Sports – Page 159 – Michmutters
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Albo caught up in State of Origin ‘scandal’

There are urgent calls for a ‘try’, awarded to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during this morning’s State of Origin grudge match at Parliament House, to be referred to the NRL bunker.

Donning a blue jersey, track pants and footy boots, the prime minister joined the ‘Parliamentary Friends of Rugby League’ on Tuesday morning for their fourth annual State of Origin touch football match.

Sucking back the cold Canberra air, the group ran out for the ‘friendly’ – put on by NRL Chief Executive Andrew Abdo – taking place on the parliament playing field.

There are urgent calls for a 'try', awarded to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during this morning's State of Origin grudge match at Parliament House, to be referred to the NRL bunker.
There are urgent calls for a ‘try’, awarded to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese during this morning’s State of Origin grudge match at Parliament House, to be referred to the NRL bunker. (9News)

New South Wales and Queensland sides consisted of veteran pollies, like former Nationals leaders Michael McCormack and Barnaby Joyce.

The latter, helping to make up the numbers for the queensland sideseemingly as red as his maroon jersey after a valiant effort.

Some speculated he was worthy of the Wally Lewis medal, but the PM apparently disagreed.

“Barnaby has very short stints on the field. Even though he represents the NSW seat, he has a Maroons jersey on as well,” Mr Albanese told Today.

“Look, there should be an inquiry into some of these players and where they are playing for, I tell you.”

He then took issue with former Wallaby turned Senator David Pocock, who also hit the field for the Maroons during the match.

NSW and QLD sides consisting of veteran pollies, like former Nationals leaders Michael McCormack and Barnaby Joyce.
NSW and QLD sides consisting of veteran pollies, like former Nationals leaders Michael McCormack and Barnaby Joyce. (9News)

“I can report the greatest scandal since GI (Greg Inglis) playing for Queensland, David Pocock from the ACT pulling on a Queensland jumper.

“They will stop at nothing.”

But the biggest controversy came just before half-time.

With a sweaty and exhausted NSW side already up 2-1, the Prime Minister hit the gas, making a glorious run toward a gap.

Hot on his heels, was newly-minted junior minister, Anika Wells.

Diving across the try line, the crowd cheered, and an elated Albanese raised both arms while running toward the group, before taking a lap of high-fives.

All the while though, Ms Wells was appealing to the referee, claiming she’d made contact with her boss, before he put the ball down… and replays would suggest, she did.

Albo's blues taking home bragging rights and the odd cramp, winning 3-1.
Albo’s blues taking home bragging rights and the odd cramp, winning 3-1. (9News)

The referee ultimately gave Mr Albanese the benefit of the doubt, awarding NSW the final try of the morning.

Albo’s Blues took home bragging rights and the odd cramp, winning 3-1.

Asked about the contentious call in a press conference, meters from the Prime Minister’s Office, Ms Wells laughed off the controversy.

“Before I walked back into the Prime Minister’s Office, I’ve really loved being the Minister for Sport, it’s been an honour.

“I think we can all agree that the referee is probably going to be the next governor-general based on that decision,” she said.

Labor cabinet minister makes history, with a small pink book

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Eddie Betts says training camp with Adelaide Crows was ‘cult-like’

Former AFL champion Eddie Betts has revealed for the first time the trauma he felt after a “weird” and “completely disrespectful” leadership training camp he attended as an Adelaide Crows player in the 2018 pre-season.

In his autobiography, The Boy from Boomerang Crescentto be released on Wednesday, the three-time All-Australian player says the secretive four-day camp held on the Gold Coast, run by a group he has chosen not to name, left him feeling “like a piece of me was brainwashed ”.

In the book, Betts writes that confidential information he had given in a private counseling session on the camp had been misused, and that the camp co-opted sensitive Aboriginal cultural rituals that offended him, jeopardised the wellbeing of other, younger Indigenous players within the Crows’ playing squad, and affected his family life. He blames it for a lack of form in 2018 that ultimately prompted him to leave the Crows.

