Essendon captain Dyson Heppell could be enticed north to finish his career, while a Collingwood big man has secured a new contract for 2023.
AFL Media’s Cal Twomey joined SEN Breakfast on Thursday morning to provide updates on several players.
One of those was Bombers skipper Heppell, who remains unsigned late in the 2022 season.
The 30-year-old has an offer on the table to stay at The Hangar, but is yet to make up his mind given interest from the Gold Coast Suns.
“We reported several weeks ago that rival clubs were looking at him as a veteran free agent option when he was out of contract at the Bombers,” Twomey said on SEN Breakfast.
“Now, he got a contract offer shortly after that, a one-year extension was put to him, but he hasn’t signed it and Gold Coast has an interest in Heppell as an unrestricted free agent.
“His form has spiked in the last couple of months, I think he’s been playing more on the wing, he was good again against North Melbourne last week, one of Essendon’s best players, so the Suns are having a look at him.
“I think Essendon opened the door to this possibility by taking until so late in the year to offer their skipper an extra year.
“So it will be fascinating to see what Heppell does from here. Take the year at the Bombers or head to Queensland to close out his career.”
Despite looking a step off the pace at times, Heppell has played an important role in 2022 off half-back, averaging 22.7 disposals, 6.8 marks and three rebound 50s a game.
Club legend Tim Watson was asked if he wanted Heppell to stay at Essendon for 2023.
“Under the right circumstances, yes,” he replied.
“He’s a great club man, very popular player, great around the team and I can see why he would attract interest from the Suns for that purpose.”
Meanwhile, Twomey also reported Collingwood ruck/forward Mason Cox will be at the Pies next year.
The 31-year-old found himself out of the team early in the year but has recaptured some of his best form as the season has progressed, playing 12 games.
“He’s locked in now for next year at Collingwood,” Twomey stated on Cox.
“He was almost out of the club this time last year, he signed a one-year deal with a games trigger for 2023 which he’s now hit.
“(There is) obviously a lot happening in the Collingwood ruck space, plenty of interest in Brodie Grundy.
“I think a lot of clubs will be weighing up the Grundy chase… Port Adelaide, GWS, some Melbourne-based clubs too (have some interest).”
That contract means all three of Cox, Darcy Cameron and Brodie Grundy are contracted to Collingwood for next season, as is young ruckman Aiden Begg.
Cox, Cameron and Grundy have only played together once this season, in Round 5.
Storm hardman Nelson Asofa-Solomona is getting away with too much according to Warriors interim coach Stacey Jones who remains “baffled” he wasn’t charged by the NRL match review committee for an incident which left Wayde Egan with two cracked teeth.
Jones went even further and said given Asofa-Solomona’s record of four charges in 2022, which have all resulted in fines, he could be due to a suspension if only to make him think more about his behaviour.
Egan was “rattled” by the incident in which Asofa-Solomona came down on top of him in a tackle last Friday which forced him from the field but was missed as only “minor contact by match review committee manager Luke Patten.
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Asofa-Solomona, who is yet to be suspended this season despite being charged three times for high tackles and one for making dangerous contact with a defender using his forearm, wasn’t even fined for landing his elbow on Egan’s face.
Patten said it was just a case of “two big men on a smaller man” in a prerecorded video shown at football boss Graham Annesley’s weekly media briefing on Monday and there was “no force applied to Egan’s neck”.
Jones, however, saw things differently and thought a chance was missed to send a signal to players about making contact in tackles.
“It’s not a good message,” Jones said, “It’s baffled me a little bit, like everyone else.
“We’re all about protecting our players. The game is so tough and physical.
“Wayde was really rattled. It could have been worse but I thought (Asofa-Solomona) could have at least been charged.”
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Jones said Asofa-Solomona, a New Zealand international, might need to be shown, though a suspension, that he needs to change his ways when tackling.
“It’s about protecting Nelson too, in some sort of way,” he said.
“He plays a physical game and the size of his body and the damage he could do to someone, it could turn out very nasty.
“I’m sure Nelson doesn’t want to have that on him.”
Jones confirmed both departing playmaker Chanel Harris-Tavita and Jazz Tevaga are unlikely to play again this season.
Harris-Tavita has suffered an MCL injury in his knee while Tevaga has a shoulder injury.
