Sports – Page 165 – Michmutters
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Bill Russell was the NBA’s king of championship rings – and far more important matters | NBA

If a person can somehow be widely adored while being simultaneously underappreciated, they must be truly great. The late NBA legend Bill Russell was a truly great person.

In the time since Russell’s death was announced by his family on Sunday, tributes have poured in from around the world. Among them was an eloquent eulogy from former US president Barack Obama in which he writes, “As tall as Bill Russell stood, his legacy rises far higher –both as a player and as a person.” Obama would know: he presented Russell with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011. And yet, despite the outpouring of kind words in his memory of him, Russell may still be the most underappreciated icon in NBA history.

Before recognizing his wider impact, it’s worth laying out Russell’s basketball credentials. To begin with, Russell is the winningest player in NBA history and it’s not even really close. During his 13 seasons in the league, he has led the Boston Celtics to 11 NBA championships, including eight consecutive titles from 1959 to 1966. No other team has ever won more than three consecutively.

Russell, of course, would never claim that I have won those championships – the Celtics won them. He was the consummate team player who took pride in performing the glamorous but productive duties which ultimately won games. Russell once wrote, “The most important measure of how good a game I played was how much better I’d made my teammates play.” Even opponents seemed to notice how nice it looked to play with Russell: he was named the regular-season MVP five times during the era in which the award was determined by players’ votes.

Russell’s strengths were his rebounding and (especially) his defense. He played in an era before Defensive Player of the Year awards –they didn’t even record blocks and steals when Russell played – but it’s safe to say he would’ve won several. Hall of Fame point guard Bob Cousy won six championships with Russell and said he played with “animal intensity.” Russell also understood that the mental component of basketball (and of defense, in particular) can be as important as the game’s physical aspects. “Remember that basketball is a game of habits,” I observed. “If you make the other guy deviate from his habits, you’ve got him.”

bill russell
Bill Russell speaks during a DNC fundraiser attended by then-US president Barack Obama at the Boston Center for the Arts in 2011. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

Russell also had a knack for playing at his best when it mattered most. During his first championship run in 1957, Russell blocked Jack Coleman in the final minute of regulation in the deciding Game 7 to keep the Celtics in the game and allow them to eventually win the title. In another Game 7 that also went to overtime, in 1962, Russell scored 30 points and grabbed 40 rebounds, leading his team in both categories. In fact, Russell seemed to keep a secret gear just for Game 7s: his teams were 10-0 in such games throughout his career, an NBA record. Russell never won an NBA finals MVP (the award was only introduced in his final season), but the fact that the NBA eventually named that trophy after him demonstrates how inextricably linked Russell’s play was with championship excellence.

However, while the on-court accolades establish Russell as one of the greatest players to ever touch hardwood, it was his activism off the court that made him a legend. Russell was the NBA’s first Black superstar at a time when legalized racial segregation still existed in much of the country. The Civil Rights Act would not be passed until Russell’s eighth year in the NBA.

Russell’s celebrity didn’t insulate him from the issues facing the rest of the country. He was subjected to racism throughout his career, even in Boston, the city he represented for 13 years: vandals once broke into his Massachusetts home and covered the walls with racist graffiti. Such bigotry and intimidation tactics, however, never prevented Russell from taking a stand against the injustices around him. In 1961, he boycotted a game in Kentucky after a white waitress refused to serve two of his Black teammates at a coffee shop. In 1967, Russell appeared alongside boxer Muhammad Ali to express his support for Ali’s refusal to serve in the Vietnam War. Russell’s record of civil rights advocacy is substantial.

And so, despite his countless athletic achievements, that is probably Russell’s most significant legacy: his commitment to using his platform as basketball star to amplify his political actions. The NBA outperforms other sports leagues when it comes to addressing social issues in a head-on way, and that is a consequence of Russell’s early example of him. Every time LeBron James fights election misinformation or Steve Kerr advocates for gun control, they’re following a trail blazed by Russell. Russell’s on-court accomplishments may never be touched, but his off-court legacy is in good hands.

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Manly Sea Eagles player split, Manly seven, Pride jersey, Round 21, Des Hasler, Daly Cherry-Evans

There is reportedly a divide in the Manly dressing room between the players who played in the Pride jersey and the seven stars who boycotted their crucial loss to the Roosters.

The Daily Telegraph’s Phil Rothfield believes there is a lingering resentment between the players that played and those that chose to put their beliefs ahead of the team’s final aspirations.

“I think there is a split,” Rothfield said of the playing group on NRL 360.

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“I think the players that took the field cannot understand why the other seven didn’t.

“I think the meeting yesterday cleared it up a little bit, but you can’t repair a split of this magnitude with a bandaid in a 45 minute meeting.

