AFL Record – Round 12, 2020

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ROUND 12 AUGUST 13-17, 2020

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CONTENTS 10

ROUND 12, AUGUST 13-17, 2020

THE BUTLER DID IT: Deadly Saints small forward Dan Butler is staking a claim for the recruit of the year.

FEATURES

READY TO RUMBLE

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KING KENNY

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Old rivals Melbourne and Collingwood have set up a crucial contest at the Gabba on Saturday. ASHLEY BROWNE reports.

It is finals or bust this year for Ken Hinkley, but the Port Adelaide coach is on track for a contract extension – and a premiership. ASHLEY BROWNE reports.

REGULARS

One Week At A Time Opinion: Ashley Browne Karcher Pressure Player Answer Man Fantasy Football Kids page Red Energy Quiz Match Centre

Owned and produced by Crocmedia AFL Record Editor Michael Lovett Production Editor Gary Hancock

Statisticians Col Hutchinson, Mark Genge Art Director Dennis Miller Senior Designer Ben Pola

Senior Writer Ashley Browne

Production Manager Stephen Lording

Writers Nic Negrepontis, Laurence Rosen, Andrew Slevison, Alex Zaia

Photography Michael Willson, Dylan Burns aflphotos.com.au

Photo Editor Rohan Voigt CEO – BallPark, Rainmaker & Publishing Richard Simkiss Publications Commercial Manager, Crocmedia Dean McBeth Traffic Coordinator Tillina Carter Printed By Ovato

Address correspondence to The Editor, AFL Record, Level 5, 111 Coventry St, Southbank, VIC 3006. (03) 8825 6600 Email: Michael.Lovett@ crocmedia.com AFL Record, Vol. 109, Round 12, 2020 Copyright © 2020. ACN No. 004 155 211. ISSN 1444-2973, Print Post approved PP320258/00109

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I couldn’t be happier to extend for another two years GOLD COAST RISING STAR MATT ROWELL ON SIGNING WITH THE SUNS UNTIL THE END OF 2023 – PAGE 10

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ONE WEEK at a TIME ROUND

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News from in and around the AFL

What, did the whole team fall over or something, did they? MAGPIE DEBUTANT TREY RUSCOE’S MUM FIONA ON NEWS OF HER SON’S SELECTION

Demons start to run hot, but D-Day looms

PLENTY TO SMILE ABOUT: Steven May, Christian Petracca and Clayton Oliver (below) have all stepped up for the Demons in the past two games.

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ASHLEY BROWNE

MICHAEL LOVETT

EDITOR’S LETTER

ll sorts of questions were being asked of Melbourne after its 51-point loss to Port Adelaide in round nine. It was an insipid performance. Port Adelaide might be the best team in the competition, but for a side with finals aspirations of its own, a defeat of that magnitude, especially given the shorter quarters this season, was bitterly disappointing. And leading the chorus of dissatisfaction was club president Glen Bartlett, who labelled it as “not Melbourne-like”. “When you pull on a Melbourne jumper, we don’t give them out in Weeties packets,” he said. The Demons simply had to respond and they did, with wins by 51 and 57 points in their next two matches. But with the rider that they were against 2020 cellar-dwellers Adelaide and North Melbourne, questions about the Demons still need to be asked. On Saturday at the Gabba, we might get some answers as they take on Collingwood. Melbourne had its way with North last Sunday without skipper Max Gawn, who has been battling back and knee soreness, and Jack Viney, who was concussed against

the Crows. Both should be back to take on the Pies. Melbourne needed its stars to step up in the last fortnight and they did. Clayton Oliver was herculean through the midfield with 34 touches (22 contested) against Adelaide, while last Sunday it was Christian Petracca who was unstoppable with 29 disposals (17 contested) and 12 score involvements. Earlier this season the dynamic Petracca was earning comparisons with Tiger superstar Dustin Martin. Such talk might have been a touch premature, but there is no doubting that the 24-year-old is in career-best form and living up to the hype from a few years back when he was the most highly-regarded youngster in the country.

u It’s been a case of the good,

the bad and the ugly over the past fortnight as the ‘Festival of Footy’ has rolled on. The good has been the footy and some individual performances. Last Saturday’s Port Adelaide-Richmond clash was clearly the best match of the season, with the Power showing why they will be there when the whips are cracking.

Individually, it was hard to go past Josh Daicos’ boundary line snap against Sydney in the final quarter last Thursday. His famous old man Peter did that most weeks and it looks like the apple hasn’t fallen too far from the tree. Still on the Magpies, the video of youngster Trey Ruscoe ringing his mum Fiona to tell her of his pending debut was gold.

Melbourne’s percentage has jumped from 89.9 to 109.9 per cent in two games and, with a match in hand, the Demons sit just outside the eight, with Collingwood among the teams just ahead of them. Which further underlines the importance of Saturday’s game. The problem for Collingwood all year has been an inability to get its best team on the park at any one time. Skipper Scott Pendlebury has missed several matches with a quad strain and is only some chance of resuming against the Demons, while fellow star midfielder Adam Treloar is set to miss up to four matches after another hamstring strain. Emerging mobile defender Isaac Quaynor is also expected to miss some games after a gruesome shin injury against the Swans last week. As a parent of 30-year-old somethings, my favourite line was: “What have you done?” The bad was the injury out of that match which saw another young Pie, Isaac Quaynor, sustain a nasty gash to his leg due to an opponent wearing incorrect studs. The ugly? The Richmond team song debacle almost beggars belief in this day and age.

The Tigers have been very good at most things they do but that was a low point, even allowing for the fact apologies have been made and accepted. That was closely followed by players targeting injured opponents and others taunting their opponents. Try doing that to Tony Lockett back in the day! And surely diving is not back in fashion? That is a bad look. AFL.com.au     AFL RECORD  5

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ONE WEEK at a TIME The Pies are in the midst of a gruelling stretch. Even by the standards of this difficult season, they are doing it tough with four games in 13 days in Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide and then this one back in Brisbane. Just four days before this key clash with the Demons, they will have played the Crows at Adelaide Oval. Collingwood has broad appeal across the country and has always attracted large crowds at the Gabba.

Before the pandemic turned this season upside down, the Pies were due to play Brisbane at the venue on Easter Thursday in front of a likely sellout crowd. There will still be several thousand fans at the Gabba for the clash with the Demons, but there will also be a tinge of sadness. COVID-19 has all but destroyed football in Melbourne, and it has robbed us of the traditional Queen’s Birthday MCG clash between the clubs, with all the associated Big Freeze activities thrown in. There’s always next year, we hope.

The Pies are in the midst of a gruelling stretch

WEEKS

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NAB AFL Rising Star MITCH GEORGIADES PORT ADELAIDE

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he first-year Port Adelaide forward’s nomination came on the back of an impressive five-mark, three-goal outing in the 51-point win over Melbourne. It was only his third game, but the 18-year-old’s strong overhead marking and ability to create scoring opportunities and hit the scoreboard was a feature.

He is the son of former Bulldogs forward John and his contribution is all the more impressive given he didn’t play at any level in 2019 after sustaining a quad injury in the NAB All Stars game on AFL Grand Final day in 2018. That match came just days after he led Subiaco to a two-point Grand Final win over Swan Districts in the 2018 WAFL Colts Grand Final.

LUKE JACKSON MELBOURNE

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ackson was the bolter at the 2019 NAB AFL Draft and was taken with the third selection by Melbourne. And he earned his Rising Star nomination after an impressive outing against Adelaide in round 10 in which he took two marks and kicked a career-high two goals playing as a hit-up forward. He was also Melbourne’s No. 2 ruckman on the night

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W1 SAM STURT

FREM

W2 MATT ROWELL

GCS

W3 CONNOR BUDARICK GCS W4 TOM GREEN

GWS

W5 CURTIS TAYLOR

NM

W6 IZAK RANKINE

GCS

W7 NOAH ANDERSON W8 CALEB SERONG

and had 14 hit-outs as he assisted Max Gawn. The former basketball standout, originally from Western Australia, was the highest ruckman picked at the national draft since Nic Naitanui in 2008 when he was selected by West Coast with the third pick.

GCS FREM

W9 MITCH GEORGIADES W10 LUKE JACKSON

PA MELB

ASHLEY BROWNE

DISPOSALS

SCORE INVOLVEMENTS

MARKS

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HIT-OUTS

GOALS

GOALS

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MITCH GEORGIADES

2020 NAB AFL RISING STAR NOMINEES

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LUKE JACKSON

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WEEKLY WINNERS WEEK TENNYSON 10 BALLARD

Who do you barrack for? Collingwood Who is your favourite AFL player? Jordan De Goey What superpower would you like to have? To be able to run fast What is your favourite ice cream flavour? Vanilla and strawberry What is your favourite TV show? Watching the footy or Captain Underpants What is the best thing about footy? Being able to watch it on TV Favourite NAB AFL Auskick At Home drill? Running up to take a mark

WEEK LEVI 11 ZACHARIOU

Who do you barrack for? Hawthorn Who is your favourite AFL player? Jack Gunston What superpower would you like to have? Super speed What is your favourite ice cream flavour? Caramel What is your favourite TV show? The Front Bar What is the best thing about footy? Playing with your mates Favourite NAB AFL Auskick At Home drill? Kicking the ball at the trampoline net and catching the rebounding ball

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ONE WEEK at a TIME

From a ‘flop’ to one of the game’s greats

INGLORIOUS START: Magpie superstar Gordon Coventry’s career was almost over before it began a century ago.

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BEN COLLINS

he legendary Gordon Coventry was the first player to break the 1000-goal barrier, but he wasn’t what you’d call a glamour forward in style, demeanour or attitude – all of which were evident in his brutally honest account of his uninspiring debut 100 years ago. The humble Collingwood superstar – whose 1299 goals topped the League’s all-time list for almost 70 years before being surpassed by Tony Lockett in 1999 – revealed his remarkable career almost ended before it began, due to an inferiority complex. The youngest of seven brothers from Diamond Creek in Melbourne’s outer north-east, Coventry followed his siblings to the local football club and made a name for himself as a half-forward. Late in the 1920 season, the unassuming 18-year-old was astounded when Collingwood guaranteed him a League debut the next week if he joined them. On the train trip to Victoria Park for training on the Tuesday night, Coventry became feverishly nervous. Halfway down the pedestrian ramp, he did an about-face to the platform. “I was overcome with stage fright … for 10 minutes I fought with myself to try and get over the nervous funk I was in, and had a train for home come along I feel sure I would have boarded it,” Coventry told The Sporting Globe in 1938, just months after he retired. “It flashed through my mind how wild my brothers would be if I turned down a chance with a League club. That was the deciding factor. “I would sooner face what was in store for me at Collingwood than go home and tell my brothers that I was frightened to enter the dressing room.” It was a pivotal moment in Collingwood history. Had he returned home, it’s possible a Coventry would never have played for the Magpies.

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After all, it was only through Gordon’s recommendation that the club secured his elder brother Syd, who captained the Pies to a record four successive premierships from 1927-30. Although young Gordon was warmly welcomed by the reigning premier, which was coached by the legendary Jock McHale, Coventry soon “gave up hope” of making the grade as players all around him showcased their dazzling skills, while he lamented that he “couldn’t kick over a jam tin” with his left foot. During the Thursday night session he told McHale he couldn’t even attempt some of the things the other players performed with ease, but the coach reassured him: “You don’t have to.” Even so, Coventry was “amazed” to be picked at centre half-forward against St Kilda at the Junction Oval in the round 15 clash on August 14, 1920. After a sleepless Friday night, the youngster rose at dawn on game-day and arrived early at the venue. Pies captain and superstar forward Dick Lee assured him his nerves would evaporate once he took the field, but when that moment came, Coventry “went (weak) at the knees”. “I couldn’t shake the stage fright for three quarters, during which time (my opponent) was

I’ve seen hundreds of lads having their first League games, but none were as inglorious as mine GORDON COVENTRY, WHO WAS KEPT TO ONE KICK AND ONE GOAL IN HIS DEBUT

running hoops around me and not allowing me to get a kick,” he recalled. This was despite the fact that by the final change, Collingwood had kicked 15 goals and led by 58 points in a one-sided affair. Coventry finally showed a promising glimpse in the last quarter when he slotted a goal with his first and only kick of the afternoon. “(I’ve seen) hundreds of lads having their first League games but none was so inglorious as mine,” he remembered. “I was sick and sorry and dreaded my trek home to Diamond Creek to tell my relations and pals that I was a real flop as a League footballer.” Unsurprisingly, Coventry was dropped. However, he was surprised to be invited back for training, despite arguing he was completely out of his depth. “You’ll show them next time, Gordon,” Collingwood secretary Ern Copeland told him. Coventry doubted there would be a next time, but he was given another chance three weeks later in the final round against South Melbourne at Victoria Park and chimed in with an equal team-high three goals in a win. He then nailed a further nine goals in three finals and the rest is history.

