Footy Fix: Ferocious Demons shut down the Magpie machine at last… but is it repeatable?

Put the final margin out of mind for a second: Melbourne totally, comprehensively outplayed Collingwood on King’s Birthday.

They thoroughly outhunted the Pies for the hard ball, with 139 contested possessions to 120, despite being without Clayton Oliver. They dialled the pressure up to 11, particularly in attack, with a whopping 17 tackles inside forward 50, to repeatedly force turnovers from Magpie defenders unaccustomed to the ferocity coming their way. And after a sluggish start in which they conceded the first three goals and looked set to be the latest team swamped by the Magpie machine, they utterly dominated the territory battle, producing 10 extra inside 50s and keeping it there for serious lengths of time.

Had the team not got a collective case of the yips to repeatedly botch simple set shots, and had they not been facing a Collingwood team that simply doesn’t know when it is beaten, the eventual margin could have, nay, should have, been six goals plus. It doesn’t matter in the grand scheme of things, but this was a match that has to be analysed with that front of mind.

For the first time all year, the Magpies’ dazzling, rapid ball movement was shut down – I’d argue Brisbane beat them at their own game in their only other loss of the season. And the result should leave 16 other coaches furiously scribbling in their notebooks right about now… provided, of course, that what Melbourne pulled off is in any way repeatable by anyone else.

Let’s start at the contest. With both sides missing a star midfielder – the Dees’ loss of Oliver matched pretty squarely by the Pies being without Jordan De Goey – it was always going to be about which lesser lights could step up and perform their role.

It was a task made perfectly for Jack Viney, who, after a middling run of form in recent weeks, showed why he remains the heart and soul of this Demons team. The beating heart of the engine room, he set the standard throughout the afternoon that every one of his teammates followed.

By quarter time, Viney had a game-high five tackles to his name, repeatedly harassing, bullocking, and pressuring his Pies opponents around the ball. By full time, that had risen to 11 – and if you’ve ever seen Jack Viney play, you know he tackles to hurt.

Add to that 19 contested possessions, another game high, and nine clearances, far and away the most of anyone out there, and he was a fitting recipient of the Neale Daniher trophy. Perhaps the most impressive part of his afternoon was his three tackles inside attacking 50, second-most behind Alex Neal-Bullen: that, more than anything, was the stat that won this game.

Neither Petracca nor Angus Brayshaw were especially tidy by foot moving forward, particularly early, but inspired by Viney’s example, they tore in hard for the rest of the day, too. Given first use repeatedly by the tag team of Max Gawn and Brodie Grundy in the ruck, who for the first time in weeks looked exactly as menacing a partnership as you’d expect them to be, it was too much for the Magpies to bear.

It was noticeable that, when Craig McRae pulled his usual trick of sending Nick Daicos onto the ball in the second half, that the sharp, in and under handballs needed to get the ball to him on the outside were lacking.

Daicos, a clearance weapon at his best, had just one of those despite significant time on-ball in the game-changing third quarter, while Tom Mitchell, the man most likely to get it out to him, had just one after half time. Little wonder the Dees were so dominant around the ball all afternoon.

That ferocity at the contest was even evident in the last minutes, with the Pies mounting their comeback: how often have we seen Collingwood in that position get clean ball out of the centre and thrust it forward into clear space with dare and danger? They’re the number one team at scoring from centre bounces this year for a reason; yet with the match on the line, they were able to make both crucial bounces in the last minute scrappy, congested affairs, eventually winning the last one via a clearing Petracca kick that officially ended the fightback.

The Pies are middle of the road this year when it comes to their work at the coalface, but no team is more efficient than they are at converting them into chances and scores. It was some effort by the Dees to restrict them to only nine goals for the match, a third of those coming in the first 15 minutes.

Viney’s brilliance leads nicely into the Dees’ second trick: forcing turnovers in their forward half. The Pies’ claim to fame under Craig McRae has been electric, composed ball movement turning defence into attack in the blink of an eye, with sharp, penetrating kicks through the middle to catch defences on the hop. You know, like the famous one against Carlton last year.

This time around, whenever they looked to pull the trigger, the Demons were alert. Rarely in the last 12 months have Collingwood come up against a team that defend at them; time after time, they’re able to handball through a press and charge at teams which have their loose defenders retreating back towards goal with every step, and the results are usually in their favour.

