AFL Record – Round 14, 2020

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ROUND 14 AUGUST 27-30, 2020

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CONTENTS

ROUND 14, AUGUST 27-30, 2020

FEATURES

BRING IT ON

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OFF THE LEASH

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It’s a genuine clash of the heavyweights when the Tigers take on the Eagles on Thursday night. ASHLEY BROWNE reports.

Can the Bulldogs replicate their “bolt-from-the-blue” premiership of 2016? The signs are good. ASHLEY BROWNE reports.

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REGULARS

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

TAKING FLIGHT: Liam Ryan was up to his old tricks against the Giants last week, before the Eagles again flew north for a second stint in the Queensland hub.

Owned and produced by Crocmedia AFL Record Editor Michael Lovett Production Editor Gary Hancock Senior Writer Ashley Browne Writers Howard Kotton, Sam Mills, Nic Negrepontis, Graham Pilkington, Laurence Rosen, Andrew Slevison, Alex Zaia

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

Photo Editor Rohan Voigt CEO – BallPark, Rainmaker & Publishing Richard Simkiss

Production Manager Stephen Lording

Publications Commercial Manager, Crocmedia Dean McBeth

Photography Michael Willson, Dylan Burns aflphotos.com.au

Printed By Ovato

Traffic Coordinator Tillina Carter

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 14, 2020 Copyright © 2020. ACN No. 004 155 211. ISSN 1444-2973, Print Post approved PP320258/00109

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Sydney has put superstar forward Lance Franklin on ice for the remainder of the season ASHLEY BROWNE REPORTS – PAGE 6

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ONE WEEK at a TIME ROUND

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News from in and around the AFL

Crunch time as Eagles fly north again

The challenge is far from over and we will continue to be flexible AFL CEO GILLON McLACHLAN ON THE LEAGUE’S STAFF CUTS

CLASH OF HEAVYWEIGHTS: After eight straight wins, the Eagles’ premiership credentials will be put to the test by reigning premier Richmond.

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ASHLEY BROWNE

MICHAEL LOVETT

EDITOR’S LETTER

est Coast is back in Queensland, settling in for its second dose of hub life for season 2020, and this time the Eagles appear to have a genuine thirst for life on the road. They were unhappy campers when they lost their first three matches after the game’s resumption – to Gold Coast, Brisbane and Port Adelaide – before arresting the slump with wins over Sydney and Adelaide. The Eagles then enjoyed a great return home and went unbeaten in six games at Optus Stadium, the latest of which was a 12-point win over the GWS Giants last Sunday evening. Adam Simpson’s men now sit in fourth place, but face a tough road ahead, with the Giants game the first of five in just 19 days. They will face Richmond at Metricon Stadium on Thursday night, having travelled across the country off a five-day break. It’s not ideal, but it is the new normal in 2020. Simpson has managed his squad superbly given the demands of the season and has mixed the team up nicely. He has even been able to introduce three debutants over u The next phase of the

the past month – Harry Edwards, Nic Reid and Xavier O’Neill. He has enviable depth and a healthy list as crunch time draws near. Thursday night’s clash with Richmond is mouthwatering. Between them, the Tigers and the Eagles have won the past three premierships. As Richmond coasted to the flag last season, it was West Coast, at the MCG in round 22, that gave it its toughest workout over the last part of the season. It has been an interesting fortnight for the Tigers. They rebounded from their loss to Port Adelaide with wins over Gold Coast and Essendon, but

2020 football frenzy starts in this round with games being played almost every day from this Thursday through to September 14. There is a day’s break next Monday (August 31) so those of us living in footy-starved Victoria can settle on the couch for a good couple of weeks with remote control at hand.