@bencollocollins

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A flag just what Kenny ‘deserves’

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ASHLEY BROWNE

ack in the days when YouTube was largely the depository of piano-playing cats, the video footy fans would have bookmarked was that of Ken Hinkley geeing up his Bell Park team at the final change of the 2003 Geelong Football League Grand Final. He was your old-school hot gospeller, with a few basic instructions, plenty of ‘us and them’ and the occasional F-bomb. It made him seem eminently relatable, and the formula that worked in local footy nearly 20 years ago has translated equally well to the AFL scene. He has been a fixture at Port Adelaide since 2012 and has ridden a few bumps over the journey. He received AFL life membership earlier this year and is behind only Alastair Clarkson, Chris Scott and John Longmire for coaching longevity, yet has none of their job security. It is finals or bust this year for Hinkley. That was made clear at the start of the season with Port making it plain for all to see what the expectations were on the coach in 2020. But as the run home to the finals begins in earnest, Hinkley has the Power sitting atop the AFL ladder and humming beautifully. And he is using the same homespun philosophies he always has to get them there. “He just has this great knack for keeping his message fresh, whether it’s about motivating us as a playing group to get better, or to keep believing,” said vice-captain Hamish Hartlett, one of five Port players who have been there for all of Hinkley’s tenure. “Whether it’s an opportunity to motivate us against an opposition we’re coming up against, he always finds a way to create some great enthusiasm leading up to games.” Hinkley surrounds himself with smart people. Port has been ahead of the curve when it comes to football intellect for much of its 24 seasons in the AFL and only a couple of

years ago he made the call to dive deeply into analytics. Brave list decisions, such as trading out Chad Wingard, appear to have worked. He lets the boffins do their thing, the line coaches are strongly empowered and Hinkley pulls it all together and keeps the team on message. “His biggest strength is his communication and that’s always been the case since he’s come to the football club,” Hartlett said. “You always know where you sit with him from a playing point of view, and then leading into games he’s certainly a very, very good motivator, his message is very clear about what we require as a playing group. “He’s always had a knack of keeping it fresh which is something that’s very difficult to do after you have been at the same football club for seven or eight years.” He doesn’t break out the guitar like Clarkson, but he takes a deep interest in his players’ lives. He has an off-switch and can revert back to being laidback “Kenny

DOWN TO EARTH: Ken Hinkley’s homespun philosophies have Port Adelaide on track for premiership success and have received the thumbs up from his players, including vice-captain Hamish Hartlett.

from Camperdown” from his Geelong playing days, and pursues an interest in horse racing and greyhounds with some of his players. Which might explain why Hinkley has been able to extract the best from his players in this exceptionally challenging season. “He mentioned briefly at the start of the year how important the season was for him and we as a playing group love having him as a coach and it gives us every motivation to want to win for him,” Hartlett said. “He’s handled it incredibly well and you wouldn’t know from walking around the football club that he has that burden on his shoulders. “He wants us to play well and does everything he can for us to play good footy and for the club to have some success.” Hinkley’s go-to saying has long been that in footy “you get what you deserve”. If Port can keep things going, come the end of 2020, Hinkley will surely get what he deserves – both the contract extension and perhaps even a premiership. AFL.com.au     AFL RECORD  9

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ONE WEEK at a TIME

ROUND 12 MILESTONES

Butler serves it up for Saints

BOOM RECRUIT: Dan Butler has been a revelation up forward for the Saints.

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AFL LIFE MEMBERSHIP

ASHLEY BROWNE

ands up at the start of the year if you thought Dan Butler would be in the running for this year’s Coleman Medal. What about the All-Australian team? Anyone? The small forward has been electric for St Kilda throughout 2020 and his four goals against Gold Coast in round 10 proved to be the difference as the Saints held on to win by four points – their fourth win on the trot against the Suns by under a goal. He has 21 goals for the season and as of last Sunday night was in fourth place on the AFL goalkicking ladder. St Kilda brought in five imports from rival clubs this year – Brad Hill, Zak Jones, Paddy Ryder, Dougal Howard and Butler – and they all came amid varying degrees of hoopla. Butler, 24, was perhaps the least-hyped but when he arrived at Moorabbin over the summer, he joined Hill, Dan Hannebery and Nathan Brown as the only players with premiership experience at the club. Hannebery is likely to be out for the season because of injury and Brown has retired, so in addition

Travis Boak PORT ADELAIDE 275 premiership matches, 20 pre-season games, 1 State of Origin match, 3 International Rules matches

150 GAMES

to his potency around goals, Butler is even more valuable to St Kilda because of his finals experience, with the Saints firmly on track to play finals for the first time since 2011. In some respects, St Kilda is fortunate to have him. Butler played 23 games and kicked 30 goals for Richmond in the 2017 premiership campaign but by last season was out of favour at Punt Rd and played just seven games and kicked five goals. Indeed, he was on Carlton’s radar for much of last year and was even spotted touring the club’s facilities ahead of the trade period. But there wasn’t universal support for him among the Blues’ list management team and instead

they put their eggs in the Tom Papley basket. In the end, they got neither player and while Papley might yet become a Blue at the end of this season, they must be looking towards the Saints with pangs of envy. Butler arrived at St Kilda with plenty of competition for spots. Jack Lonie, Dean Kent, Nick Hind, Jack Sinclair and Matthew Parker all play similar roles, yet Butler has passed them all in terms of output and importance with his pure speed and goal-sense. He would be leading the St Kilda best and fairest. And if there was an official recruit of the year award, he would surely be leading that as well.

He averaged 21 disposals and kicked six goals and was adjudged best-on-ground in three of those games, all wins to the Suns. Since the injury, in addition to his rehabilitation, he has been remaining useful to Gold Coast by working as an opposition analyst and on match-days by relaying

messages from the coach’s box to players on the interchange bench. Most pleasingly for the Suns is how invested the No. 1 selection at last year’s NAB AFL Draft has become in the club. “I’ve loved the football club since I’ve arrived and I couldn’t be happier to extend for another two years,” Rowell told afl.com.au. “The young group we’ve got, I can see if we keep improving and working hard, we can have some good success here. “We’re all dedicated and all the people at the club are dedicated to get success, that’s the main thing.” The Suns are also expected to soon reach agreement on a similar contract extension with No. 2 pick and Rowell’s best mate, outside midfielder Noah Anderson.

Sunny days as Rowell re-commits

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ASHLEY BROWNE

he rebuilding of Gold Coast continues at an impressive pace and received a major boost last week when emerging star midfielder Matt Rowell signed a new deal that will keep him at the club until at least 2023. The 19-year old dazzled in his first four games for the Suns before a shoulder injury against Geelong in round five in all likelihood ended his season.

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David Swallow GOLD COAST SUNS

100 GAMES

Rory Lobb GWS/FREMANTLE

Anthony McDonaldTipungwuti ESSENDON

Christian Salem MELBOURNE This list includes those not necessarily selected but on the verge of milestones.

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AFL RECORD PROMOTION

INSPIRING STORIES FOR BOWRA & O’DEA

GAINING RESPECT:

Troy Cook claimed the Doig Medal in his first season with the Dockers.

COOK’S TOUR OF DUTY

Former Sydney Swan and Fremantle Docker Troy Cook travelled far and wide throughout his football career. He speaks to 6PR’s TIM McMILLAN. TELL US ABOUT LIFE GROWING UP AS A YOUNG LAD IN CARNARVON. u It was an awesome place to grow up, living out in the country. For those who don’t know where Carnarvon is, it’s on the Gascoigne River (900km north of Perth) and right on the coast as well. So growing up we could go fishing, swimming and hunting as well. FROM CARNARVON YOU MOVED DOWN TO GERALDTON AS A TEENAGER. WAS THAT A HARD TRANSITION FOR YOU? u I didn’t have much say in it. Mum had her foot in my back kicking me out the door to go to Geraldton to finish my years 11 and 12. Back then I didn’t really want to go because leaving the family was pretty hard, but I had a few mates from the school that I was going with as well, so that made it a little bit easier. DID YOU GO AS A BOARDER?

u Yes. Mum and dad were still living in

Carnarvon, so I moved to the boarding school, St Pat’s College, at the time. It was a great experience. It taught me how to time-manage a little bit and focus on my studies a bit more, but also it introduced me to taking my footy pretty seriously because it was a decent comp back then, in the Colts. But that’s when I was lucky enough to travel back and forth from Geraldton when I was in Year 12 and made the Teal Cup side at the time in the under-18s competition.

12  AFL RECORD

THE TRANSITION FROM CARNARVON/GERALDTON DOWN TO PERTH. THAT’S ANOTHER BIG STEP IN ITSELF. HOW LONG WERE YOU THERE AND WHAT WAS IT LIKE HAVING TO GET USED TO A NEW PLACE TO LIVE? u Halfway through Year 12, mum and dad moved down to Perth. Once I graduated from Year 12, I joined them and my first thought was about where I was going to play football and I found out the nearest train station and footy club to where we lived, and that was Perth footy club. TALK ABOUT A BIG STEP, FROM COUNTRY WA TO PERTH IS A STEP, BUT THEN TO THE SYDNEY SWANS IS ANOTHER LEVEL AGAIN. u My head was spinning at the time, coming from Carnarvon, Geraldton, Perth and then I was supposed to go over to the other side of Australia for three or four years, which I thought was the other side of the world at that time. My oldest brother, he’s a mad Essendon supporter, and I remember sitting and watching with him, barracking for Essendon when ‘Plugger’ (Tony Lockett) kicked that point after the siren to get them into the Grand Final. So fast forward a month or so and I’m pulling on the same colours and potentially playing with Plugger. TELL US HOW THE TIME AT SYDNEY CAME TO AN END AND

Fast forward a month and I’m potentially playing with ‘Plugger’ TROY COOK ON BARRACKING FOR THE BOMBERS AGAINST THE SWANS IN THE 1996 PRELIMINARY FINAL

u FACT FILE

TROY COOK

DOB: 12/8/1976 Recruited from: Perth (WAFL) Playing career: 1997-2007 (Syd 1997-99, Frem 2000-07) Games: 193 (Syd 43, Frem 150) Goals: 77 (Syd 11, Frem 66) Honours: Frem best and fairest 2000 Brownlow Medal: career votes 41

YOU ENDED UP BACK HOME AT FREMANTLE. u I think at the end of the 1998 season they drafted in Wayne Schwass from North Melbourne and that put a bit of pressure on me and pushed me out of the midfield. I was still playing some really good football in the reserves, and back then we used to travel with the main team to Melbourne or wherever we were playing. So opportunities sort of dried up in my last year. I played 20 games in my first year, 18 in my second year and only about five I think in my last year there. Damian Drum was the assistant coach, he ended up picking up the Fremantle coaching job in 1998, I think it was, so my first year I formed a really good relationship with ‘Drummy’. He was the skills coach and he liked the way I played. IN 2000 YOU PLAY ALL 22 GAMES, LEAD THE CLUB IN DISPOSALS, YOU TOOK OUT THE DOIG MEDAL AS THE BEST AND FAIREST. THAT’S QUITE A WAY TO KICK OFF YOUR DOCKERS CAREER. u It was a good move for me in the end. It was all about opportunity and Drummy afforded that to me. That’s all I wanted to do, trying to gain the respect of the players but also show them that I’m serious about trying to make this club a better side with the way I perform and the way I play. IN 2007 YOU WRAPPED UP YOUR AFL CAREER. YOUR FINAL MATCH WAS YOUR 150TH. u I got there and it’s great. You walk away from a club being a life member and it’s awesome. And the club’s done a great job making sure they engage with me since I’ve retired and inviting me back to a few different functions, whether it’s having a chat to some of the younger guys or just coming down and watching a game. POST AFL YOU WENT BACK TO PERTH AGAIN. u I was always going to go back there. For the club which gave me the start to kick off my AFL career, I was always going back. I played the next three years, but halfway through that last year we weren’t going to make the finals so I just said no, mentally I was done. FOOTNOTE: Cook and his wife Tamara have started Known Associates Australia which is an Aboriginal-owned events management company. Cook is also involved in the Wirrpanda Foundation, set up by former Eagles star David Wirrpanda to lead the provision of education and employment opportunities for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians.

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ONCE IS ENOUGH: Self-regulation by AFL broadcasters has seen serious injuries to players such as Isaac Quaynor and Mitch Wallis (inset) replayed less frequently.

What I’m thinking with Ashley Browne

Footy horror show takes a pause Broadcasters are taking a commonsense approach by not replaying vision of graphic injuries.

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o show or not to show? That is the issue TV broadcasters grapple with a few times each season as our game extracts the most brutal and at times gruesome toll on the bodies of its players. It doesn’t take too much prompting to recall some of the more horrific player injuries we have seen over the past few years. James Hird and Jonathan Brown had their faces rearranged. The legs of Gary Rohan, Michael Barlow, Nathan Brown and Mitch Wallis, among others, were contorted in ways that human physiology teaches us just should not happen. Last Thursday week it was Collingwood speedster Isaac Quaynor whose leg was horribly sliced open after being scraped by the studs of Sydney debutant Sam Wicks. And this is where the conundrum comes into play for the TV producers and directors perched in their broadcast trucks, or as is the case in 2020, in their control centres back at network headquarters. How much is too much when it comes to gruesome injuries? The tipping point might have come in 2005 when Brown’s leg crumbled while playing for Richmond against Melbourne at Docklands. It was in the middle of the time when Channel Nine had the TV rights and treated every Friday night game like a major news event. There were cameras everywhere and Brown’s sickening injury was replayed from almost every angle imaginable.

14  AFL RECORD

It was a newsworthy event; Brown was a really good player and the Tigers were 7-2 and flying. They ended up missing the finals. But there was a discussion in the aftermath as to whether we saw too many replays of the injury and it has led to some welcome self-regulation from AFL TV types about what to show thereafter. “We shoot wide these days,” one inside-the-truck AFL broadcast employee said. “Nobody wants to see blood and guts or pictures that might make them feel sick.” The procedure in the broadcast truck is that after a sickening incident, the producer takes a look from various angles, chooses one and replays it once. The next few minutes are spent discussing the injured player, how he has been going and what his absence means, while live pictures show him being taken from the ground. Sensibly, the commentators remind us that the injury is serious and that there is no need for multiple replays. And that’s where social media comes into play. The broadcasters only need to show it once and the genie is out of the bottle. Twitter and Facebook take it from there and it will soon show up on social media. The social media feeds associated with mainstream media outlets proceed with caution and their tweets and posts are usually accompanied by warnings that

Nobody wants to see blood and guts or pictures that might make them feel sick AFL BROADCASTER

graphic videos and images will follow by clicking the link. The Quaynor incident was also an eye-opener in another respect. Who knew that in this uber-professional era that the soles of the players’ boots were virtually going unchecked? Despite rules clearly stating what sort of stops players are able to use, it seems that dozens, if not hundreds, of players in the competition are using boots with a combination of moulded and metal stops. And it has been going on unchecked for years. Poor old Wicks, in just his first game, wore whichever boots he was given, and unwittingly caused one of the season’s more gruesome injuries. Players are now rightly on notice to wear the correct footwear at all times. If not, they might face the ultimate indignity – lining up and having the umpires inspect their boots before the game, just like back in the under-12s. And as one wag on Twitter suggested, perhaps they should go totally retro and check the fingernails as well.

SEN.com.au

AR12 p14 Ashley Browne 275.indd 14

10/8/20 3:12 pm


TEN MILLION MOMENTS and $10 million raised for local clubs Grassroots sporting clubs are more than just places to play. They’re the beating heart of local communities, where moments are shared and friendships are nurtured. Since 2008, Toyota has been supporting local clubs through our unique Good for Footy and Good for Cricket programs, including annual raffles which make club fundraising free and easy. This year, we’ve reached a mighty new milestone. Together with thousands of players, volunteers and community supporters, we’ve raised over ten million dollars for sports clubs around Australia. Now that’s a moment to celebrate!