This time, helped by suffocating pressure on their defensive transitioners that resulted in scrubby kicks galore, the Pies just couldn’t get any reliable ball movement going their way. By the midpoint of the second term they were going at 41 per cent by foot in their forward half, about 50 per cent down on their usual standards this year; I’d wager that figure would have dropped into the mid-30s by the end.

It was evident in plays like Scott Pendlebury loping towards 50 in acres of space in the last quarter, steadying, and kicking straight to Adam Tomlinson. It was especially evident in Brayden Maynard looking to lead a charge through the centre, but hitting a wave of Demons pressure, letting the ball spill free, and allowing Viney in to gather, blind turn into space, and hit up Jacob van Rooyen inside 50 for the goal that ended up winning the match.

That play was, first and foremost, set up by Jake Lever charging at Maynard, rather than retreating like most teams do. You see it in the pic below from Fox Footy: Lever guarding the centre corridor as he did all day, waiting for the perfect moment to strike and impact the contest; then, the moment a John Noble handball with three Dees swarming him misses Maynard, he pounces, forcing the turnover. Viney does the rest.

It’s also worth mentioning that the Dees had a plan all afternoon for Nick Daicos, to prevent his involvement in chains like this.

It was simple: Neal-Bullen would keep a close eye on him whenever the Dees were without the football, while his teammates would regularly set up a wall just in front of any Magpie ball-carrier, particularly from a mark, when Daicos drew near.

Apologies for the blurry photo, but you can still see what’s going on: Pendlebury has the ball and his first instinct is to try and give to Daicos; but Neal-Bullen has other ideas. Not too many teams even put this much attention into him.

But it’s not that simple; otherwise it would play right into Collingwood’s hands. Noble comes flying past a second later, either to receive from Pendlebury or force Neal-Bullen to abandon Daicos to guard the more dangerous player. It works: Neal-Bullen leaves Daicos and rushes to cover him.

That’s where the wall kicks in: Kysaiah Pickett and Joel Smith, both trailing behind Noble, move in front of Pendlebury, one on either side, blocking up the path into which Daicos can run. Pendlebury and Daicos both see this, and don’t bother with a handball receive.

Given both Daicos’ elite skills and the Magpies’ year-long desire to get the ball into his hands at all costs, to deny them this is noteworthy, and it certainly had an impact in how poor they were moving the ball into attack.

By three quarter time, Daicos had two inside 50s, down on his season average of four, and one score involvement, a mile down from his season average of nearly seven. He’d have just one score involvement in the last quarter, too; the goal he kicked to draw the margin to four points, having been shifted forward in the last in a desperate attempt by McRae to fix their ball movement problems.

Given Daicos still had 27 disposals, this was a tremendous example of how to effectively nullify his influence without needing to totally shut him out of the game.

The result was the Demons winning 32 forward half intercepts, with less effective ball users like Maynard, Taylor Adams and Will Hoskin-Elliott forced to step up and be the distributors inside 50. With the Dees’ defensive structure looking as sound as it has been all year, helped by Adam Tomlinson’s presence as a key back freeing up Lever and Steven May to do intercepty things, the marks on the lead the Pies have made their trademark this year dried up.

Lever, as it happens, had just one intercept mark all afternoon, while May and Gawn had four each. But for intercept possessions, Lever was right up with the best for the day with eight, equal with May.

Going the other way, the Dees kicked 2.10 from their forward half intercepts, with gettable shot after gettable shot squandered having set them up so perfectly. This was a six-goal hiding of a quality team in a four-point thriller’s clothing.

So, what can we learn from this? I’d argue not much. The Pies looked for all the world like a team knackered, and reports of a bug floating through the camp during the week make plenty of sense. You’d certainly not expect to see the likes of Pendlebury butchering the ball inside 50 like he did all afternoon on a regular basis, pressure or no. Next week’s bye comes at a perfect time for them to refresh, still percentage clear atop the ladder and looking a shoo-in for top two at least (touch wood quickly for me, Magpies fans).

