Categories
Entertainment

‘Engulfed in flames’: Award-winning actress fighting for life after violent car crash

US actress Anne Heche is reportedly fighting for life following a collision that left her vehicle “engulfed in flames”.

The incident occurred on Friday morning (local time) in the Mar Vista area of ​​Los Angeles, near her home.

Heche, 53, is the former partner of talk show host Ellen DeGeneres, and is known for films including Donnie Brasco and Cedar Rapids.

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Pictures and video footage obtained by US media outlet TMZ showed the Emmy-award winning actress driving a blue Mini Cooper, which was later pictured severely damaged at the scene.

The vehicle drove into a two-storey home and “erupted in heavy fire” according to the Los Angeles Fire Department.

Anne Heche in 2018. Credit: Chris Pizzello/AP
An aerial view of the crash scene. Credit: NBC

“Fifty-nine firefighters took 65 minutes to access, confine and fully extinguish the stubborn flames within the heavily damaged structure,” an LAFD report stated.

“One female adult (was) found within the vehicle, who has been taken to an area hospital by LAFD Paramedics in critical condition.”

The LAFD also confirmed that the vehicle drove ten meters into the residence but that the occupant of the house escaped without injury.

The building was left “uninhabitable”, said spokesman Brian Humphrey.

Heche began dating DeGeneres in 1997 but separated in 2000.

Dumpster diver has run in with police

Dumpster diver has run in with police

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Categories
Australia

NSW Health meningococcal warning for Splendor in the Grass attendees after one person dies

NSW Health is urging patrons of this year’s Splendor in the Grass festival to monitor for symptoms of meningococcal disease, after two revellers contracted the disease and one died.

“Although the disease is uncommon, it can be severe, so we are urging people who attended the event in the North Byron Parklands on 21 – 24 July to be alert to the symptoms of meningococcal disease and act immediately if they appear,” NSW Health said in a statement issued on Friday.

One person who attended Splendor in the Grass last month has died with meningococcal.

One person who attended Splendor in the Grass last month has died with meningococcal. Credit:Getty

A man from Sydney, aged in his 40s, who attended the festival has died of meningococcal disease, NSW Health said.

“NSW Health expresses its sincere condolences to his loved ones.”

Symptoms of the disease include a sudden fever, headache, neck stiffness, joint pain, a rash of red spots or bruises, a dislike of bright lights, nausea and vomiting.

Symptoms in young children include irritability, difficulty walking, high-pitched crying and refusing food.

The state has seen 15 cases of meningococcal disease this year, which is rare but tends to increase in late winter and spring.

It is most common in children under five and 15-25 year olds.

Our Breaking News Alert will notify you of significant breaking news when it happens. Get it here.

Categories
US

PM Update: Scattered strong storms may produce flooding through evening

Comment

* flood watch until 11 pm *

5:10 pm — Severe thunderstorm and flash flood warnings for parts of the District, eastern Montgomery and western and northern Prince George’s County

Storms have flared up quickly over the last hour with a zone of torrential rain and strong winds between northeast Washington and Laurel, including Landover, Greenbelt and Beltsville. While isolated very strong wind likes are possible, lightning and heavy downpours are the main hazard with this area of ​​storminess. Some areas in this zone could see up to 3 inches of rain. The storm activity is slowly drifting north-northeast; some areas could see downpours for an hour or so before the rain eases.

Original forecast from 4:30 pm

Temperatures strove for 90 this afternoon and tended to make it. Upper 80s and low 90s, plus soupy humidity, is enough in most spots for plentiful shower and thunderstorm activity, which continues into and through the evening. The weekend won’t be a washout, but we’ll run a chance for showers and storms both days. It’s possible our heat wave could extend a couple more days as well.