“The camp ended up appropriating a First Nations peoples’ ritual of a ‘talking stick’ and attempting to apply it to all of us, even the non-Indigenous players and coaches.

“In my view, the talking stick was used incorrectly, and I was not aware that any Elder had given permission for it to be used either.

“There was all sorts of weird shit that was disrespectful to many cultures, but particularly and extremely disrespectful to my culture,” Betts writes in the book.

Betts says he would have to live for the rest of his life with the shame of having participated in some of the more confronting exercises.

‘It all made me feel really sick’

Betts writes that his first “serious reservations” about the camp began after a compulsory hour-long psychological assessment, conducted over the phone by a person he understood to be a counselor from the mind-training and leadership specialist group.

“We were told that we weren’t to do the interview with our partners in ear-shot and that the objective of the questions was to build a profile about us that we would work through on the camp,” Betts writes.

Eddie Betts with partner Anna and their children.

Eddie Betts with partner Anna and their children.

He says he opened up to the interviewer and divulged what he described as private life experiences, believing that it would assist the specialists to appreciate “the cultural complexities” of his life.

“I thought it would be used to build a profile about me that showed obstacles I’ve overcome to be successful and to play AFL.”

The red flag for Betts was when the interviewer tried to gain Betts’ confidence by claiming familiarity with Aboriginal culture: “He tried to make out as though he was like me, as though I should feel comfortable disclosing to him my trauma.”

Then 30 years old, Betts, who was part of the Adelaide club’s senior leadership group, says he was told the camp would do more than just invigorate his game-day performances. “I was told that I would come back a better husband and father, a better teammate and that I’d get a lot out of the camp,” he says.

However, the Wirangu, Kokatha and Guburn man, who is a father of five, says he returned with feelings of shame and humiliation that left him angry, paranoid, secretive and “feeling drained and lethargic”. Betts says the emotional fallout immediately began to harm his family relationships from him. His partner, Anna, noticed “the extent of my distress”, Betts writes. “Anna noticed I was starting to get snappy at the kids and I started getting really bad anxiety,” he says.

That’s when the couple sat down and talked about what had happened.

The Crows adopt the 'power stance' as they face off against Richmond before the 2017 Grand Final.

The Crows adopt the ‘power stance’ as they face off against Richmond before the 2017 Grand Final.

The ‘power stance’

The Adelaide Crows began working with the leadership training group midway through the 2017 season, Betts writes.

“This mind training was centered, mainly, around us being ‘warriors’ – things like inner-voice, dominance, mindset.”

Betts was reluctant to buy into these early programs and their “one-size-fits-all approach” over players from diverse backgrounds. As a designated leader, Betts felt he needed to check in on the wellbeing of his younger Indigenous teammates.

After the Crows lost successive games in the 2017 season, Betts says the training group reviewed game videos and claimed they had identified where the playing squad had lost these games. At fault was the way players had run through the supporters’ banner onto the ground, they said.

“Apparently, our facial expressions weren’t up to game mode,” Betts writes. The playing group was made to practice their facial expressions, he says.

Another mind-training technique Betts found concerning was intended to emphasize the players’ masculinity. The exercise involved the players forming a circle, making eye contact with one another, and screaming obscenities. Betts says elements of the program make him cringe in hindsight.

Betts warms up prior to the first preliminary final in Adelaide in 2017.

Betts warms up prior to the first preliminary final in Adelaide in 2017.Credit:Getty

“One of the young fullas said to me, ‘I see you as an Uncle. I don’t really like screaming “f— you” at you’. In our culture, from a young age, our older people are a model of respect to our kids and we quickly learn to reciprocate that respect back towards our elders. In my view, some of the younger brothers were getting wala [angry] with these leadership specialists.”

“For me, it didn’t make any sense for the leadership specialists to try and increase my angry man energy, or whatever the f— it was they were after.”

Betts writes that on the eve of the 2017 final series, the mind-training instructors devised and implemented a technique for the team to present itself after it had run through the club banner onto the playing pitch. They called it “the power stance”, Betts says, which meant all 22 Crows players and coach Don Pyke standing with their arms down, slightly away from their sides, in a commanding posture.