The Pies also ran into the perfect opponent to capitalise on an off day: the Demons are the number one side in the comp at generating forward half turnovers, thanks to their bevy of pressure smalls led by Neal-Bullen and Kysaiah Pickett, while their miserly defence is difficult to score on if you don’t have a big brute of a key forward to keep May occupied. Brody Mihocek, having an outstanding season, just wasn’t able to stop him having a huge say on proceedings, nor make the most of the very limited chances that came his way.

CLICK HERE for a seven-day free trial to watch the AFL on KAYO

All up, it was a perfect storm that hit Collingwood at the ‘G – it’s both a miracle and a sign of how outstanding they are that they could have pinched it anyway in the last 30 seconds.

The big story out of this is Melbourne. A sleeping giant for much of the start of the season, they’ve been threatening to entrench themselves in the top four without ever looking like being a top-two rival to the Magpies or Port Adelaide or even Brisbane.

That changes now: for the first time all year, they have a serious scalp to their name, made all the more meritorious by the absence of Oliver.

For all the concerns about them, the Dees are third with a 9-4 record, an exceptional percentage, a bye to refresh, and having racked up 18 scoring shots on the best defence in the league.

They’re back.



Source link

#Footy #Fix #Ferocious #Demons #shut #Magpie #machine #repeatable

AFL Draftstars Sunday Slate Rd 8: An upset Clarko means someone has to play forward

The traditional 3 game Sunday Draftstars contest is the perfect cure for the Coronation hangover we all have. If only Kayo does a mini of the ceremony from London if you missed it last night. As Draftstars veteran ‘Tbetta’ explains, the civil unrest at Arden Street as presented some avenues to attack today’s contests.

MAIN CONTESTS:
$75,000 Main ($15 entry, 125 max)
$10,000 High Roller ($150 entry, 3 max)
$5,000 Fiver ($5 entry, 50 max)
$3,000 Mini ($2 entry, 15 max)
$2,500 Buck Hunter ($1 entry, 100 max)
$2,000 Micro ($0.50 entry, 100 max)

SATELLITE:

PORT vs ESS – Adelaide Oval: Fine.
COLL vs SYD – MCG: Showers.
NTH vs STK – Marvel Stadium: Under the roof.

INNER CORE:

FWD
In the midst of North Coach Clarko’s team selection dummy spit, we have rookie Blake Drury ($6,000 MID/FWD) added as a menu option. I’d be all over him in a DEF-stack combo meal if he were lining up in defence against the leaky Saints, but his strong recent VFL form was generated from games forward of centre – where the ball will not be so often this Sunday evening. At the opposite end, Cooper Sharman ($6,850 FWD/DEF) will find it difficult to get a breather, replacing Cordy in a back-up ruck role.

He’s been out of sorts for the past couple of weeks, but Jack Higgins ($9,640 FWD) presents excellent value if you think he’s one of St Kilda’s primary avenues to goals this week; he produced scores of 90 and 114 a few weeks ago with bags of 4 and 5 goals respectively. Teammate Jade Gresham ($11,160 FWD/MID) also has to be considered following scores of 87 and 101 in the past fortnight – against much tougher opposition than the Roos.

Errol Gulden ($14,000 MID/FWD) raised his bat (116) last weekend for the first time in a month, also raising his hand for DFS consideration. The extra midfield time through Justin McInerney’s axing last week certainly helped, and the dumping of this week’s whipping boy in Dylan Stephens ensures those minutes are still available.

MID
There’s very little on offer in terms of core salary relief options in the midfield, with Miller Bergman’s ($6,000 MID/DEF) half-back role the only silver lining in this range. On these kinds of slates and with 4 MID slots to fill, that’s where nailing the mid-price range becomes crucial.

Luke Davies-Uniacke is still questionable and with no Tom Powell, Hugh Greenwood or Will Phillips in the fray, Ben Cunnington’s ($10,700 MID) midfield role is once again rock solid. He posted season-highs of 97 AF and 75% CBA action last week, so get him while he’s cheap. Jason Horne-Francis ($10,300 MID) and Travis Boak ($11,660 MID) are the other standouts in his range.

I’ll be paying up as much as possible on this slate though, with Jack Steele’s ($16,800 MID) midfield role restored last week for his 128. That figure could increase in the culling of the Kangaroos on Sunday. Brad Crouch ($15,700 MID) has slowed down ever since his skipper returned, but North is the perfect match-up for a greedy midfielder like Brad to get back on track.

