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Former Adelaide Crow Bryce Gibbs speaks out about infamous training camp after Eddie Betts book release

Former Adelaide Crows footballer Bryce Gibbs has admitted a controversial pre-season training camp fractured the playing group and says he regrets not speaking up about it.

Gibbs is the latest player to speak publicly about the camp, echoing concerns about the Gold Coast trip raised by former teammates Eddie Betts and Josh Jenkins.

Betts wrote in his book, released this week, how personal details he confidentially shared with a counselor were used to verbally abuse him in front of teammates, in an experience he found “traumatizing.”

In another example, Betts details how First Nations rituals were misappropriated, which he found “extremely disrespectful”.

Gibbs said incidents shared by Betts and Jenkins about the camp should not have happened.

“When I reflect, this is where I feel really disappointed in myself, this is when I started to take a back seat, watching guys stand up and say ‘this is not on, we need to address this, we need to tell people what happened’, they seemed to get shut down pretty quickly,” Gibbs told radio station SEN SA.

Gibbs was traded from Carlton at the end of 2017 and joined Adelaide weeks before the players went on the camp, where he was included in the more intensive “group one” version of the camp alongside nine other players and two coaches.

The retired AFL player said he was disappointed he did not support teammates who experienced a more difficult time during the camp than he did.

books of eddie betts on bookshelf, with his face on the front cover.
Eddie Betts’ biography, The Boy from Boomerang Crescent, includes claims about his traumatic experience during the training camp.(ABC News: Ben Pettit)

“Reflecting on those ongoing conversations when we were trying to flush it out, I do regret not speaking up when I probably should’ve been a more experienced and senior player of that group,” he said.

“It did fracture the playing group, it fractured relationships in the football department, players lost trust with members in that football department.”

In a statement made in 2021, the Crows said a SafeWork SA investigation “found neither the club nor any other person or organisation, breached any work-health-and-safety laws during or in relation to the camp.”

“We tried to move on where that was obviously the wrong thing to do and that’s probably why we’re speaking about it four years on,” Gibbs said.

“If it was handled correctly and people had taken responsibility, put their hand up and knocked it on the head a lot earlier when it happened, it still would’ve been hard as people still went through what they went through – and people will still carry some emotional scars from it — but at least it would’ve been dealt with in the proper manner then and there.”

‘It shouldn’t have happened’

Gibbs said he took a call from a counselor before the camp to discuss his childhood and past experiences, which he thought was “a bit of a red flag.” He said he was “pretty calculated” in what he disclosed.

He said by not divulging too much to the counsellor, his experience of the camp was different from what Betts and Jenkins spoke about this week.

“Reflecting on it all, it just shouldn’t have happened. It was easier for me to move on as I didn’t have that level of experience and trauma put to me, I found it easier to suppress it and squash it and just try and move on personally which I was able to do, which made it easier for me,” Gibbs said.

“That’s my experience of the camp, obviously very different to a lot of people.”

Eddie Betts jumps onto Josh Jenkins as the crowd cheers a goal in the background.
Eddie Betts and Josh Jenkins (right) have both spoken publicly about the 2018 pre-season training camp.(AAP: Tracey Nearmy)

Jenkins recalled an exercise involving players being hoisted up in harnesses while having abuse hurled at them by facilitators and teammates, including “some of the barbs” being thrown at Betts.

Gibbs said he was told not to reveal details of the camp to players in the other groups of the camp.

“Getting spoken to and getting educated on what to say to family, friends and the other guys in the other groups, we were told not to go into detail about what happened and for whatever reason most of us stuck to that at the time,” he said.

‘Strange rules’ during camp

Gibbs said he experienced “unusual things” and “plenty of red flags” during the infamous training trip but convinced himself to keep an open mind and that the camp would help build stronger relationships with his teammates.

The 268-game veteran shared that on the trip to the campsite, Crows players were blindfolded and were not allowed to talk on the bus, which had blacked-out windows.