DC braces for second night of storms after deadly lightning strike

Listen to our daily DC forecasts: Apple Podcasts | Amazon Echo | More options

Through Tonight: Scattered showers and storms remain possible through the evening, probably ending near or after sunset. Any of these storms can drop up to several inches of rain in a short time, causing localized flooding. There’s also a risk of damaging winds, mainly in downbursts from collapsing storms. Once past the storm threat, it’s partly cloudy overnight — perhaps patchy fog in the usual spots near bodies of water and such. Winds will blow lightly from the south as temperatures fall through the 70s.

View the current weather at The Washington Post.

Tomorrow (Saturday): Partly to mostly sunny skies of the morning turn cloudier with time. There could be a few late-day showers or storms, but probably considerably fewer than today. High temperatures are pretty close to 90. Humidity remains high, with dew points near or above 70, meaning it feels more like 95 to 100 in the afternoon.

Sunday: Skies are partially sunny. A few afternoon showers and thunderstorms are possible. They could linger into the evening. Afternoon temperatures reach the low 90s in many spots. Winds will blow from the southwest around 5 to 10 mph. Dew points in the 70s make it feel closer to 100 in the afternoon.

See Camden Walker’s forecast through the beginning of next week. And if you haven’t already, join us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter and Instagram. For related traffic news, check out Gridlock.

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Categories
Business

House prices: Interest rate rises and property downturn could be good for buyers

Rising interest rates and uncertainty are causing the property market to cool around Australia. Sydney and Melbourne markets are leading the decline at -2.7 per cent and -0.9 per cent respectively, looking at CoreLogic data.

Based on the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) average property price of $1.2 million in Sydney and $966,500 in Melbourne, this reflects respective discounts of $32,999 and $8699 on the average property today.

With inflation at a 21-year high of 6.1 per cent and interest rates at 1.85 per cent and tipped to continue to rise, it seems likely there will be more pressure on property prices in the short term.

But maybe this could be a good thing. Watching the huge property run over the last couple of years, many people were either priced out of the market or felt property had become overcooked.

With prices on the decline, is it now a smart time to jump in?

State of the property market

Through 2020-21 we saw the value of all property in Australia increase by 23.7 per cent, the strongest growth seen since 2003. In contrast to the weak property market we’re seeing today, for the same time last year the average house price rose $107,000 in Sydney and $41,000 in Melbourne in just three months.

In 2022, we’ve been seeing declines driven by rising interest rates and uncertainty about how the Australian economy is going to ride out the current inflation crisis. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) initially forecast a 15 per cent decline in the property market by the end of 2023, with further falls predicted in 2024.

Worth noting is that not all areas have been (or likely will be) impacted by this downturn equally. We’re seeing property prices hold up more in areas with strong demand and limited supply, and prices weaker in areas that don’t have the same fundamentals. This trend is likely to continue throughout this period of property market disruption.

The key driver of softer property prices is rising interest rates, which have increased by 1.75 per cent over the last four months adding thousands to the cost of repayments on the average Aussie mortgage. With rates forecast to continue rising through 2022 as the RBA grapples with the current global inflation crisis, further pressure will be placed on borrowers and the property market as a result.

Advantages of buying property now

With the property market softening and fewer buyers in the market, people buying property today are doing it at a solid discount to the prices we’ve seen recently.

There’s a lot of fear and uncertainty out there. In my experience helping people with their investing through up and down markets, I’ve found that this uncertainty creates opportunity.

During the height of the Covid crisis there was also a lot of talk about the potential for big property market declines, and a lot of people were too fearful to buy property. Many people were sitting on the sidelines waiting for the uncertainty to pass, convinced there would be a huge crash that would allow them to pick up even more of a bargain.

But before we knew it, the ‘crisis’ was over and the uncertainty was gone. The property market didn’t fail as far as was expected, and many people missed the boat.

In my view, the current conditions are perfect for property buyers to pick up a bargain.

Disadvantages of buying property now

That being said, buying property today does come with risk. The main one that any property buyer needs to manage in the short-term is the likelihood of interest rates rising further.