It is the middle of the European winter, and sprinter Evan O’Hanlon is shoveling snow off a track in the Czech Republic, where he lives, so he can train in -8C weather.
Key points:
Evan O’Hanlon won his second straight T37/38 100m Commonwealth Games gold
Brandon Starc won silver as he tried to defend his 2018 high jump title
Rohan Browning missed the men’s 100m podium by 0.06 of a second
The Australian four-time Paralympian has no coach by his side, his long-time mentor Iryna Dvoskina coaches him by correspondence.
But he just keeps on running – he does not know how to stop.
“I guess one way to explain it is I’m a problem gambler, and I like coming out here and gambling two years of funding on 11 seconds of running,” he said after winning the men’s T37/38 100m at the Commonwealth Games.
O’Hanlon’s career could have ended two years ago after he broke his foot badly.
Not only did he define his doctor’s expectations to run again, he also embarked on a new mission to represent Australia at this year’s Beijing Winter Olympics in bobsled.
While he just missed out on qualification for the two-man event, he was determined to come back to the Commonwealth Games, and his persistence has been vindicated.
“It’s really nice, mostly because I could do it in front of my four-year-old daughter and my two-year-old son, Ursula and Alfred,” he said.
“All my other medals they were probably a bit too young for, and in Tokyo they didn’t get to come over because of COVID. So I’ve hung on long enough they’ve been able to come and watch, and that’s pretty special.”
The five-time Paralympic champion wants to keep running and maybe give bobsled another shot too — but he has to be realistic.
“I know if I was right training at the same level I was before London and Rio, I feel like I could win gold again in Paris,” he said.
“But I’ve got to be able to look after my family as well. I’m on the top level of [funding] support in Australia and I moved to the Czech Republic [with Czech wife Zuzana] so that I can afford to keep running.
“I can’t afford to do it if I’m living in Australia on that funding.”
O’Hanlon said his wife would have the final say over whether he continues in one or both sports, but you get the sense he is not done just yet.
Starc pushes through pain barrier for silver
Every step Brandon Starc took in the men’s high jump final was agony.
He is still recovering from a bruised heel that forced him to withdraw from the recent world championships.
And while he had to produce more jumps than he would have liked in the end, he was relieved to get a reward.
Starc and New Zealand’s Hamish Kerr both cleared 2.25m on their first attempts, but neither could get past 2.28m, so Kerr won on countback.
“That was probably the toughest comp I’ve ever had,” Starc said.
“Throughout that comp, besides maybe the first jump, I was feeling every bit of that bruised heel. [I] was taking my shoe off trying to get some sort of relief.
“But really, I just had to kind of grit my teeth and jump through it.
“I could have either just rolled over and gave up or pushed through it and tried to do something.”
It was a satisfying medal for the defending champion, and he soaked up the silver with his nine-month-old son Oliver, carrying him all around Alexander Stadium for a lap of honour.
Browning misses 100m podium
Rohan Browning was sixth in the men’s 100m final, finishing just 0.06 of a second off third spot.
The African champion, Kenya’s Ferdinand Omanyala, won in 10.02 seconds.
Browning almost did not even make it to Birmingham.
After underperforming at the world championships a few weeks ago, I have considered withdrawing from the rest of the season to return home and get back to training.
“A month ago, there’s no way I saw myself in this final, so I try to take each win,” he said after the race.
“But once you’re here, you just want to be on that podium. That’s what it’s all about.”
Browning has been on a journey to refine his technique and improve his start since his breakthrough performance in winning his heat at last year’s Tokyo Olympics.
And while he conceded he was not where he wanted to be, he was optimistic the results would soon come.
“I’m glad I decided to persist. I just think one of the lessons I’ve learned is persistence is so much more important than patience, you just gotta keep trying things and keep at it. And eventually the tide will turn,” he said.
Jamaica’s Olympic champion Elaine Thompson-Herah lived up to the hype and won the women’s 100m.
Fantastic finish in 10,000m
One of the most spine-tingling moments of night six came in the finale to the women’s 10,000m.
After half an hour of racing, it turned into a sprint finish between Scotland’s Eilish McColgan and Kenya’s Irine Chepet Cheptai.
On the final lap, the fans stood up and channeled all their energy towards the Scot, furiously screaming, urging her to find something extra.
And she pulled it off on the home stretch.