AFL RECORD PROMOTION

#1 PRESSURE PLAYER

OLLIE WINES PORT ADELAIDE v RICHMOND Adelaide Oval August 8, 2020

premiership credentials with an impressive win over Richmond last weekend. The eventual 21-point victory at Adelaide Oval was made possible by a dominant midfield performance from the Power’s on-ball brigade. In particular, Ollie Wines was in premium form, producing by far his best game in 2020. He picked up 28 possessions, had 10 clearances and seven inside 50s and seemingly had the ball on a string alongside Travis Boak, Tom Rockliff, Robbie Gray and Zak Butters. But what set Wines’ game apart from his teammates was that his pressure output was at another level. According to Champion Data, the former Power skipper amassed 64.1 pressure points, thanks to a clear game-high 11 tackles (the next best was seven) and 22 pressure acts. Wines was out of the Port side earlier in the season, but since returning to Ken Hinkley’s line-up in round three, has been a key contributor as the Power have catapulted to the top of the ladder with nine wins in their 11 matches. The Power’s next challenge comes in the form of Geelong at Metricon Stadium on Friday night and they will need Wines at his best again. Champion Data introduced its pressure point system in 2011 as a way of measuring defensive intent beyond just tackles, spoils and smothers. Points are awarded for corralling (1.2), chasing (1.5), closing (2.75) and physical pressure (3.75).

16  AFL RECORD

11

PRESSURE POINTS PRESSURE ACTS

64.1 22

TACKLES 11

u Port Adelaide enhanced its

16

ROUND

TIME ON GROUND

81 mins

TACKLE EFFICIENCY 84.6%

ANDREW SLEVISON

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10/8/20 2:58 pm


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QUESTIONS?

Ask Col via email at col.hutchinson@afl.com.au or write to him at AFL House, PO Box 1449, GPO, Melbourne, VIC 3001

ANSWER MAN

with LACHLAN ESSING

GUEST

With Bryce Gibbs battling to have an impact at the Crows, I was wondering which players have struggled the most at their second club, after being successful at their first?

NAME GAME GUARDING SPACE

KEVAN CARROLL

u Surnames were

often created from occupations. On AFL/VFL lists over the years, there have been (apologies to Gary Ayres …) the Smiths, the Bakers, the Farmers etc, and, less obviously, the Fletchers, the Coopers etc. Some medieval occupations have disappeared, but the surnames from them remain – for example, the surname of Sydney’s Will Hayward. The hayward was literally the “hedge warden” and was in charge of fences and enclosures, keeping them free of poachers, cattle and vandals: probably a name better suited to a defender than to Will. The name derives from the Old English hege (the g being pronounced as y) meaning “hedge” and weard, “guard”.

LAST HURRAH: Champions Doug Hawkins and Wayne Carey (inset) ended their careers with stints at rival clubs.

MOE BUNYIP, FINKE, NT LE: There have been many players who have had great success at more than one club, but some are not so lucky. Doug Hawkins was a legend at the Bulldogs, playing 329 games and kicking 216 goals, being selected All-Australian twice, named in the club’s Team of the Century and captaining the Dogs for four seasons. Hawkins joined the struggling Fitzroy in 1995, making 21 appearances to reach his 350th game in his final match. Wayne Carey, a champion at North Melbourne, was traded to Adelaide at the end of 2001. The ‘King’ played just 28 games over three seasons, with the Crows slipping down the ladder, going from third, to sixth to 12th respectively. Star Collingwood goalkicker Peter McKenna took a year off in 1976, but came back for Carlton in 1977, playing just 11 games. Charlie Dibbs and Alex Jesaulenko were both playing coaches at their second clubs. Jesaulenko lasted just two seasons with St Kilda, while Dibbs resigned halfway through his first year at Geelong.

STARS WHO DIDN’T SHINE AT THEIR SECOND CLUB *Also played at Collingwood (15 games, 30 goals in 1995) (150+ CAREER GAMES) Player

Gms

Gls

1st club

Span

Gms

Gls

2nd club

Span

Gms

Gls

Doug Hawkins Peter McKenna Ben Cousins Chad Cornes Wayne Carey

350 191 270 255 272

227 874 217 179 727

Footscray Collingwood West Coast Port Adelaide North Melb

1978-94 1965-75 1996-2007 1999-2011 1989-2001

329 180 238 239 244

216 838 205 175 671

Fitzroy Carlton Richmond GWS Giants Adelaide

1995 1977 2009-10 2012 2002-04

21 11 32 16 28

11 36 12 4 56

Charlie Dibbs Adam Cooney Cameron Bruce Mick McGuane Peter Bedford Brendan Fevola Dermott Brereton* David E. Clarke Travis Cloke Alex Jesaulenko Albert Collier Lindsay Thomas Daniel Wells Alby C. Pannam

223 250 234 155 186 204 211 211 256 279 217 212 258 183

1 202 211 129 329 623 464 319 452 444 67 329 166 458

Collingwood W Bulldogs Melbourne Collingwood South Melb Carlton Hawthorn Geelong Collingwood Carlton Collingwood North Melb North Melb Collingwood

1924-35 2004-14 2000-10 1987-96 1968-76 1999-2009 1982-92 1971-81 2005-16 1967-79 1925-30; 1933-39 2007-17 2003-16 1933-1943; 1945

216 219 224 152 178 187 189 202 246 256 205 205 243 181

1 186 210 128 325 575 427 298 441 424 54 325 150 452

Geelong Essendon Hawthorn Carlton Carlton Brisbane Sydney Carlton W Bulldogs St Kilda Fitzroy Port Adelaide Collingwood Richmond

1936 2015-16 2011-12 1997 1977-78 2010 1994 1982 2017 1980-81 1941-42 2018 2017-19 1947

7 31 10 3 8 17 7 9 10 23 12 7 15 2

0 16 1 1 4 48 7 21 11 20 13 4 16 6

18  AFL RECORD

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AR12 p18 Answerman 275.indd 18

10/8/20 3:13 pm


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THE TRADERS

AFL.com.au/fantasy

@AFLfantasy

BUY

POPULAR PIE: Magpie ruckman Brodie Grundy is owned by 65 per cent of Fantasy Classic coaches.

JACK MACRAE

WESTERN BULLDOGS

MIDFIELDER As we have become accustomed to, it takes a few weeks of inconsistent roles and scoring before the Bulldogs settle Macrae back into his best position in the middle. He has a three-game average of 116.

CHRISTIAN PETRACCA

FOCUS ON

POPULAR PLAYERS

MELBOURNE

MIDFIELDER/FORWARD

Collingwood ruckman Brodie Grundy is the most selected player in AFL Fantasy Classic with 65 per cent of the competition locking him in as the No. 1 big man. He’s a go-to captain option for a lot of coaches, locked in by 37 per cent of the competition for double points last round.

Lachie Neale and Jack Macrae are the next most favourable skippers. Grundy’s popularity isn’t limited to Fantasy Classic. He was also the No. 1 average draft pick in the thousands of Fantasy Draft leagues completed this season. Among the most selected players are the best in their position with the top player in each line appearing in the top 20 overall.

Also featuring at the top end include the value players of 2020. Marlion Pickett started at $170K and has added well over $250K this season. Max King, Brandon Starcevich and, more recently, Izak Rankine have been some of the most profitable cash cows. Many coaches have already offloaded them, while others are keeping them as emergencies on their bench. Christian Petracca appears in 38 per cent of teams. In round one, he was in about 10 per cent of teams and has since been one of the biggest movers in ownership. Rightly so as the Demon has been the best available FWD this season and has added more than $200K to his value.

TOP 20 MOST SELECTED PLAYERS IN FANTASY CLASSIC PLAYER

CLUB POS

Brodie Grundy

Coll

% OWNED

PLAYER

CLUB POS

% OWNED

65%

Brandon Starcevich BL

DEF/MID

40%

Lachie Whitfield GWS MID/FWD

60%

Dan Houston

PA

DEF/MID

39%

Dustin Martin Marlion Pickett Sam Docherty Tom Mitchell Darcy Cameron Max King Lachie Neale Jake Lloyd

53% 50% 48% 45% 45% 42% 42% 41%

Connor Budarick Christian Petracca Jack Macrae Izak Rankine Andrew Brayshaw Patrick Cripps Bailey Williams Stephen Coniglio

GCS Melb WB GCS Frem Carl WCE GWS

MID/FWD MID/FWD MID FWD MID/FWD MID DEF/RUC MID

39% 38% 37% 36% 33% 30% 29% 29%

Rich Rich Carl Haw Coll StK BL Syd

RUC MID/FWD MID DEF MID RUC/FWD FWD MID DEF

20  AFL RECORD

AR12 p20 Fantasy 275.indd 20

There are breakout seasons and then there is what Petracca is doing. He is averaging 91 and is the only player owned by 38 per cent of the competition leaving a ‘must have’ trade for the other coaches who don’t have him.

TIM TARANTO

GWS GIANTS

MIDFIELDER If you are searching for a unique pick in the midfield, look no further than the Giant star. After taking a couple of games to find his feet, Taranto has been on fire in his past two games with scores of 100 and 109.

ALSO CONSIDER

HOLD TODD GOLDSTEIN

SELL MARLION PICKETT

NORTH MELBOURNE RUCK

RICHMOND MIDFIELDER

After an outstanding start to the season, the Roos star has dropped off with back-to-back 60s and a five-game average of 72. Given the uncertainty around the top-line upgrade options in the ruck department, there is no point moving him on just yet.

The GF hero has been an outstanding cash cow after being available for the basement price of $170K at the start of the year. He has averaged 57 in his past five games, but now would be a good time to upgrade him to a premium.

JOSH DUNKLEY

CARLTON FORWARD

WESTERN BULLDOGS MIDFIELDER

It was a bold play to bring in the star Dog following his layoff and it hasn’t paid off … yet. Since returning, he has scores of just 83 and 66, but there is nothing like a game against the Crows to get your mojo back.

ANDREW GAFF

MICHAEL GIBBONS

After an impressive three-week stretch where ‘Gibbo’ returned scores of 74, 71 and 106, he became a popular stepping stone option. It’s time to take the cash and run as he is now losing money following back-to-back 40s and a high breakeven.

BAILEY SMITH

WEST COAST MIDFIELDER

WESTERN BULLDOGS MIDFIELDER/FORWARD

The star Eagle has been performing well below expectations for his 15 per cent of coaches with just one triple-figure score in his past six games. He is worth holding.

If you are in the 26 per cent of coaches who own the emerging Dogs star and are in the position for a luxury upgrade, Smith is a viable option to move on. He is averaging just 56 in his past three games.

ALSO CONSIDER

ALSO CONSIDER

Clayton Oliver, Luke McDonald, Dayne Zorko

Sam Docherty, Zac Williams, Elliot Yeo

Warnie

Roy

Calvin

Make sure you make a note when each lockout will be occurring and plan your trades accordingly. As teams this round are named at 6.20pm AEST the day before they play, you need a plan and map out your trade options and when to make them.

With so many players “managed” over the past couple of rounds, make use of the rolling lockout by holding on to a trade for the unforeseen resting of one of your stars. It could get you an important league win or a ranking boost.

West Coast supporters make up the greatest percentage of AFL Fantasy coaches. A total of 15 per cent of the competition are Eagles supporters, followed by Crows fans (11 per cent). Dockers (eight per cent) and Magpies (seven per cent) supporters are next.

WARNE DAWGS

DESTROY

Derek Eggmolesse-Smith, Brandon Starcevich, Alex Keath

CALVINATOR

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10/8/20 3:33 pm


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SPOT THE DIFFERENCE

Can you find the players who were NAB AFL RISING STARS? Jared Rivers Brett Deledio Danyle Pearce Joel Selwood Rhys Palmer Daniel Rich Dan Hannebery Dyson Heppell Daniel Talia Jaeger O’Meara Lewis Taylor

Callum Mills Andrew McGrath Jaidyn Stephenson Sam Walsh

FACE SWAP Can you figure out the forwards who make up these two faces? 22

AFL RECORD

AR12 p22 KidsPage 275.indd 22

E K Z D T T S Z C H M E J

P B N V A E V R O K X M O

P K A L L D A H N W X L U

E F I W U E T K O Z O A C

L A O L P I V A S H H P T

L O R I C H W K N Y Z F E

D E K O O R I V E R S U A

M J R M F R Y Y H C P Z P

Y C Y K C W E T P M E S A

Z R G G W A Q C E I T A A

T C E R C A R T T L U D K

F S S B A W L A S L N M P

B G N V E T K S E S H P T

D

O Y Y V S N H U H M Q G Y

R K L I X P N C I B O Z U

X R O L Y A T A U Z O P L

Z Z N X D W O D H E H N N

SPOT THE DIFFERENCE: The red sponsor logo on the ball has been removed; the GC on Sun Izak Rankine’s guernsey has changed to GO; his eyebrows have been removed; the stripes on his right boot have been altered; the St Kilda emblem on Saint Nick Coffield’s guernsey is missing . FACE SWAP SOLUTION: LEFT – Tom Hawkins, Brody Mihocek, Levi Casboult. RIGHT – Harry Himmelberg, Tom Papley, Max King .

WORD FIND

H Y F M O I D E L E D R B

TO FIN

SEN.com.au

10/8/20 4:18 pm


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AFL RECORD PROMOTION

POWERED BY

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WERE YOU

PAYING

ATTENTION 1

What were Dustin Martin’s possession and goal tallies in Richmond’s win over the Western Bulldogs in round nine? A 26/3 B 27/2 C 28/1 D 29/0

2

How many goals in total did Sam Weideman kick for Melbourne in rounds nine and 10? A4 B5 C6 D7

3

Carlton jumped Hawthorn in round nine by kicking how many goals in a row in the opening term? A3 B4 C5 D6

4

How many goals did the Brisbane Lions kick in the second half of their round nine win over Essendon? A 9 B 10 C 11 D 12

5

Which team kicked the highest score in round nine? A St Kilda B Richmond C Brisbane D North Melbourne

6

Field umpire Andre Gianfagna was a rookie-listed player with which AFL club? A Carlton B Collingwood C Melbourne D Hawthorn

7

What was unique about the opening quarter of the West Coast-Geelong game in round nine? A Josh Kennedy didn’t kick a goal B Zach Tuohy kicked the ball the wrong way C Neither team scored a behind D The scores were level at quarter-time STRONG AND BOLD: How many touches and goals did Dustin Martin get against the Bulldogs?