Rising interest rates for property buyers today mean that you’re highly likely to be paying more for your mortgage in six months than you are today. As mentioned above, rates are tipped to raise around 2 per cent from their current levels in the short-term – meaning you need to be prepared and ready to fund higher mortgage repayments.

There is also potential for property values ​​to fall further in the short-term. Buying and then selling property is an expensive exercise, so you never want to be forced to sell a property. But when values ​​are declining, it’s even more important to protect yourself.

When is the best time to buy property

Looking back, it’s easy to identify ‘good’ times to buy property, but nobody has a crystal ball. We never really know where the property market is going until it actually happens.

And further, while there have been times that we can see would have been better than others to buy property, values ​​have consistently risen over the long-term. That means that over any 10-year period, your asset would have increased in value.

This suggests that the best time to buy was always 10 years ago. The second best time is today.

My view is that if property is on your money road map, now is a great time to buy. You’ll be able to take advantage of the uncertainty, pick up an asset that was a good investment six months ago at a higher price, and move forward on your money journey.

Finding a good quality property is crucial, and having a rock solid plan absolutely necessary to protect your risk. But get these two things right and you’ll be set for success, and will position yourself to come out of this period of disruption in a stronger position than you went into it.

The wrap

Buying property is scary at the best of times, but when fear and uncertainty are high it’s even harder. But property has been one of the most effective ways to invest to build wealth for the last hundred or so years in Australia, and I don’t see that changing any time soon.

Take the time to get your approach right, then make it happen – your future self will thank you for it.

Ben Nash is a finance expert commentator, podcaster, financial adviser and founder of Pivot Wealth, and author of the Amazon best-selling book ‘Get Unstuck: Your guide to creating a life not limited by money’.

Ben has just launched a series of free online money education events to help you get on the front financial foot. You can check out all the details and book your place here.

Disclaimer: The information contained in this article is general in nature and does not take into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Therefore, you should consider whether the information is appropriate to your circumstances before acting on it, and where appropriate, seek professional advice from a finance professional.

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Categories
Entertainment

Sara Paretsky: ‘The story of Joan of Arc made me long for a vision’ | Books

My earliest reading memory
I was six, walking home from school with a book that had the word “city” in it. I only knew the hard “c” and couldn’t figure out what a kitten had to do with the story.

My favorite book growing up
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott. I first read it when I was seven or eight. I was the only girl in a family of boys, and I loved immersing myself in the family of sisters. My family also had a lot of anger and volatility, and the thoughtful, parenting Marmee gave her daughters de ella offered an attentive window into an idealized family story. The book appealed to me, too, for the same reason it appealed to girls 150 years ago: the four sisters quarrel, they have flaws, they love and support each other, they figure out ways to solve their problems. And the story itself is told against the backdrop of the American civil war, a history which continues to obsess me both as a citizen and as a writer.

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The book that changed me as a teenager
My parents (and really, everyone who’s ever known me) have always thought my personality was too intense. When I was a child, they gave me Mark Twain’s Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc. They wanted me to see the fate that awaited girls who engaged too intensely with life. Instead, the story of Joan made me long for a vision and the commitment to follow it, even to death.

The writer who changed my mind
In the Last Analysis, by Carolyn Heilbrun writing as Amanda Cross. I found it in a secondhand bookshop when I was 19, and it showed me a different concept of the female hero than the marriage story I’d grown up thinking was our most probable destiny.

The book that made me want to be a writer
By six or so I was already writing little stories, but I never imagined myself as a published writer. It wasn’t until I was in my 20s, reading Raymond Chandler at the same time that my life was being turned around by second wave feminism, that I started trying to write for publication. I was tired of reading books in which women used their bodies to try to get good boys to do bad things. I wanted to create a female detective who was a person, someone who could solve problems without using her body, and someone who could have a sex life that did not define her moral character. My series of novels featuring detective VI Warshawski came out of that wish.

the author I came back to
When I was 18 or so, I read Dubliners and Portrait of the Artist. James Joyce’s writing blew me away, and so I thought I’d read Ulysses. I never got past “Stately, plump Buck Mulligan … ” Finally, this past winter, I read it with a group of friends who’d also never made it past the first paragraph. I wish I was erudite enough to join the throngs who list it as their favorite book of all time, but, sadly, it isn’t mine. However, I reread Dubliners and I still am in awe of the craft and insights in those stories. Joyce was only 26, but they still read like mature work.