“I knew the Kenyans were super strong and would put in bursts. But you can see in that last 100 that I wanted gold. It is an absolute dream. It is so special to have it here in the UK,” she said.
It is the third Commonwealth Games gold in the event for the McColgan family — Eilish’s mum Liz won the event in 1986 and 1990, and now coaches her daughter.
“She ran the race the way I knew she was capable of,” Liz said.
“It has been a long time coming and I know all the hard work she does. It is great that it all came together.”
Canberra Raiders prop Josh Papalii has reportedly pledged his allegiance to Samoa for the upcoming Rugby League World Cup held in England later this year.
Papalii has dabbled in the Samoan and Kangaroos camps in the past with four games with Samoa and 11 with the Kangaroos.
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The Maroons veteran is the latest Australian eligible player to commit to a Pacific Island nation, joining Panthers duo Jarome Luai and Brian To’o.
“As an older player, I feel like it’s a movement I just don’t want to be missing out on,” Papalii said.
“Just seeing the likes of a few of the Penrith boys coming out and I’ve had few text messages from other players who haven’t come out yet saying they’ve put their hand up for Samoa.
“I have put my hand up to play for Samoa. Mal Meninga knows that and I’ve had a coffee with Mal as well to speak about what I’m planning to do… but that’s a long way from here, anything can happen in the next hopefully eight weeks.”
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Papalii represented Samoa at the 2017 World Cup but has since pulled on the green and gold of Australia.
“I guess probably my last World Cup wasn’t the best, I sort of treated it as a little vacation and probably drank a bit too often, ate more than I should have,” he admitted.
“I’m looking to just play a bit of World Cup for the Motherland and represent my wife and my kids and especially my parents as well and just make Samoa proud.”
This year’s Rugby League World Cup will be hosted in the United Kingdom, making it Papalii’s third appearance in the major tournament, being his second with his native country of Samoa.
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Australia leads the medal tally with 46 gold medals as the Commonwealth Games swimming program concludes at the end of day six of the competition.
Tomorrow, attention turns to track and field and team sports.
Gold: 46
Silver: 38
Bronze: 39
Total: 123
You can check out how the latest batch of medals were won in our Commonwealth Games blog, or have a look at the medal winners and the top 10 medal standings by country below:
Day 6 medal winners:
Gold:
Evan O’Hanlon, athletics, T37/38 100m
Kaylee McKeown, Chelsea Hodges, Emma McKeon and Mollie O’Callaghan, swimming, 4×100 medley relay
Ariarne Titmus, swimming, 400m freestyle
Sam Short, swimming, 1,500m freestyle
Silver:
Brandon Starc, athletics, high jump
Bradley Woodward, Zac Stubblety-Cook, Matt Temple and Kyle Chalmers, swimming, 4X100 medley relay
Mollie O’Callaghan, swimming, 50m backstroke
Benjamin Hance, swimming, S14 200m freestyle
Cheryl Lindfield and Serena Bonnell, lawn bowls, B6-B8 women’s pair
“I started my international career and was probably pigeonholed as a 50-over player purely because my strike rate wasn’t near where it needed to be,” McGrath said. “That was a massive focus for me. to be [striking] at 150, I don’t know how long I’ll keep it there, but I’ll try my best.”
Under blue skies at Edgbaston, McGrath and Beth Mooney (70 not out from 49 balls) helped Australia recover from 2-19, after the early wickets of Alyssa Healy (4) and Meg Lanning (4), by plundering an unbeaten 141-run booth.
It was the highest third-wicket partnership ever by the Australians in T20s, eclipsing McGrath and Lanning’s 135-run stand last month against Ireland. The 141-run partnership was also the fourth-highest ever, for any wicket, by Australia in the shortest format.
McGrath and Mooney used their crease cleverly and showed brute force square of the wicket as Pakistan’s bowlers struggled to stem the flow of runs on a quick outfield. Australia scored 102 runs from their final 10 overs.
In response, Pakistan lost two wickets inside two overs and didn’t recover. They were 8-116 at the end of their 20 overs, with McGrath snaring 3-13 from three overs to bring her career average down from an already brilliant 13.85 to 11 on the dot.
“The game can be taken away from you like we saw today with Tahlia coming in,” Mooney said. “She played an unbelievable innings. She seems really clear on her role in the team.”