Betts says the choreographed stance, which was intended to intimidate the game-day opposition, was even practiced at Crows training. The Crows deployed the trick before their qualifying and preliminary finals and came away from each of those games with the win, before slumping to a spectacular defeat in the grand finale.

The grand finale drubbing at the hands of the Richmond Tigers still haunts Betts, but he says some of that may stem from the techniques deployed by the instructors at pre-season training for the 2018 season.

Betts is abandoned after losing the 2017 grand finale.

Betts is abandoned after losing the 2017 grand finale.Credit:Getty

“We had some weird sessions pop up. One consisted of us training while the Richmond club song blasted around AAMI Park while we did a gruelling running session.”

A harness and a knife

The technique geared up again when the squad was flown to a training camp on the Gold Coast in late January 2018, Betts says.

He recalls that the camp began normally enough with routine footy training drills, but soon the team was separated into groups, made to surrender their mobile phones and subjected to what he describes as a barrage of verbal abuse and psychological intimidation involving fake weapons.

According to Betts, players were then blindfolded, loaded onto a bus with papered-over windows and conveyed to an undisclosed location as the Richmond team song played on a loop loudly through the bus’s sound system. When the squad arrived at the secret destination, team members were instructed to remove their blindfolds.

Betts says the first thing they saw was a dozen or so burly men, all dressed in black, greeting them with the power stance.

The welcoming committee laid out the camp rules for the bemused players, Betts says.

“Things like, we weren’t allowed to shower… we had to stay sweaty and smell ‘manly’. We also had to keep what they described as ‘noble silence’,” Betts writes.

Camp life, which Betts’ partner, Anna, later told him was “cult-like”, also involved an “initiation process” for each of the participants, an exercise Betts views as cultural appropriation of sensitive traditional Aboriginal ceremonies.

When the time came for Betts to be “initiated”, he says he was again informed that it would make him a man. He was put into a body harness with a rope attached and told to try and fight his way towards a knife to cut himself free while teammates holding the rope physically obstructed him. The initiation also involved the camp instructors hurling verbal abuse at him, he says.

“Things were yelled at me that I had disclosed to the camp’s ‘counsellors’ about my upbringing. All the people present heard these things,” Betts writes. “I was exhausted, drained and distressed about the details being shared. Another camp-dude jumped on my back and started to berate me about my mother, something so deeply personal that I was absolutely shattered to hear it come out of his mouth from him.

At the end of the camp, the players were told that this exercise had provided each other with a safe space and that any issues affecting them were only to be shared with other group members.

“Then we started an exercise that consisted of role-playing our responses to our partners… One of the responses suggested to us was, ‘I feel like a better father and husband, having come from this camp.’”

Betts with his family at the beach, one of the photos included in his new book.

Betts with his family at the beach, one of the photos included in his new book.

But after sharing his experience with his partner, Betts developed an increasingly deeper sense of regret. He also spoke to his Aboriginal elders about some of the co-opted rituals, and the use of sacred and culturally sensitive words that were used at the camp. The conversations led to Betts and his partner approaching the club’s executives with their concerns.

Betts says he wanted to have the program discontinued to protect other Crows players from the same experiences and to establish an internal support network for some of the other players who Betts says were struggling.

“After a meeting with all the Blackfullas at the club, I decided to address the playing group and talk about how I found the camp, mainly addressing the cultural safety implications for us brothers. I sought permission to remove all the Aboriginal boys from any further interactions with the ‘leadership specialists’ and their mind-training exercises. I told the club I wouldn’t be involved in any more mind-training exercises at all.”

Three weeks later, Betts says he was dropped from the squad’s leadership group. The decision devastated him.

“It takes a lot of work for us Blackfullas to provide other people that we’re capable of leading,” he says.

The Adelaide Crows Football Club declined to comment when contacted by The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald.