“I think when something as drastic as this happens when seven men pull out of a finals crunch match over a view and an opinion and the other guys are totally on the opposite side.

“They put their views and opinions ahead of a finals berth almost.”

Paul Kent also believes there is a split between the Manly seven and the owner who incorrectly said they would backflip on their stance in time for next season.

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Daly Cherry-Evans and DesHasler.Source: News Corp Australia

“What about the owner coming out and saying the players had gone back on what they originally intended, which they have heavily refuted,” Kent said.

Braith Anasta agreed with Rothfield that as a player he would be frustrated with the seven players who put their beliefs above a goal the team has worked for since pre-season in November.

“I agree with and I’m just thinking now as a player the majority of the playing group you train from November all the way through,” Anasta said.

“You put your body on the line every week. You put your heart and soul into it. You make sacrifices every single day.

“These players have got a few teammates who have made a different decision than the rest of the team and it can cause a divide and it seems to be that way.

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Jake Trbojevic and Manly players process the loss to the Roosters.Source: Getty Images

“It could derail their season. We spoke about it before the game that it could happen and it is possibly happening right now.

“There are no winners and losers here. The fact is it doesn’t matter what they are arguing over or have a split of opinion over. It can cause a divide and it seems to be causing a divide.”

The Daily Telegraph’s Dean Ritchie has no doubt there is a rift between the seven players and the rest of the squad and it will take time to heal the wounds of the last week.

“There is divisions at Manly and anyone who tells you there is not telling a fib,” Ritchie said on The Big Sports Breakfast.

“The players that played were dirty on the players that didn’t play.

Sea Eagles players at training.Source: News Corp Australia

“They are trying to sort it out and understand each other’s religious beliefs and views, but there is a division there.

“You speak to one player and he will say we can move forward from this and you speak to others who say this is going to take a lot longer.”

Laurie Daley questioned how both sides of the split can come together with no common ground on the issue.

“You have got two parties that don’t agree and you talk about finding common ground, but where is the common ground in this?” Daley said.

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“There is no giving,” Ritchie replied.

“Both sides are quite staunch in their views. The players are dirty the others didn’t play and the seven players are saying, we are not backing down.

“To be fair to them they have been staunch from the beginning and have stuck tight through a lot of criticism, so they are not clearly going to apologize.

“I don’t know how one meeting is going to fix this problem at Manly.”

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Match review committee not punishing dangerous acts of foul play

Two things have left me scratching my head over the past week in rugby league.

The NRL has made it clear it’ll do whatever it takes to protect the head and neck of players, with league bosses making the point in the weekend newspapers that they’re “winning the war against concussion” with a reduction in head-knocks of 40 per cent this season.

Why then are dangerous acts of foul play going unpunished by the match review committee when there are players being fined and/or even escaping sanction for elbowing others in the head like Jared Waerea-Hargreaves and Nelson Asofa-Solomona?

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The Roosters enforcer copped a $3000 fine for driving his elbow into a defenseless Manly debutant Zac Fulton who was on the ground at the time, and Asofa-Solomona wasn’t even charged after dropping his forearm onto the head of Warriors hooker Wayde Egan, who is facing a trip to the dentist to repair some busted teeth. He’s lucky it wasn’t worse.

The last time I checked, that’s dangerous contact with the head and under the NRL rules should be punished heavily, so what is the match review committee looking at?

To make matters worse, South Sydney forward Tom Burgess copped a one match ban for a good old fashioned coat hanger to the head of Ronaldo Mulitalo that warranted a send off, but again the MRC hit him with a feather.

Adding to the confusion around foul-play is the two-match suspension imposed by the NRL judiciary last week on Cronulla forward Dale Finucane for an accidental head clash with Stephen Crichton, who suffered a lacerated ear.

Finucane said after the hearing that the decision “will set a dangerous precedent”, but the match review committee has instead ignored at least two other incidents which I consider much worse than the tackle involving the Sharks veteran.

I don’t want to sound frivolous, but why wasn’t Lindsay Collins charged for the collision with Andrew Davey on Thursday night? Is it because the Roosters player came off second best and was knocked out before hitting the ground? We’ve all been crying out for consistency from the MRC, but you’d have more luck finding a needle in a haystack.

Roosters enforcer penalized for dirty act

The other issue that’s left me puzzled is a difficult one. It’s the pride jersey at Manly. We refer to the game as being inclusive with NRL boss Andrew Abdo and ARLC chairman Peter V’landys declaring “we’re a game for everyone”, yet we’ve spent the last seven days ostracising a group of Sea Eagles players for their religious beliefs.

For the record, I support the pride jersey and while I disagree with the likes of Josh Aloiai, Jason Saab and Josh Schuster who refused to wear the rainbow colors on Thursday night against the Roosters, are they not entitled to their religious beliefs?