The win was Australia’s third in a row, but it’ll mean nothing without another A-grade performance on Saturday.
“Moving into finals all the work we’ve done in the round games is irrelevant,” McGrath said. “Everyone starts from scratch. It’s knockout. In saying that, we take a lot of confidence and momentum.”
Mooney added: “Pressure is a bit of a privilege in my eyes. There’s certainly no amount of pressure that’s more than what we put on ourselves to perform day in and day out.
“The challenge that awaits us is really exciting. Semi-finals are sometimes harder than finals. You have to be on your game from ball one.
“You want a spot in that gold medal match. We know on our best day we can beat anyone.”
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He defended that title against Japan’s Fighting Harada in a controversial points decision.
In a rematch six months later in Japan, Famechon knocked Harada out in the 14th round.
In May, 1970, Famechon lost on points to Mexican Vicente Saldivar, retiring soon after at the age of 25, having won 56 of his 67 professional fights.
“As a human, he was second to none. He was such a beautiful man,” former world champion Jeff Fenech told 2GB.
Famechon’s life was changed forever in 1991 when he was hit by a car in Sydney and badly injured. He suffered brain damage and a stroke and was lucky to survive.
In 2012 Famechon was elevated to Legend status in the Australian National Boxing Hall of Fame, having also been inducted into the World Boxing Hall of Fame in 1997.
He fought in a golden era of Australian boxing, alongside the likes of fellow world champion Lionel Rose.
“We all loved those guys and looked up to them,” Fenech said.
“They’re our idols, they’re legends, and the passing of him today is very sad.
“Every time I saw him he was always happy, always having a joke. Even after he had the horrific accident, everything was about living life to the fullest and having a great time.
“He’ll be sadly missed.
“He was an Australian boxing icon, a legend in Australian sport. To his family, my thoughts are with you all and may he rest in peace.”
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However that resulted in Piastri denying on social media that a deal had been made, rejecting a move up with the team formerly known as Renault: “I will not be driving for Alpine next year.”
That has sent the rumor mill into overdrive that Piastri will join McLaren next year, even though Ricciardo has a third year to run on his contract with the English team.
Should a McLaren move materialize for Piastri, it would leave Ricciardo without a seat for 2023.
Szafnauer told motorsport.com.au the team has spoken with several drivers but didn’t rule out a return for Ricciardo, referencing Alonso’s career, which includes two stints at McLaren, and three at Alpine-Renault.
“I mean, if you look at Fernando, for example, he comes and goes, and I think that happens to other drivers too,” he told the publication.
“And I don’t think that’s an issue at all. I think what we need to focus on is, like I say, the plans that we have for the next 89-88 races.
“We’ve got to make sure that we complement that plan with the best driver that we can, and there are some options out there for us. And we put the best driver in next to Esteban [Ocon]so that we can move forward towards what we’ve been planning.”
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Commonwealth Games in pictures: Fighter left in tears after coach calls off fight
Our AFL experts tackle some of the burning questions ahead of Round 21, including if Carlton loss to Adelaide will cost them a finals spot, the Round 21 game with the biggest stakes and what we really think about Collingwood.
Has Carlton blown their chance at September action?
Rohan Connolly: I suspect they might have. Have just done a ladder predictor, and I have the Blues missing out by a game to the Bulldogs, with Richmond in seventh spot. Brisbane (away), Melbourne and Collingwood is a bloody tough assignment. It’s a pity, really, because their emergence has been exciting, and they’ve done it against a continual backdrop of injury. But the bottom line is they’ve been too erratic over the second half of this season, 4-5 since being 8-2 after 10 rounds. And the loss to St Kilda when the Saints were in ordinary shape and last Saturday night’s disaster are probably the nails in the coffin.
Jake Michaels: Yes, the loss to the Crows was disappointing and inexcusable for a side which has been spoken about all year as a flag chance, but Michael Voss’ side still controls its destiny and remains a hot favorite to play in September. The Blues really only need to win one of their remaining three games, and while they are all tough, I can’t seem to them ending the season on a four-game losing streak. They make it in but I’m starting to reconsider just how much damage they can do…
Matt Walsh: Which Carlton will we see the rest of the year? Is it the one which went 8-2 and looked irresistible at times? Or the one which gives up games to St Kilda and Adelaide without showing so much as a whimper? That will determine where they finish on the ladder. They’re currently a game and a half inside the eight with somewhat healthy percentage; if they can snag a win over one of Brisbane (at the Gabba), or Melbourne and Collingwood (at the MCG) after that, they should make it, but lose all three and it’s a wasted season and, frankly, a failure on Michael Voss.