It also means the AFL Record will be producing another ‘Festival of Footy’ edition like we did back in rounds 10-11. The rounds 15-16 edition will cover both rounds – complete with full team lists – and will be available from next Monday in print and digital format. The print edition will be available at newsagents, Coles and Coles Express in Victoria

Simpson has managed his squad superbly

spearhead Tom Lynch has had on-field disciplinary issues and faced the Tribunal this week after striking Michael Hurley. His availability for Thursday night was unclear as the AFL Record went to print. Experienced premiership defenders Dylan Grimes and Nick Vlastuin were both fined for staging against the Bombers, while Grimes was also fined for striking Jake Stringer. The Tigers are showing similar signs to Brisbane after its three-peat and the Hawks towards the end of their recent golden era in that a bit of hubris and a touch of unsociable footy have become part of their make-up.

and on sale at Adelaide Oval, the Gabba and Metricon Stadium. The season will finish with normal standalone editions for each of rounds 17 and 18 as we prepare for bumper finals editions. More news on our finals plans as we get closer to September and October. Speaking of finals, the Western Bulldogs have put

themselves in the firing line and they feature as this week’s cover story. Popular Bulldog Mitch Wallis graces the cover after his career-best four-goal haul against Melbourne last week and let’s hope he is there deep into October after the heartbreak of missing the 2016 premiership with a broken leg. AFL.com.au     AFL RECORD  5

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ONE WEEK at a TIME But they remain an undeniably good team and they’re always up for the big games. And make no mistake, this one is huge. The top five teams in the competition have separated themselves from the rest, but five into four does not go. The Eagles sit half a game ahead of Richmond in fourth place with a game in hand. Win this and they might be consigning the Tigers to an elimination final, which will no doubt please other top four clubs Port Adelaide, Brisbane and Geelong. Meanwhile, Sunday’s Carlton-Collingwood clash is unusual on two fronts. For starters, the Gabba clash will be the first between them at a ground other than the MCG since 2000, when they staged what was billed as “The Last Suburban Battle” at the old Princes Park. But what makes this remarkable is that the 10th-placed Blues are in genuine finals contention. The last time they were within a game of the eight with five games remaining in their season was 2013.

The rivalry with the Pies isn’t what it used to be, but this shapes as one of the biggest games between the clubs for years. It will be a fun afternoon at the Gabba, but allow us to be melancholy Victorians for just one moment. Had this game (a Blues home game to add to the occasion) been at the MCG, the old girl would have been heaving. Also notable this week is that Sydney has put superstar forward Lance Franklin on ice for the remainder of the season. Franklin, 33, didn’t play at all this year after suffering a serious hamstring tear during the lockdown and then more recently an injured groin. This was his seventh season with the Swans and he reportedly earned $1.4 million, the largest sum of his nine-year, $10 million deal to join the club.

PUT ON ICE: Swans superstar Buddy Franklin did not get out of his training gear once this season.

WEEKLY WINNERS WEEK REYANSH 13 JANI

Who do you barrack for? Richmond Who is your favourite player? Dustin Martin What superpower would you like to have? To be able to fly and be invisible What is your favourite ice cream flavour? Oreo What is your favourite TV show? Footy What is the best thing about footy? There’s lots of excitement. And there are very funny moments. And I love watching the goals Favourite NAB AFL Auskick At Home drill? Kicking goals and marking

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NAB AFL Rising Star MAX KING ST KILDA

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ax King’s outstanding debut season for St Kilda has been rewarded with the round 12 nomination for the NAB AFL Rising Star. The fourth selection at the 2018 NAB AFL Draft didn’t play last year because of injury, but has been a mainstay of the Saints forward line all season and took six marks and kicked a game and career-high three goals in the win over Essendon at the Gabba. The 202cm key forward has impressed with his speed, agility and marking power and is benefitting from the tutelage of former champion Hawk forward Jarryd Roughead, who is on the staff at St Kilda. King’s identical twin Ben is making equally impressive strides playing a similar role for Gold Coast. He received a Rising Star nomination last year. Both came through East Sandringham juniors, the Sandringham Dragons and Haileybury, where they were coached by Essendon great Matthew Lloyd. ASHLEY BROWNE

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DISPOSALS

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MARKS

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SCORE INVOLVEMENTS

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GOALS

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KEELY GELJON

2020 NAB AFL RISING STAR NOMINEES W1 SAM STURT W2 MATT ROWELL

FREM GCS

W3 CONNOR BUDARICK GCS W4 TOM GREEN

GWS

W5 CURTIS TAYLOR

NM

W6 IZAK RANKINE

GCS

W7 NOAH ANDERSON W8 CALEB SERONG W9 MITCH GEORGIADES W10 LUKE JACKSON

GCS FREM PA MELB

W11 KYSAIAH PICKETT MELB W12 MAX KING

STK

Who do you barrack for? North Melbourne Who are your favourite players? Kaitlyn Ashmore and Shaun Higgins What superpower would you like to have? Be super fast at everything What is your favourite ice cream flavour? Strawberry and watermelon What is your favourite TV show? Glee, Ninja Warrior and Big Brother What is the best thing about footy? Having fun Favourite NAB AFL Auskick At Home drill? I love to play markers up and kick to kick

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ONE WEEK at a TIME

Are Dogs up for the fight again?