There is a huge Pasifika presence in the NRL with around 50 per cent of the players who are of Pacific origin or with Pacific heritage and that’s something we should be extremely proud of. It’s what makes us not only an inclusive game, but a multicultural game as well.

The Sea Eagles handled the pride jersey appallingly and hijacked the build-up to a special weekend in which we celebrated the Harvey Norman Women in League Round.

Hasler apologizes for Manly ‘mistake’ – Manly Sea Eagles coach Des

The club officials who failed to consult the players were nowhere to be seen, it was instead left up to Des Hasler to handle the firestorm of criticism at one of the most impressive press conferences I’ve ever seen from an NRL head coach.

Des spoke passionately, emotionally and with empathy as he navigated his way through a minefield of questions from the waiting media who would usually turn up in the same numbers to speak to the prime minister.

His opening remarks pointed to the cause of the controversy and that it was “sadly, the execution of what was intended to be an extremely important initiative was poor.”

Chairman Scott Penn returned from the United States to meet with the players and said on Thursday night in an interview with Danny Weidler on Nine News that they were open to wearing the pride jersey in the future.

Manly rainbow meeting held amid fears of ‘rift’

“That’s the message they were very clear on, let’s work together” said Penn.

The seven Manly players have since rejected that suggestion from the Sea Eagles chairman, insisting they’ll never soften their stance when it comes to religion, so this is an issue that’s not going away for the club or the National Rugby League.

Peter V’landys is refusing to rule out the possibility of the league introducing a pride round as early as next season, insisting inclusivity and different opinions have to be equally respected as we “don’t live in Russia.”

If that’s the case, I’m questioning why the NRL would head down the path of a pride round which has the potential to alienate the 50 per cent of Pasifika players in the game who may or may not support it because of their religious beliefs.

Again, I disagree with their religious beliefs and I find them difficult to accept in 2022, but if we’re not “living in Russia”, how can we then force the Polynesian players to support something they don’t believe in?

Sexual preference and inclusivity shouldn’t be such a complex issue, especially in sport. At the same time, when you look at the players, coaches and officials who make up the National Rugby League, it’s very much a complex issue in need of more discussion.

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Luke Jackson future at Melbourne Demons, Fremantle Dockers, Dan McStay, Brisbane Lions, Collingwood Magpies, Jordan De Goey, St Kilda Saints

Melbourne and Brisbane have been quizzed on the futures of two their respective out-of-contract stars as rumors swirl.

Plus the latest on a suitor’s Jordan De Goey bid as well as Dan Hannebery’s future.

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DEES, LIONS CONFIRM HONEST CHATS WITH OFF-CONTRACT STARS

Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin has admitted he’s had “honest chats” with out-out-contract star Luke Jackson about his future, saying the youngster faces a massive call ahead.

Jackson has put off contract talks until the end of the season and been heavily linked with a move to Fremantle as he weighs up returning to his home state of Western Australia.

Speaking on Fox Footy’s AFL 360, Goodwin implored the 20-year old to not be distracted by his future plans and keep his focus on helping the Demons’ bid for back-to-back premierships.

“I’ve had some great chats with Luke and some were honest chats about we just want him to perform for the Melbourne footy club, however long that may be,” Goodwin told Fox Footy.

“That’s what our focus has been, whether that’s 10 weeks, whether that’s the next 10 years, and he’s been really open … he’s fully committed to Melbourne.”

Jackson rucking against Freo (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)Source: FOX SPORTS

“Our responsibility as a club is to be mature in our approach towards that end, and get the best out of the Luke for however long he’s at our footy club… those conversations have been held with Luke and he’s embraced it.

“He needs time to make his decision… we’ve said to Luke all along, ‘you take as much time as you need’.

“He’s got the chance to go home at some stage throughout his career and he’s got a footy club that he loves at the moment, so it’s a big decision for him to make.”

Brisbane faces a similar situation with key forward Dan McStay, who’s been heavily linked to Collingwood on a five-year, $3 million deal.

And like Goodwin, Lions coach Chris Fagan just wanted to see McStay put his best foot forward while wearing the Brisbane jumper.

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“I’d have a couple of chats with Daniel during the season. These are challenging times for players when they’ve got to make decisions about their futures,” Fagan told AFL 360.

“I just wanted to make sure Daniel felt supported and also to encourage him to play the best football he can for the rest of the year.

“Whatever decision he makes he makes, hopefully he decides to stay with the Lions, but if he doesn’t he’s given us great service and we’re grateful for what he’s contributed to the club.”

Asked if players and clubs should announce moves ahead of time, like in the NRL, Fagan said: “That probably seems the mature way to do it, I just don’t know whether we’re ready for that and whether all clubs will be comfortable.