Jarryd Barca: They haven’t blown their chance completely, but they stumbled at a critical hurdle in that loss to Adelaide which only makes their path to September a little rockier. Their best is as good as — if not better than — anyone in the competition which is why I’ve been bullish about them all season, but the difference between their best and worst still seems too stark. Let’s not overreact here, though, they might not always reach the true heights of their ceiling, but I fully expect them to bounce back hard in the next three weeks as good teams do and at least snag one win – which should be enough.
Which game this week will have the biggest impact on finals?
RC: Wow, it’s a great round and there’s perhaps four games you could realistically argue are the most important in this sense. But I’m probably inclined to go with Geelong vs. St Kilda because it could affect both the battle for top and the battle for eighth, Melbourne in a position to re-take top spot if it wins by enough and the Cats stumble, and the Saints out of the eight if they lose and either Richmond or the Western Bulldogs win by any amount. That’s a wide range of ramifications.
JM: I’m looking at Friday night’s tasty clash between the Demons and Magpies. Melbourne’s looking more like the Melbourne we’ve become accustomed to but a top four berth is still far from secure, especially with games to come against the Magpies, Blues and Lions. If Collingwood gets up here and beats the Dees for the second time in 2022, they not only put a firm grasp on their own top four hopes but send significant concerns through the Demons camp. Can’t wait for it.
MW: The Western Bulldogs-Fremantle clash suddenly has my interest after Freo’s capitulation on Friday night against Melbourne. The Dockers are outside the top four now, and while they’re still a chance to climb back up to secure the double chance, equally, the Dogs will be rare to take down a contender to keep their slim, but not outrageous finals hopes alive . After the Dockers, the Bulldogs face GWS and Hawthorn, and with Carlton missing, there’s a real chance that a win this week could help to throw up some crazy first-week finals.
JB: Brisbane hosting Carlton at the Gabba with both teams coming off different kinds of brutal losses is as mouth-watering as it gets, with the Lions still fighting for a top four berth which we know is critical for interstate teams, and the Blues eager not to let their grip on the top eight loosen any more than it is. In terms of impacting finals, the top four isn’t out of the question for Michael Voss if his side can pull of an unlikely upset, and we can preempt the pressure that will ensue wth defeat, while facing Brisbane up north in an elimination final is a scary proposition for whoever may still scrape into the lower echelons of the eight.
What’s your strongest opinion about Collingwood right now?
RC: That they have had a sensational season whatever happens from here, with huge improvement considering they finished 17th in 2021. And I don’t buy the “lucky” argument or the inevitably of them being “found out” when it matters. Yes, you need an element of fortune to win close games, but nine wins from 10 games decided by 11 points or less is too big a sample to be purely lucky. Indeed, I think the fact last year they played in six games decided by 12 points or less and lost five is a good tangible indicator of their improvement.
JM: The Magpies are nowhere near as good as their record suggests. I’ll admit I was wildly wrong about the Pies at the start of the season (predicting them to finish bottom four) but are they a top four side? not chance. Percentage is a great indicator of how a side is traveling and there are currently EIGHT sides who have a better percentage than the Pies. Enough said.
MW: I’ve been saying for weeks to look at the percentage – it’s the best guide for where a team is ‘really at’. They’ve ground out some hard-fought wins, and have at times been fortunate (there’s nothing wrong with saying that!) but they’re not a power club that I can see winning at the end, let alone convincingly. Much like Sydney last year, I can see them finishing with a ‘home’ final in the first week but losing to a more experienced side. Plenty to look forward to, though.
JB: That while they’ve greatly exceeded expectations this season, we probably should have seen a rise coming after last year’s abysmal efforts, given the experience they still have. It’s easy to overreact in this game and that’s what most of us did, but actually having a good on-field year amongst the wild off-field distractions — a trade period ‘fire sale’, the fallout from the ‘Do Better’ report , Eddie McGuire stepping down and the ongoing board speculation and eventual upheaval, the removal of head coach Nathan Buckley mid-year and a range of injuries to key players which stipulated the blooding and exposure of the list’s youth — is virtually unimaginable. A far cry from this season’s fortunes, the Pies also lost five matches last season by under two goals (two by one point), so were more competitive than their 17th-placed finished suggested. Nah, they’re probably not a 14-5 team, but they were never going to be that bad.