GATHERING MOMENTUM: With skipper Marcus Bontempelli leading the way, coach Luke Beveridge (inset) hopes the Bulldogs can repeat the heroics of 2016.

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ASHLEY BROWNE

he Western Bulldogs have come to learn all too quickly what follows after winning a bolt-from-the-blue premiership as they did in 2016. Expectations grow enormously. Fans, giddy with excitement, expect the team to play deep into September (or October as will be the case in 2020) every season. The media talks up a potential dynasty. In the case of the Bulldogs, the argument was that they were the best team of the finals in 2016, not necessarily the entire season. Imagine how good they would be, the logic followed, when they became fully formed. Four years on and the Dogs haven’t come close to replicating the deeds of 2016. They missed the finals in 2017 and 2018 and only just made it last year, narrowly avoiding becoming the first team since Hawthorn in 1981 to miss the finals three successive years after winning a flag. And when they did make it back to September action last year, they turned up their toes, losing to the GWS Giants by 58 points at Giants Stadium, just three weeks after belting them by 61 points at the same location. There was a sense of momentum about the Bulldogs at the time, they’d won eight of their last 11 games of the home and away season and were touted as the team nobody wanted to play in the finals. The Giants quickly put that to bed. Following last Saturday’s 28-point win over Melbourne, the Bulldogs are back in the eight. They leapfrogged the Demons in the process, so in the context of the season, it was an important win. It was built off the back of one quarter of dominance and some of the left-field thinking that has been the hallmark of Luke Beveridge from the moment in late 2014 when he walked through the doors of

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Whitten Oval to become the next coach of the Dogs. Melbourne led by seven points at half-time and, to most neutral observers, appeared to be getting on top. But Beveridge recognised that errors by ruckman Tim English cost his side two goals, so he moved him to full-forward in the second half, which allowed erstwhile spearhead Aaron Naughton to get on his bike and move around the forward line some more, while Josh Bruce was switched into the ruck and played well. Josh Dunkley, all 190cm of him, also took some centre bounces. The Dogs controlled the footy in the third term, took 26 uncontested marks for the quarter and

The Dogs haven’t come close to replicating the deeds of 2016

transitioned the ball effortlessly at times from one end of the ground to the other. Naughton, who kicked six goals the week before, was held goalless against the Demons, so in chimed Mitch Wallis, who played almost exclusively inside 50 and kicked a career-best four goals. On a day in which a tricky wind wreaked havoc, his set-shot kicking was superb For those watching the Fox Footy telecast, it was an entertaining afternoon. It started during the pre-game show when the ‘fly on the wall’ camera captured vision of Beveridge’s pre-game address. The always-thoughtful Beveridge clearly made his players laugh (there was no audio, only the pictures) but there were also some boxing gestures as well. It turns out that part of the pre-game build-up for the Dogs was the screening of the famous 1958 Archie Moore-Yvon Durelle light-heavyweight fight, during which Durelle knocked Moore to the canvas three times in the opening round, with the American just seconds from being counted

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out, only for Moore to work his way back and then knock out the Canadian fighter in the 11th. A sunny afternoon at Metricon Stadium hardly equates to a world title fight, but the stakes were high for the Dogs and they climbed off the canvas and into the top eight. This season has been so full of form-related twists and turns, so the win over the Demons didn’t necessarily mean the Bulldogs are back in town and on the march to play deep into the finals. Indeed, the win marked the first time this year they have beaten a team in the top eight and their logbook includes heavy defeats to Collingwood (52 points), St Kilda (39), Carlton (52), Richmond (41), Port Adelaide (13) and Brisbane (24). Still, the memories of the 2016 flag remain vivid enough and so many of their prime movers can be damaging. Skipper Marcus Bontempelli is a match-winner and one of the best 10 players in the competition. Jack Macrae leads the AFL in disposals and Tom Liberatore is one of the best contested-possession and clearance players there is. Lachie Hunter has added further grunt to the midfield since his return. Second-year outside mid Bailey Smith might be leading the best and fairest. English is developing, but has already demonstrated that his best ruckwork is sublime.