They played heavy metal music on the bus and talked about the 2017 Grand Final, in which Adelaide were heavily defeated by Richmond, and Gibbs’ departure from Carlton.

Gibbs said “strange rules” were enforced during the camp, including players being required to walk in a straight line and not being allowed to use their mobile phones or shower.

A football player crouches with a yellow ball while surrounded by other players
Bryce Gibbs plays for South Adelaide in SANFL since retiring from AFL in 2020.(Supplied: Nick Hook via South Adelaide FC)

He said some of the rules imposed were “hard to justify” and players were doubting the benefits of the training.

“I felt like we were in a bit of a state of mind, this whole experience was happening around us and a couple of guys spoke up about their concerns, it was sort of negotiated that we would continue on with what we were doing,” Gibbs said.

“I think Eddie used “brainwashed”, as he described it, but in the state of mind and in the moment we just continued doing what they’d set out to do.

“It probably wasn’t until later on when reflecting on it that it was probably an opportunity to speak up a bit more.”

The AFL and the Adelaide Football Club have both apologized to Betts for the trauma caused by the camp.

Prominent Adelaide lawyer Greg Griffin said he had spoken to at least seven players who were on the 2018 Crows’ list about a potential class action.

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Minjee Lee in the hunt for Women’s Open and a Scottish family double | Women’s Open

A corner of East Lothian may forever belong to a family from Western Australia. Should Minjee Lee prevail at the Women’s Open – and a second round of 70 leaves her in fine position to do precisely that – she will have shown the local specialty already displayed by her brother de ella.

Min Woo Lee’s win at the Scottish Open last July was the biggest of his career. It is hardly unfair to suggest the 24-year-old has been firmly upstaged in sporting context by his older sister of him. The quirk here is that Minjee Lee is in hot pursuit of a third major – and second of 2022 – at Muirfield, literally over the wall from the Renaissance Club where Min Woo Lee emerged from a playoff.

Minjee Lee offered only that a family double in the same postcode and more than 9,000 miles from home would be “pretty cool” before a ball was struck in the Women’s Open. A four under par total at the halfway point has only intensified strong attention around her, including in her native country.

Lee eased to victory the US Open in June and would almost certainly become Australia’s first female world No 1 with a win at Muirfield. At the halfway mark she is four shots off the leader, South Korea’s Chun In-gee, and shielding herself expertly from the noise.

“I try not to think too much about that other stuff,” Lee said. “I’m still the same person. I hit a little white golf ball around a field. That’s always been my mindset and whatever comes with it, I’m going to embrace it and be the best person that I can be.” And the best golfer, clearly. Lee’s second round included two birdies and one bogey. She rolled missed chances on the greens. “I played really smart out there,” she added. “I couldn’t quite capitalize on my birdie opportunities so hopefully they will all drop tomorrow.

“The course is really set up quite fair and the design of the course is actually rewarding when you play to the safe side. I definitely think it’s a very fair, challenging but fun course.” Indeed, Muirfield has generally been deemed a huge success by competitors.

Martin Slumbers, the R&A’s chief executive, has placed emphasis on big-time sport requiring big-time audiences and big-time venues. It also needs big-time leaderboards. Job done on that front: Chun, the Women’s PGA winner this year, leads with seven-time major winner Inbee Park two shots back. Madelene Sagström, last year’s runner-up, and South Africa’s Ashleigh Buhai are sandwiched between them in a tie for seconds.

New Zealand’s Lydia Ko is also in the mix at one under par. Ko added a 70 to day one’s 71 despite a messy double bogey at the 18th. Charley Hull, a renowned pessimist when it comes to links golf, has matched Ko’s aggregate. Ireland’s Leona Maguire, chasing the first of what many believe will be multiple major successes, is two under after a 69. She had aspirations of an even better Friday after an eagle at the par five 5th.