“Some players might feel like if they say they’re going, that would endanger their chances perhaps for selection for the rest of the year or the club might turn in a different direction.

“I don’t know whether we’ve arrived at that level of maturity with football yet, I’d like to think so.”

SAINTS WANT MORE BY GOEY CLARITY

St Kilda’s board has requested its football department for more information on Jordan De Goey before it ticks off making a formal push for the free agent Magpies star, reports TheAge.

The Saints have been linked to De Goey, who was discussed at the club’s board meeting on Thursday night as it weighs up an aggressive pursuit of the 26-year old.

It’s believed the board wants to be satisfied he’s the “right fit” for the club both on and off the field including its leadership and values ​​and whether he could help the club win a premiership.

De Goey’s future at Collingwood is in doubt after the Pies pulled their most recent contract offer to him following his Bali exploits — a two-year deal with a trigger for another two years, totaling $3.2 million.

De Goey returned from a quad injury on the weekend (Photo by Daniel Pockett/Getty Images)Source: FOX SPORTS

Geelong is also interested in the midfielder/forward, while St Kilda coach Brett Ratten confirmed in June his club would want to look at “all the evidence” around De Goey’s off-field indiscretions before ruling out a play for the out-of-contract Collingwood star.

“We’d have to do our homework and have a look at exactly what has happened and taking all the evidence as you do when you bring in any player, especially opponents from another club,” Ratten said.

“You’re looking at the on-field performance, and you’re looking at what you’re trying to build as a football club and culture and that as well. So we take in both sides of the equation, and then we make decisions around there and all those free agents will be singled out and sort of maybe targeting one or two, if it’s possible.

“We do assess everything they do on and off the field.”

HANNEBERY ‘PRETTY KEEN’ TO PLAY ON

Herald Sun journalist Jon Ralph reports Dan Hannebery is “pretty keen” to play on in 2023, but believes the out-of-contract Saint may have to settle for a rookie list spot.

Hannebery enjoyed a strong return to the field against Hawthorn — an inclusion that raised the eyebrows of some pundits — racking up 27 disposals and booting one goal in the St Kilda’s 12-point win in his first game since Round 23 last year.

However the injury-plagued 31-year old, who’s coming towards the end of a four-season deal worth around $800,000 per season — a contract renegotiated to a reduced figure this year — has struggled to stay on the park in recent years, playing just 16 senior games in four campaigns due to several setbacks.

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Speaking on Fox Footy’s on the couch, Ralph provided the latest on Hannebery’s future.

“Officially out of contract, pretty keen to go again — probably needs to make the next three weeks a winner.

“He funded his own trip over to ‘Healing Hans’ the German soft tissue expert… he’s taken multiple hundreds of thousands of dollars pay cut.

“I think one possibility is if he gets through the year, you go onto the rookie list or you spend a summer trying to train yourself up — and if you can get through it, it gives you another year as a summer rookie.”

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Australia’s Oscar Piastri could move from reserve driver to F1 seat for Alpine after Fernando Alonso signs with Aston Martin for 2023

Highly rated young Australian motor racing ace Oscar Piastri appears on the cusp of securing a prized Formula One seat after the shock defection of veteran Alpine teammate Fernando Alonso.

Alonso has signed a multi-year deal with British-based F1 team Aston Martin and Piastri is considered the two-time world champion’s obvious successor at Alpine for the 2023 season.

A winner of the 2021 Formula Two championship, Piastri has been Alpine’s reserve driver this season amid speculation he could be loaned out to another Formula One team in 2023.

But the 41-year-old Alonso’s switch from the Renault-owned Alpine — as a replacement for retiring four-times world champion Sebastian Vettel at Aston Martin — makes Piastri a warm favorite to join Daniel Ricciardo in bolstering Australia’s presence in the F1 ranks.

Piastri — who is managed by Australia’s former Formula One star Mark Webber — is considered a rising talent in motor racing.

Australia's Oscar Piastri drives a Formula 1 car in testing, with his back left wheel just off the track.
Oscar Piastri is a reserve driver for the Alpine F1 team, but he could grab a prized seat for the 2023 season. (Getty Images: Formula 1/Joe Portlock)

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The 21-year-old from Melbourne claimed the Formula Three championship in 2020 to announce his arrival on the world stage.

Should Piastri secure a seat with Alpine in 2023, he will become the first Australian driver to make a Formula One debut since Ricciardo stepped up in the 2011 British Grand Prix.

While confirming Alonso’s departure, Alpine says it is premature to add to speculation that Piastri will be his replacement.

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“The team will announce its driver line-up for the 2023 Formula One season in due course,” Alpine said.