DISTANT MEMORY: The Bulldogs have played just one final since their stunning premiership success four seasons ago.

The Dogs are OK down back and will be better when Zaine Cordy returns from a chest injury in a couple of weeks. The biggest issue for Beveridge is the forward line, which has shown flashes all year, but never been fully in sync. Naughton is projecting to become a star, but he’s barely out of his teens. The consistency is not yet there. He and Bruce haven’t yet played enough footy together to create the two-pronged attack that would put the frighteners up any backline.

New AFL restructure announced

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ASHLEY BROWNE

FL chief executive Gillon McLachlan has unveiled a new organisation model for the League as it deals with the toll of the COVID-19 pandemic on the game. With the League expected to lose $400 million this financial year and the financial pain set to continue for several years thereafter, the restructure is expected to make the AFL leaner and more agile. As part of the restructure, about 20 per cent of AFL staff across Australia have lost their positions,

with the headline departure being that of longtime senior executive Darren Birch, who headed up the League’s Growth, Digital and Audience department, which includes AFL Media. Ken Wood, who for close to two decades has had direct responsibility for the AFL’s Total Player Payments, is also moving on. McLachlan said the AFL had a responsibility to take decisive action now to ensure that the industry and future of the game

TAKING ITS TOLL: AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan has announced the League is expected to lose $400 million this financial year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

What of Josh Schache? Whatever happened to Tory Dickson? Wallis was terrific last weekend and offers the versatility that any coach would love. But the next Bulldogs premiership likely won’t be won with him as the No. 1 forward. In this condensed season, teams can move from the outhouse to the penthouse in the blink of an eye. So where are the Western Bulldogs? Get back to us in a fortnight, after games against genuine premiership aspirants Geelong and West Coast.

at all levels was preserved and that the game remained affordable and accessible to all. “For our industry and game to emerge stronger from this ongoing COVID-19 challenge and the increased uncertainty we face over coming years, we need to significantly change our business model for not only the AFL but the wider football community,” he said. Marvel Stadium’s daily operations are now fully integrated into the AFL under the guidance of Kylie Rogers as EGM of Commercial and Customer, while the planned redevelopment of the stadium and the surrounding precinct will become an additional portfolio for Travis Auld, who also manages finance, clubs and broadcasting. There has also been a reshuffle at state league level with former North Melbourne coach Brad Scott the new head of AFL Victoria. AFL.com.au     AFL RECORD  9

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ONE WEEK at a TIME

History favours the Cats

LUCKY N0. 17: Big Cat Esava Ratugolea will be hoping Geelong can repeat its premiership glory of 1925, the last time a 17-game home and away season was played.

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GRAHAM PILKINGTON

his is not the only time there has been a 17-game home and away season. On the last occasion, the premiership went to Geelong. The first time was in 1901. The Cats won 14 games to be minor premiers, but Essendon beat Collingwood in the Grand Final. The Magpies reversed the result the following season for their initial VFL premiership, with 15 home and away victories allowing it to finish on top of the table. The 17-game season ran from 1901 through to 1907, with Collingwood grabbing another premiership in this period. Carlton won its first flag in 1906 and repeated the result the next season, while Fitzroy also gathered two premierships in this period. Ladder-topping wins ranged from 12 to 15 (average 14), and the minor premiers went on to take major glory in five of the seven years. A big difference to now is that there were only eight teams in the VFL then, so teams played each other twice, plus three more games. There was a final four playoff system. In 1908, University and Richmond were admitted to the VFL, but the season was extended by only one game to 18. This remained pretty much the norm for the next 60 years, save for the restrictions during two world wars and the 16-game seasons for a period after World War I. University dropped out in 1915. Then came 1925: the last 17-game season, until now. What brought the change? There was another war – a territory war. The rivalry between the smaller parent VFA and the more successful breakaway VFL turned nasty. The former had added a Geelong ‘Association’ club in 1922 in an attempt to spread its influence. But in 1925, the successful Footscray and North Melbourne teams were invited to join the