“I birdied 14 and 15 which are probably two of the hardest holes out there, so that was a nice boost heading into those last few holes,” Maguire said. “I was three under for the last five so that’s really good momentum heading into the weekend.

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“I would have liked to have got to four or five under but you have to take your chances where they come. I didn’t take advantage of some holes and then I birdied two of the hardest holes. That’s links golf and you just really have to be patient. I feel like I did that today. It would have been easy to kind of get frustrated and finish a couple over. I dug in for those last few which were nice. I hit it in a few of those bunkers, which are really penal.” Louise Duncan, the young Scot making just her second professional start, slipped back to minus two and alongside Maguire after a 73.

Those to miss the cut included Sweden’s Anna Nordqvist, who won this major in dramatic fashion at Carnoustie 12 months ago, Catriona Matthew and Lexi Thompson. The world No1, Ko Jin-young also crashed out at five over par. A disastrous second round of 81 for Laura Davies comprehensively ended her prospects of lasting more than 36 holes. Nelly Korda squeezed in for the weekend at plus two after a disappointing 74.

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The fiery squash match between Greg and Donna Lobban, husband and wife

“At the end of a match like that, when it’s that close, you feel like, ‘Yeeeeeaaah!’ Donna said. “But my heart just sunk. I’m happy we won but gutted we’re the ones who put them out of the tournament. It doesn’t feel good. I hope it never happens again.”

Squash at this pace isn’t for the faint-hearted. Certainly not for the claustrophobic. As London broadsheet The Times headlined a story after a particularly fiery match at Glasgow in 2014: “Fear and Loathing in Glass Cages.”

This match was tinged with controversy, just as Donna’s women’s double fixture with Rachel Grinham had been earlier in the day when they lost on the final point of the third set when the referee didn’t award a controversial let call.

On that occasion, Grinham threw her racquet into the glass background and stormed off devastated.

Against her husband, she got the rub of the green in the final points of the third set.

Doubles squash is a funny beast. It’s only played every four years at Commonwealth Games with the court widened and the tin at the front lowered.

Players clamor all over each other and the interpretation of what constitutes a “let” (when the point is replayed) and a “stroke” (when a point is awarded) after a player gets in the way of the ball they’ve just struck is confusing.

“They do give some shocking decisions,” Donna said. “But I’ve had just as many go against me. I don’t think the last no-let they got was a no-let, but Rachael and I lost 11-10 on a no-let that should never have been a no-let this morning. We are briefed on what it should be, but it’s a mixed bag. The best we could do is play the ball as much as we could, so we couldn’t let the refs a chance to get involved.”

Either way, it doesn’t matter now. Donna didn’t just win the match but also a bet: Greg must cook dinner for the couple for the next month.

“I don’t know if I want him to make dinner,” she said with a laugh. “I should’ve bet that if I win he has to shave off his mullet and mustache from him. That would’ve felt good. I might have to put up with him being in a terrible mood for a while.

“To be fair to him, after I had a tough loss this morning, he was still there for me. He’s still the main person that’s there for me, and I’m there for him. We’re not signing the divorce papers after today. We’re still all right.”

wet and wild

youve heard of Bondi Rescue, but what about Canal Rescue?

Thankfully for the good people of Birmingham, and the legions of sports fans who have converged on this city in recent days, there are water rescue types to save anyone who happens to fall in the 35 miles or so of canals in this fair city.

None of the canals have fences to stop people staggering into the water.

Just by chance, your humble correspondent happened to be drinking a shandy at a pub along one of the canals on Friday afternoon when we spotted the “water rescue” boat flying past.

We shouted at them to come back and tell us how many people they must pull out of the water.

New Zealand beach volleyball players try to fish their ball out of a Birmingham canal during a photoshoot.

New Zealand beach volleyball players try to fish their ball out of a Birmingham canal during a photoshoot.Credit:AP

“About one or two every Saturday night,” one canal lifesaver told us. “More since the Games started because a lot of people seem to have alcohol in their system.”