“We look forward to finishing the remainder of the 2022 season with Fernando in blue, and we’ll keep pushing to the maximum until the final lap in November.”

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‘Disability isn’t a dirty word’: non-binary Paralympian Robyn Lambird on smashing stereotypes and setting agendas

“What happened to you?”

“Jesus can heal you.”

“Can you have sex?”

“You’re pretty for someone in a wheelchair.”

Believe it or not, these are all things Robyn Lambird says strangers have said to them.

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But they’ve embraced their profile as a Paralympian to shatter misconceptions and make their mark on and off the race track.

The beauty in disability and diversity

Lambird is a non-binary wheelchair racer from Perth, and made their Paralympic debut at Tokyo last year, winning a bronze medal in the T34 100m final.

Wheelchair racer Robyn Lambird pumps their fists after winning a bronze medal
Lambird won a bronze medal in their Paralympic debut in Tokyo. (AAP: Drew Chislett)

Their immediate focus is the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham where they’ll contest the women’s T33/34 100m.

It will hold special significance for the England-born sprinter to compete in front of family members, including both sets of grandparents, for the first time.

The 25-year-old also competes in the national wheelchair rugby league, studies digital and social media at university, and has built an impressive following online as a content creator and activist.

Lambird’s Instagram account is full of engaging posts, educating, entertaining, and illuminating.

It ranges from fashion tips to training diaries, to important messages around queer pride and disability awareness.

Lambird has cerebral palsy, and one of the clear messages they want to get across is that disability isn’t a dirty word.

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“I think on some level in our society, we still see disability as this inherently negative thing,” Lambird said.

“[The idea that] this tragedy happened to someone and that’s why we shy away from the word disabled, and all of these other euphemisms, differently abled.

“But, to me, the word disabled is a source of pride because I’m proud of who I am now. And everything that I’ve done in my life, I’ve done with my disability, not despite it.

“It’s not our bodies that make us disabled at the end of the day, it’s the opportunities that we don’t have or it’s because the world is not accessible to us.”

Lambird says it’s up to everyone to advocate for people with a disability.

“If you as an able-bodied person go into a cafe, and you realize that it’s inaccessible, maybe ask why that’s the case? Or what can be done to make that environment accessible?,” they said.

“And if you notice that there’s no disabled people in your workplace, maybe you should be questioning that, why isn’t there opportunities for people with disabilities to get into those spaces?”

Role model for queer community

Lambird is also passionate about standing up for the queer community, something which has taken more prominence since they became the first out non-binary athlete to win a Paralympic medal in Tokyo.

“I think afterwards, I realized how important that was… in terms of helping other people to feel welcome in the sporting environment and to know that they have a future in the sport, if that’s what they want, and that they can they can be themselves,” they said.

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“That’s the thing that I really love about sport is it has this opportunity to bring people together to create this great sense of community.”

Lambird’s positive experiences in sport started in wheelchair rugby, which is a mixed gender sport.

Robyn Lambird in action playing wheelchair rugby.
Lambird also plays wheelchair rugby at a national level.(Wheelchair Sports NSW/ACT: Karen Watson)

They think it’s worth exploring whether more sports can follow its lead, to make it more inclusive for trans and gender diverse people.

“I just think everyone should have the opportunity to go to reap the benefits of sport, both mentally and physically,” they said.

“Sport has changed my life and has given me so many things, and I couldn’t imagine not being in the position that I am now.

“So I think we really just need to start sitting down and having conversations about how we can open that up to everyone and ensure that everyone feels like they have a place.”

There is no normal: finding a community online

Social media is an important part of Lambird’s life, giving them the opportunity to tell their own story, which is often overlooked by the mainstream media.

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“Any media that focuses on disability and tries to accurately portray that experience is important, but the people that really know what it’s like to live with a disability and to navigate the world as a disabled person are disabled people.

“And having that opportunity to take control of that narrative, and to show what disability looks like for us, and what is our truth, it’s incredibly important.”

Lambird still has a long sporting career ahead of them, but they have an eye on the future as well, and their ability to create lasting change.

“I think I always just find the beauty in diversity. Diversity is one of the world’s greatest teachers, I think we can learn so much about the world and our place in it just by listening to others,” they said.

“I’ve been very lucky to find an amazing community online and on social media, people that are just trying to lift each other up regardless of their gender or sexuality or their disability.

“And I think it’s challenging that idea that, there is not normal.”

Lambbird will compete in the T33/34 women’s 100m at the Commonwealth Games on Wednesday August 3 AEST.

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Brisbane Lions bosses angered after Richmond Tigers game, Marlion Pickett bumps Zac Bailey, video, hospitalized with sternum injury, coughing up blood, Mitch Robinson

‘Angered’ Lions bosses have spoken to the AFL about an on-field incident involving Marlion Pickett and Zac Bailey from Richmond’s come-from-behind seven-point win over Brisbane, according to veteran journalist Caroline Wilson.