The book I reread
Jane Eyer. I read it when I was about 10 but was only interested in the first section, at boarding school. I’ve reread it several times as an adult, and am fascinated by how Charlotte Brontë handles her agency in her characters. As a companion, I reread Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys. I don’t usually like what I call vampire books, where a writer reimagines the characters another writer thought up and breathed life into. The Wide Sargasso Sea is a huge exception. Her apology for the sexuality of women in the West Indies is a tour de force.

The book I could never read again
The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orczy. I love the storyline, but the depictions of race and class are hard to take.

The books I am currently reading
The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams, and The Cat Who Saved Books by Sosuke Natsukawa, and The Mind Readers by Margery Allingham.

My comfort read
Barbara Pym, although she’s not as cozy a writer as people who don’t know her work imagine. I love her de ella heroine de ella in Excellent Women, who keeps cookbooks at her bedside de ella for her own comfort reading de ella.

Sara Paretsky’s new VYo Warshawski novel Overboard is published by Hodder & Stoughton.

Categories
Sports

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

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

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

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

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Categories
Australia

John Tingle, founder of Shooters Party and father of ABC journalist, dies aged 90

John Saxon Tingle, the father of high-profile ABC journalist Laura Tingle and founder of the Shooters Party, has died.

Tingle announced the 90-year-old’s death on Twitter on Saturday saying: “Love you Dadda.”

On Instagram, she added: “Isn’t Saxon just the best name?”, registering her “profound gratitude and luck in having him in my life.”

Born in the eastern-Sydney suburb of Edgecliff in November 1931, Mr Tingle founded the Shooters Party in 1992. He was also its vice-chairman until 1995.

His career started in journalism, where he worked as a broadcaster and news editor for 2QN Deniliquin from 1949 until 1951.

a young boy looking and smiling
John Tingle was born November 2, 1931.(Instagram: @laura.tingle)

He later joined the ABC, where he stayed until 1968, returning in 1977 to present Friday Night Forum.

Throughout the 1970s he worked in radio for a number of networks including 2SM and 2GB in Sydney.

From 1992 to 1995 he was director of current affairs at radio 2CH.

Today, Tingle attributed her choice in career and success to her father.

“Apart from all else of course he was my greatest urger-on, fan and critic in my professional life and so proud I had followed him into journalism,” she wrote on Instagram.

“He taught me at 15 what was the most important question to ask, cheered me on to tackle the small and mean people in politics, and to not be afraid to celebrate the transformative people and moments it sometimes gives us.

“And to always report what you believe to be true.”

A picture of John Tingle.
Mr Tingle worked for a number of media outlets including the ABC.(Twitter: Laura Tingle)

In 2019, Mr Tingle, a resident of Wauchope in the NSW Mid North Coast, called himself an “accidental politician” in an interview with the Illawarra Mercury.

“I was 63 looking to retire to Port Macquarie, I had a block of land and without telling me they put me at the top of the ballot and I got elected,” he said.

“It was a party that was never intended to be with someone elected who didn’t know he was standing for parliament.”

Mr Tingle was father to Peter, Sally and Laura.

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Categories
US

Brittney Griner’s Sentence Renews Pressure on President Biden

WASHINGTON — Immediately after a Moscow judge handed down Brittney Griner’s nine-year prison sentence on Thursday, calls grew louder for President Biden to find a way to bring her home.

“We call on President Biden and the United States government to redouble their efforts to do whatever is necessary and possible,” the Rev. Al Sharpton said in a statement.