Straight Outta Brumpton is determined to not become a statistic on this assignment. That said, we have three days to go.

It’s just not cricket

There’s a lot of debate about which sports should be included in the program at the 2026 Commonwealth Games when they are held in regional Victoria.

There are serious discussions under way about a men’s competition in the Twenty20 cricket, after women’s teams were included at this Games.

Australia's cricketers celebrate during their win over Pakistan at Edgbaston this week.

Australia’s cricketers celebrate during their win over Pakistan at Edgbaston this week.Credit:Getty

Personally, I think we have enough cricket played throughout the year. It shouldn’t be included at all. But we have some alternative suggestions: snooker, darts, poker, poker machines, five-leg multies, greyhound racing, caber toss, Scotch egg eating, bagging our sports editor.

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THE QUOTE

“Um, yeah. I don’t know what to say. I’m really…yeah.” – England’s 17-year-old Andrea Spendolini-Sirieix‘s giggling reaction after winning gold in the women’s diving 10m platform when asked by the BBC how she felt.

THUMBS UP
George Miller
– the 75-year-old Scottish for lawn bowler, not the Academy Award-winning director of Mad Max – became the oldest Commonwealth Games gold medalist in history when he claimed the mixed pairs B2/B3 title.

THUMBS DOWN

Andrew Parsons, the president of the International Paralympic Committee, has categorically ruled out any notion of the Para program being merged with the program at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Boo! The integration of the two has been a real winner here in Brum.

Get all the latest news from the Birmingham Commonwealth Games here. We’ll be live blogging the action from 4pm-10am daily.

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Penrith Panthers, Parramatta Eels, Nathan Cleary, Jarome Luai, Mitchell Moses, Cam Smith

NRL legend Cameron Smith believes Nathan Cleary’s lengthy ban leading into finals will provide “a blessing in disguise” for the Panthers.

Cleary flipped Penrith’s season on its head when he was sent off for a dangerous lifting tackle on Eels playmaker Dylan Brown last Friday.

The New South Wales Origin star copped a five-match suspension and won’t return for the competition leaders before the finals.

Five-eighth Jarome Luai is also out set for a lengthy stint on the sidelines, after suffering an MCL injury against the Sharks.

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Without the two experienced playmakers leading the team around the park, the Panthers will have to rely on some relatively inexperienced combinations until the finals.

Penrith have turned Jaeman Salmon and Sean O’Sullivan for Saturday’s clash with Canberra, with the Panthers currently six competition points clear of second with five games to play.

But Smith said the break for the duo can become a positive for the reigning NRL premiers.

“I think it can work in their favour,” Smith said on SEN’s The Captain’s Run on Thursday.

“I actually think that giving this football side an opportunity side to play a month or five weeks without Cleary in particular and Jerome Luai, their two main men, it’s their go-to men in attack, I actually think when they return they’ll both be fresh.

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“Nathan Cleary, he’s going to have fresh legs, he’s going to be fresh mentality. He hasn’t had to get up for games for five weeks.

“You could see as soon as he made that tackle he knew he’d let the team down, and the club and the fans. He’s going to come out in that final series and think ‘I’ve got to repay this footy club and my fans for missing five weeks’.

“This footy side can benefit so much from these two guys not being there and guys like Api Koroisau and Isaah Yeo… they’re going to have to shoulder more responsibility now with the way the football team plays.

“I just think they’re going to be a stronger footy side again.”

Penrith have one hand on the minor premiership just over a month out from finals, but they could quickly lose that grip with a couple of losses on the bounce.

The Cowboys are their closest rivals in the race for pole position, but the Sharks are also an outside chance – but are four games back and they have a significantly worse points difference.

Open your eyes! Roosters Scold Walker | 00:31

North Queensland host the Panthers in the final round of the regular season, and although it’s unlikely, it’s possible that the two teams clash with the minor premiership on the line.

It’s potentially a season defining a few weeks for the Panthers, who are looking to defend their NRL crown.