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VFL, together with the eastern suburban Hawthorn club. The VFA was decimated. The three new clubs brought the VFL total to 12, but only one extra game was added to the previous year’s 16 home and away matches. Geelong topped the ladder with 15 wins, but lost its semi-final to Melbourne. As minor premiers, the Cats had a right of challenge and beat Collingwood – which had overcome Melbourne – in the

As minor premiers, the Cats had the right of challenge

Grand Final for its first VFL premiership. Geelong had ‘Carji’ Greaves and Cliff Rankin; the Magpies had the Coventrys (Syd and Gordon) and coach Jock McHale. The Grand Final was played on Saturday, October 10, close to the potential 2020 date of October 17, and there was a record 64,288 at the MCG. There was no television coverage as television had yet to be invented, but there was a technical first: the game was broadcast on radio. The following year saw a return to the 18-game season. Can we learn anything about the number of votes needed to win this year’s Brownlow Medal by comparing other 17-game seasons? In the period 1901-07, there was no Brownlow awarded. It came into existence only in 1924. St Kilda’s Colin Watson won in 1925 with nine votes, two ahead of inaugural winner Greaves. In those days, the sole umpire cast just a single vote. So that doesn’t allow for any sort of comparison. There have been many subsequent players who won the medal after playing exactly 17 games, generally in an 18-game season, with an average of nearly 23 votes. It is not a true comparison with 2020, but it will have to do. Richmond dual medallist Roy Wright gathered 29 votes in 1954 (by contrast, Hawthorn’s Tom Mitchell won in 2018 with one less vote from 22 games). The lowest winning total from 17 games was 18 votes by the marvellously named Wilfred ‘Chicken’ Smallhorn of Fitzroy in 1933 and Essendon’s triple winner Dick Reynolds in 1938. The last to do it was another triple winner, South Melbourne’s Bob Skilton, who polled 24 votes in 1968. An assessment of this information suggests that this year’s McClelland Trophy for the team topping the ladder at the end of the season will be achieved with 14 wins and it will lead to the premiership. Allowing for the recent trend of higher numbers, the Brownlow winner will get 26 votes, and that player will finish their career with multiple medals. Whatever happens, 2020 will go down as the most memorable 17-game season ever.

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ONE WEEK at a TIME

Roys long gone, not forgotten

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HOWARD KOTTON

itzroy’s demise as an AFL club in 1996 continues to evoke emotions among its committed tribe almost a quarter of a century later. While some have transferred their allegiances to the Brisbane Lions, many struggle with the merger between the Bears and Fitzroy and now follow other Melbourne-based clubs. Despite growing up on a farm in the West Australian town of Tammin, Pete Carter has always

been a fanatical follower of one of the VFL’s original clubs. Carter’s passion for the Royboys is palpable as he recounts the club’s greatest moments in his new book. His attention to detail is impressive, using newspaper reports and various websites as reference material. As he counts down from the 100th best win to the one he believes was the greatest (in round 13, 1983, by 150 points against North Melbourne at the Junction Oval), the chapters are divided into quarters to make it feel like you are following a game. Adding to this theme are four “time-on” items at the end of each chapter. One of those items demonstrates the link between Fitzroy and Carter’s other favourite club, WAFL team East Perth. Carter’s love of mathematics and statistics shines through, with

200 GAMES COACHED

Nathan Buckley COLLINGWOOD a special stats section near the end of the book. Fitzroy might have gone, but the club’s spirit lives on in fanatics such as Carter. u Fitzroy’s Fabulous Century: The 100 Greatest Victories 1897-1996 by Pete Carter. Published by Mr Smudge Books. RRP: $25.