US officials and analysts had been resigned to a guilty verdict for Ms. Griner, a basketball star who plays for a Russian team during the WNBA off-season. But the cold reality of her sentence of her on a drug charge was a shock and renewed calls for Mr. Biden to secure her release of her — even as critics fumed that of her offering of her to swap with Moscow prisoners Russian hostage-taking .

The result is a painful quandary for the Biden administration as it tries to maintain a hard line against President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia over his war in Ukraine.

“There’s nothing good here,” said Andrea Schneider, an expert on international conflict resolution at Cardozo School of Law. “No matter what Biden does, he’s going to be criticized — either that we’re giving too much or we’re not working hard enough.”

Kremlin officials had said that any potential deal could not proceed before her trial was complete, creating a glimmer of hope that the verdict might open the door for an exchange. But analysts called that unlikely any time soon.

“I don’t think this is going to get resolved quickly,” said Jared Genser, a human rights lawyer who represents Americans held by foreign governments. “I think the fact that Putin has not said yes right away means that he’s looked at the US offer and said, ‘Well, that’s their first offer. I can get more than that.’”

That US offer, first presented to Russia in June, sought the release of Ms. Griner and Paul N. Whelan, a former Marine arrested in Moscow and convicted of espionage in 2020.

The Biden administration proposed to trade the two Americans for the notorious Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout, who is midway through a 25-year federal prison sentence for offering to sell arms to a Colombian rebel group that the United States then considered a terrorist organization.

The proposal has already reshaped US diplomacy toward Russia, which had been frozen at senior levels since Mr. Putin’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine. A phone call about the matter on July 29 between Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken and his Russian counterpart, Sergey V. Lavrov, was their first conversation since the war began. But it appeared to leave the Kremlin unmoved. The White House says Russia has made an unspecified “bad faith” counteroffer that the United States is not taking seriously.

On Friday, Mr. Lavrov told reporters that the two nations would continue discussing the issue through established channels. He repeated the Kremlin’s insistence that the United States not discuss the negotiations in public, though Russian media outlets began linking Mr. Bout’s case to Ms. Griner’s early this summer.

But the pressure is lopsided. While Mr. Putin has long sought Mr. Bout’s release, perhaps out of loyalty to a man with deep ties to Russia’s security state, the arms dealer’s continued imprisonment costs Mr. Putin little. Time, in other words, is in Mr. Putin’s favor.

Mr. Biden, on the other hand, finds himself squeezed from two sides.

On one side are Ms. Griner’s supporters. Ella’s wife, Cherelle Griner, has made public pleas for Mr. Biden to cut a deal with Mr. Putin as soon as possible. Those pleas have been echoed by Mr. Sharpton, Democratic activist groups, television pundits, pro athletes and celebrities on social media. (Mr. Sharpton on Thursday also called for the release of Mr. Whelan.)

“How could she feel like America has her back?” the NBA superstar LeBron James said in mid-July. “I would be feeling like, ‘Do I even want to go back to America?’”

That was before Mr. Biden’s proposal to free Mr. Bout became public. Officials said they disclosed the offer, which was confirmed last week by a person briefed on the talks, to increase pressure on Russia. But the revelation may have also reflected a desire to show Ms. Griner’s backers that Mr. Biden was not sitting on her hands.

“We believe it’s important for the American people to know how hard President Biden is working to get Brittney Griner and Paul Whelan home,” John F. Kirby, a White House national security spokesman, said at the time. “We think it’s important for their families to know how hard we’re working on this.”

After Ms. Griner was sentenced on Thursday, Mr. Biden renewed his commitment to “pursue every possible avenue to bring Brittney and Paul Whelan home safely as soon as possible.”

The White House would not say how Mr. Biden might achieve that goal, however. “I don’t think it would be helpful to Brittney or to Paul for us to talk more publicly about where we are in the talks and what the president might or might not be willing to do,” Mr. Kirby said.

But almost any additional offers would be sure to amplify criticism from Mr. Biden’s other flank — and charges that Mr. Biden was bending to extortion by Mr. Putin, a man he has called a war criminal.

“This is why dictatorships — like Venezuela, Iran, China, Russia — take Americans hostage, because they know they’ll get something for it,” Rep. Mike Waltz, Republican of Florida, told Newsmax last week. “They know eventually some administration will pay. And this just puts a target on the back of every American out there.”

Mike Pompeo, the former secretary of state, echoed the criticism in a Fox News interview last week, saying that to free Mr. Bout would “likely lead to more” Americans being arrested abroad. And former President Donald J. Trump, who when in office prided himself on freeing detained Americans abroad, slammed the proposed deal in crude terms.

Mr. Bout, he said, was “absolutely one of the worst in the world, and he’s going to be given his freedom because a potentially spoiled person goes into Russia loaded up with drugs.” (Russian officials who detained Ms. Griner at a Moscow-area airport in mid-February found less than one gram of cannabis vape oil in her bags.)

Mr. Genser, the lawyer for other detained Americans, noted that Mr. Biden has an option beyond raising his offer. He could seek new ways to make Mr. Putin suffer.

“You need to dramatically elevate the cost to Vladimir Putin of keeping them detained,” Mr. Genser said. “It’s not only about giving Putin what he wants. It’s about simultaneously raising the pain for him.”

That is no easy task, however. Biden administration officials have spent months trying to devise ways to incur enough pain on Mr. Putin to make him cease his invasion of Ukraine. Like the freedom of Ms. Griner and Mr. Whelan, that goal, too, remains elusive.

Categories
Entertainment

Actress Anne Heche ‘critical’ after fiery crash

US actress Anne Heche has been taken to hospital in a critical condition following a collision that left her vehicle “engulfed in flames”.

The incident occurred on Friday morning in the Mar Vista area of ​​Los Angeles, near her home.

Heche, 53, is the former partner of talk show host Ellen DeGeneres, and is known for films including Donnie Brasco and Cedar Rapids.

Pictures and video footage obtained by US media outlet TMZ showed Heche driving a blue Mini Cooper, which was later pictured severely damaged at the scene.

Anne Heche - @Stu_Mundel was over this wild scene at the top of our noon newscast - a car that had crashed into an apartment complex in Mar Vista area our crew captured the moment the suspected driver, now identified by @TMZ as actress Anne Heche, suddenly rose from the stretcher
Camera IconUS actress Anne Heche is fighting for life in hospital following a collision in Los Angeles that left her vehicle ‘engulfed in flames’. Credit: @Stu_Mundel/twitter/supplied

The vehicle struck a two-storey home and “erupted in heavy fire” according to the Los Angeles Fire Department.

“Fifty-nine firefighters took 65 minutes to access, confine and fully extinguish the stubborn flames within the heavily damaged structure,” an LAFD report stated.

“One female adult (was) found within the vehicle, who has been taken to an area hospital by LAFD Paramedics in critical condition.”

Anne Heche
Camera IconThe incident occurred on Friday morning in the Mar Vista area of ​​Los Angeles, near her home. Credit: AP

The LAFD also confirmed to the PA news agency that the vehicle had driven ten meters into the residence but that the occupant had escaped without injury.

The building was left “uninhabitable,” spokesman Brian Humphrey said.

Heche began dating DeGeneres in 1997 but separated in 2000.

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Categories
Sports

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Dyson Heppell (unrestricted free agent)

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

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

Isaac Smith (unrestricted free agent)

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

Ollie Henry (out of contract)

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

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

Darcy Gardiner (restricted free agent)

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

Cam Zurhaar (out of contract)

“Cam Zurhaar is still unsigned.

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

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

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

What’s coming for GWS

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

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

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

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

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

“I think Hopper is their number one target there.

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

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





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