The group that ran the camp has previously said it recognizes “that some parts of the camp didn’t resonate with some players”. However, it said it had received overwhelmingly positive feedback from players and the club at the time, and that the group would have been “fired in an instant” if the camp had gone as badly wrong as some had suggested.

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Betts says the effects on him continued into the 2018 season. His on-field form of him slumped with the four-time AFL goal-kicker of the year not kicking a single goal until round three. That season, the Crows failed to qualify for the finals series, and Betts says he was left questioning his playing future of him.

“Personally, I felt like I’d lost the drive to play footy, and to be honest, I’m not sure I ever had the same energy I did before that camp,” he writes.

At the end of the year, Betts left the Crows and South Australia to reunite with the Carlton Blues in Victoria, where he finished his 17-year playing career in 2021 at the club that gave the boy from Boomerang Crescent his debut.

In 2021, a SafeWork SA inquiry made no findings of any wrongdoing against the mind-training specialists.

The author of this article, Jack Latimore, did a “cultural edit” of Betts’ book, The Boy from Boomerang Crescentpublished by Simon & Schuster Australia, released on Wednesday, August 3, 2022. Ali Clarke conducted the book’s research and interviews.

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Jannik Sinner Surge Into Race Contention | ATP Tours

Jannik Sinner’s victory at the Plava Laguna Croatia Open Umag on Sunday did more than earn him a sixth ATP Tour trophy. The win also helped him arise into contention in the Pepperstone ATP Race To Turin.

Sinner climbed three places to 13th in the Race, putting him within 705 points of eighth-placed Felix Auger-Aliassime. Eight men will qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals, which will be held at the Pala Alpitour from 13-20 November.

The 20-year-old competed in last year’s season finale as an alternate after fellow Italian Matteo Berrettini with drawn due to injury. Sinner will now have an opportunity to earn even more points in the coming month, with ATP Masters 1000 events in Montreal and Cincinnati as well as the US Open.

VIEW PEPPERSTONE ATP RACE TO TURIN STANDINGS

There was no movement among the Top 12 players in the Race on Monday. However, several players competing this week will have an opportunity to secure or improve their standing as the qualification battle heats up.

Daniil Medvedev is currently sixth in the Race with 2,575 points. The 26-year-old, who is trying to qualify for the Nitto ATP Finals for the fourth consecutive year, can climb past Alexander Zverev and into fifth by making the final at the Abierto de Tenis Mifel in Los Cabos.

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The second seed at the ATP 250 event is Auger-Aliassime, who is eighth in the Race with 2,385 points. The Canadian is trying to earn his spot at the season finale for the first time, and he will look to add to his 325-point lead over ninth-placed Taylor Fritz, who is competing at the Citi Open this week in Washington.

The top seed in the United States’ capital is Andrey Rublev, who is seventh in the Race. The 24-year-old holds just a 30-point lead over Auger-Aliassime as he seeks his third qualification for the year-end championships.

Rafael Nadal leads the Pepperstone ATP Race To Turin with 5,620 points and his fellow Spaniard, Carlos Alcaraz, is second with 4,270 points. They are scheduled to return to compete next week at the National Bank Open Presented by Rogers in Montreal.

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Tasmania, AFL bid, new stadium, club vote, decision, 19th licence, Jon Ralph, Colin Carter report, bill

AFL fans will know whether Tasmania becomes the 19th team in the competition by the end of this month, Fox Footy’s Jon Ralph believes.

Just a week after reports the Tassie bid had stalled over exactly who would fund a new stadium, Ralph said there’s confidence that a “new vision” for the stadium would broker the 19th license for 2027 and beyond.

Under new estimates, the venue would cost less than $500 million – rather than the initial $750m – and could once again change attitudes towards the potential new club.

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“There will be a vote by the end of the month,” Ralph said on Fox Footy.

“The Tasmanian Government they can secure funding for a stadium believe that’s less than $500m.

“The feasibility study that’s underway with the current taskforce and government won’t be completed by the end of April, but they believe if you have a $500m bill, it would be dollar for dollar.

“Federal government, State government, there’d be some private partnership investment, with a hotel, convention centre, parking of course which would attract some visitors.