Which bottom six side are you most optimistic about in 2023?
RC: Hawthorn. I was more bullish than most about the Hawks even before this season, and while a 7-12 record is hardly anything to write home about, I think they haven’t been far off the mark at all, seven of their losses by 27 points or less. I’m pretty upbeat about their young guys, too. It’s a pretty big group, and the likes of Newcombe, Jiath, Lewis, Koschitzke, Ward, Maginness are coming along quickly. I sense Sam Mitchell as coach is building a pretty solid brand of game, too, which will keep improving.
JM: Call me crazy but I’m still bullish on the Bombers. I picked them to make finals this year and am as surprised as anyone by their nosedive. With the likes of Zach Merrett, Darcy Parish, Dylan Shiel, Andy McGrath and Jye Caldwell, there’s a nice group of youthful midfielders. Players like Peter Wright, Sam Draper, Nic Martin and Mason Redman have had breakout years and should only improve, while the defense has the personnel to be far better than they have been this season. With an easier fixture (which they will get) I’m tipping them to bounce back next season.
MW: Hawthorn is not yet a year into its planned reset with Sam Mitchell at the helm, and, for the most part, they’ve exceeded my expectations. They’ve already matched their 2021 win tally of seven, and we’ve seen a different take from Mitchell and at the selection table. Strides have been taken by Mitch Lewis and Jai Newcombe. We’ve seen Changkuoth Jiath become an assured rebounder. Will Day is stringing together games, Josh Ward has impressed… there’s a heap to like about this list. If they can attract a big name in the next season or two, they could be playing finals sooner rather than later.
JB: I agree with Jake on this one, although I didn’t have them making it this season, I fully expect the Bombers to bounce back and play finals footy in 2023. Their defense is sound with Jordan Ridley, Jayden Laverde, Jake Kelly and Redman holding the fort while developing tall Zach Reid is waiting in the wings, they have a diverse midfield group with a range of strengths that can cause serious damage, and key forwards Peter Wright and the ever-improving Harrison Jones can form one of the most formidable forward 50 partnerships in the league. The puzzle pieces are there at The Hangar.
That pushed Australia to 10 team fouls and under 3 x 3 rules any infringement from then on meant England went to the free throw line for two shots and possession.
England ramped up their physical approach, with Orlan “OJ” Jackman particularly dubious in defense but somehow allowed to get away with it.
The sides traded baskets with England hitting the lead when Jayden Henry-McCalla nailed a two point shot, only for Johnson to score one point with seconds remaining.
The match went into overtime in which the first team to score two points won.
“I don’t think it’s the ref’s fault,” Australia’s Jesse Wagstaff, who plays for the Perth Wildcats, said. “That’s 3 x 3 basketball, it’s pretty physical and both teams are pretty physical. That’s just how it goes.”
Despite the loss, the match was another reminder of why this shortened format of the game has become so popular since making its debut in Tokyo last year.
Australia, though, face an uphill battle to qualify for the 2024 Olympics in Paris.
ranking points [are how we qualify] but unfortunately it’s tough for us,” Hire said. “Most of our guys are playing professional – when you’re playing in that, the pro circuit, they don’t have time to travel around the world. We don’t get paid to play 3 x 3, we don’t get per diems like the Boomers, you’re doing it for the love of the game and your country. Realistically it will be tough for us. We have to go through World Cup qualifications. It will be tough, but we know Aussies like to battle. We’ll put ourselves in a position to pull through.
Earlier, the men’s wheelchair team got the party started for Australia, beating Canada 11-9.
loading
The match went right down to the final second with Canada’s Colin Higgins’ two-point attempt from outside the perimeter lipping out.
“Never in doubt,” insisted Australia’s Lachlin Dalton, who scored one of five from the arc, earning him the nickname of “Kingslayer” from the in-court commentator.
The tables were turned, however, in the women’s wheelchair fixture with Canada trouncing Australia 14-5.
Get all the latest news from the Birmingham Commonwealth Gameshere. We’ll be live blogging the action from 4pm-10am daily.