Bailey spent Sunday night in hospital after getting subbed out of the game with a sternum issue following a collision with Pickett — an incident that received no sanction from the match review officer despite vision of the exchange showing the Tigers midfielder bump Bailey in the area off the ball.

Scans cleared the young Lions star of any serious injury as he was released from hospital on Monday to fly home to Brisbane, with the club still yet to rule him out of this week’s match against Carlton.

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However speaking on Channel 9’s Footy Classified on Monday night, Wilson reports Brisbane was “completely shattered” by the loss to the Tigers and “among their devastating was anger” due to Bailey’s clash with Pickett.

“Initial anger broke out after this incident early in the game involving Bailey and Pickett. There was a bump, there was a push, I know Brisbane bosses were talking to the AFL throughout the day,” she said.

“Bailey went to hospital, he was coughing up blood, he was very, very concerned, happily the news is a lot better today and he’s flown home.

“There’s been no citing from the match review officer, I think the incident was looked at and looked at and looked at again.”

“One quick one on Pickett, who has the ability to seriously hurt players because he’s a tough player — I think there will be words delivered to Richmond about his tactics.

“But there was a lot of anger, I think Brisbane has calmed down today.”

Tigers claw back to claim stunning win | 03:02

The MRO’s explanation of the incident read: “The incident involving Richmond’s Marlion Pickett and the Brisbane Lions’ Zac Bailey from the second quarter of Sunday’s match between Richmond and the Brisbane Lions was assessed. It was the view of the Match Review Officer that Pickett’s actions did not constitute a reportable offence. No further action was taken.”

Port Adelaide great Kane Cornes said he “didn’t see too much wrong” with the exchange and wasn’t sure what Brisbane was upset about.

Meanwhile speaking on Fox Footy’s AFL 360, Lions coach Chris Fagan confirmed the club hoped to have Bailey available for selection this week.

“He’s (Bailey) recovered well and is back in Brisbane. I think he’ll be fine this week, it was just he was coughing up a bit of blood and that’s not a good sign when that’s happening,” Fagan said.

“You have to be really careful when you see that. But as it turned out it was n’t anything of huge significance, which more than anything is pleasing for Zac and his health from him.

Wilson also reported Mitch Robinson and Brisbane have received a “please explain” from the AFL after the veteran gave his middle-finger to the Richmond cheer squad during the contest.

“I think he’s going to have to explain himself, but I don’t think there’ll be a fine,” she said.

Robinson, who missed a crucial potential go-ahead shot late in the game, took another cheeky swipe at Tigers fans on social media after the loss.

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Georgia Godwin, Matthew Glaetzer show strength and resilience to win second Commonwealth Games gold medals

Georgia Godwin has continued her breakthrough Commonwealth Games, with another gold medal in artistic gymnastics in Birmingham.

A day after winning the women’s all-round individual title, the 24-year-old again produced her best to claim the vault.

And it was as tight as you can get.

Godwin and Canada’s Laurie Denommee finished on the same score after their two vaults.

A female gymnast does a flip
After a difficult few years for women’s gymnastics, Georgia Godwin has given the sport in Australia a ray of hope.(AAP: Dean Lewis)

However, the Queenslander won on the tie-break rule, with the highest scoring single vault.

“Coming off of two days of comp, I am feeling it a little bit, so I just gave 110 per cent of what I had left into that first vault,” she said.

And straight after the final vault, she backed up for the uneven bars, and this time grabbed silver.

While gold might seem to shine brightest, Godwin was most emotional when talking about sharing the silver medal in the team final earlier in the week.

“The team one means so much to me,” she said.

“To go through everything we have with the other four girls, and to come away with a silver, I’m so proud of them.

“I’m just proud of myself and everything I’ve had to go through. And everyone who’s helped me get here. It takes a huge village.”

A female athlete wearing yellow and green holds up two medals
Georgia Godwin now has won two gold and two silver medals at the 2022 Games.(ABC News: West Matteussen)

Godwin is the advertisement gymnastics needs after a report last year showed serious issues in the sport.

And she’s willing to help the sport move forward.

“I like to see myself as the mother figure. I am older,” she said.

“This team I was honored to be the captain of — and I’ve really just tried to take everyone under my wing, show them what sportsmanship looks like and try [to] guide them in the right direction at the end.

“I do my best to try [to] show that gymnastics is a safe sport, and that everyone should feel safe when doing gymnastics, and we’re heading in the right direction.”

Godwin still has one more event to come: the women’s beam final.