“My understanding is the other work streams are basically done, basically ticked off. None of them are game changers. The stadium is the massive issue.

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“So the plan will go to the AFL committee, let’s call it mid-month. It will go back to the presidents to go back their own boards, and then presidents like Jeff Kennett will come to a consensus view.

“We will have a decision either way.”

The new stadium would be based upon the Queensland Country Bank Stadium in Townsville, which was built for $295m two years ago.

For that venue, $140m came from State funding while a further $100m was provided from the Federal government.

Ralph said Tasmania’s stadium would also include a Perspex roof, like Dunedin’s Forsyth Barr Stadium, that would not be retractable.

“We are at the most official, the most important month in the history of the AFL in Tasmania,” Ralph said.

Fox Footy’s Nick Riewoldt, who is a Tasmanian AFL taskforce member, said now was the time for the AFL to choose a side on the 19th licence.

“Most arrogant performance!” | 03:02

“Now its incumbent on the AFL to, if they strongly believe Tasmania deserve a 19th license, to lobby that in front of the presidents,” he said.

“We know it’s mixed, some (club presidents) put their flags in the ground before the report had even been tabled.”

The Colin Carter report, on Tasmania’s bid for an AFL team, found the feasibility “stacks up”.

“Gillon McLachlan has said to them, funding will be conditional as long as you are turning sod on the new stadium by the time the team runs out for its first game, that’s acceptable,” Ralph added.

“Before finals, we’ll know (if they get a license).”

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2022 AFLW 10 under 10 to watch: Courtney Jones

IN a unique series for the lead-up to the 2022 AFL Women’s Season 7, Rookie Me Central will look at 10 players to watch this year who have played under 10 games. While it would be easy to pick those who finished high in last year’s Rising Star, or top picks this year, we have opted to look at players who have been around for at least two seasons – or in previous years – but have only managed to play nine games or less. Next up in the series is Gold Coast recruit Courtney Jones.

Taking three seasons to finally her chance after being picked up in the 2019 AFLW Draft, Courtney Jones burst onto the scene in 2022, playing nine games and slotting eight goals to win Carlton’s leading goalkicker award. As surprising as her out-of-the-blue season of her being have been, it was just as much of a shock when the 168cm forward announced she would be heading north to go to the Gold Coast.

Over the first two AFL Women’s seasons, Jones could not manage to crack in for a game, largely due to the lack of matches at state league level. The 2020 VFL Women’s season was wiped out by COVID-19 after Jones had impressed for the Southern Saints prior to being drafted in 2019. She finally got her chance in 2021, playing 10 games and slotting five goals from 13.3 disposals and 4.2 marks, playing in that high forward role.

In 2022, Jones finally got her chance in 2022, playing nine of a possible 10 games, averaging 78.4 per cent game time. Playing inside 50, Jones became a damaging sharp shooter, kicking eight goals at almost a goal per game, whilst picking up 2.4 marks and 2.2 tackles. Playing deeper forward than she had at VFLW level, Jones averaged just under a mark per game inside 50, and laid a tackle per game, but read the ball well from the kick-out also winning seven intercept possessions. Still young, Jones has plenty to offer at her new club.

Though the Navy Blues would have dearly loved to have kept the forward, Jones is a perfect fit to a growing Gold Coast team, with the 22-year-old ready to shine. Traded for a bargain basement price of Pick 49 over the off-season, Jones is a player who can far outweigh her value, particularly if she can maintain her goal a game average. She can also play further afield though and be that higher half-forward again or even through the midfield, using her slick skills to distribute the ball to leading forward inside 50.

In Season 7, Jones is one of many wearing new colours, but after a breakout season, Suns fans will be hoping she can go to another level again. No doubt plenty will watch on in fascination to see what kind of role she plays for the South East Queensland side.

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Black Ferns named for O’Reilly Cup Test series » allblacks.com

As the Black Ferns continue to build to the Rugby World Cup 2021, played in 2022, Director of Rugby Wayne Smith as named a 33-player squad for the upcoming two-Test series against Australia.