“Let’s just say the top four doesn’t change, they take on Melbourne. If they finish first, they’ll be taking on the Storm,” he added.

“The biggest difference this year is they’ll play their first game at home. They’ll be playing at Penrith.

“Whereas last year and I know it was a neutral ground for the Sydney sides, but they played the Rabbitohs up in Townsville and got beaten. They’re a different footy side at home.

“They’ve lost one game there in a thousand years.”

Parramatta are another side who will be without a key player for a majority of their remaining regular season games.

Star playmaker Mitchell Moses has been ruled out with a finger injury, and will spend at least a couple of weeks watching on from the sidelines.

The Eels could potentially drop out of the top eight if they have a bad month, with the Raiders just four-point behind them.

“(Moses) He’s leading the competition for try assists. He’s got 20 try assists, so now with him out, plus his goal kicking, so now they need to find someone to produce points for them.

“They’re going to have to find some points somewhere. Whether Gutho stands up a little bit more, I think Jake Arthur may be playing in the halves this week.

“These remaining five games are crucial.”

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Solo sailor Lisa Blair circumnavigates Antarctica in record time to draw attention to the effects of climate change

When Lisa Blair first set sail around the world a decade ago, the last thing she expected to see at 40 degrees south, deep in the Southern Ocean, was a bird perched on a drifting styrofoam box.

Looking out and noticing the sheer volume of rubbish and pollution spread throughout the water was heartbreaking. How could the consequences of human impact be seen so far from human beings?

With a passion to draw attention to the harmful impacts of climate change, combined with a love for sailing, Blair embarked on a record-breaking, unaccompanied, unaided and unremitted circumnavigation of Antarctica in February, aboard her eye-catching, technicoloured racing yacht.

“I’ve been sailing now for 12 years. I started sailing when I was 25 and I’m 37 now. I’ve seen quite a dramatic change, just in the time that I’ve been sailing from the lack of abundance of wildlife that you now see, to the fact that the weather patterns are so much more unstable because the seasons aren’t following the calendar anymore,” Blair tells Wide World of Sports.

“I really wanted to use the action of doing records and the accompanying media coverage as a platform to create awareness for taking action against climate change and empower individuals because everyone I spoke to always felt like it was so big a problem – climate change and pollution – that their little bit wasn’t going to make a difference.

“So, I founded the name ‘Climate Action Now’ and renamed my boat in 2015, and for the last eight years I’ve been running this campaign.

“What I do is I go out and collect post-it notes from people in the public, each post-it note being an environmental action or something that a person is already doing to create a better future. We then gather them up and turn them into a digital design.

“I’ve sailed this design over 50,000 nautical miles around Antarctica twice, around Australia and into global media coverage. The goal is to inspire people that as individuals we all have the power to create change – it just starts with one action. If you get one million people taking one action then you’re creating the impact that we’re looking for.”

With a dramatic dismasting off the coast of South Africa spoiling her first attempt in 2017, the second time around, Blair wanted to do more than just sail the record for exposure, graciously extending a hand to the scientific community.

“With around Antarctica being such a data-sparse area of ​​our oceans, I stepped it up another level and I put my hand up to the scientific community globally and said, ‘Hey, crazy sailor here. I’m going to be in Antarctica , where you have almost no data for three months. What can I do for you that’s going to be of the most scientific value?'”

Partnering with several marine organizations and citizen science programs, Blair ran a non-stop microplastics sampler on board, collecting more than 180 microplastic samples. This coincided with an ocean-health monitoring system used to determine baseline data similar to existing models of the Southern Ocean.

Blair also turned her boat into a mobile weather station to help with forecasting and logged all of her depths while sailing to assist in mapping the ocean floor, all while deploying eight weather-drifter buoys and an Argo research float.

“I was very busy while I was out there,” Blair says.