DEF
Previously mentioned names of Cooper Sharman and Miles Bergman are obviously available back here, so you have the DPP flexibility to mix and match to find that perfect line-up if you need it. Alternatives are thin; Ben McKay ($7,080 DEF) has a rare opportunity to intercept mark his way to value this week, while Darcy Tucker’s ($8,360 DEF/FWD) role with all of North’s changes is anyone’s guess.

Harry Sheezel ($14,910 DEF) had everything go against him a couple of weeks ago – Aaron Hall returned to the side, he picked up a couple of niggles and even attracted a tag – but his luck has flipped ahead of Round 8. Hall is now back in the 2’s and Sheezel gets the juiciest DvP match-up known to defensive distributors, all in one big hit. Jack Sinclair ($15,050 DEF) is an alternative following his season-high 119 last week, as is the Dan Houston ($12,940 DEF) rollercoaster if you want to save a few pineapples.

RUC
Another tough line, with no one standing out from a value perspective. Sam Draper ($10,290 RUC) could be an option based on the Port ruck DvP, which is second only to West Coast’s ruck situation in terms of the most bankable boosts. The constant Andrew Phillips cockblock is a shame, though.

Mason Cox ($8,690 RUC/FWD) returns from injury to give Collingwood some vertical relief, but with no change to Collingwood’s defence, it looks like he’ll have to share duties with Billy Frampton. At the other end of the scale, we have the rampant Rowan Marshall ($17,260 RUC), but how often will you be able to afford him with the lack of value options on this tough 3-game slate?

BLACK HOLES:

Zach Merrett ($15,840 MID)

Essendon have shown their hand in terms of how they deal with a tight ag, with Merrett’s three lowest CBA games coming via Finn Maginness (68%), Marcus Windhager (64%) and now Mark O’Connor (38%) shadows. Unsurprisingly, that move to half forward to attempt to shake the tag against the Cats resulted in his lowest score (and first non-ton) for the year with a mediocre 82.

If all Port needs to do to remove their opponent’s best player from the midfield is to send a player to stand next to him, then why wouldn’t they give Willem Drew a special assignment this week?

Nick Daicos ($16,740 DEF/MID)

Given that the Ben Keays tag was so effective last week in holding Daicos to his first mortal game for the season, you’d have to assume Ryan Clarke is his Round 8 date. One underrated aspect to the Keays tag was the ability to follow him into the midfield when the switch inevitably gets made, and Clarke also has plenty of reps as a midfielder in the past. There could be another lean week on the horizon for Little Nicky.

Jack Ziebell ($13,780 DEF)

Clarko is not here to fornicate with spiders following that 90-point demolition, completely upending his defense by seemingly replacing ball-winners (Hall comes to mind) with actual defenders. By my count, he’s selected 8 or 9 possible defenders in the side – with the former skipper on top of that figure. I can definitely see a universe where Ziebell swings to the other end of the ground; Flynn Perez, Miller Bergman and the versatile debutant Blake Drury have all been added to the mix, while the recent injuries to Charlie Comben and Callum Coleman-Jones suggests the Roos need another bigger body up forward.

Now’s probably a good time to mention that Ziebell averaged just 56 points as a forward last year, sandwiched between his seasons of 100 and 96 (so far) as a backline distributor. If he does find himself closer to the scoring sticks, it’s a big no thank you from me.

STAR SIGNS:

Back to Boak

Speaking of former skippers, Travis Boak’s ($11,660 MID) trajectory is heading in the opposite direction to his North Melbourne counterpart. After starting the season underdone and marooned out on a wing, Boak’s score has increased every single week, culminating in a healthy 124 against the Saints. It’s no coincidence that Round 7 was his first game of the year with significant centre bounce involvement at 44%, and with no change to the inside midfield group at selection, we could see him hold that hybrid role. He’s simply too cheap if so.

Same Old String Trick

If you’ve been following footy for the past decade, you’d have heard about “The Dusty Role” at some point, and that’s exactly how Jake Stringer ($11,260 MID/FWD) was redeployed against the Cats last week for his surprise 115. The key element of the role is starting at every centre bounce possible (in this case, easily a season-high 80%) before pushing hard forward once the clearance is won. This gets Essendon a bigger body in at centre clearances, but also gives Stringer the chance at getting a mismatch in transition – and I’d say it worked, given he kicked an equal season-high 4 goals against the reigning Premiers.