Glaetzer ‘over the moon’ to win after rollercoaster competition

Track cyclist Matthew Glaetzer has had one of the wildest rides of all athletes at the Commonwealth Games.

He started competition with gold in the men’s team sprint, then was involved in a scary crash in the keirin, which threatened to end his campaign.

He was left fuming after being denied a bronze medal in the men’s sprint upon review.

Two cyclists down on the banked cycling track, one is Englishman Joe Truman and the other Australia's Matthew Glaetzman.
Matthew Glaetzer’s Birmingham campaign almost came to a premature end after a heavy crash in the keirin.(Getty Images: Justin Setterfield)

Then, to throw another spanner in the works, just hours before the men’s 1000m time trial, AusCycling released a statement saying the Australians would have to use different handlebars, due to them being ruled unsafe.

So, among that dramatic backdrop, Glaetzer still somehow managed to summon a phenomenal performance to win the time trial, using equipment that would’ve added at least a second to his time.

“I’m making a habit of bouncing back at the Commonwealth Games,” he said.

“I’d rather not have such lows to come back from, but it shows there is always a new day and we can always try again.”

Glaetzer has now equaled Anna Meares’s track cycling record of five Commonwealth Games golds.

“It was special, but I was surprised I won, given how bad I felt out there,” he said.

“Last night I said I’d be over the moon just to get a medal, considering everything that’s happened.

“To come home with a win in such a special time, shows how strong we are as a nation.”

Another bright star emerges on the green

Ellen Ryan, 25 — the youngest member of the Australian lawn bowls team — took out the gold medal in her debut Games women’s singles final, overcoming Guernsey’s Lucy Beere 17-21.

However, in the men’s triple final, while Australia’s men almost pulled off one of the great comebacks, they had to settle for silver..

Barry Lester, Carl Healey and Ben Twist were trailing 12-1, with two ends to go.

They managed to get back to 12-all but England edged ahead to win 14-12, leaving the Aussies with a silver medal.

“We used every bit of Aussie spirit we could and put ourselves in a position [to win],” Lester said.

“ButJamie [Chestney, England] and the boys played really well and they’re worthy winners.”

Weightlifting gold out of reach

Kyle Bruce was in the gold medal position in the men’s 81kg weightlifting category after a Commonwealth Games record of 183kg in the clean and jerk.

He was given three white lights by the judges, however, on review, officials ruled his arms didn’t fully extend in the overhead position and, so, he was left with silver behind England’s Chris Murray.

A man wearing green, yellow and black lifts a heavy weight during a competition
Kyle Bruce accepted the judges’ decision as he claimed silver in the men’s 81kg category.(AAP: Darren England)

“A lot of people at home that don’t know weightlifting that will would be cheering and screaming like ‘Wow, that’s the gold, he’s got it,'” Bruce said.

“And then, a few minutes later, to say it’s a ‘No lift’, some people wouldn’t understand that.

“But, as a weightlifter, that’s the rules. I understand that.”

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Manly Sea Eagles player split, Manly seven, Pride jersey, Round 21, Des Hasler, Daly Cherry-Evans

There is reportedly a divide in the Manly dressing room between the players who played in the Pride jersey and the seven stars who boycotted their crucial loss to the Roosters.

The Daily Telegraph’s Phil Rothfield believes there is a lingering resentment between the players that played and those that chose to put their beliefs ahead of the team’s final aspirations.

“I think there is a split,” Rothfield said of the playing group on NRL 360.

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“I think the players that took the field cannot understand why the other seven didn’t.

“I think the meeting yesterday cleared it up a little bit, but you can’t repair a split of this magnitude with a bandaid in a 45 minute meeting.

“I think when something as drastic as this happens when seven men pull out of a finals crunch match over a view and an opinion and the other guys are totally on the opposite side.

“They put their views and opinions ahead of a finals berth almost.”

Paul Kent also believes there is a split between the Manly seven and the owner who incorrectly said they would backflip on their stance in time for next season.

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Daly Cherry-Evans and DesHasler.Source: News Corp Australia

“What about the owner coming out and saying the players had gone back on what they originally intended, which they have heavily refuted,” Kent said.

Braith Anasta agreed with Rothfield that as a player he would be frustrated with the seven players who put their beliefs above a goal the team has worked for since pre-season in November.

“I agree with and I’m just thinking now as a player the majority of the playing group you train from November all the way through,” Anasta said.

“You put your body on the line every week. You put your heart and soul into it. You make sacrifices every single day.

“These players have got a few teammates who have made a different decision than the rest of the team and it can cause a divide and it seems to be that way.

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Jake Trbojevic and Manly players process the loss to the Roosters.Source: Getty Images

“It could derail their season. We spoke about it before the game that it could happen and it is possibly happening right now.