After 92 days, 18 hours, 21 minutes and 20 seconds at sea, Blair sailed into the record books on May 27, having smashed the overall speed record held by Russian voyager Fedor Konyukhov for an incredible 10 days.

Asked what she did differently to shave off more than a week’s worth of travel, Blair says her attention never wearied.

“When you’re on a record you’ve got a time crunch, so you’ve got to always catch the weather shifts, you’ve got to be constantly on alert. So, if you’re not sleeping or eating, you ‘re doing maintenance on the boat, you’re doing the scientific undertakings, you’re doing emails,’ she says.

“I had this philosophy that I didn’t need to sail super, super fast all the time, I just needed to sail 0.2 of a knot faster than him (Konyukhov) over the 16,000 nautical miles we were sailing and I’d beat the record. And I was at times able to sail considerably more than that.”

Blair also put the feat down to being physically prepared, and disciplined when staring down long periods of lethargy, ailment and sleep deprivation.

“It’s a 50ft racing yacht, so doing anything on board is quite difficult. Everything is manual, so hoisting the sail can sometimes take 20-30 minutes to pull up just because it’s simply so heavy,” she says.

“Also, when I’m close to land or known hazards, I don’t sleep longer than 20 minutes at a time, and when I get further afield I might increase that up to 40 minutes, but on both of my circumnavigations around Antarctica , I don’t think I slept for more than an hour and a half in a single sleep the entire time.

“That, in toe with the equipment on board the boat starting to deteriorate as you get halfway around because you’re doing a lifetime’s worth of work to it… it ends up being what I think is one of the hardest endurance sports out there. “

With both feet now firmly back on Australian soil, the Sydney sailing instructor will change course to her next epic record attempt.

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Israel Adesanya, Alex Pereira, UFC 281, Dana White, November, title fight

Israel Adesanya will have the chance to re-write some personal history when he defends his UFC middleweight title against Brazilian Alex Pereira on November 13 (AEST).

World champion Adesanya announced on Sports Center that he’ll fight old rival Pereira in a title fight at UFC 281 at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

The highly anticipated grudge match pits the two old foes against each other for the first time in mixed martial arts, after fighting twice before in kickboxing.

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Adesanya was visibly shocked by the judges’ decision after his first fight with Pereira, with the Brazilian winning by unanimous decision.

The pair had their rematch less than a year later in March 2017, with a left hand knocking the Nigerian-born fight out during the third round.

While he hasn’t felt the need to chase revenge after losing both fights, Adesanya vowed to “slam this b****” ahead of their meeting at the famous New York venue later this year.

Tough as nails Aussie makes Dana applaud | 01:28

“Have I ever shied away from a fight? I’ve always picked the guy no one wants to fight,” Adesanya said on Sports Center.

“The guy that everyone runs away from, I run towards. So I run towards the fire and this is no different.

“After he beat me in Brazil, I never had any plans of trying to get revenge or anything like that because I don’t hold onto things.

“I’m telling you, the universe has presented this to me and it’s right there. It’s the perfect alley-oop and I’m going to slam this b****”.

Adesanya held onto his middleweight crown with a unanimous decision win over American Jared Cannonier at UFC 276 last month.

The victory extended the 33-year-old’s unbeaten run to three fights, after losing to Polish fighter Jan Blachowicz by unanimous decision in the UFC light heavyweight title fight last year.

As for his opponent, Pereira is undefeated from three fights so far in the UFC whilst he’s undefeated in his last six MMA fights.

The Brazilian is coming off a first-round knockout of the highly rated Sean Strickland.

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Commonwealth Games 2022: New Zealand athlete Imogen Ayris won pole vault bronze on fractured foot

New Zealand’s latest pole-vaulting star Imogen Ayris has revealed she not only competed in the final of her event at the Birmingham Commonwealth Games with a broken hand, but also with a broken foot.

Ayris told the NZ Herald following her bronze medal vault of 4.45m that she discovered a broken bone in her hand earlier this year, caused by an old gymnastics injury. Now Ayris says she found out following the final that her foot was also in a sorry state.