Welcome Home

The clear Home vs Away trend continues for Connor Rozee ($15,370 MID), bringing his season splits to a hefty 122 at home and just 78 on the road. With this week’s clash at Adelaide Oval, Rozee needs to be in your player pool – he scored 113 and 115 against the Bombers in their two meetings last season.

GALAXY CLUSTER:

St Kilda – Full Stack

With a Sunday evening special against the Roos, this is essentially the highest scoring fantasy team versus the team that concedes the most points, so we could have a genuine bloodbath on our hands. It’ll honestly be hard to find a bad pick on the Saints this week, but a focus on midfielders and goalkickers is the way to go – they’re going to see plenty of the footy in those two thirds of the field.

North – DEF Stack

St Kilda ranks second only to the Bulldogs in terms of how much fantasy goodness they ooze to opposition defenders, which gives us an interesting philosophical question to mull over. The trio of Hall, Sheezel and Ziebell would have been the obvious answer for a DEF stack here, but the swiftly swinging selection scythe of Clarko changes things significantly.

With Hall dumped and Ziebell at some risk of swinging forward, Sheezel becomes the overwhelming fancy in defense for the Roos. Luke McDonald ($11,560 DEF) jumps a couple of pegs up the totem pole and has shown he can play that role to perfection in the past, while Corr is in a decent spot to +6 his way to value in the $8k range.

Port – Outside MID targets.

The DvP algorithm throws up outside players as an area to target against the Bombers, which instantly thrusts players like Dan Houston, Ryan Burton and Miles Bergman into the mix on top of the aforementioned Boak. Xavier Duursma would have been a perfect target in the 4-digit price range, but crisis creates opportunity, as they say. Riley Bonner ($8,820 DEF) should slot onto that wing and has shown a healthy scoring ceiling in years past.

MULTIVERSE THEORY:

In a parallel universe:

  • Tom Mitchell revenge game, anyone? The former Swan’s disdain for Horse Longmire is legendary, and has manifested itself into scores of 101, 97, 125, 109 in his last four against Sydney…
  • Could St Kilda’s lack of key forwards mean that someone like Griffin Logue is swung forward instead of Ziebell? Could I be jumping shadows with the former skipper…?

Tbetta.

Ready to go? Draftstars multi game Saturday slate will close at 1.10pm AEST. ENTER NOW!

Chances are you’re about to lose. For free and confidential support call 1800 858 858 or visit gamblinghelponline.org.au



Source link

#AFL #Draftstars #Sunday #Slate #upset #Clarko #means #play

Tasmania set to enter AFL after decades of campaigning

The AFL club presidents have voted unanimously to grant Tasmania the game’s 19th licence, fulfilling decades of dreams for a team from the island state.

During a video meeting this afternoon, the presidents reached a decision within 15 minutes and there were no objections.

The granting of the licence now goes to the AFL Commission for a formal ratification.

An official AFL announcement of the licence is expected as early as Wednesday.

The announcement of $240 million in federal funding towards a 23,000-seat stadium at Hobart’s Macquarie Point was the final hurdle to be cleared before presidents could vote on Tasmania’s bid.

“It’s not an Australian Football League if it leaves off the south island, and that’s what has occurred for too long,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Saturday at the stadium funding announcement.

Under that plan, Tasmania will enter the league in 2027, first playing games at Hobart’s Bellerive Oval and Launceston’s York Park before the new stadium is finished in 2028-29.

The stadium is part of a proposed urban renewal project at Macquarie Point.()

Source link

#Tasmania #set #enter #AFL #decades #campaigning

How the Hobart stadium spend is a game-changer in Australian sport

On a bracing Hobart morning in autumn, many Tasmanians were greeted with the news that they had been waiting years to hear.

On the cusp of delivering his government’s second budget, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has committed $240 million to building a stadium at Hobart’s Macquarie Point site, pending the AFL granting Tasmania a licence for a league team.