150 GAMES

Jake Lloyd SYDNEY

Lion legend mourned

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ASHLEY BROWNE

ill Stephen, one of the great figures of the old Fitzroy Football Club, passed away last Monday aged 92. He played 162 games for the Roys between 1947 and 1957 primarily as a defender and served as captain-coach of the club between 1955 and 1957. It was the first of three stints as coach of his beloved club and he also took charge from 1965-70 and again in 1979 and 1980. In 1979, he led the club to its first finals appearance in 19 years. The Lions knocked over Essendon in the elimination final before a

ROUND 14 MILESTONES

one-point loss to Collingwood in an epic semi-final. “He was a bit old school,” former Lions ruckman Ron Alexander told the AFL Record last year. “But he was a clever guy in his third time around as coach. He knew what he was talking about.”

Stephen was a firm supporter of the Brisbane Lions, but was affiliated with other clubs over the journey. He coached Essendon in 1976 and 1977, having previously been Ron Barassi’s assistant at North Melbourne in 1975 when the club won its first flag. He also worked at South Melbourne under Norm Smith. His passing leaves 93-year-old Noel McMahen as the oldest living former League coach. The former Melbourne champion was in charge at South Melbourne between 1962 and 1964. Former South Melbourne player Frank Brew, who played 87 games for the Swans from 1947-53, passed away on August 13. Brew was also a long-time curator at Carlton’s home ground Princes Park.

Devon Smith ESSENDON/ GWS GIANTS

100 GAMES

Darcy Byrne-Jones PORT ADELAIDE

u FOOTY FUNNIES – Bob Dikkenberg

Lachie Weller GOLD COAST/ FREMANTLE North Melbourne will play its 2000th game and GWS Giants will play their 200th game in round 14. This list includes those not necessarily selected but on the verge of milestones.

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24/8/20 4:30 pm


AFL RECORD PROMOTION

INSPIRING STORIES FOR BOWRA & O’DEA

FITNESS FANATIC: After football, John Annear turned his talents to competing in the Hawaiian Iron Man.

MAN OF MANY TALENTS John Annear plied his football craft on opposite sides of the country before taking his off-field skills around the world. He speaks to 6PR’s TIM McMILLAN. JOHN, YOU GREW UP IN THE GOLDFIELDS OUT KALGOORLIE WAY. WHAT DID MUM AND DAD DO? u They’re both Kalgoorlie people. My dad was a mining engineer and my mother was a teacher. I did most of my schooling in Kalgoorlie and then we moved to a place called Widgiemooltha, a very small spot between Coolgardie and Norseman. We were living on a mine site, which was fairly unheard of in those days. Most mining sites would have a purpose-built town, so this was one of the earlier ones where the people running the show would live not far from the mine site. It was only a one-teacher school and it turned out to be an absolute cracker of a school. THE CHANGE, GOING FROM THAT VERY SMALL COMMUNITY IN THE GOLDFIELDS TO A BOARDING SCHOOL ATMOSPHERE AT CHRIST CHURCH (IN PERTH), DID YOU TAKE THAT IN YOUR STRIDE OR WAS THAT A BIT OF A SHOCK TO THE SYSTEM? u I laugh now but ‘Twiggy’ Forrest, he was in the other boarding house, and I spent more time in the medical centre I think. Twig because he’d be fighting all the time and me because I was bawling. WAS TWIGGY A MATE OF YOURS? u Twig had a real rough time there. He had a bit of a stammer, and he’d be teased a bit and he would let loose. He would take on any kid, any size …

14  AFL RECORD

HOW DID THE SWITCH FROM WAFL CLUB CLAREMONT TO COLLINGWOOD COME ABOUT? u I was playing with a guy called Kevin Worthington and he’d come back to Perth and I think he felt there was still plenty of footy left, so I was lucky enough for Kevin to ask Collingwood to have a look at me and I think they wanted that type of player. WHAT WAS IT LIKE GOING TO MELBOURNE AS A YOUNG MAN TO JOIN A CLUB LIKE COLLINGWOOD? u The first year-and-a-half I played under Tommy Hafey and I think it’s that sort of father figure that sits alongside your own dad. Tommy would give you everything. To give you an idea, he’d get to training about four o’clock, he’d load up the bench press and he’d be doing about what would now be 100kgs. He’d be whacking those out and he was as fit as a fiddle. He’d do all the pre-season running. He was just a wonderful mentor and he really looked after you. WHAT PROMPTED THE MOVE TO RICHMOND AT THE END OF 1983? u What happened the previous year, Collingwood had got hold of (Geoff) Raines and (David) Cloke. They were two iconic players at Richmond, so Richmond then came to Collingwood and scooped five out of six in the best and fairest. So Phil Walsh, myself, Craig Stewart, Neil Peart, Noel Lovell, there were a few of us that were given offers to move there. And I know ‘Walshy’ and I, it was never our intention to move. I look back on it, and as much as I met some great guys at Richmond,