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Arriving at a celebratory lunch for Kiwi athletes at New Zealand House in Edgbaston on Thursday wearing a moon boot, Ayris told 1News that she had to block out the pain as she fought for her medal.

“(The pain) was there but it wasn’t what I was thinking about, it wasn’t what I was worried about,” she said.

“I’m quite good at ignoring pain. I’ve jumped with some pretty wacky injuries in the past so it didn’t affect me at all. It was there but it wasn’t.”

Ayris said she wasn’t even sure how the break occurred and had purposely downplayed her pain leading up the event.

“It’s been a little niggly for a while – when I got off a plane in America (before last month’s world championships in Oregon) for a session I felt it a bit but I just thought that it was from the travel.

“I kept training on it, it kind of went away, and then it came back a bit. We were strapping it up for training sessions, didn’t modify any training, and then after competition we got it scanned to figure out what was really going on and it was fractured.

“I had probably downplayed it in the past two weeks building up to this but I didn’t want to make it a thing if it wasn’t a thing.”

The break has forced the rising star to cancel a planned athletics campaign in Europe and instead return to New Zealand to rehabilitate the injury.

“I’m going to go home, put my feet up and let this bone heal,” she said.

This article originally appeared on the NZ Herald and was reproduced with permission

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Italian decathlon athlete Alberto Nonino U20s World Championships race ruined by errant penis

Italian decathlon athlete Alberto Nonino had a nightmare run at the U20s World Championships after his penis repeatedly flopped out of his shorts while competing.

The 18-year-old was running in the 400m portion of the Decathlon event in Colombia when he suffered a wardrobe malfunction just after making a promising start.

While the rest of the field were pumping their arms to stretch away from the line, Nonino’s were busy trying to repeatedly tuck his member away.

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Sam Edmund’s trade period update on Heppell, Henry, Geelong’s “number one target” and more

SEN Chief reporter Sam Edmund has the latest on a number of players linked with a move during the 2022 trade period.

This year’s exchange window begins in early October, meaning there are less than two months until clubs are able to wheel and deal.

Edmund predicts a much more exciting affair than last year’s snooze fest.

“There’s so much intertwining when it comes to these things too. If Luke Jackson goes to Fremantle it affects Rory Lobb too, Bobby Hill is going to leave GWS, Karl Amon is going to leave Port Adelaide, Dan McStay is going to leave Brisbane… Geelong sniffing around the edges,” he said on SEN’s Crunch Time.

“So many of them are going to be related this year, I think it’s going to be a really busy trade period and I think we’re going to have the domino that needs to be done that unlocks the rest of them, so there will be some hectic times I think this trade window.”

I have provided updates on Dyson Heppell, Ollie Henry, Geelong’s “number one target”, the happenings at the Giants and more.

Edmudn also reported on Thursday that Izak Rankine was being tempted by a move home to South Australia by the Crows with a big-money offer.

Dyson Heppell (unrestricted free agent)

“The Suns, they’re interested in Dyson Heppell. My gut feels is he stays at Essendon, it’ll get worked out (but) there’s been some haggling.

“Certainly there was a bit of frustration from both camps early, but I think they’re getting there and I think Dyson Heppell will stay but he’s got that offer to go up to Gold Coast to see him providing some great leadership up there for the Suns.”

Isaac Smith (unrestricted free agent)

“Isaac Smith is going to sign a one-year extension shortly with Geelong, (a) super recruit he has been.”

Ollie Henry (out of contract)

“I think Ollie Henry will get there (at Collingwood). He’s thrashing things out with Collingwood at the moment, still unsigned, so he it’s got Collingwood fans a little nervous. ”

“Geez, he’s showed some good sings this season, he’s been in and out of the side… but with McStay coming in – or so we think – that’s complicating things for Ollie Henry (like) where does he play, when does he play… so there’s a bit to work out there.”