“The Commonwealth will be providing, in the budget in 10 days time, $240 million of funding for this site and $65 million for the upgrade of UTAS stadium in Launceston as well,” Mr Albanese stated.

“We want to make sure that the benefits of having an AFL team based here in Tasmania means that they can play both in Hobart and in Launceston, as well to develop to deliver the economic benefits for the whole state of Tasmania.”

The $240m promised is a historic figure, the largest a federal government has ever promised to spend on a football stadium.

The budget promise ticked off the last of 12 “workstreams” the AFL articulated for the entry of a standalone Tasmanian team into the AFL competitions.

It is expected in the coming days that the 18 AFL club presidents will vote to grant Tasmania the 19th AFL licence.

The proposed Tasmanian stadium spending adds to the billions of dollars spent on football stadiums across the country in recent years.

Importantly, the spend on the new Hobart stadium breaks new ground for federal government involvement in spending on football stadiums in Australia.

The spending on Macquarie Point may change the relationship between governments and spending on major sporting infrastructure.

Size of the spend

Source link

#Hobart #stadium #spend #gamechanger #Australian #sport

The Lions’ key forwards have put their own spin on the AFL’s traditional ‘spearhead’

For almost as long as footy has existed there has been an obsession with the spearhead: The hulking forward dragging their side to victory, proving the difference between two sides.

This year, Geelong’s Jeremy Cameron’s early goal-kicking exploits has been the hottest story in the code.

With 27 goals in just his first six games, the former GWS Giant is on pace to kick 103 goals in the home-and-away season alone. The ton is maybe the most heralded “number” in footy and exciting to all fans.

Source link

#Lions #key #forwards #put #spin #AFLs #traditional #spearhead

How the Crows have used the kick-in to surge into AFL finals contention

It’s a near-timeless cry proclaimed from the outer, often yelled by the weary worriers of old.

“Just kick the bloody thing.”

Ahead of them stands a player, patiently assessing the game ahead. Every bit of focus is required to ensure that the kick-in goes right, and doesn’t result in six points being added to the single one just scored.

Source link

#Crows #kickin #surge #AFL #finals #contention

Hawthorn racism review couple, ‘abandoned’ by the AFL and club, consider legal action

A couple at the centre of the Hawthorn racism review is considering taking legal action against the club, which they say “purposefully abandoned” them and “cruelly” dishonoured its public pledge of support after the scandal broke.

The couple’s lawyer, Judy Courtin, released a statement on Tuesday, which quoted the couple as saying they were “left sitting in our pain, re-traumatised and feeling blamed and invalidated”.

“We feel that Hawthorn and the AFL have attempted to wipe their hands clean of us, and worse, to blame us for what happened to us,” the couple said in the statement.

“They have publicly stated that they are supporting us, but in private, we feel torment at every turn. Often, we are obtaining information via the media.

“We feel abandoned by the very club that was promising to understand and address our hurt and trauma.

“Once again, we feel as though our voices are being silenced or controlled in processes that are not independent or safe. We are fearful, scared, intimidated and all of the feelings from the past are, once again, so familiar.”

Stating that it lacked independence, the couple previously refused to participate in the AFL-commissioned investigation that flowed from Hawthorn’s Cultural Safety Review, the latter of which sought to understand historical incidents of racism at the club.

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

AFL announces terms of reference for Hawks investigation

Dr Courtin said the couple would now consider civil litigation and said their lives had been “turned upside down” by the affair.

Former club coaches Alastair Clarkson and Chris Fagan have denied any wrongdoing in relation to allegations made to the authors of the Hawthorn report.

After the scandal broke, the AFL claimed its investigative panel would reach findings by Christmas last year, but its progress has been slow.

Clarkson and Fagan are yet to be interviewed and few of the families to make allegations of mistreatment have been willing to participate.

In October, Dr Courtin told ABC Sport the AFL review lacked credibility.

“An inquiry that is paid for and established by the AFL, and absent of any input from my clients, is not and cannot be independent,” Dr Courtin said, adding that her clients “continue to be treated with disdain”.

The AFL said its investigation is ongoing.

“The AFL is committed to providing support for all, including those who have shared their experiences and those who have chosen not to be part of the investigation,” a statement read.

“Where appropriate we have offered this support through the legal representatives of the parties represented. That support continues.”