  • Ruahei Demand to lead the team alongside co-Captain Kennedy Simon
  • Theresa Fitzpatrick and debutant Tyla Nathan-Wong to join squad fresh from Commonwealth Games.
  • 19-Test Black Fern Victoria Subritzky-Nafatali and 2019 Black Fern Player of the Year Charmaine McMenamin return to the squad.

The Black Ferns Squad is (in brackets; age, Super Club, Province, Test Caps);

hookers
Luka Connor (25, Chiefs, Bay of Plenty, 6)
Natalie Delamere (25, Matatu, Bay of Plenty, 1)
Georgia Ponsonby (22, Matatu, Canterbury, 5)

props
Tanya Kalounivale (23, Chiefs, Waikato, 2)
Pip Love (32, Matatu, Canterbury, 17)
Krystal Murray (29, Blues, Northland, 3)
Amy Rule (22, Matatu, Canterbury, 5)
Awhina Tangen-Wainohu (24, Chiefs, Waikato, new cap)
Santo Taumata (19, Chiefs, Bay of Plenty, new cap)

locks
Chelsea Bremner (27, Matatu, Canterbury, 3)
Joanah Ngan Woo (26, Hurricanes, Wellington, 8)
Maiakawanakaulani Roos (21, Blues, Auckland, 6)

Loose Forwards
Alana Bremner (25, Matatu, Canterbury, 6)
Tafito Lafaele (21, Blues, Auckland, 2)
Charmaine McMenamin (32, Blues, Auckland, 25)
Kaipo Olsen-Baker (19, Hurricanes, Manawatu, 2)
Kendra Reynolds (29, Matatu, Bay of Plenty, 3)
Kennedy Simon (25, Chiefs, Waikato, 8)

halfbacks
Ariana Bayler (25, Chiefs, Waikato, 4)
Kendra Cocksedge (34, Matatu, Canterbury, 60)
Arihiana Marino-Tauhinu (30, Chiefs, Counties Manukau, 8)

Inside Backs
Sylvia Brunt (18, Auckland, 2)
Ruahei Demant (27, Blues, Auckland, 18)
Amy du Plessis (23, Matatu, Canterbury, 2)
Theresa Fitzpatrick (27, Blues, Auckland, 11)
Chelsea Semple (29, Chiefs, Waikato, 28)
Victoria Subritzky-Nafatali (30, Otago, 19)
Hazel Tubic (31, Chiefs, Counties Manukau, 14)

Outside Backs
Renee Holmes (22, Matatu, Waikato, 3)
Ayesha Leti-I’iga (23, Hurricanes, Wellington, 15)
Tyla Nathan-Wong (28, Blues, Northland, new chap)
Grace Steinmetz (24, Matatu, Canterbury, 0)
Ruby Tui (30, Chiefs, Counties Manukau, 2)

Unavailable due to injury: Liana Mikaele-Tu’u, Grace Brooker, Aleisha-Pearl Nelson

Auckland inside back Ruahei Demant led the team to Pacific Four Series victory in June and will be joined in a co-captaincy role for this series with Waikato loose forward Kennedy Simon.

Simon was the 2021 Black Ferns Player of the Year and missed the most recent series with a knee injury but will add plenty of fire power to the O’Reilly Cup squad.

Director of Rugby Wayne Smith said the standard of play in the Farah Palmer Cup will set a strong platform for players coming into this series.

“The beauty of the FPC at the moment is there is huge attacking intent, players are in better condition and as a result we are seeing fast, open and exciting games.

“The trial we held early last month also added real depth to our game. It did end up a bit one-sided but regardless of the result there were players from both sides who showed up and we saw humility, honest endeavor and drive, which are attributes we are looking for,” said Smith.

The return of World Cup winners Charmaine McMenamin and Victoria Subritzky-Nafatali adds experience and depth to the Black Ferns squad.

“Charmaine brings a huge work rate and a wise head, and it’s been her form in FPC that clinched her selection. She has recovered from what could have been a career-ending injury, so we’re excited to have her in the team.