Darcy Gardiner (restricted free agent)

“Darcy Gardiner is another player that remains unsigned at Brisbane that we haven’t spoken about a lot and there’s some real interest in him as a free agent, so that will be interesting.”

Cam Zurhaar (out of contract)

“Cam Zurhaar is still unsigned.

“He refused to sign or even get to the table while David Noble was there and now obviously, waiting to see what happens next.

“They cannot afford to lose Cam Zurhaar, he’s formed a really nice pairing with Nick Larkey there.

“As any player would be I imagine, he’s sitting back with the new coach coming in.”

What’s coming for GWS

“GWS, all bets are off here, they might be the most active in the trade window which we’ve spoken about as they look to balance the books.

“It’s not an exodus as such, I think it will be really targeted in terms of who they let go and they’ve got some levers to pull here given not all their players are in contract.

“Tanner Bruhn is definitely out, he wants to get back to Victoria only two years after being taken with Pick 12 in the 2020 draft.

“Bobby Hill has wanted a trade since this time last year, and Tim Taranto is out of contract and widely expected to seek a fresh start.

“And then there’s his midfield running mate Jacob Hopper, who’s got a year to run (on his contract with GWS) but Geelong have expressed a real interest in him, as well as Jordan De Goey.

“I think Hopper is their number one target there.

“Nick Haynes has been raised, (he’s) contracted long term, Lachie Whitfield even just around the edges as well as someone who’s locked in for the long term as well.

“So there’s a bit to work out at GWS also with a new coach coming in.”





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Sports

Cameron Mooney thought blunder had cost Geelong 2009 premiership

Former Geelong star Cameron Mooney has revealed he thought he’d cost the Cats another premiership in the dying stages of their 2009 triumph over St Kilda.

Mooney, who says he’s spent “most years kicking himself” about his inaccuracy in front of goal in the 2008 loss to Hawthorn, feared he’d come up short again the following season when his direct opponent threatened to turn the grand finale just seconds before its most iconic moment – ​​the Matthew Scarlett toe-poke.

“I saw Gary Ablett (Jnr) in the middle of the ground by himself, so I’ve gone to turn back inside 50,” Mooney explained on 3AW’s Footy: Then and Now podcast.

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“But Zac Dawson, who was playing on me, came off me – he made a great decision – and spoiled the ball on Gary Ablett in the middle of the ground.

“My first instinct was – ‘Oh my God, I’ve lost us two grand finals in a row’ – I couldn’t believe it.

“I was shattered.

“Somehow, Scarlo has come through the other way and the ball has just bounced up nicely for him to give that famous toe-poke back into Gaz’s hands and I’m off to the races back into the goal square.”

‘Footy: Then and Now’ is a weekly podcast that gets you excited for the weekend ahead by revisiting famous VFL/AFL moments with the people who shaped them. Follow/Subscribe on Spotify, Manzanaand Google Podcasts

That play famously ended up with Paul Chapman kicking a goal at the top of the square, which gave Geelong the lead and ultimately the premiership.

It wasn’t Mooney’s only confession from that game.

He said he knew at the time Tom Hawkins’ goal just before half-time had hit the post on the way through.

“I knew it hit,” Mooney said.

“I went over and jumped on him (Hawkins) to celebrate as if to try and convince the goal umpire to not make it a point.

“As we were celebrating I was thinking ‘My god, I think we’ve got away with this’ and in the end we did.”

Mooney went on to marvel at the fact Hawkins and Joel Selwood, who both played key roles in the 2009 success, were still front and center of Geelong’s premiership push.

He said he felt Geelong had its best chance since 2011 to win the premiership this year.

“I just want to see him (Selwood) hold the cup,” he said.

“Winning premierships when you’re young is great, it’s fun, it’s fantastic, but winning one when you’re older and have gone through all the hell and you’ve gone through all the wins, losses, ups and downs and years and years later you finally get your hands on the cup, that is the most satisfying thing you’ll ever have.”

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