8

In their 14 clashes with Gold Coast, what is the Giants win-loss record? A 11-3 B 10-4 C 9-5 D 8-6

9

Who had the most disposals (30) in the Fremantle versus Collingwood game in round nine? A Adam Treloar B Steele Sidebottom C Nat Fyfe D Caleb Serong

10

Port Adelaide ruckman Peter Ladhams was recruited from which SANFL club? A Central District B Glenelg C Sturt D Norwood

11

How many goals did Jack Riewoldt, Tom Lynch and Jake Aarts combine for in Richmond’s win over the Brisbane Lions in round 10? A 8 B 9 C 10 D 11

12

What was Geelong’s winning margin over North Melbourne in round 10? A 27 points B 30 points C 33 points D 36 points

13

How many times has Melbourne defeated Adelaide at Adelaide Oval? A5 B4 C3 D2

Who ran the most kms in the Brisbane Lions v Western Bulldogs round 11 game? A Alex Witherden B Hugh McCluggage C Marcus Bontempelli

RED ENERGY TOTAL SPRINTS Who had the most sprints in the West Coast Eagles v Carlton round 11 game? A Sam Docherty B Brendon Ah Chee C Jamie Cripps

RED ENERGY MAX SPEED Who ran the fastest in the Port Adelaide v Richmond round 11 game? A Darcy Byrne-Jones B Noah Balta C Zak Butters

WHO SAID THIS?

It was just poor, really poor

14

In which quarter did Sydney kick its first behind in its round 10 loss to Collingwood? A First B Second C Third D Fourth

A JOHN LONGMIRE

B RHYCE SHAW

C DAMIEN HARDWICK

D LUKE BEVERIDGE

15

Dan Butler was traded by Richmond to St Kilda in exchange for pick No. 54. Which player did the Tigers select with that pick? A Noah Cumberland B Bigoa Nyuon C Will Martyn D Hugo Ralphsmith

ANSWERS: 1 A; 2 B; 3 C; 4 A; 5 D; 6 C; 7 C; 8 B; 9 A; 10 D; 11 B; 12 C; 13 B; 14 C; 15 B. Running Machine C (13.4 kms); Total Sprints A (28); Max Speed B (32.8 km/h); Who said this: C. AR12 p25 Were You Paying Attention 275.indd 25

AFL.com.au     AFL RECORD  25

10/8/20 1:58 pm


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LEAGUE LEADERS DISPOSALS

KICKS

Disposing of the ball via a handball or kick.

PLAYER

HANDBALLS

Disposing of the ball by foot.

MTS AVE EFF %

PLAYER

STATS PROVIDED BY

Disposing of the ball by hand.

MTS AVE EFF %

PLAYER

MARKS

Catching a kicked ball that has travelled 15m.

MTS AVE EFF %

PLAYER

MTS AVE

1 A.Treloar (Coll)

6 29.3 56.3

1 J.Lloyd (Syd)

10 15.2 75.0

1 J.Macrae (WB)

11 15.4 80.5

1 N.Haynes (GWS)

10 8.1

2 L.Neale (BL)

11 29.2 72.6

2 L.Neale (BL)

11 14.9 62.8

2 M.Crouch (Adel)

9 15.1 80.9

2 B.Sheppard (WCE)

10 6.9 9 6.6

3 J.Macrae (WB)

11 27.2 72.9

3 A.Treloar (Coll)

6 14.8 46.1

3 A.Treloar (Coll)

6 14.5 66.7

3 J.Ridley (Ess)

4 C.Oliver (Melb)

10 26.6 72.6

4 L.Ryan (Frem)

10 14.7 83.0

4 T.Mitchell (Haw)

10 14.4 84.7

4 M.Hurley (Ess)

9 6.4

5 S.Pendlebury (Coll)

7 25.3 66.7

5 A.Gaff (WCE)

10 14.6 63.7

5 C.Oliver (Melb)

10 14.3 87.4

5 L.Whitfield (GWS)

10 6.4

6 J.Lloyd (Syd)

10 24.8 78.6

6 S.Docherty (Carl)

10 14.5 72.4

6 L.Neale (BL)

11 14.3 82.8

6 L.Duggan (WCE)

10 6.3

7 M.Crouch (Adel)

9 24.8 71.7

7 J.Lyons (BL)

11 14.4 58.2

7 C.Petracca (Melb)

10 13.6 79.4

7 M.Taberner (Frem)

10 6.0 10 5.9

8 T.Mitchell (Haw)

10 24.7 76.9

8 Z.Tuohy (Geel)

11 14.4 60.8

8 N.Fyfe (Frem)

7 13.3 82.8

8 N.Coffield (StK)

9 C.Petracca (Melb)

10 24.4 71.3

9 J.Short (Rich)

11 14.4 86.1

9 S.Pendlebury (Coll)

7 12.9 75.6

9 J.Short (Rich)

11 5.8

10 Z.Merrett (Ess)

8 23.8 71.6

10 N.Haynes (GWS)

10 14.0 72.9

10 P.Cripps (Carl)

10 11.8 83.9

10 S.Docherty (Carl)

10 5.8

SCORE INVOLVEMENTS

Scoring chains where the player had a disposal, hit-out to advantage, kick-in or knock-on.

PLAYER

MTS AVE

AFL PLAYER RATINGS

As seen on AFL.com.au. The most advanced metric of player performance available using data from 2020.

PLAYER

MTS AVE

HIT-OUTS TO ADVANTAGE

CENTRE CLEARANCES

STOPPAGE CLEARANCES

A hit-out that reaches an intended teammate.

The first kick or effective handball in a chain that clears the centre bounce area.

The first kick or effective handball in a chain that clears the ball-up or throw-in area.

PLAYER

MTS AVE

PLAYER

MTS AVE

PLAYER

MTS AVE

1 C.Petracca (Melb)

10 7.4

1 C.Petracca (Melb)

10 16.9

1 M.Gawn (Melb)

9 10.2

1 P.Cripps (Carl)

10 3.7

1 A.Treloar (Coll)

6 5.0

2 L.Neale (BL)

11 6.7

2 L.Neale (BL)

11 16.6

2 B.Grundy (Coll)

10 9.4

2 D.Shiel (Ess)

7 3.3

2 T.Goldstein (NM)

11 4.3

3 T.Hawkins (Geel)

11 6.6

3 N.Fyfe (Frem)

7 15.6

3 N.Naitanui (WCE)

10 8.6

3 L.Neale (BL)

11 2.9

3 E.Yeo (WCE)

10 3.7

4 C.Dixon (PA)

10 6.1

4 M.Gawn (Melb)

9 15.1

4 J.Witts (GCS)

10 8.3

4 C.Oliver (Melb)

10 2.8

4 H.Greenwood (GCS) 10 3.6

5 J.Lyons (BL)

11 6.0

5 C.Oliver (Melb)

10 14.8

5 T.Goldstein (NM)

11 8.2

5 T.Adams (Coll)

10 2.7

5 C.Oliver (Melb)

10 3.6

6 T.Boak (PA)

11 6.0

6 T.Goldstein (NM)

11 14.1

6 P.Ryder (StK)

7 7.9

6 N.Naitanui (WCE)

10 2.7

6 D.Sheed (WCE)

10 3.5

7 P.Dangerfield (Geel) 11 5.9

7 N.Naitanui (WCE)

10 13.8

7 S.Lycett (PA)

7 7.6

7 J.Kennedy (Syd)

6 2.7

7 J.Viney (Melb)

9 3.2

8 H.McCluggage (BL) 11 5.8

8 D.Martin (Rich)

10 13.6

8 M.Pittonet (Carl)

9 7.4

8 L.Parker (Syd)

10 2.5

8 L.Neale (BL)

11 3.2

9 M.Duncan (Geel)

10 5.8

9 M.Bontempelli (WB) 11 12.9

9 C.Sinclair (Syd)

7 6.6

9 P.Dangerfield (Geel) 11 2.5

9 B.Crouch (Adel)

8 3.1

10 S.Bolton (Rich)

10 5.8

10 J.Viney (Melb)

10 I.Soldo (Rich)

9 6.6

10 E.Yeo (WCE)

10 O.Wines (PA)

9 3.1

METRES GAINED

Distance gained with the ball by running, kicking or handballing, combining measures towards and away from goal.

PLAYER

MTS AVE

9 12.8

CONTESTED MARKS A mark under physical pressure of an opponent or in a pack.

PLAYER

MTS AVE

INSIDE 50s

Moving the ball from the midfield into the forward zone. Excludes multiple entries within the same chain of possession.

PLAYER

MTS AVE

10 2.4

PRESSURE POINTS

Weighted sum of pressure acts – 3.75 for physical pressure, 2.25 for closing, 1.5 for chasing and 1.2 for corralling.

PLAYER

MTS AVE

TACKLES

Using physical contact to prevent an opponent in possession of the ball from getting an effective disposal.

PLAYER

MTS AVE

1 J.Short (Rich)

11 467

1 C.Dixon (PA)

10 3.5

1 A.Treloar (Coll)

6 4.8

1 H.Greenwood (GCS) 10 58.0

2 B.Smith (Adel)

9 434

2 M.Taberner (Frem)

10 2.3

2 S.Bolton (Rich)

10 4.8

2 B.Parfitt (Geel)

8 57.1

2 B.Parfitt (Geel)

3 Z.Tuohy (Geel)

11 430

3 R.Lobb (Frem)

10 2.1

3 D.Martin (Rich)

10 4.7

3 C.Oliver (Melb)

10 56.2

3 T.Rockliff (PA)

8 6.5

4 P.Dangerfield (Geel) 11 424

4 M.Gawn (Melb)

9 2.0

4 T.Kelly (WCE)

10 4.6

4 J.Steele (StK)

11 55.0

4 J.Worpel (Haw)

10 6.1

5 J.Lloyd (Syd)

10 421

5 R.O’Brien (Adel)

10 1.9

5 J.Viney (Melb)

9 4.6

5 J.Anderson (NM)

9 53.5

5 A.McGrath (Ess)

9 6.0

6 J.Lukosius (GCS)

10 421

6 L.Casboult (Carl)

10 1.9

6 P.Dangerfield (Geel) 11 4.5

6 E.Yeo (WCE)

10 50.7

6 J.Steele (StK)

11 5.7

1 H.Greenwood (GCS) 10 7.6 8 7.1

7 L.Neale (BL)

11 419

7 S.Weideman (Melb)

6 1.8

7 Z.Merrett (Ess)

8 4.4

7 L.Parker (Syd)

10 50.3

7 C.Oliver (Melb)

10 5.6

8 S.Docherty (Carl)

10 418

8 J.Walker (NM)

11 1.7

8 O.Florent (Syd)

10 4.3

8 J.Kelly (GWS)

9 50.2

8 L.Parker (Syd)

10 5.6

9 T.Kelly (WCE)

10 417

9 M.King (StK)

11 1.6

9 T.Boak (PA)

11 4.3

9 D.Zorko (BL)

9 49.6

9 E.Yeo (WCE)

10 5.6

10 A.Saad (Ess)

9 417

10 J.Sicily (Haw)

10 1.6

10 C.Oliver (Melb)

10 4.2

10 W.Snelling (Ess)

9 49.4

10 J.Anderson (NM)

9 5.6

28

AFL RECORD

LeadersPlayer.indd 28

SEN.com.au

Note: totals do not include stats from Adel v Coll and GCS v Ess as they had not been played at time of print.

10/8/20 11:36 pm


OFFICIAL 2020 TOYOTA AFL

PREMIERSHIP SEASON LADDER AFTER ROUND 11

P

W

L

D

Gls

For Beh

Pts

Gls

Against Beh Pts

Mtch Home Away Form Scores pts W L D W L D W/L High Low

%

Av margin W < 7 L < 7 Pls Rnd 11 1st Yr Qtrs 4th W L pts pts used 2019 Players Won Qtrs W