“Vic isn’t your ordinary player – she is mercurial. She’s returning after a long layoff and has done incredibly well to get to this point, so having her back in the mix is ​​great.”

Smith remarked there was also several quality players that hadn’t made the 33-player squad.

“Selection is always difficult. The game is the fastest it’s ever been at the moment and while there are some experienced players who have missed out, they are working extremely hard to adapt to our game and we certainly aren’t writing them off.”

The two-match Test series holds special importance to Smith, named after his former coaching mentor and friend Laurie O’Reilly.

“Laurie inspired me to be a coach and I feel really fortunate to have had such a great relationship with him.

“These are test matches and they are called that for a reason – they test our ability to play under pressure against other world class players. These are incredibly important games from a historical perspective, an emotional one and as a selection tool for the World Cup,” said Smith.

Broadcast
O’Reilly Cup matches will be broadcast live on Sky.

tickets
Tickets to the Christchurch Test on sale here.

Schedule (times in NZT)
Black Ferns vs Australia, Saturday 20 August, 7.05PM, Orangetheory Stadium, CHRISTCHURCH

Black Ferns vs Australia, Saturday 27 August, 2.45pm, Adelaide Oval, ADELAIDE

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Giants accused of paying “irresponsible” money to players

Tim Watson believes GWS has paid “irresponsible” money to players who don’t influence games as much as they should.

Giants quartet Lachie Whitfield, Stephen Coniglio, Josh Kelly and Toby Greene are all on lucrative long-term contracts that are taking up considerably space in the club’s salary cap.

It may lead to several players leaving the club this off-season.

Tim Taranto, Jacob Hopper, Bobby Hill and Tanner Bruhn have all been mentioned in trade circles and could depart at the end of the season.

speaking on SEN BreakfastWatson and co-host Garry Lyon touched on Whitfield’s seven-year deal with the Giants which runs through to the end of 2027.

The midfielder’s contract is worth around $1 million a season.

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Watson: “As good as he is, it is irresponsible to be paying guys that play certain positions that sort of money.”

Lyon: “Are you saying Whitfield’s not worth that sort of money?”

Watson: “Let’s not necessarily talk about Whitfield, but let’s talk about specifically a position someone plays, and if you’re an outside non-influencing-result-type player, not a needle-moving-type player, then you shouldn’t be paid that sort of money.

“That is big, big money in the AFL.”

SEN’s Sam Edmund reported on Monday that Whitfield can’t be ruled out as a trade option.

“There are some at the club who would entertain the prospect, and there have been informal discussions around this player,” Edmund said further on Tuesday.

“Nothing formally at list management level.

“Is it less likely to happen? Ofcourse. But the club are aware that it needs to reset its direction.

“To do that, they might need to make some pretty big decisions.”

Whitfield, an All-Australian and dual best and fairest winner, has played 182 games for GWS.

The 28-year-old is averaging 22.4 disposals per game in 2022.





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AFL greats laud Richmond superstar

Shai Bolton is enjoying a blistering season for Richmond and has been lauded by AFL greats after another game-winning performance.

Bolton was at his best on Sunday against Brisbane as the Tigers clawed back a 42-point deficit to triumph by seven points at the MCG.

The 23-year-old’s struggles with his goal kicking continued, booting two goals from seven shots, but he also had 24 disposals, 711 meters gained and game-highs in score involvements (12) and inside 50s (9).

Essendon great Tim Watson, who called the game for Channel Sevenwas enamored by the performance.

“Is he the most watchable player in the game right now?” he began on SEN Breakfast.

“I don’t like to make these big statements, but I don’t know of any player in the game right now that is more watchable than Shai Bolton.

“It’s just something I left the MCG with the impression of on Sunday, having watched him live – and I’ve watched him plenty of times on TV – oh my goodness me.

“He does stuff that no one else can do. It’s like he’s got springs in his legs from him… he’s an extraordinary talent.

“Score involvements, when you participate in a score as part of a chain… he is 45 per cent involvement (to disposals), the next best is Marcus Bontempelli at 36 per cent, then Chad Warner and Christian Petracca.”