‘Forced to beg, cap in hand’

Dr Courtin said the couple had been “forced to beg, cap in hand” for counselling support after their alleged ordeal had become public knowledge, and that it took “nine weeks of pointless argument for the HFC [Hawthorn Football Club] to finally agree to pay for some counselling for our distressed client, which has, again, further exacerbated their sense of betrayal and mistreatment”.

“It was suggested that one of our clients obtain a referral from his GP for 10 publicly funded counselling sessions at no cost to the HFC,” Dr Courtin said in the statement.

Source link

#Hawthorn #racism #review #couple #abandoned #AFL #club #legal #action

You can’t find a court to play on thanks to this team’s surprise basketball success

It is no secret that Tasmanians have a new-found love affair with basketball.

Since the Tasmanian JackJumpers entered the National Basketball League in 2021, interest in the sport has skyrocketed.

Each home game, thousands of Tasmanians don their green and yellow to cheer on the team — but the growing fanfare is creating headaches for grassroots basketball clubs.

In the state’s north, the Launceston Basketball Association has seen a 46 per cent increase in the number of players wanting to hit the court since the JackJumpers played their first season.

Association president Craig Gibson said while it was great so many people wanted to play the game, it now had 500 teams — 300 junior and 200 senior — and was struggling to give them all court time.

“We’re very much expecting to not fit everyone in this year,” he said.

“We’ll have to go back to the clubs and tell them, ‘We don’t have the space, you can only have this many teams’, which will mean there’ll be kids that don’t get to play.”

Mr Gibson fears kids may soon be turned away from playing basketball.(ABC News: Manika Champ)

The reason the association is struggling to accommodate the influx of players is court space.

It is a similar situation across the state, with Basketball Tasmania saying the state needs at least 26 new indoor courts to keep up with demand.

Junior basketballer in a red top with a ball running down a basketball court
The number of basketballers wanting to play in Launceston has increased by 46 per cent in the past 18 months.(Supplied: Launceston Basketball Association Facebook)

The Tasmanian government has plans to develop new facilities, but basketball organisations say they are still years away.

Source link

#find #court #play #teams #surprise #basketball #success

‘We need to find players, and quickly’: Changing tastes leading to struggles for once-great team

There are fears one of Tasmania’s former powerhouse football teams is dangerously close to not being able to field a team, with sporting greats likening the situation to a canary in a coalmine for other clubs.

The Glenorchy Magpies, famous for being the former home of all-time Australian rules greats Peter Hudson and Roy Cazaly, have struggled to attract players to the club for more than 12 months, but ahead of this year’s Tasmanian State League season, the situation has worsened.

At least one recent training session saw just 12 dedicated players on the track, prompting fears for the future of the club, which boasts 17 premierships and has been a traditional powerhouse of Tasmanian football.

But Tim Woodham, who will contest the presidency of the club at its upcoming annual general meeting, believes the tide will turn in the coming weeks.

“I don’t want to go into recession, because I believe you don’t come back but we do need to find some players and quickly,” he said.

“We haven’t got any quick fixes at the minute, and it might take a little while to turn around but one day Glenorchy will be back as a powerful club again.”

The club has some famous exports, such as all-time great Peter Hudson.(Supplied: www.tasmanianstateleague.com.au)

Interim president Scott Donaghy told ABC Radio Hobart on Tuesday that while numbers were low, the Magpies situation had been overblown and that he was expecting a steady return of players to the club in the coming weeks.

A young man stands on a run track and smiles.
Sprint star Jack Hale has been signed by the club as a high-performance coach.(ABC News: Luke Bowden)

“We’ve told AFL Tas that we’ll be putting a team on the park. As far as we’re concerned, we will be putting a team on the park, and hopefully a second team,” he said.

Things are already starting to turn, with about 30 players attending a pre-season running session at Risdon Brook Dam this morning.

The club has also signed sprint star Jack Hale as a high-performance coach.

But answers are being sought as to how the famous club has declined so rapidly.

Glenorchy a ‘warning sign’ for other clubs

Glenorchy, which went winless at senior level last year, and was forced to forfeit two second-tier development league games, is a canary in the coal mine, according to former greats.

Source link

#find #players #quickly #Changing #tastes #leading #struggles #oncegreat #team