1 Port Adelaide

11

9

2

0

113

117

795

80

77

557

142.73

36

5 1 0 4 1 0

3W

110

44

33

33

1

0

30

7

2

31

8

2 Brisbane Lions

11

8

3

0

111

134

800

97

87

669

119.58

32

5 0 0 3 3 0

1W

96

41

28

32

1

0

32

5

4

27

5

3 Geelong Cats

11

7

4

0

118

89

797

90

70

610

130.66

28

4 2 0 3 2 0

2W

108

35

36

16

1

1

32

1

1

24

6

6W

111

41

31

40

0

0

31

4

1

21

4

1L

101

34

27

27

1

2

33

12

3

25

6

4 West Coast Eagles

10 7

3

0

100

71

671

83

74

572

117.31

28

6 0 0 1 3 0

5 St Kilda

11

4

0

118

74

782

102

89

701

111.55

28

3 1 0 4 3 0

7

6 Richmond

11

6

4

1

105

101

731

89

93

627

116.59

26

4 1 0 2 3 1

1L

105

34

32

22

0

0

32

6

1

20

4

7 Collingwood

11

6

4

1

91

91

637

82

57

549

116.03

26

3 1 1 3 3 0

2W

86

36

30

23

0

1

37

3

5

20

4

8 GWS Giants

10 6

4

0

94

79

643

87

92

614

104.72

24

4 2 0 2 2 0

3W

105

33

18

20

2

0

33

2

3

24

6

9 Essendon

10 5

4

1

86

76

592

95

88

658

89.97

22

2 4 0 3 0 1

1D

79

28

8

27

3

2

34

10

2

13

2

10 Melbourne

10 5

5

0

92

81

633

83

78

576

109.90

20

2 4 0 3 1 0

2W

92

32

33

22

1

2

33

16

1

23

9

11 Western Bulldogs

11

5

6

0

94

88

652

105

95

725

89.93

20

2 2 0 3 4 0

3L

93

34

29

36

1

0

37

14

5

21

7

12 Gold Coast Suns

11

4

6

1

102

88

700

101

88

694

100.86

18

3 4 1

1 2 0

1D

92

29

35

22

0

2

31

17

5

18

3

13 Carlton

10 4

6

0

96

80

656

104

69

693

94.66

16

1 4 0 3 2 0

2L

103

50

15

16

2

2

32

18

2

22

7

14 Fremantle

10 4

6

0

76

52

508

82

84

576

88.19

16

3 3 0 1 3 0

2W

79

16

13

20

1

1

33

9

5

14

4

15 Hawthorn

10 4

6

0

82

72

564

99

68

662

85.20

16

2 1 0 2 5 0

1L

90

27

23

32

1

0

32

11

3

16

5

16 North Melbourne

11

8

0

92

80

632

108

122

770

82.08

12

2 2 0 1 6 0

2L

119

23

30

28

1

1

36

13

3

15

5

17 Sydney Swans

10 3

7

0

76

79

535

97

102

684

78.22

12

1 3 0 2 4 0

2L

74

26

7

24

1

1

37

15

5

14

2

18 Adelaide Crows

11

11

0

69

74

488

131

93

879

55.52

0

0 6 0 0 5 0

11L

71

29

-

35

0

2

37

8

8

11

4

5

Leigh Haussen

3

0

AFL UMPIRES 2020 1

Chris Donlon

Games 321  Finals 15

6

Dean Margetts

Games 356  Finals 12

11

Curtis Deboy

Brendan Hosking

Games 163  Finals 2

21

Simon Meredith

Games 379  Finals 33

26

Craig Fleer

31

Paul Rebeschini

Games 9  Finals 0

umpire.afl

7

Jeff Dalgleish

Games 215  Finals 6

Andrew Stephens

Games 122  Finals 3

17

John Howorth

Games 15  Finals 0

22

Nathan Williamson

Games 80  Finals 2

27

Games 130  Finals 1

Nick Foot

Games 145  Finals 1

12

Games 100  Finals 2

16

2

Andre Gianfagna

Games 43  Finals 0

32

Jacob Mollison

Games 249  Finals 2

3

Leigh Fisher

Games 144  Finals 1

8

Brett Rosebury

Games 426  Finals 44

13

Nick Brown

Games 58  Finals 0

18

Ray Chamberlain

Games 324  Finals 27

23

Robert Findlay

Games 244  Finals 5

28

Cameron Dore

Games 19  Finals 0

33

Brent Wallace

Games 72  Finals 0

4

Justin Power

Games 25  Finals 0

9

Matt Stevic

Games 391  Finals 41

14

Hayden Gavine

Games 62  Finals 0

19

Alex Whetton

Games 36  Finals 0

24

David Harris

Games 141  Finals 1

29

Andrew Heffernan

Games 7  Finals 0

34

Games 57  Finals 0

10

Robert O’Gorman

Games 120  Finals 1

15

Mathew Nicholls

Games 360  Finals 27

20

Jamie Broadbent

Games 5  Finals 0

25

Shaun Ryan

Games 341  Finals 38

30

Dan Johanson

Games 3  Finals 0

Eleni Glouftsis

Games 36  Finals 0

ROOKIES: Andrew Adair, Matthew Baigent, Peter Bailes, Tom Bryce, Jordan Fry, Courtney Gibson, Louis Jago, Nicholas Jankovskis, Giles Lewis, Nicholas McGinness, Michael Pell, Luke Porter, Martin Rodger, Leighton Rowe, Gabby Simmonds, James Strybos, Nathan Toner. BOUNDARY: Jordan Andrews, Michael Baker, Michael Barlow, Adam Bastick, Peter Bock, Chris Bull, Ian Burrows, Sean Burton, Adam Coote, Patrick Cran, Damien Cusack, Brett Dalgleish, Chris Delany, Patrick Dineen, Nathan Doig, Chris Esler, Daniel Field-Read, Joshua Furman, Josh Garrett, Christopher Gordon, Patrick Jackson, Matthew Jenkinson, Matthew Konetschka, Drew Kowalski, Mitchell Le Fevre, Tim Lougoon, Ben MacDonald, Damien Main, Michael Marantelli, Josh Mather, Jason Moore, Tim Morrison, Sean Moylan, Lachlan Rayner, Adam Reardon, Michael Saunders, James Scully, Sam Stagg, Nick Swanson, Shane Thiele, Mark Thomson, Matthew Tomkins, David Wood. GOAL: Steven Axon, Jesse Baird, Dylan Benwell, Sally Boud, Matthew Bridges, Peter Challen, Alex Chisholm, Michael Craig, Matthew Dervan, Luke Edwards, Mark Ensbey, Daniel Hoskin, Sam Hunter, Brodie Kenny-Bell, Matt Maclure, Angus McKenzie-Wills, Alistair Meldrum, Steven Piperno, Simon Plumridge, David Rodan, Chelsea Roffey, Brett Rogers, Sam Walsh, Stephen Williams, Daniel Wilson, Adam Wojcik.

AFL.com.au

AFL RECORD

29


2020 TOYOTA AFL PREMIERSHIP SEASON ROUND 1

Sunday, June 28

Thursday, March 19

Rich 16.9 (105) vs. Carl 12.9 (81) (MCG) (N) Friday, March 20

WB 5.4 (34) vs. Coll 13.8 (86) (MRVL) (N) Saturday, March 21

Ess 9.9 (63) vs. Frem 8.9 (57) (MRVL) Adel 11.5 (71) vs. Syd 11.8 (74) (AO) (T) GWS 17.3 (105) vs. Geel 11.7 (73) (GS) (N) GCS 4.5 (29) vs. PA 10.16 (76) (MS) (N) Sunday, March 22

NM 8.8 (56) vs. StK 7.12 (54) (MRVL) Haw 14.6 (90) vs. BL 9.8 (62) (MCG) WCE 12.6 (78) vs. Melb 7.9 (51) (OS) (T)

ROUND 2

BL 10.23 (83) vs. Adel 7.4 (46) (G) Melb 6.8 (44) vs. Geel 7.5 (47) (MCG) Haw 8.10 (58) vs. NM 8.6 (54) (MRVL) (N)

ROUND 5

Thursday, July 2

Carl 8.7 (55) vs. StK 11.7 (73) (MRVL) (N) Friday, July 3

Coll 7.6 (48) vs. Ess 10.3 (63) (MCG) (N) Saturday, July 4

WCE 11.11 (77) vs. Syd 6.7 (43) (MS) Geel 13.11 (89) vs. GCS 8.4 (52) (GMHBA) (T) WB 13.9 (87) vs. NM 5.8 (38) (MRVL) (N) BL 12.13 (85) vs. PA 6.12 (48) (G) (N) Sunday, July 5

Thursday, June 11

Coll 5.6 (36) vs. Rich 5.6 (36) (MCG) (N) Friday, June 12

Geel 17.6 (108) vs. Haw 7.5 (47) (GMHBA) (N) Saturday, June 13

BL 12.9 (81) vs. Frem 10.9 (69) (G) Carl 7.11 (53) vs. Melb 8.6 (54) (MRVL) (T) PA 17.8 (110) vs. Adel 5.5 (35) (AO) (N) GCS 14.6 (90) vs. WCE 6.10 (46) (MS) (N) Sunday, June 14

GWS 8.12 (60) vs. NM 12.8 (80) (GS) Syd 11.7 (73) vs. Ess 12.7 (79) (SCG) StK 14.4 (88) vs. WB 7.7 (49) (OS) (N)

ROUND 3

Adel 4.10 (34) vs. Frem 8.6 (54) (MS) Melb 8.4 (52) vs. Rich 12.7 (79) (MCG) GWS 13.5 (83) vs. Haw 7.7 (49) (GS) (N)

ROUND 6

Thursday, July 9

Geel 11.7 (73) vs. BL 6.10 (46) (SCG) (N) Friday, July 10

Coll 8.11 (59) vs. Haw 3.9 (27) (GS) (N) Saturday, July 11

Frem 12.7 (79) vs. StK 11.7 (73) (MS) WCE 10.7 (67) vs. Adel 5.4 (34) (G) Melb 12.8 (80) vs. GCS 9.9 (63) (GS) (N) Ess 9.13 (67) vs. NM 7.11 (53) (MS) (N) Sunday, July 12

Thursday, June 18

Rich 5.9 (39) vs. Haw 11.5 (71) (MCG) (N) Friday, June 19

WB 8.9 (57) vs. GWS 4.9 (33) (MRVL) (N) Saturday, June 20

NM 8.12 (60) vs. Syd 10.11 (71) (MRVL) Coll 12.9 (81) vs. StK 5.7 (37) (MCG) (T) Geel 11.11 (77) vs. Carl 12.7 (79) (GMHBA) (N) BL 10.14 (74) vs. WCE 6.8 (44) (G) (N) Sunday, June 21

GCS 12.10 (82) vs. Adel 4.5 (29) (MS) Ess vs. Melb (MCG) – game postponed Frem 6.5 (41) vs. PA 10.10 (70) (MS) (N)

ROUND 4

PA 9.9 (63) vs. GWS 6.10 (46) (MS) Rich 4.10 (34) vs. Syd 3.8 (26) (G) Carl 16.7 (103) vs WB 7.9 (51) (MS) (N)

ROUND 7

Thursday, July 16

Geel 5.5 (35) vs. Coll 8.9 (57) (OS) (N) Friday, July 17

Ess 7.9 (51) vs. WB 14.9 (93) (MS) (N) Saturday, July 18

GWS 10.8 (68) vs. BL 13.10 (88) (GS) Syd 9.6 (60) vs. GCS 13.14 (92) (SCG) (T) Rich 11.11 (77) vs. NM 2.11 (23) (MS) (N) Sunday, July 19

Syd 5.9 (39) vs. WB 10.7 (67) (SCG) (N)

Carl 9.7 (61) vs. PA 9.10 (64) (G) Haw 7.6 (48) vs. Melb 14.7 (91) (GS) Frem 5.2 (32) vs. WCE 9.8 (62) (OS) (T)

GWS 10.6 (66) vs. Coll 9.10 (64) (GS) (N)

Adel 8.7 (55) vs. StK 12.6 (78) (AO) (N)

PA 13.11 (89) vs. WCE 6.5 (41) (MS) StK 15.3 (93) vs. Rich 10.7 (67) (MRVL) (T) Ess 8.3 (51) vs. Carl 7.10 (52) (MCG) (N) GCS 10.4 (64) vs. Frem 8.3 (51) (MS) (N)

Thursday, July 23

Thursday, June 25 Friday, June 26

Saturday, June 27

Monday, July 20

ROUND 8

Glenelg 3.4 5.6 10.10 15.14 (104) Central District 1.1 4.3 5.5 11.5 (71) BEST: Glenelg – Snook, Partington, Agnew, Parks, Proud, Nicholson. Central District – T. Schiller, Patterson, Montgomerie, Boyd, Menzel. GOALS: Glenelg – McBean 4, Bailey 3, Allen 2, Partington 2, Kluske, Nicholson, Snook, Yates. Central District – Hoskin 2, Stephenson 2, Lange, Boyd, Olsson, Butcher, Gillard, Durdin, Habel.

30

AFL RECORD

SEN.com.au

NM 9.3 (57) vs. Carl 9.10 (64) (G) Syd 9.6 (60) vs. Haw 7.11 (53) (SCG) PA 6.8 (44) vs. StK 12.1 (73) (AO) (N) Sunday, July 26

GCS 11.7 (73) vs. Ess 11.7 (73) (MS) (N) Byes: GWS Giants, Sydney Swans

ROUND 12

Thursday, August 13

Frem 2.4 (16) vs. Geel 6.12 (48) (OS) (N)

Saturday, August 15

Monday, July 27

ROUND 9

Wednesday, July 29

WB 7.7 (49) vs. Rich 13.12 (90) (MS) (N) Thursday, July 30

Melb 4.8 (32) vs. PA 12.11 (83) (G) (N) Friday, July 31

Carl 9.4 (58) vs. Haw 14.5 (89) (OS) Ess 3.10 (28) vs. BL 14.7 (91) (MS) (N) Saturday, August 1

NM 19.5 (119) vs. Adel 7.8 (50) (MS) StK 15.11 (101) vs. Syd 6.12 (48) (G) (T) WCE 11.7 (73) vs. Geel 10.4 (64) (OS) (N) Sunday, August 2

GCS 4.11 (35) vs. GWS 9.7 (61) (MS) Frem 10.1 (61) vs. Coll 7.7 (49) (OS) (T)

ROUND 10

Monday, August 3

PA 8.7 (55) vs. WB 5.12 (42) (AO) (N) Tuesday, August 4

Rich 12.10 (82) vs. BL 4.17 (41) (MS) (N) Wednesday, August 5

Geel 13.12 (90) vs. NM 9.3 (57) (G) (T) Adel 5.7 (37) vs. Melb 13.10 (88) (AO) (N)

Sydney Swans vs. GWS Giants (OS) (N) Friday, August 14

Geelong Cats vs. Port Adelaide (MS) (N) North Melbourne vs. Brisbane Lions (MS) Melbourne vs. Collingwood (G) (T) Fremantle vs. Carlton (OS) (N) Sunday, August 16

Western Bulldogs vs. Adelaide Crows (MS) St Kilda vs. Essendon (G) West Coast Eagles vs. Hawthorn (OS) (T) Monday, August 17

Richmond vs. Gold Coast Suns (G) (N)

ROUND 13

Friday, August 21

Gold Coast Suns vs. Carlton (TIO) (N) Saturday, August 22

Western Bulldogs vs. Melbourne (MS) Port Adelaide vs. Hawthorn (AO) (T) Essendon vs. Richmond (TIO) (N) Fremantle vs. Sydney (OS) (N) Sunday, August 23

Adelaide Crows vs. Geelong Cats (AO) Brisbane Lions v St Kilda (G) West Coast Eagles v GWS Giants (OS) (T) Monday, August 24

Collingwood v North Melbourne (G) (N)

Thursday, August 6

Coll 6.14 (50) vs. Syd 6.5 (41) (G) (T) GCS 11.8 (74) vs. StK 12.6 (78) (MS) (N) Friday, August 7

Ess 8.7 (55) vs. GWS 8.11 (59) (MS) (N) Byes: Fremantle, West Coast Eagles, Hawthorn, Carlton

ROUND 11

Saturday, August 8

PA 13.15 (93) vs. Rich 11.6 (72) (AO) (T) BL 14.12 (96) vs. WB 11.6 (72) (G) (N) Sunday, August 9

WCE 11.6 (72) vs. Carl 7.8 (50) (OS) Melb 13.14 (92) vs. NM 5.5 (35) (AO) (N) Monday, August 10

StK 4.10 (34) vs. Geel 14.9 (93) (G) (N) Frem 7.6 (48) vs. Haw 4.8 (32) (OS) (N)

GWS 9.8 (62) vs. Rich 6.14 (50) (GS) (N)

Adel 5.8 (38) vs. Coll 10.2 (62) (AO) (N)

Friday, July 24

Wednesday, August 12

Adel 8.11 (59) vs. Ess 9.8 (62) (AO) WCE 18.3 (111) vs. Coll 6.9 (45) (OS) Melb 7.7 (49) vs. BL 7.11 (53) (MS) (N)

GCS 6.10 (46) vs. WB 7.9 (51) (MS) (N)

SANFL ROUND 7 Eagles 2.2 4.9 7.11 11.12 (78) West Adelaide 1.1 3.1 3.4 4.6 (30) BEST: Eagles – Jones, Hayes, Giuffreda, Toumpas, Rowland, McNeil. West Adelaide – Stevens, Anderson, Thilthorpe, May, Turner, Hill. GOALS: Eagles – Rowe 4, Carcuro 4, Von Bertouch 2, Sinor. West Adelaide – Turner, Keough, Koster, Ellem.

Saturday, July 25

Tuesday, August 11

Note: Fixture is subject to change.

(T) Twilight match; (N) Night match; (AO) Adelaide Oval; (BA) Blundstone Arena, Hobart; (G) Gabba, Brisbane; (GMHBA) GMHBA Stadium, Geelong; (GS) Giants Stadium, Sydney; (MARS) Mars Stadium, Ballarat; (MRVL) Marvel Stadium, Melbourne; (MCG) Melbourne Cricket Ground; (MS) Metricon Stadium, Gold Coast; (OS) Optus Stadium, Perth; (SCG) Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney; (TIO) TIO Stadium, Darwin; (TP) TIO Traeger Park, Alice Springs; (UNSW) UNSW Canberra Oval, Canberra; (UTAS) University of Tasmania Stadium, Launceston.

WAFL ROUND 4 North Adelaide 0.3 1.9 8.11 8.14 (62) Sturt 0.1 1.3 3.3 6.7 (43) BEST: North Adelaide – Craig, Combe, Schwarz, Young, Minervini, Wigg. Sturt – Johnson, Slimming, Wundke, Edmonds, McEntee, Hone. GOALS: North Adelaide – Young 3, Lebois 2, Magor, Combe, Ramsey. Sturt – Morrison 2, Fahey-Sparks 2, Hone, Slimming.

West Perth 2.0 6.4 8.5 12.9 (81) East Perth 0.0 3.0 6.1 8.1 (49) BEST: West Perth – Guadagnin, Lourey, Black, Nelson, Knott. East Perth – Cahill, Willcocks, Ramsay, Msando. GOALS: West Perth – Lourey 4, Knott 2, Peirce 2, Moulton, Lynch, Keitel, Meadows. East Perth – Magro 2, Ramsay, Lynch, Robertson, Scott, Young, Kuek.

Perth 6.0 7.1 9.2 10.4 (64) East Fremantle 4.1 5.6 6.6 8.10 (58) BEST: Perth – Masten, Colledge, Sinclair, McInnes, Payne. East Fremantle – Jansen, Snadden, Bailey, Leggett. GOALS: Perth – Delahunty 3, Rogers 2, Jones 2, McDonald 2, Coniglio. East Fremantle – Bennett 2, Bailey 2, Eardley, Griffin, Lester-Smith, Montauban.

Norwood 3.3 3.5 7.7 10.10 (70) South Adelaide 1.1 5.5 6.8 9.12 (66) BEST: Norwood – Wilkins, Rokahr, Ball, Pinyon, Panos, Abbott. South Adelaide – Broadbent, Haines, Sampson, Fitt, Milsom. GOALS: Norwood – Pinyon 2, Wilson 2, Douglas, Baulderstone, Grigg, Bampton, Ellison, Barry. South Adelaide – Fitt 3, Wilkinson 2, Cross, Heaslip, Broadbent, Schwarz.

South Fremantle 1.4 3.5 8.5 15.7 (97) Subiaco 3.1 4.3 5.4 7.5 (47) BEST: South Fremantle – Donaldson, Florenca, Z. Strom, Stewart, Rioli. Subiaco – Delahunty, Newton, Kitchin, Clark, Stainsby. GOALS: South Fremantle – Main 3, Shaw 3, Schloithe 2, Verrier 2, Donaldson 2, Stewart, Suban, Miller. Subiaco – Matera 2, Waters, Delahunty, Sokol, Doyle, Martin.

Claremont 2.2 4.4 5.6 8.10 (58) Peel Thunder 3.0 4.0 5.3 5.5 (35) BEST: Claremont – J. Hardisty, Mitchell, D. Hardisty, Smallwood, Davis. Peel Thunder – Rankin, Cullen, Bogensperger, Boullineau, McGowan. GOALS: Claremont – Mitchell 2, England 2, Hamp 2, J. Hardisty, Barton. Peel Thunder – Ballantyne 2, Lawler, Holmes, Cullen.


SCOREBOARD ROUND 9 Richmond 4.3 10.4 11.10 13.12 (90) Western Bulldogs 1.1 3.5 4.7 7.7 (49) BEST: Richmond – Martin, Grimes, Balta, Short, Bolton, Cotchin. Western Bulldogs – Macrae, Daniel, Wallis, B. Smith, Williams. GOALS: Richmond – Aarts 3, Martin 3, Castagna 2, Lynch 2, Chol, Pickett, Riewoldt. Western Bulldogs – Wallis 3, Bruce 2, Vandermeer 2. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Martin (Rich), 4 Balta (Rich), 4 Short (Rich), 3 Daniel (WB), 3 Macrae (WB), 3 Cotchin (Rich), 2 Bolton (Rich), 1 Grimes (Rich). Umpires: B. Hosking, S. Ryan, C. Fleer. Venue: Metricon Stadium Port Adelaide 3.2 6.6 10.9 12.11 (83) Melbourne 0.2 1.3 3.5 4.8 (32) BEST: Port Adelaide – Boak, Wines, Amon, Georgiades, Mayes, Houston. Melbourne – May, Salem, Gawn, Hibberd. GOALS: Port Adelaide – Georgiades 3, Westhoff 2, Rozee 2, Dixon, Mayes, Wines, Farrell, Boak. Melbourne – Weideman 2, Petracca, Melksham. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Boak (PA), 8 Wines (PA), 3 Houston (PA), 3 Amon (PA), 2 Byrne-Jones (PA), 2 Georgiades (PA), 2 Rockliff (PA). Umpires: R. O’Gorman, A. Whetton, R. Findlay. Venue: Gabba Hawthorn 2.0 8.3 11.4 14.5 (89) Carlton 5.1 6.2 7.4 9.4 (58) BEST: Hawthorn – Mitchell, Worpel, Gunston, O’Meara, Burgoyne, Shiels, Breust. Carlton – Cripps, Weitering, Casboult, E. Curnow, Martin. GOALS: Hawthorn – Gunston 3, Shiels 2, Smith 2, Breust 2, Day, O’Meara, O’Brien, Impey, Wingard. Carlton – Casboult 3, Newnes 2, Martin 2, Cuningham, Cripps. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 9 Gunston (Haw), 8 Mitchell (Haw), 7 Shiels (Haw), 4 Frost (Haw), 1 Smith (Haw), 1 Cripps (Carl). Umpires: N. Williamson, D. Harris, J. Mollison. Venue: Optus Stadium Brisbane Lions 5.3 5.5 10.6 14.7 (91) Essendon 1.3 2.3 3.4 3.10 (28) BEST: Brisbane Lions – Neale, Witherden, J. Berry, Zorko, Answerth, Cameron. Essendon – McGrath, Hurley, Ridley, Parish. GOALS: Brisbane Lions – Cameron 4, Neale 2, Ellis-Yolmen, Ballenden, Hipwood, J. Lyons, McCarthy, Rayner, Skinner, Zorko. Essendon – Smith 2, Parish. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Neale (BL), 6 Cameron (BL), 5 Witherden (BL), 4 Answerth (BL), 2 Zorko (BL), 2 McGrath (Ess), 1 J. Berry (BL). Umpires: C. Donlon, A. Stephens, B. Wallace. Venue: Metricon Stadium North Melbourne 4.1 9.1 12.2 19.5 (119) Adelaide Crows 0.2 3.3 6.7 7.8 (50) BEST: North Melbourne – Anderson, Goldstein, McDonald, Dumont, Davies-Uniacke. Adelaide Crows – Laird, Lynch, Seedsman, M. Crouch, McAdam. GOALS: North Melbourne – Zurhaar 3, Davies-Uniacke 2, Hall 2, Higgins 2, Larkey 2, Mahony 2, Pittard 2, Anderson, Daw, Macmillan, Simpkin. Adelaide Crows – McAdam 2, Atkins, Himmelberg, Laird, Murphy, Seedsman. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 McDonald (NM), 7 Anderson (NM), 6 Goldstein (NM), 5 Dumont (NM), 2 Zurhaar (NM). Umpires: L. Haussen, B. Rosebury, H. Gavine. Venue: Metricon Stadium

GWS Giants 2.4 4.5 5.7 9.7 (61) Gold Coast Suns 0.3 2.4 2.7 4.11 (35) BEST: GWS Giants – Whitfield, Williams, Taranto, Hopper, Haynes, Corr. Gold Coast Suns – Collins, Witts, Bowes, Ainsworth. GOALS: GWS Giants – Cameron 2, Himmelberg 2, Coniglio, Finlayson, Hopper, Kelly, Taranto. Gold Coast Suns – Ainsworth, King, Swallow, Weller. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 9 Whitfield (GWS), 9 Hopper (GWS), 5 Kelly (GWS), 5 Williams (GWS), 1 Taranto (GWS), 1 Himmelberg (GWS). Umpires: L. Fisher, C. Deboy, S. Meredith. Venue: Metricon Stadium

AFLCA Champion Player of the Year Votes

Fremantle 0.0 4.1 6.1 10.1 (61) Collingwood 1.2 2.4 6.5 7.7 (49) BEST: Fremantle – Serong, Mundy, Ryan, Taberner, Fyfe, Blakely. Collingwood – Sidebottom, Grundy, Noble, Maynard, Moore, Treloar. GOALS: Fremantle – Taberner 4, Schulz 2, Crowden 2, Fyfe, Mundy. Collingwood – Sidebottom 2, Mihocek, Sier, Grundy, Hoskin-Elliott, Stephenson. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Ryan (Frem), 8 Mundy (Frem), 6 Serong (Frem), 3 Maynard (Coll), 2 Taberner (Frem), 1 Sidebottom (Coll). Umpires: N. Foot, D. Margetts, J. Howorth. Venue: Optus Stadium

Player

Club

62

Lachie Neale

Brisbane Lions

44

Jack Steele

St Kilda

40

Christian Petracca

Melbourne

39

Travis Boak

Port Adelaide

37

Jack Macrae

Western Bulldogs

34

Cameron Guthrie

Geelong Cats

ROUND 10

33

Taylor Adams

Collingwood

Port Adelaide 1.2 3.2 7.5 8.7 (55) Western Bulldogs 2.5 3.5 3.6 5.12 (42) BEST: Port Adelaide – Butters, Wines, Ladhams, Rockliff, Gray, Amon. Western Bulldogs – Liberatore, Macrae, B. Smith, Dunkley, Lloyd. GOALS: Port Adelaide – Dixon 2, Gray 2, Farrell, Ladhams, Powell-Pepper, Wines. Western Bulldogs – Lloyd 2, McLean 2, Weightman. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 7 Butters (PA), 7 Macrae (WB), 4 Bontempelli (WB), 4 Jonas (PA), 3 Clurey (PA), 3 Ladhams (PA), 2 Dixon (PA). Umpires: B. Hosking, C. Dore, H. Gavine, L.Haussen. Venue: Adelaide Oval

32

Nic Naitanui

West Coast Eagles

31

Jarrod Witts

Gold Coast Suns

30

Todd Goldstein

North Melbourne

Richmond 3.3 8.5 9.6 12.10 (82) Brisbane Lions 2.3 3.8 3.15 4.17 (41) BEST: Richmond – Martin, Bolton, Lynch, Baker, Short, Balta. Brisbane Lions – Neale, McInerney, McCarthy, Ah Chee, J. Lyons. GOALS: Richmond – Riewoldt 4, Lynch 3, Aarts 2, Bolton, Higgins, Pickett. Brisbane Lions – Cameron, Hipwood, McCarthy, Zorko. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 9 Baker (Rich), 8 Bolton (Rich), 7 Martin (Rich), 3 Lynch (Rich), 2 Neale (BL), 1 Balta (Rich). Umpires: R. O’Gormon, A. Whetton, R. Findlay. Venue: Metricon Stadium Geelong Cats 4.2 5.8 8.11 13.12 (90) North Melbourne 3.1 3.2 5.2 9.3 (57) BEST: Geelong Cats – C. Guthrie, Miers, Hawkins, Fogarty, Stanley, Z. Guthrie. North Melbourne – Simpkin, Higgins, Anderson, Dumont, Tarrant. GOALS: Geelong Cats – Miers 4, Hawkins 3, Z. Guthrie 2, Duncan, Menegola, Simpson, Stanley. North Melbourne – Hosie 2, Daw, Hall, Mahony, Polec, Scott, Simpkin, J. Walker. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 C. Guthrie (Geel), 8 Miers (Geel), 5 Menegola (Geel), 3 Henry (Geel), 2 Blicavs (Geel), 2 Simpkin (NM). Umpires: A. Stephens, A. Gianfagna, C. Fleer. Venue: Gabba

St Kilda 3.3 7.4 9.6 15.11 (101) Sydney Swans 2.1 3.6 5.10 6.12 (48) BEST: St Kilda – Steele, Gresham, Hind, Jones, Clark, Billings, Paton. Sydney Swans – Parker, Florent, McCartin, Lloyd, Cunningham. GOALS: St Kilda – Hind 3, King 3, Battle 2, Butler 2, Gresham 2, Geary, Jones, Clark. Sydney Swans – McCartin 3, Florent, Papley, Sinclair. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 8 Jones (StK), 7 Steele (StK), 7 Gresham (StK), 6 Hind (StK), 1 Clark (StK), 1 Parker (Syd). Umpires: M. Stevic, A. Gianfagna, P. Rebeschini. Venue: Gabba

Melbourne 3.2 5.4 6.7 13.10 (88) Adelaide Crows 2.4 4.5 4.7 5.7 (37) BEST: Melbourne – Oliver, Viney, May, Petracca, Salem, Lever. Adelaide Crows – M. Crouch, Brown, Keays, Laird, Seedsman. GOALS: Melbourne – Weideman 3, Jackson 2, Melksham 2, Viney 2, Fritsch 2, Bennell, Oliver. Adelaide Crows – Seedsman 2, Fogarty, Himmelberg, Crocker. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Oliver (Melb), 7 Viney (Melb), 6 May (Melb), 3 Petracca (Melb), 2 Weideman (Melb), 2 Salem (Melb). Umpires: C. Donlon, H. Gavine, P. Rebeschini. Venue: Adelaide Oval

West Coast Eagles 3.0 4.2 7.6 11.7 (73) Geelong Cats 4.0 7.0 9.2 10.4 (64) BEST: West Coast Eagles – Kennedy, Naitanui, Sheed, Yeo, Kelly, Shuey. Geelong Cats – Stewart, Duncan, Dangerfield, Tuohy, C. Guthrie, Menegola. GOALS: West Coast Eagles – Kennedy 4, Sheed 2, Darling 2, Ryan, Cripps, Ah Chee. Geelong Cats – Tuohy 2, Hawkins 2, Menegola, Duncan, Dangerfield, Parfitt, Miers, Simpson. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Naitanui (WCE), 6 Kennedy (WCE), 4 Stewart (Geel), 4 Duncan (Geel), 4 Yeo (WCE), 2 Kelly (WCE). Umpires: J. Power, J. Dalgleish, R. Chamberlain. Venue: Optus Stadium

Collingwood 0.6 2.10 5.11 6.14 (50) Sydney Swans 1.0 5.0 5.2 6.5 (41) BEST: Collingwood – Adams, Maynard, Daicos, Treloar, Sier, Grundy. Sydney Swans – Lloyd, Rowbottom, Dawson, Thurlow, Hayward, Stephens. GOALS: Collingwood – Ruscoe, Elliott, Noble, Reid, Adams, Daicos. Sydney Swans – Thurlow 2, Wicks, Bell, Stephens, Papley. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Adams (Coll), 6 Daicos (Coll), 4 Maynard (Coll), 4 Treloar (Coll), 2 Thurlow (Syd), 2 Sier (Coll), 1 Noble (Coll), 1 Lloyd (Syd). Umpires: N. Foot, M. Stevic, E. Glouftis. Venue: Gabba

Note: Leaderboard as at end of round 10 and does not include votes from the round three Essendon v Melbourne match.

LEADING GOALKICKERS 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Player Tom Hawkins Josh Kennedy Charlie Dixon Tom Papley Dan Butler Charlie Cameron Ben King Matt Taberner Tom Lynch Jeremy Cameron Jack Gunston Eric Hipwood

Club Goals Behinds % (Geel) 24 13 64.9 (WCE) 24 13 64.9 (PA) 21 16 56.8 (Syd) 21 14 60.0 (StK) 21 8 72.4 (BL) 20 15 57.1 (GCS) 18 12 60.0 (Frem) 18 8 69.2 (Rich) 17 14 54.8 (GWS) 17 9 65.4 (Haw) 16 13 55.2 (BL) 16 11 59.3

St Kilda 3.2 6.2 9.4 12.6 (78) Gold Coast Suns 2.1 6.5 8.7 11.8 (74) BEST: St Kilda – Billings, Butler, Clark, Gresham, Steele, Carlisle. Gold Coast Suns – Greenwood, Collins, Miller, Ainsworth, Swallow, Powell. GOALS: St Kilda – Butler 4, Battle 2, Steele 2, Gresham, Kent, King, Marshall. Gold Coast Suns – King 3, Miller 2, Powell 2, Rankine 2, Anderson, Lemmens. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Butler (StK), 5 Steele (StK), 5 Miller (GCS), 4 Witts (GCS), 4 Billings (StK), 1 Lukosius (GCS), 1 Greenwood (GCS). Umpires: B. Rosebury, J. Broadbent, R. Chamberlain. Venue: Metricon Stadium GWS Giants 0.2 2.5 4.7 8.11 (59) Essendon 0.2 6.3 7.5 8.7 (55) BEST: GWS Giants – Coniglio, Taranto, Whitfield, Haynes, Kelly, Shaw. Essendon – Merrett, Ridley, Saad, Hurley, McGrath, Langford. GOALS: GWS Giants – Shaw 2, Cameron 2, Coniglio, Finlayson, Himmelberg, Ward. Essendon – Langford 2, Zaharakis, Shiel, McDonald-Tipungwuti, McKenna, Draper, Saad. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 9 Merrett (Ess), 7 Whitfield (GWS), 6 Taranto (GWS), 4 Saad (Ess), 4 Coniglio (GWS) Umpires: L. Fisher, C. Deboy, S. Ryan. Venue: Metricon Stadium Byes: Fremantle, West Coast Eagles, Hawthorn, Carlton

AFL.com.au

AFL RECORD

31


SYDNEY SWANS

GWS GIANTS

Coach John Longmire Co-captains Josh Kennedy /Luke Parker /Dane Rampe GOALS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 41 42 43 44 45 46 48

Coach Leon Cameron Captain Stephen Coniglio

BEHINDS

GOALS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 44 46 50

Chad WARNER Kaiden BRAND Dylan STEPHENS Ryan CLARKE Isaac HEENEY Jackson THURLOW Harry CUNNINGHAM James ROWBOTTOM Will HAYWARD Sam NAISMITH Tom PAPLEY Josh KENNEDY Oliver FLORENT Callum MILLS Sam GRAY Zac FOOT Will GOULD Callum SINCLAIR Matthew LING Sam REID Jack MAIBAUM Nick BLAKEY Lance FRANKLIN Dane RAMPE Ben RONKE Luke PARKER Justin McINERNEY Lewis TAYLOR George HEWETT Tom McCARTIN Harry REYNOLDS James BELL Ryley STODDART Jordan DAWSON Barry O’CONNOR Aliir ALIIR Elijah TAYLOR Colin O’RIORDAN Brady ROWLES Hayden McLEAN Robbie FOX Lewis MELICAN Jake LLOYD Sam WICKS Joel AMARTEY Michael KNOLL

Phil DAVIS Jacob HOPPER Stephen CONIGLIO Toby GREENE Jye CALDWELL Lachie WHITFIELD Lachie ASH Callan WARD Jackson HATELY Sam JACOBS Tommy SHERIDAN Tom GREEN Isaac CUMMING Tim TARANTO Sam TAYLOR Brent DANIELS Zac LANGDON Jeremy CAMERON Nick HAYNES Tom HUTCHESSON Matt BUNTINE Josh KELLY Heath SHAW Matt DE BOER Lachlan KEEFFE Jake RICCARDI Harry HIMMELBERG Zach SPROULE Zac WILLIAMS Matt FLYNN Jeremy FINLAYSON Kieren BRIGGS Xavier O’HALLORAN Nick SHIPLEY Aidan CORR Harry PERRYMAN Bobby HILL Daniel LLOYD Connor IDUN Adam KENNEDY Shane MUMFORD Jake STEIN Jack BUCKLEY Callum BROWN Sam REID

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PORT ADELAIDE

GEELONG CATS

Coach Ken Hinkley Captain Tom Jonas

Coach Chris Scott Captain Joel Selwood GOALS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46

GOALS

BEHINDS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 36 37 38 39 40 41 44 45 47 48 50

Rhys STANLEY Zach TUOHY Brandan PARFITT Gary ABLETT Nakia COCKATOO Jordan CLARK Harry TAYLOR Jake KOLODJASHNIJ Jack STEVEN Ben JARVIS Josh JENKINS Cooper STEPHENS Lachie FOGARTY Joel SELWOOD Nathan KREUGER Sam DE KONING Esava RATUGOLEA Charlie CONSTABLE Quinton NARKLE Oscar BROWNLESS Jacob KENNERLEY Mitch DUNCAN Gary ROHAN Jed BEWS Lachie HENDERSON Tom HAWKINS Sam MENEGOLA Darcy FORT Cameron GUTHRIE Tom ATKINS Francis EVANS Gryan MIERS Jake TARCA James PARSONS Patrick DANGERFIELD Blake SCHLENSOG Sam SIMPSON Jack HENRY Zach GUTHRIE Luke DAHLHAUS Cameron TAHENY Mark O’CONNOR Stefan OKUNBOR Tom STEWART Brad CLOSE Mark BLICAVS

Tom JONAS Sam POWELL-PEPPER Ryan BURTON Todd MARSHALL Dan HOUSTON Steven MOTLOP Brad EBERT Hamish HARTLETT Robbie GRAY Travis BOAK Tom ROCKLIFF Trent McKENZIE Wylie BUZZA Miles BERGMAN Karl AMON Ollie WINES Tom CLUREY Zak BUTTERS Mitch GEORGIADES Connor ROZEE Xavier DUURSMA Charlie DIXON Jack WATTS Kane FARRELL Sam HAYES Riley BONNER Joel GARNER Willem DREW Scott LYCETT Joe ATLEY Trent BURGOYNE Sam MAYES Darcy BYRNE-JONES Dylan WILLIAMS Boyd WOODCOCK Jake PATMORE Peter LADHAMS Justin WESTHOFF Jarrod LIENERT Riley GRUNDY Jackson MEAD Martin FREDERICK Tobin COX Jake PASINI Cam SUTCLIFFE RUSHED

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AFL RECORD PROMOTION

Kangaroos v Lions

ROUND

12

HEAD to HEAD

ON THE CHARGE: Shaun Higgins will be crucial to the Roos’ chances of an upset.

Played 55: North Melbourne 32, Brisbane Lions 22, draws 1. Since 2016: North Melbourne 4, Brisbane Lions 2. Most recent game: round 18, 2019, North Melbourne lost to Brisbane Lions by 12 points at the Gabba. Highest attendance: 66,719, first preliminary final, 1996, at the MCG.

NORTH MELBOURNE

to you by Match Preview Brought u Ouch. North Melbourne’s season went from

bad to worse last Sunday night, thrashed by 57 points by a weakened Melbourne and adding Aiden Bonar, Josh Walker, Robbie Tarrant and Majak Daw to an already long injury list. Coach Rhyce Shaw has kept his counsel for most of the season, but said the display against the Demons “wasn’t acceptable”. Finding form this week won’t be any easier against Brisbane, which after conceding the first three goals against the Western Bulldogs last Saturday at the Gabba, went on a rampage thereafter and, if anything, the four-goal margin at the end flattered the visitors. Spearhead Eric Hipwood found form

with five goals and, if Tarrant and Walker don’t come up, he will be licking his lips in anticipation of what might come his way. We’re not entirely sold on the Lions – they might be a fraction behind Port Adelaide, Richmond and West Coast in our estimation and we won’t learn a heap more about them this week. Charlie Cameron might be held out because of knee soreness, but this is still the chance to work on their systems forward of centre and perhaps bank some percentage for later in the season. ASHLEY BROWNE

Highest score: 24.22 (166), round 1, 1993, at the MCG. Lowest scores: 5.10 (40), round 18, 2007, at the Gabba. Away record: 11-15. Home record: 21-7-1. Greatest winning margin: 94 points, round 9, 1989, at the MCG. Longest winning sequence: 7, round 3, 1990, to round 16, 1993. Most goals in a game: 8, John Longmire, round 17, 1991, at Waverley Park; round 1, 1993, at the MCG; round 16, 1993, at the Gabba.

BRISBANE LIONS

Highest score: 26.14 (170), round 22, 2004, at the Gabba. Lowest scores: 6.2 (38), round 9, 2014, at Marvel Stadium; 5.8 (38), round 17, 2015, at the Gabba. Home record: 15-11. Away record: 7-21-1. Greatest winning margin: 113 points, round 22, 2004, at the Gabba. Longest winning sequence: 3, round 2, 2001, to round 12, 2002; round 18, 2003, to round 22, 2004. Most goals in a game: 8, Jonathan Brown, round 17, 2009, at the Gabba.

Prediction: Brisbane Lions by 40 points PROUD OFFICIAL SPONSOR OF

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game brightonhomes.net.au

32  AFL RECORD

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BRISBANE LIONS

NORTH MELBOURNE

Coach Chris Fagan Captain Dayne Zorko

Coach Rhyce Shaw Captain Jack Ziebell GOALS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 46 50

GOALS

BEHINDS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47

Majak DAW Marley WILLIAMS Jed ANDERSON Shaun HIGGINS Ben JACOBS Taylor GARNER Jack ZIEBELL Bailey SCOTT Luke DAVIES-UNIACKE Ben CUNNINGTON Luke McDONALD Jy SIMPKIN Jared POLEC Trent DUMONT Paul AHERN Aiden BONAR Jasper PITTARD Shaun ATLEY Josh WALKER Nick LARKEY Dom TYSON Todd GOLDSTEIN Ben McKAY Sam DURDIN Robbie TARRANT Tarryn THOMAS Will WALKER Kayne TURNER Charlie COMBEN Curtis TAYLOR Mason WOOD Ed VICKERS-WILLIS Jamie MACMILLAN Jack MAHONY Joel CROCKER Kyron HAYDEN Tristan XERRI Flynn PEREZ Tom MURPHY Matt McGUINNESS Tom CAMPBELL Aaron HALL Cameron ZURHAAR Lachlan HOSIE Ben BROWN

Brock SMITH Deven ROBERTSON Allen CHRISTENSEN Callum AH CHEE Mitch ROBINSON Hugh McCLUGGAGE Jarrod BERRY Ely SMITH Lachie NEALE Daniel RICH Lincoln McCARTHY Stefan MARTIN Thomas BERRY Grant BIRCHALL Dayne ZORKO Cam RAYNER Jarryd LYONS Keidean COLEMAN Jacob ALLISON Cedric COX Sam SKINNER Mitchell HINGE Charlie CAMERON Marcus ADAMS Daniel McSTAY Connor McFADYEN Darcy GARDINER Cameron ELLIS-YOLMEN Alex WITHERDEN Eric HIPWOOD Harris ANDREWS Tom JOYCE Zac BAILEY Toby WOOLLER Ryan LESTER Rhys MATHIESON Brandon STARCEVICH Connor BALLENDEN Corey LYONS Jack PAYNE Matt EAGLES James MADDEN Noah ANSWERTH Archie SMITH Jaxon PRIOR Oscar McINERNEY Tom FULLARTON

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MELBOURNE

COLLINGWOOD

Coach Simon Goodwin Captain Max Gawn

Coach Nathan Buckley Captain Scott Pendlebury GOALS

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 44 46 48

BEHINDS

GOALS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 43 44 45 46 47 48

Steven MAY Nathan JONES Christian SALEM James HARMES Christian PETRACCA Luke JACKSON Jack VINEY Jake LEVER Charlie SPARGO Angus BRAYSHAW Max GAWN Toby BEDFORD Clayton OLIVER Michael HIBBERD Ed LANGDON Kade KOLODJASHNIJ Harley BENNELL Jake MELKSHAM Mitch HANNAN Adam TOMLINSON Braydon PREUSS Aaron VANDENBERG James JORDON Trent RIVERS Tom McDONALD Sam WEIDEMAN Aaron NIETSCHKE Oscar McDONALD Jayden HUNT Alex NEAL-BULLEN Bayley FRITSCH Tom SPARROW Oskar BAKER Marty HORE Harrison PETTY Kysaiah PICKETT Kade CHANDLER Mitch BROWN Neville JETTA Corey WAGNER Jay LOCKHART Josh WAGNER Joel SMITH Austin BRADTKE Kyle DUNKLEY

Jaidyn STEPHENSON Jordan DE GOEY Isaac QUAYNOR Brodie GRUNDY Jamie ELLIOTT Tyler BROWN Adam TRELOAR Tom LANGDON John NOBLE Scott PENDLEBURY Dayne BEAMS Matthew SCHARENBERG Taylor ADAMS Darcy CAMERON Lynden DUNN Chris MAYNE Callum BROWN Travis VARCOE Levi GREENWOOD Ben REID Tom PHILLIPS Steele SIDEBOTTOM Jordan ROUGHEAD Josh THOMAS Jack CRISP Josh DAICOS Will KELLY Nathan MURPHY Tim BROOMHEAD Darcy MOORE Flynn APPLEBY Will HOSKIN-ELLIOTT Rupert WILLS Trent BIANCO Jay RANTALL Brayden SIER Brayden MAYNARD Jeremy HOWE Trey RUSCOE Atu BOSENAVULAGI Brody MIHOCEK Anton TOHILL Jack MADGEN Max LYNCH Mason COX Mark KEANE Tom WILSON

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FREMANTLE

CARLTON

Coach Justin Longmuir Captain Nat Fyfe

Coach David Teague Co-captains Patrick Cripps /Sam Docherty GOALS

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48

BEHINDS

Jesse HOGAN Griffin LOGUE Brandon MATERA Sean DARCY Adam CERRA Reece CONCA Nat FYFE Andrew BRAYSHAW Blake ACRES Michael WALTERS James AISH Mitch CROWDEN Luke RYAN Nathan WILSON Ethan HUGHES David MUNDY Hugh DIXON Darcy TUCKER Connor BLAKELY Matt TABERNER Joel HAMLING Caleb SERONG Cam McCARTHY Tom NORTH Alex PEARCE Hayden YOUNG Sam STURT Lachie SCHULTZ Luke VALENTE Lloyd MEEK Liam HENRY Stephen HILL Travis COLYER Brett BEWLEY Jason CARTER Brennan COX Rory LOBB Isaiah BUTTERS Sam SWITKOWSKI Bailey BANFIELD Stefan GIRO Michael FREDERICK Taylin DUMAN Tobe WATSON Dillon O’REILLY Jarvis PINA Leno THOMAS

GOALS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 43 44 45 46 47

Jack SILVAGNI Paddy DOW Marc MURPHY Lochie O’BRIEN Sam PETREVSKI-SETON Kade SIMPSON Matthew KENNEDY Matthew KREUZER Patrick CRIPPS Harry McKAY Mitch McGOVERN Tom DE KONING Liam STOCKER Liam JONES Sam DOCHERTY Darcy LANG Brodie KEMP Sam WALSH Eddie BETTS Lachie PLOWMAN Jack MARTIN Caleb MARCHBANK Jacob WEITERING Nic NEWMAN Zac FISHER Harrison MACREADIE Marc PITTONET David CUNINGHAM Cameron POLSON Charlie CURNOW Tom WILLIAMSON Jack NEWNES Sam RAMSAY Sam PHILP Ed CURNOW Josh HONEY Ben SILVAGNI Finbar O’DWYER Fraser PHILLIPS Michael GIBBONS Levi CASBOULT Will SETTERFIELD Matthew OWIES Hugh GODDARD Matthew COTTRELL Callum MOORE RUSHED

RUSHED 1ST QTR

AR12 Teams 275.indd 58

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

BEHINDS

FINAL

1ST QTR

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

FINAL

10/8/20 10:01 am


Canterbury 210x275.indd 1

16/4/20 8:04 am


ADELAIDE CROWS

WESTERN BULLDOGS

Coach Matthew Nicks Captain Rory Sloane

Coach Luke Beveridge Captain Marcus Bontempelli GOALS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 46

GOALS

BEHINDS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45

Matthew SUCKLING Lewis YOUNG Mitch WALLIS Marcus BONTEMPELLI Josh DUNKLEY Bailey SMITH Lachie HUNTER Jackson TRENGOVE Hayden CROZIER Easton WOOD Jack MACRAE Zaine CORDY Josh SCHACHE Rhylee WEST Taylor DURYEA Toby McLEAN Josh BRUCE Louis BUTLER Cody WEIGHTMAN Ed RICHARDS Tom LIBERATORE Sam LLOYD Laitham VANDERMEER Buku KHAMIS Ben CAVARRA Billy GOWERS Patrick LIPINSKI Callum PORTER Tory DICKSON Fergus GREENE Bailey DALE Will HAYES Aaron NAUGHTON Bailey WILLIAMS Caleb DANIEL Brad LYNCH Roarke SMITH Riley GARCIA Jason JOHANNISEN Lachie YOUNG Jordon SWEET Alex KEATH Ryan GARDNER Tim ENGLISH Lin JONG

Chayce JONES Brad CROUCH Riley KNIGHT Lachlan MURPHY Matt CROUCH Bryce GIBBS Jordan GALLUCCI Jake KELLY Rory SLOANE Myles POHOLKE Paul SEEDSMAN Daniel TALIA Taylor WALKER David MACKAY Kyle HARTIGAN Luke BROWN Will HAMILL Tyson STENGLE Ben CROCKER Rory ATKINS Billy FRAMPTON Shane McADAM Josh WORRELL Ned McHENRY Harry SCHOENBERG Tom LYNCH Ben KEAYS Rory LAIRD Wayne MILERA Patrick WILSON Darcy FOGARTY Brodie SMITH Elliott HIMMELBERG Fischer McASEY Andrew McPHERSON Ronin O’CONNOR Lachlan SHOLL Tom DOEDEE Ben DAVIS Jordon BUTTS Ayce TAYLOR Reilly O’BRIEN Lachlan GOLLANT Kieran STRACHAN RUSHED

RUSHED 1ST QTR

AR12 Teams 275.indd 63

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

BEHINDS

FINAL

1ST QTR

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

FINAL

10/8/20 10:04 am


WITH #7 JACK ZIEBELL Jack Ziebell finds his drive captaining his younger players and helping them reach their potential. So, where do you find yours? North Melbourne and proud major sponsor Mazda, are asking every North fan to keep finding their drive in 2020.

MAZ14498_AFL_Record_275Hx210W_JackZiebell_CMYK.indd 1

5/6/20 5:50 pm


ST KILDA

ESSENDON

Coach Brett Ratten Captain Jarryn Geary

Coach John Worsfold Captain Dyson Heppell GOALS

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 42 43 44 45 46 48

BEHINDS

GOALS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 49

Nick COFFIELD Jake CARLISLE Zak JONES Jade GRESHAM Shane SAVAGE Sebastian ROSS Luke DUNSTAN Bradley HILL Jack STEELE Dan HANNEBERY Hunter CLARK Max KING Jack LONIE Jarryn GEARY Jack BILLINGS Dan BUTLER Dylan ROBERTON Paddy RYDER Rowan MARSHALL Dougal HOWARD Ben LONG Nathan BROWN Jack BYTEL Logan AUSTIN Dean KENT Josh BATTLE Ryan ABBOTT Tim MEMBREY Jimmy WEBSTER Ed PHILLIPS Ryan BYRNES Ben PATON Matthew PARKER Jack SINCLAIR Daniel McKENZIE Leo CONNOLLY Oscar CLAVARINO Darragh JOYCE Nick HIND Jack BELL Jonathon MARSH Callum WILKIE Sam ALABAKIS Doulton LANGLANDS Jack MAYO

Andrew McGRATH Tom BELLCHAMBERS Darcy PARISH Kyle LANGFORD Devon SMITH Joe DANIHER Zach MERRETT Martin GLEESON Dylan SHIEL Aaron FRANCIS David ZAHARAKIS Tom CUTLER Orazio FANTASIA Jordan RIDLEY Jayden LAVERDE Josh BEGLEY James STEWART Michael HURLEY Kobe MUTCH Jacob TOWNSEND Dyson HEPPELL Irving MOSQUITO Harrison JONES Nick BRYAN Jake STRINGER Cale HOOKER Mason REDMAN Ned CAHILL Patrick AMBROSE Brandon ZERK-THATCHER Noah GOWN Brayden HAM Andrew PHILLIPS Matt GUELFI Lachie JOHNSON Dylan CLARKE Sam DRAPER Ross McQUILLAN Will SNELLING Cian McBRIDE Adam SAAD Anthony McDONALD-TIPUNGWUTI Shaun McKERNAN Conor McKENNA Mitch HIBBERD Henry CRAUFORD Tom HIRD RUSHED

RUSHED 1ST QTR

AR12 Teams 275.indd 68

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

BEHINDS

FINAL

1ST QTR

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

FINAL

10/8/20 10:04 am


WEST COAST EAGLES

HAWTHORN

Coach Adam Simpson Captain Luke Shuey

Coach Alastair Clarkson Captain Ben Stratton GOALS

1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47

BEHINDS

Liam RYAN Jake WATERMAN Andrew GAFF Dom SHEED Brad SHEPPARD Elliot YEO Jack REDDEN Nic NAITANUI Jarrod BRANDER Tim KELLY Oscar ALLEN Luke SHUEY Liam DUGGAN Jamie CRIPPS Tom HICKEY Josh KENNEDY Daniel VENABLES Nathan VARDY Jeremy McGOVERN Jack PETRUCCELLE Hamish BRAYSHAW Lewis JETTA Xavier O’NEILL Shannon HURN Francis WATSON Jack DARLING Tom COLE Luke FOLEY Jackson NELSON Will SCHOFIELD Bailey WILLIAMS Brayden AINSWORTH Mark HUTCHINGS Josh ROTHAM Tom BARRASS Ben JOHNSON Jarrod CAMERON Callum JAMIESON Brendon AH CHEE Harry EDWARDS Anthony TREACY Willie RIOLI Mitch O’NEILL Nic REID Jamaine JONES

GOALS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47

Harry MORRISON Mitch LEWIS Tom MITCHELL Jarman IMPEY James WORPEL James SICILY Ben McEVOY Sam FROST Shaun BURGOYNE Jaeger O’MEARA Conor NASH James FRAWLEY Conor GLASS Jack SCRIMSHAW Blake HARDWICK Isaac SMITH Daniel HOWE Jonathon CEGLAR Jack GUNSTON Chad WINGARD Tom SCULLY Luke BREUST Tim O’BRIEN Ben STRATTON Jonathon PATTON Liam SHIELS Michael HARTLEY Paul PUOPOLO Changkuoth JIATH Will DAY Ricky HENDERSON Finn MAGINNESS Mathew WALKER Jacob KOSCHITZKE Josh MORRIS Dylan MOORE Jackson ROSS Darren MINCHINGTON Emerson JEKA Harrison JONES Oliver HANRAHAN Harry PEPPER Ned REEVES Damon GREAVES Will GOLDS James COUSINS Keegan BROOKSBY

RUSHED 1ST QTR

AR12 Teams 275.indd 73

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

BEHINDS

RUSHED FINAL

1ST QTR

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

FINAL

10/8/20 10:05 am


RICHMOND

GOLD COAST SUNS

Coach Damien Hardwick Captain Trent Cotchin

Coach Stuart Dew Co-captains David Swallow /Jarrod Witts GOALS

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 25 26 27 28 29 31 32 33 34 35 36 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 50

BEHINDS

GOALS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 52

Nick VLASTUIN Dylan GRIMES Dion PRESTIA Dustin MARTIN Jack ROSS Patrick NAISH Liam BAKER Jack RIEWOLDT Trent COTCHIN Shane EDWARDS Jason CASTAGNA David ASTBURY Jack HIGGINS Bachar HOULI Jayden SHORT Daniel RIOLI Alex RANCE Tom LYNCH Ivan SOLDO Noah BALTA Josh CADDY Kane LAMBERT Toby NANKERVIS Riley COLLIER-DAWKINS Thomson DOW Fraser TURNER Shai BOLTON Oleg MARKOV Luke ENGLISH Kamdyn McINTOSH Jack GRAHAM Nathan BROAD Will MARTYN Noah CUMBERLAND Jake AARTS Callum COLEMAN-JONES Mabior CHOL Ryan GARTHWAITE Derek EGGMOLESSE-SMITH Sydney STACK Hugo RALPHSMITH Ben MILLER Bigoa NYUON Marlion PICKETT

Pearce HANLEY Anthony MILES Jack BOWES Brandon ELLIS Jarrod HARBROW Alex SEXTON Will BRODIE Brayden FIORINI Ben AINSWORTH Charlie BALLARD Touk MILLER Sam DAY Jack LUKOSIUS Lachie WELLER Noah ANDERSON Rory THOMPSON Corey ELLIS Matt ROWELL Josh CORBETT Jack HOMBSCH Hugh GREENWOOD Izak RANKINE Sean LEMMENS David SWALLOW Sam COLLINS Sam FLANDERS Wil POWELL Jarrod WITTS Chris BURGESS Peter WRIGHT Jordan MURDOCH Zac SMITH George HORLIN-SMITH Ben KING Connor BUDARICK Josh SCHOENFELD Jeremy SHARP Jesse JOYCE Nick HOLMAN Jacob HERON Malcolm ROSAS Patrick MURTAGH Jez McLENNAN Darcy MACPHERSON Jacob DAWSON Caleb GRAHAM Sam FLETCHER Matt CONROY Mitch RIORDAN Jy FARRAR Luke TOWEY RUSHED

RUSHED 1ST QTR

AR12 Teams 275.indd 78

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

BEHINDS

FINAL

1ST QTR

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

FINAL

10/8/20 10:06 am


33 MATCHES 20 DAYS

JULY 29 – AUGUST 17 AM 7366-0720 AFL Marketing 33 in 20 Campaign_AFLRecord_FA_R.indd 2

29/7/20 9:53 am


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