would be more hope for players over the age of 20 to be snapped up.

Clubs were likely to look wider for ready-made talent in state competitions, he said.

Players such as Steven Morris, who made it to Richmond after winning West Adelaide's best-and-fairest and Central District premiership player Ian Callinan, who made it on to the Crows' list in his late 20s, are likely to be part of the game rather than an aberration.

"It looks like half of the players who are new talent will be mature-age players and the other ones will be the younger ones," Sheehan said.

"But there's only 20 or so players to be taken - maybe a dozen or so young ones and a dozen older ones.

"I think the rookie list was only as big as it was because of the (league) expansion and now it's come back into what it was originally.

"Normally there's an average of over 50 taken and it looks like half of that will be taken in this rookie draft. So it makes it pretty tight."


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More

SA clubs back fight against drugs

Adelaide Crows football list manager David Noble. Picture: Ray Titus Source: The Advertiser

SOUTH Australia's two football clubs have warned there is much work to do in the game's fight against illicit drugs and The Advertiser understands the issue will be looked at as soon as next week.

The move comes as several club officials are becoming concerned with the widespread use of "party drugs" and the role they are playing in players' lives.

The AFL's football managers have a meeting with a wide-ranging agenda in Melbourne next Tuesday and the issue of drugs is certain to come up.

It is understood several of the football managers across the competition have had long talks not only with their players but also their own teenaged children about the nightclub environment.

What has been learnt is that footballers are likely to be offered illicit drugs every time they venture out for a late-night adventure and are often offered the drugs without charge because the dealers like having celebrity around them.


The issue surrounding illicit drugs was raised by Collingwood chief executive Gary Pert at the last AFL chief executive meeting on the Gold Coast before the national draft on November 22.

Adelaide Football Club's David Noble agreed it was a concerning issue.

"It's an issue we spend a lot of time on as part of our behaviour committee," Noble said.

"The main thing is to try to keep ahead of the curve but we'd be happy to be part of any program that can address this and give us a better understanding."

Port Adelaide football department chief Peter Rohde said work needed to be done on the issue and said the club would do all it could.

Rohde suggested it was dangerous for football clubs to stick their heads in the sand and say the problem was elsewhere.

"We understand it's a problem in society and we know our players are exposed to it," Rohde said.

"It would be naive to think that they're not going to be exposed to it and we're very reluctant to take the moral high ground on this.

"I think we're like most clubs here - we're more than happy to be involved to see if we can protect our players' welfare and warn them of the dangers."

AFL spokesman Patrick Keane said the issue of illicit drugs would get another hearing at the next chief executives' meeting in Melbourne next month.
 


22.42 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger