Sports – Page 21 – Michmutters
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Why is Barcelona still spending, signing players and selling off parts of itself?

A month ago, Bayern Munich manager Julian Nagelsmann said what everyone who doesn’t own a vintage Seydou Keita jersey was thinking: “The only club that has no money, but buys every player they want. I do not know how. It’s kind of crazy.”

This was after Barcelona acquired 33-year-old Robert Lewandowski, scorer of 35 goals for Nagelsmann in the Bundesliga last season, for $49.5 million. Raphinha had already arrived from Leeds for $63.8m. It seemed “crazy” then … and then they spent another $55m on Sevilla defender Jules Kounde. They’ve also signed free agents Andreas Christensen from Chelsea and Franck Kessie from AC Milan, as well as resigning both Sergi Roberto and Ousmane Dembele once their previous contracts expired at the end of June. Chelsea’s Marcos Alonso is expected to join soon, and the club is reportedly still interested in Manchester City’s Bernardo Silva. The latter seems like a fantasy too far, but well, so did everything else until it all happened.

the how of all this — a club with over a billion dollars in debt and described as “clinically dead” by president Joan Laporta last season suddenly spending more on transfer fees than anyone else in the world — has been hashed out by many of our writers already this summer. In a word, which you must be sick of by now: levers. They’ve sold off a quarter of their future domestic broadcast revenue and a quarter of their in-house production company for a short-term cash infusion north of $600 million. More levers are being pulled, too, with news early on Friday — just 30 hours or so before their season opener, a home date with Rayo Vallecano — that the club was selling more in order to be able to register its signings.

Instead, I want to focus on a different question: why? Why is this once-great club selling off its future for a still-uncertain present? Can this really be as obviously short-sighted as it seems?

Laporta will make you think that they had to do this, that there was no choice but to totally revamp the squad with hundreds of millions of dollars of loans put toward a massive transfer outlay. However, that’s just not true.

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Pick 1 contender dominates VFL as Horne-Francis responds to surprise omission

North Melbourne young gun Jason Horne-Francis has responded to his AFL omission with 29 touches in the VFL on Saturday afternoon.

Taking on the Coburg Lions, the Roos were on a five-game losing streak coming into the match but emerged dominant 58-point winners.

But the headline story was that of Horne-Francis, who was a shock omission when teams lobbed on Thursday night. Reports emerged on Friday that the 19-year-old’s recovery wasn’t up to North Melbourne’s standard and that it was a factor in him missing out.

He would have been playing his first game in his home state of South Australia against Adelaide on Saturday had he not been dropped.

Playing at Piranha Park, Horne-Francis finished with 29 disposals, nine clearances and six marks. He also had five inside 50s.

It’s just his second game of VFL the 2021 No.1 draft pick has played. The first came in Round 16 when he also collected 29 disposals and a goal.

Horne-Francis had only enjoyed more than 20 possessions in one of his previous nine AFL games.

Meanwhile, 2022 National Draft Pick 1 contender Will Ashcroft was one of his side’s best as Brisbane defeated Sandringham.

Ashcroft, who has nominated to play for the Lions in the AFL next year as a father-son prospect, was playing his third VFL game of the year.

The 18-year-old collected 29 disposals, six clearances and a goal in Brisbane’s 25-point win at Trevor Barker Oval.

He also recorded six inside 50s and four tackles to be in the Lions’ top handful of players.

Tom Campbell dominated in the ruck for Sandringham with 40 hitouts and 12 clearances, while Ryan Byrnes (25 disposals, seven tackles) and Jack Bytel (27 disposals, 13 clearances) were also amongst the best.

Ashcroft, son of Brisbane great Marcus, shapes as the best player in this year’s draft class. He averaged 33.3 disposals, 15 contested possessions, 10 clearances, 6.7 tackles and 6.7 inside 50s from his three Vic Metro matches at the Under 18 National Championships.





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Ross Taylor claims New Zealand Cricket over-ruled his player-of-the-year award

New Zealand Cricket has declined to respond in detail to Ross Taylor’s claims that chief executive Dave White over-ruled his nomination for a player-of-the-year award in 2018 and that “someone from NZC” also asked a panel to reconsider his 2014 award.

Taylor won back-to-back Sir Richard Hadlee Medals in 2012-13 and 2013-14, but the former Black Caps captain has said NZC questioned his second-year selection.

He made the claim in his new book, Ross Taylor: Black & White, published this week, and also alleged he was snubbed by NZC’s then-chairman Stuart Heal at the awards ceremony in 2014.

Taylor also claimed in a Sky Sport interview on Thursday that he missed out on the 2017-18 award – it was given to Trent Boult – after chief executive David White questioned an independent panel’s nomination of Taylor.

READMORE:
* Ross Taylor claims current Black Caps made racially insensitive comments
* ‘Undermined’: Ross Taylor lifts the lid on the ‘ambush’ that cost him the Black Caps captaincy
* T20 series win over West Indies would be huge for Black Caps’ World Cup preparation

NZC declined to stuff request for an interview about Taylor’s claim, but said in a statement that it “acknowledges Ross Taylor’s wonderful career for the Black Caps and the huge contribution he’s made to cricket in New Zealand”.

“We’re comfortable with the judging process for our annual awards, we note Ross has won the supreme award on three occasions, and we congratulate him on a stellar career.”

when stuff sought direct comment about the claim about White’s involvement in the 2017-18 award decision, a NZC spokesman said they did not want to comment beyond their initial statement.

Sir Richard Hadlee presents the player of the year award to Ross Taylor at the 2013-14 New Zealand Cricket annual awards.

Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

Sir Richard Hadlee presents the player of the year award to Ross Taylor at the 2013-14 New Zealand Cricket annual awards.

Taylor told Sky interviewer Laura McGoldrick on Thursday that there was no awards ceremony when he got the 2012-13 award.

“It might not have been a good look if I ended up winning the Sir Richard Hadlee Medal after the way I had been treated. [in losing the captaincy].”

In his book, Taylor recalled the backdrop to the Hadlee Medal award in 2013-14, Brendon McCullum’s first full season as Black Caps captain after taking over from Taylor, who was sacked in 2012 after a tour to Sri Lanka.

“I’d made five centuries [in 2013-14], but given that Brendon had become the first New Zealander to make a test triple century and had also made a double hundred, I knew it had to be a close call,” Taylor wrote. “I didn’t realize just how close.

“The player of the year was chosen by a panel of former New Zealand selector and cricket identity Don Neely, the then convener, Ian Smith, and Bryan Waddle.

“They deliberated and communicated their decision – that Ross Taylor was player of the year – to New Zealand Cricket. NZC came straight back asking them to reconsider.”

Ross Taylor of New Zealand celebrates after scoring a century against the West Indies in Hamilton in 2013, one of five test tons he struck in the 2013-14 season.

Hannah Johnston/Getty Images

Ross Taylor of New Zealand celebrates after scoring a century against the West Indies in Hamilton in 2013, one of five test tons he struck in the 2013-14 season.

Taylor’s claim was backed up by Smith, who said in the book that Neely “said we’d been asked to review”.

“I don’t think he said we must make another choice, but someone from NZC told Don we had to look at it again.

“We did get pressure, there’s no doubt about that. In the end, we basically said, ‘No we’re not looking at it again. We made that decision in the first place and that decision stands’.”

Smith said their decision to award Taylor the Hadlee Medal “wasn’t out of sympathy or anything like that. We didn’t pick Ross because we felt sorry for him – he just had a damn good year.”

Taylor said it was “an interesting awards night” when he received the medal in 2014.

“Stuart Heal, the recently installed NZC chairman and a former chairman of Otago cricket, presented Brendon with a special award to mark his triple century.

Ross Taylor with the Sir Richard Hadlee Medal in 2014.

Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

Ross Taylor with the Sir Richard Hadlee Medal in 2014.

“During the evening I walked past Heal three times; he didn’t say a word to me.

“A couple of board members did congratulate me on winning back-to-back Sir Richard Hadlee Medals, but they were certainly in the minority.

“I assumed the others categorized me as a troublemaker because I hadn’t gone [from the captaincy] quietly.”

Waddle said in the book he wasn’t sure about the background to the 2014 medal discussions because he wasn’t panel convenor then, but he did recall an exchange when Taylor was shortlisted for the 2017-18 award.

Waddle said the panel had narrowed their choice down to three names and were “pretty much deadlocked” at 1-1.

“Someone from NZC got in touch with me a couple of times to find out where we were at.

“I explained the situation to him and said that it looked as though it was going to be Ross Taylor. That led to an exchange of views: he expressed a preference for Trent Boult.

The panel “held firm”, said Waddle, who went back to NZC and said: “This is our recommendation, this is what you’ve asked us to do. They’re your awards and you don’t have to accept our recommendation if that’s the way you feel about it.

“I thought that was the only reasonable way to get out of it. They could do whatever they wanted – and they did. Trent Boult was the winner.”

The identity of the NZC official who spoke to Waddle was not revealed in the book.

But Taylor told Sky Sports this week that Waddle had told the book’s co-author Paul Thomas that it was David White, who had asked the panel to reconsider the 2017-18 award.

“Bryan Waddle told Paul he was the convenor in 2018 and that ‘David White rang and asked who was the player-of-the-year?’,” Taylor said. “Bryan Waddle said to David White, ‘Ross Taylor’s our Sir Richard Hadlee medalist. David White said, ‘I don’t think so’.”

Waddle went back to the other panellists, and then told White their decision was unanimous, Taylor said, but the broadcaster also said to White, “it’s your awards, David you can change it if you want’ … and they went with Trent Boult.”

Taylor said he “wasn’t sure what David’s reasons were, but they took it off me”.

He said he did not know it had happened at the time, but when he learned about it later in the year “it probably didn’t sit that well with me at the time”.

Taylor went on to win his third Hadlee Medal in 2020.

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The key selection Boks say makes the All Blacks ‘even more dangerous’

The Springboks believe that the wounded All Blacks will be ‘even more dangerous’ as a result of starting first-five Richie Mo’unga at Ellis Park on Saturday.

Mo’unga starts at 10 for the first time this year in place of Beauden Barrett, one of four changes to Ian Foster’s New Zealand team to face South Africa in their Rugby Championship clash at Johannesburg.

Barrett fell heavily on his head and neck during last weekend’s opening 26-10 loss to the Springboks following a collision with Kurt-Lee Arendse.

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Although trained this week, Barrett is named on the bench, with Mo’unaga preferred to start. Springbok assistant coach Mzwandile Stick believes it’s a call that makes the men in black even more of a menace.

“The All Blacks are a world class side, and with Richie Mo’unga at flyhalf they will be even more dangerous. He can mix up his game with kicking and running, so he will bring something different to the team.

“We know for a fact that we can’t switch off for a moment against them because they have world class players that can punish you. It is going to be a massive challenge, and we have to be at the top of our game to beat them.

“In my lifetime in the Bok team it is the first time we will be playing back-to-back Tests against the All Blacks at home, and we know it is going to be a massive challenge, but we’ll give everything to do well. We have a massive tour ahead, but we don’t want to look too far ahead.

“Emirates Airline Park is a great venue for both teams. I certainly will never forget the Rugby World Cup final in 1995 with Nelson Mandela in attendance and Joel Stransky’s drop-goal.

“The big factor for us, however, is to keep building and hopefully we can do that, and the scoreboard will take care of itself.”

Skipper Siya Kolisi is also wary of the threat New Zealand bring.

“We had a look at last week’s game, but we cannot dwell on that result too long,” said Kolisi. “New Zealand are a very good team, and they are one performance away from turning things around.

“From our side, we had a good review of last week’s game, and we feel there is a lot we can still improve on.”

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The players (and coach) who must nail Round 2 in The Rugby Championship

If the whole industry you work in was poring over your reviews, performance improvement plan, final warning and running betting pools on your time of termination, you’d feel it a bit.

Ian Foster is crispy. Well done. He’s a hot chicken with the oven beeping. It is not even clear if a narrow win at Ellis Park can save his job from him.

Maybe it should. The All Blacks are only five wins from 14 in Johannesburg’s rugby citadel; one of their worst returns in a stadium they’ve often been to.

A big win for the All Blacks may keep Foster for the Bledisloe Cup, where he could sweep and buy his ticket to France on NZRU bucks.

A loss seems doom; another trouncing and he may have to fly coach, using his severity allowance from him.

(Obligatory caveat: Foster seems a very nice man and we Bok fans all wish him long and continued employment as the head mastermind of Kiwi rugby; we suggest he hire Allister Coetzee as his attack coach).

But which players are also under the pump in Round 2?

I’ll look at two per team in this fascinating and more even Rugby Championship.

new zealand

The coach-captain bond in rugby is deeper, richer than in any other sport. Coaches in the NFL call every play; in volleyball, netball and in the NBA, the coach is shouting into players’ ears almost the entire game. Baseball and football managers use hand signals and bring their players to them for conference continually.

In rugby, a captain is an extension of the coach; his handpicked voice and mind of him.

On The Roar Rugby podcast this week we were joined by Stuart Lancaster and our own Nick Bishop.

One topic was captaincy; leadership. Lancaster made a good point: in life, in business we know leadership doesn’t peak in our twenties and thirties. Yet a Test captain (usually about 30) is asked to lead 23 highly competitive players in the heat.

There are passages of play in which one voice becomes more vital than any other.

sam cane is a quiet sort. Peter O’Mahony sledged him and there has seemed to be no response from Cane. He looks slow to the loose ball and breakdown. Siya Kolisi beat him to the floor in Round 1 and to be honest, Cane had a better position. He also could not dent Malcolm Marx at the ruck.

Can you imagine the French pack simply not being able to move Marx?

So, Cane must rise. Or he may be sitting in 17B next to Foster.

Sam Cane of the New Zealand All Blacks looks on dejected following the International Test match between the New Zealand All Blacks and Ireland at Sky Stadium on July 16, 2022 in Wellington, New Zealand.  (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

(Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

The other Kiwi upon whom pressure sits is young Ethan deGroot. There is no greater scrum examination for a young loosehead than to try to decipher the strange and wonderful and 50-cap successful long bind of Frans Malherbe.

If de Groot gets it wrong on the hard, hard field with 60,000 sauced up Saffas baying for more scrums, that fast start the All Blacks need will be gone.

Referees are human and a dominant Bok scrum in their fortress with perfect turf is a fearsome thing for a young lad.

Territory cannot be won with a faulty scrum. There is not a good reserve loosehead, either.

If Cane captains better and gets to the right spots sooner than Kolisi, Marx, and Kwagga Smith, the All Blacks will be better. If de Groot can split Malherbe and his hooker, he will have done his part of him and may have that No 1 jersey for a while.

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Marx’s reward for being Man of the Match is his more familiar Bomb Squad role. He will likely be the first book on the pitch.

So the pressure resides on joseph dwebaa muscular bloke last seen brushing Dan Biggar aside.

His throws will need to be perfect, his brake foot must satisfy Luke Pearce, and he needs to get off the floor to carry as quickly as he dances with the Gwijo Squad. Crucially, he will need to make good decisions at the back of the Bok maul.

Dweba can cement his spot as the third string hooker for the World Cup, and then, anything can happen. Remember, Marx played over 70 minutes of the 2019 final.

Australia

James O’Connor, in your long and distinguished and roller coaster career, you have seen almost everything. In 2011 he coolly slotted the match winner at the Cake Tin to oust the Boks in a quarterfinal, and here he is over a decade later steering the Wallaby ship in Argentina.

He does not hop like a bunny any more. He isn’t a running threat. But he has seen every eventuality on a rugby pitch.

He’s the closest thing Australia has to Jonny Sexton (without the perfect touch off the boot).

Far from home, in the dreaded second match on tour, it is possible a few young Wallabies can melt or aging stars can go down.

JOC is the stabilizer. As odd as that sounds, friend.

But that makes him essentially the captain. Pressure.

In the pack, I see Rory Arnold as playing for one of the three Giteau spots later, even next year if that is still the rule.

He will be working against good locks, even if Guido Petti would have been the best benchmark. A bad performance here and Arnold may be seen as a mere luxury?

Look for him to be highly motivated to show why he is a cut above the locks seen in the English series.

Argentina

thomas rooster is 23. He is very short. He is very heavy.

Argentina has a big pack problem. They have wonderful hookers and a big angry back five. But no notable props.

Gallo could be an answer. He has only four caps for Los Pumas. He’s up against Taniela Tupou, who is also not tall.

This sumo wrestle will greatly interest both Michael Cheika and Dave Rennie, who both know even as the number of scrums has fallen steadily at Test level (with longer advantages and better hands) the “penalisable” portion has risen. Referees like Angus Gardner ping half of all scrums.

You cannot go far in a World Cup with a suspect tighthead.

The other player who has a lot to show is Gonzalo Bertranou. On our podcast with Marcelo Bosch I listed him as one of the four Pumas I was most impressed with against Scotland. With Tomas Cubelli on the bench, and Nic White his opposite number, this is a perfect time for the nippy and intelligent Bertranou to shine.

Round 2 will have its winners and losers; who do you see as carrying a big load this time?

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Clarkson’s ex-manager advises coaching great to choose North Melbourne

Alastair Clarkson’s former manager Liam Pickering says he would advise the four-time premiership coach to take the North Melbourne job.

The Roos are reported to have offered Clarkson a contract of at least five years and have gone all in on securing him as their senior coach, while he’s also met with GWS.

Those are the only two clubs currently on the lookout for a new senior coach, and given his credentials, it’s believed Clarkson has the pick of the job he wants.

Pickering and Clarkson have been friends for over 35 years, but the two parted ways in a managerial sense in 2013.

“I think he is (going to North Melbourne),” Pickering said on *SEN’s Off The Bench.

“I haven’t spoken to him, so I don’t know.

“I would be (advising him to take the North Melbourne job) because I don’t see Alastair living in Sydney.”

Pickering also added that following in the footsteps of John Kennedy Snr would mean a lot to Clarkson.

“It’s a great challenge, it’s his old club, and the other thing is he idolizes Kanga (John) Kennedy,” he added.

“Kanga went from Hawthorn where he was a legend as a coach and came across to North and coached North for (several years), he’s Alastair’s hero.

“It would just be great for the footy club if he could go there.

“Nothing against the Giants job, I think the Giants have got the better list. But if it was me advising him, I’d say, ‘Kanga job, just make it yours mate. It’s your club, your people’.”

Clarkson will likely make his decision before the end of the home and away season and there’s growing momentum an announcement could come next week.

He formerly played 93 games at North Melbourne between 1987 and 1995.





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McLaughlin: Dixon does not get respect he deserves at home

Scott Dixon

Scott McLaughlin believes six-time IndyCar champion Scott Dixon does not get the respect he deserves back in New Zealand.

Dixon’s tally of six top-level North American open-wheeler titles is second only to AJ Foyt’s seven, and he moved to outright second all-time on another significant metric with his victory in the most recent race of the season.

The Brisbane-born Kiwi’s win at Nashville was his 53rd across CART (one win) and IndyCar, moving him past Mario Andretti after drawing level four races earlier at Toronto.

Again, only Foyt is ahead, on 67 wins.

Dixon prevailed only by a tenth of a second in Nashville, with McLaughlin following him across the finish line.

The latter became a full-time IndyCar driver last year and, having idolized his countryman in the #9 Chip Ganassi Racing entry, is thrilled to now count him as a friend.

“To go toe to toe with Scotty, it was awesome,” said McLaughlin of his battle with Dixon.

“There’s definitely that starstruck [factor] is gone.

“We’re probably more mates now, which is cool, and to call your hero ‘mate’ is pretty cool.

“He is just a phenomenal guy, he is the greatest of all time, in my opinion, and I think he doesn’t get enough respect in New Zealand for what he’s achieved.

“I think he is a phenomenal race car driver, phenomenal bloke, and to go toe-to-toe with him is a very cool thing for me in my racing career and it’s like a bucket list thing.”

Dixon is second in the series and McLaughlin sixth with three races to go.

The next event, the last of 2022 on an oval, is that at Gateway on August 19-20 (local time).

Every IndyCar race is live and ad-free on Stan Sport.

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AFL 2022: Melbourne defeat Carlton, Kysaiah Pickett goal, video, finals race, ladder

Melbourne have broken the hearts of Carlton fans by snatching victory from the jaws of defeat in the final 15 seconds.

The Blues had their hands on a finals berth for the first time since 2013, holding onto a one point lead in the dying seconds when Melbourne surged forward.

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A long bomb inside 50 from Jayden Hunt went to ground and Kysaiah Pickett got on the end of a Jake Melksham loose ball get and sent a mongrel punt floating goalward.

As it sailed through you could pinpoint the moment Carlton’s fans hearts break.

The win launches Melbourne back to second spot on the ladder and leaves Carlton in a perilous position entering the final round of the home and away season.

“I’m speechless really I don’t know what to say, it’s good to be back on the winning list. We went down last week and to bounce back this week is unreal,” Pickett said after the win.

Dees skipper Max Gawn didn’t even kick his post-game interview off properly before asking just how long was left on the clock.

“That’s pretty clutch. Kozzie is a good player and he’s been playing some good footy this year and that was his moment, ”Gawn said.

“We were on the wrong end of the moments last weekend and we studied it a lot. The last 10 minutes of the Collingwood game we watched it a lot and you saw some good stuff in those last minutes, we were able to hold our nerve.”

Jake Melksham was a standout in front of goal for Melbourne, ending the night with four goals and kicking the second last goal of the contest to bring the Demons back to within a point.

The Blues held the ball with around 60 seconds left to play and looked assured of victory, but one simple miss kick opened the door and the Demons pounced.

Carlton need to secure a win against Collingwood in round 23 or pray Hawthorn can topple the Western Bulldogs next Sunday.

A loss next weekend and a Bulldogs win and the Blues will once again miss out on September action.

“It leaves already gutted, it leaves already disappointed. But I’m also really proud at the same time and I thought our players were really brave right through our whole night,” Blues coach Michael Voss said.

“It hurts. Important game for us but we didn’t quite get it right at the end but as far as the whole game goes I just thought the boys played really brave and played a great style of footy and it’s something we want to keep replicating.”

Fans watching on Saturday night simply couldn’t believe the ending they had just witnessed.

7 News reporter Emma O’Sullivan wrote: “I don’t even barrack for the Demons or the Blues but my heart is still in my mouth, that was wild.”

The Advocate editor Alex Fair wrote: “That was epic. Simply epic. What a reply.”

Broadcaster Darren Parkin wrote: “Nothing can kick you in the pills quite like footy can it? That’s brutal for the Blues.”

Former Brisbane and Port Adelaide player Tom Rockliff believes the final moments played into Melbourne’s hands.

“I think it was a clear tactic from Melbourne to load the corridor. Lever kicks to a 3 vs 1 in middle of ground. Doesn’t happen by chance, something they have trained – Carlton set up well down the line,” he wrote.

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Melbourne Demons v Carlton Blues, Fremantle Dockers v West Coast Eagles fixtures, teams, ladder, odds, tickets, players

Melbourne’s four-goal hero Jake Melksham spoke to Channel Seven after the game…

Q: Congratulations on your win and also your performance.
A: Thank you. There is a lot of emotion down here at the moment. We were just talking off air either way, whatever way that went, it was massive for either team. For us to stick to tasks like we did at the end, we executed our win the game play. Kozzy kicks a great goal and we are standing here talking about how good it was. It was awesome.

Q: You talk about little things being enormous things. You are never quite sure what they are going to be Gee, there are a lot of little moments tonight – I mean Phil Davis was talking about your body craft there. Just the smothers, the touches, the tap-ones, the little hand balls, they add up.
A: Yes, they do. It is actually what we focus on at the club. We have a match review each week and we are presented with a videotape of our smothering tackling. It is called ‘Tackle and Tough’. It is the one-percenters we drive. That has been a massive difference for us the last 18 months, the little things we focused on. We see that tape Monday. He gives out Precision Footy which is one of his footies he patented. It’s great.

Q: It would be a pretty good tape to watch on Monday
A: Yes, it will be awesome. Back in defense was huge. They held up well for us all game. Mids great as usual and the forwards, we come good in the second half. I felt like in the first half we were too far away from the ball and they were cutting it off across halfback. We got that going in the second half and it went well.

Q: Angus talked about you felt like you were playing your game over the last few weeks, not getting reward. Can you tell us about what changed in the way in which you guys identified, “This is the style we want to play.”
A: I don’t think anything has changed in the style as much. Obviously we are going with a bit smaller forward line hence, myself being in. We have big Ben Brown down there and Max Gawn at times but it is our ability to just stick to task for the full 120 minutes. Like last week, we go down by a goal. Collingwood were just better for longer, they were cleaner, they
executed under pressure. That was a huge pressure cooker of a game last week and we just didn’t get it done. That’s what we focused on this week. It looked like with five minutes to go it was maybe heading that way again but like I said before, we execute our win-the-game play and we have a win.

Q: Take us through the win-the-game play.
A: Yes. So obviously when you are down as forwards we all just pulled back. You would have seen that on the screen. We just opened the forward line up. The mids will do their thing – I can’t say what the mids do. Some sort of attack work in there from Max and get it forward and in. We open the forward line up, put them under the pump, try and win your one-on-ones and scores. It is good.

Q: You said during the ad break, “Was it good to watch? Was it good to call? There is not many better games of football when there is so much on the line for both teams. With things going the way we expected to, you would have dropped out of the four for the first time since 2020 with a round to go and a trip to The Gabba.
A: Yes, footy is strange. Like you have got to be on every week. We managed to get it done at the end. We go to The Gabba next week, play a top-four team. They had a great win last night. We are looking forward to that. We travel really well. So we will go up there full of confidence and attack the game. Can’t wait.

Q: Just quickly on Carlton. They started 8-2. They are playing football finals until you give it to Kozzy and he kicks a goal. Kozzy kicks a point it is a draw and they play finals.
A: Yes. Crazy. It’s crazy. It just shows, like you have just got to stay in the game. And they did that really well as well. They were very brave. It was a toss of the coin tonight. We were lucky, Kozzy kicked a great goal. I hope they win and get in finals. I think they can do damage.

Q: To go back is really difficult. How hungry is the team and the club to be back there and to have that taste again, that victory?
A: Yes, they are super hungry. Like, I didn’t play (in the premiership) – this is everything to me. Like I’m at the end of my career. I don’t know what I will be doing in the next few months. Like, it means everything to me. There are heaps of players – like Jayden Hunt didn’t play. There is a few of us that didn’t play. Obviously it means a lot but Goody talks about it. He won a flag in his first two years. He is quite lucky. But after that, for the next 15 years, he only had the opportunity twice to win a flag. So to be in the position, to do it again is huge — to win a flag. We have recognized that. Now it is about making the most of it and executing under pressure in the big games and we will try and do it again. But have got to be there and put yourself on show every week. Put yourself out there. We are there and we just have got to execute.

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Sam Kerr nominated for Ballon d’Or for fourth time as Lionel Messi snubbed in 17-year first

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The 35-year-old forward also won the prize in 2019. It was not awarded in 2020 due to the pandemic. Neymar also missed the cut this time.

Lewandowski, Kylian Mbappe, Karim Benzema, Erling Haaland and five-time winner Cristiano Ronaldo were all included, as were Mohamed Salah, Sadio Mane, Kevin De Bruyne, Harry Kane and Son Heung-min.

The men’s list features six Manchester City players: Phil Foden, Joao Cancelo, De Bruyne, Riyad Mahrez, Bernardo Silva, and new signing Haaland (formerly Borussia Dortmund).

Liverpool also have six nominees: Trent Alexander-Arnold, Luis Diaz, Fabinho, Darwin Nunez, Salah and Virgil van Dijk.

The awards will be presented on October 17.

Among changes announced in March, the award is now being awarded based on performances during a regular European season, rather than a calendar year. A reduction in the number of voters was among other changes, with the goal of streamlining the process. Voters also will no longer consider a player’s career accomplishments.

France Football magazine has given out the award to men every year since 1956 and to women every year since 2018 – when Hegerberg became the first female winner – though both were canceled in 2020 because of the pandemic.

with wires