“There are no winners and losers here. The fact is it doesn’t matter what they are arguing over or have a split of opinion over. It can cause a divide and it seems to be causing a divide.”

The Daily Telegraph’s Dean Ritchie has no doubt there is a rift between the seven players and the rest of the squad and it will take time to heal the wounds of the last week.

“There is divisions at Manly and anyone who tells you there is not telling a fib,” Ritchie said on The Big Sports Breakfast.

“The players that played were dirty on the players that didn’t play.

Sea Eagles players at training.Source: News Corp Australia

“They are trying to sort it out and understand each other’s religious beliefs and views, but there is a division there.

“You speak to one player and he will say we can move forward from this and you speak to others who say this is going to take a lot longer.”

Laurie Daley questioned how both sides of the split can come together with no common ground on the issue.

“You have got two parties that don’t agree and you talk about finding common ground, but where is the common ground in this?” Daley said.

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“There is no giving,” Ritchie replied.

“Both sides are quite staunch in their views. The players are dirty the others didn’t play and the seven players are saying, we are not backing down.

“To be fair to them they have been staunch from the beginning and have stuck tight through a lot of criticism, so they are not clearly going to apologize.

“I don’t know how one meeting is going to fix this problem at Manly.”

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Melbourne Storm, Nelson Asofa-Solomona incident, video, MRC, Darren Lockyer, Phil Gould, Luke Patten

Darren Lockyer was already bewildered when the match review committee opted against charging Nelson Asofa-Solomona.

And after watching the MRC’s video explanation of why the Storm prop wasn’t charged for his ugly move on Warriors hooker Wayde Egan, Lockyer is feeling dizzy.

Asofa-Solomona was widely slammed for appearing to drive his left forearm into the head of Egan as he and two Melbourne teammates tackled him in Auckland on Friday night, resulting in the back of Egan’s head thumping into the turf.

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MRC explains Asofa-Solomona non-sanction

But the MRC again triggered calls of inconsistency when it decided not to punish Asofa-Solomona.

NRL head of football Graham Annesley shook up his weekly football briefing on Monday, playing a pre-recorded video of MRC manager Luke Patten explaining the non-sanction.

“It was a forceful tackle which unfortunately resulted in Egan’s head going into the ground,” Patten said.

“There might be possibly minor contact at the end of the tackle… but that minor contact.”

Patten supposedly has a strong knowledge of the game, having played 282 NRL matches with the Steelers, Dragons and Bulldogs between 1998 and 2010.

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Rather than question the ability of Patten in his role, Lockyer took exception to the officiating system.

“I saw Luke Patten. We saw the words, but if you see him deliver that with his face and voice, your head’s spinning. How are we ever going to understand how the game is officiated?” Lockyer said on Nine’s 100% Footy.

“They’re reading off a textbook.

“We need to get the terminology with the on-field decisions very similar to what they’re doing when they’re reviewing this. The decisions that are being handed down by the match review committee are going into a lot more detail than what the people on the ground are doing, so we’re getting these mixed messages.We need to streamline that, and I think you’ll get a lot more understanding.

“I think where one of the real challenges is, and (where) we get the confusion, is that when you listen to the MRC penalize an incident there’s so much detail in there: separation, elbows. And then for a referee to adjudicate that on the field, whether it’s the Bunker of the on-field referee — they can’t go into that level of detail. So you get one thing, and then you get another thing.”

Gould seethes at length of Cleary ban

Another jarring example of inconsistent officiating was the suspension dealt to Dale Finucane for the Sharks lock’s tackle on Stephen Crichton in round 19.

Finucane didn’t receive an on-field penalty for the contact that left the Panthers center with a badly lacerated ear, but the MRC offered him a two-game ban. He was then slapped with a three-match ban when he fought the charge at the judiciary and failed.

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“Everything’s refereed differently off the field than it is on the field, including the Bunker, including the match review committee and then including the judiciary,” Phil Gould said on 100% Footy.

“They’re all different and they all have different powers and they all have different motivations in what they’ve trying to do.

“The system is flawed and the people are flawed… you’ve got to look at so many different things. It shouldn’t be like that.

Storm’s late-season loan swoop irks Lockyer

“(It’s the) same as when we’re looking at tries and balls that are up in the air and bobbling around.

“We look at too much detail. It’s all about intent, it’s all about unnecessary risk, it’s all about carelessness or recklessness.”

Gould says he doesn’t know how players and coaches “put up with” this era of the game.

“The difficulty of playing this game now because of the rules and the interpretation and the obsession of the referee and the Bunker and the judiciary… (it’s a) minefield,” Gould said.

“I would hate to be playing in this era, I would really hate to be playing in this era, I would hate to be coaching in this era.”

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