Bolton averages 7.7 score involvements per game, sixth in the competition, and has 47 more score involvements across the season than any other Tiger.

Port Adelaide Hall of Famer Kane Cornes went one step further than Watson, describing the Richmond utility as “the best player in the game right now”.

“Shai Bolton is just extraordinary,” Cornes said on Nine’s Footy Classified.

“To watch him and what he’s doing… he’s playing this role more than uniquely since Dustin Martin has.

“I think he’s now number one, is there a better player in the competition than Shai Bolton for impact?

“Look at center bounce, score involvements, he’s had 69 shots on goal for a small forward.

“What he’s doing, for me, he’s probably the best player in the game right now.”

Bolton earned six coaches’ votes for his Sunday performance and ranks as the second highest non-midfielder in the AFLCA Champion Player of the Year Award behind James Sicily.





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Sports

NRL Team List: Round 21 Roosters v Broncos

Origin winger Selwyn Cobbo has been named to make his return for the Brisbane Broncos in Thursday night’s prime time showdown with the Sydney Roosters at the SCG.

The 20-year-old has been sidelined since copping a heavy head knock for the Maroons in the Origin decider at Suncorp Stadium last month, the Broncos taking a cautious approach to his recovery.

Cobbo has been outstanding in his first full NRL season on the wing, scoring 12 tries in 14 games, making 67 tackle breaks, 12 line breaks and running for an average 129 meters per game.

His return sees Delouise Hoeter move to an extended bench, while last week’s debutant Deine Mariner retains his spot in the centres.

In other changes, Kobe Hetherington has been named at lock replacing Queensland lock Pat Carrigan who will face the NRL judiciary tonight.

Hetherington was outstanding at No.13 for the Broncos in Carrigan’s absence during the Origin period. Prop Rhys Kennedy comes into the 17th on the interchange.

Elsewhere, Jake Turpin also comes onto the interchange in No.14 replacing Cory Paix, who will return to the Hostplus Cup to play some extended minutes and build more fitness off the back of his knee injury.

Grab your tickets for the Broncos’ next home game against the Knights at Suncorp Stadium on Saturday, August 13 at 7.35pm HERE.

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Brisbane Lions angry at on field incident involving Zac Bailey, Marlion Pickett, Richmond Tigers, Caroline Wilson comments

Angered Brisbane bosses have spoken to the AFL following an on-field incident involving Zac Bailey and Richmond’s Marlion Pickett, reports veteran journalist Caroline Wilson.

The bump, which occurred in the second quarter of the Tigers’ stunning seven-point comeback win over the Lions on Sunday, resulted in Bailey being subbed out of the match with a sternum issue and transported to hospital after “coughing up blood.”

“Brisbane was completely shattered, shattered by [Sunday’s] loss and among their devastation was anger, and initial anger broke out after an incident earlier in the game involving Zac Bailey and Marlion Pickett,” Wilson told Nine’s Footy Classified.

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According to Wilson, Brisbane bosses approached the AFL on Monday after no charge was laid by match review officer Michael Christian, despite footage of the incident showing the Tigers midfielder forcibly bump Bailey off the ball.

After completing the match review of the round 20 Sunday games, the AFL explained that the incident was assessed, but it was the view of Christian that Pickett’s actions did not constitute a reportable offence.

Wilson believed the incident would have been thoroughly analysed, but thought the AFL would still get in contact with Pickett who was subsequently charged with rough conduct for a different incident involving Rhys Mathieson

“Marlion Pickett – who has the ability to seriously hurt players because he’s a tough player – I think there will be words delivered to him, or to Richmond, about his tactics,” she said.

On review of the vision, Port Adelaide great Kane Cornes added he couldn’t see “too much wrong” with the collision and wasn’t sure what Brisbane was upset about.

Bailey spent Sunday night in hospital with scans later clearing the 22-year-old of any serious injury. The Lions are yet to confirm whether he will be fit to play in this Sunday’s game against Carlton.

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