When I finished footy there was a bit of a void JOHN ANNEAR

u FACT FILE

JOHN ANNEAR

DOB: 17/6/1961 Recruited from: Claremont (WA) Playing career: Coll 1981-83, Rich 1984-86, WCE 1987-90 Games: 166 (Coll 43, Rich 65, WCE 58) Goals: 111 (Coll 28, Rich 43, WCE 40) Honours: 2nd Rich best and fairest 1984 Brownlow Medal: career votes 34

I sometimes think just playing out your time at one club is a better way. AT WHAT POINT DID YOU START HEARING WHISPERS ABOUT THE ARRIVAL OF WEST COAST? u I never really took an interest in it. I was happy at Richmond, I’d got into physio over in Melbourne. I did radiography then got into physio and had a great job at a sports medicine centre which (former Tiger) Barry Richardson ran. It was really an out of the blue call from ‘Mossy’ (Graham Moss) who said, “Look, would you want to come home?”. At that stage it really was, if I was going to move back to Perth, this was the time. SO POST-FOOTBALL, YOUR COMMITMENT TO FITNESS DIDN’T DIMINISH AT ALL, TO THE POINT WHERE YOU DECIDED TO COMPETE IN PROBABLY THE TOUGHEST EVENT ON THE PLANET, THE HAWAIIAN IRON MAN. u Back in the Richmond days, Phil Walsh and I, off season we’d go off and do these little mini ones around Melbourne. It was always in the back of my mind, so when I finished footy there was a bit of a void. I just did the local scene for a while then post-kids I thought, “Right, I want to go to the big dance”. I went and did this qualifying event in China. A lot of pros were there and they all said this was the hardest race you’ll ever do. It was 48 degrees, they’d run out of water on the drink stations. There were ambulances going up and down and it was on an island called Hainan Island, which was like a big golf resort. It prepared me well because I thought nothing was going to be as bad as this. I qualified in China, and then got to Kona. HOW DID YOU BECOME THE PERSONAL PHYSIOTHERAPIST FOR ITALIAN OPERA LEGEND LUCIANO PAVAROTTI? u Again it was a real chance thing. His manager managed a young lady in Perth and he had finished his second concert in Australia and really hadn’t got great reviews – he’d been sitting and looked old. So the poor old physio that they had, an Italian guy, they shipped him out on the Sunday morning because they found he’d been playing cards and eating with the big fellow. So as a last-minute pitch, instead of this tour folding, the manager rang me and said, “Can you give him a try in the pool?”. The long and short of it was I got him in the pool, and he loved the pool because it took the weight off him. A week later I joined his touring party and toured the world, lived in Modena with him. One of those chance things that happen.

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27/7/20 4:00 pm


2020 VISION: Some teams, like the Eagles, have enjoyed a glut of home games, while the ‘footy frenzy’ was popular with fans, with Fox Footy’s viewership rising dramatically.

What I’m thinking with Ashley Browne

Lessons learned from a tough year What innovations and changes can the game’s decision-makers take into 2021 and beyond?

T

hrough necessity more than anything, season 2020 has been like no other. The need to be “nimble and agile” just to keep the season going has meant that this year has become something of a petri dish for the game. Ideas the AFL and those who service the game have considered but discarded in the past have come back into vogue. As the “new AFL” begins to take shape, it is worth considering what, if any, of the changes imposed on us because of COVID-19 will become a permanent feature.

16-MINUTE QUARTERS

A prescient move by the AFL to introduce the shorter quarters, a decision made in the middle of March on the basis that at some stage the coronavirus would derail the season and there might be a requirement for clubs to play more than one game a week. Obviously this has reduced scoring and through 13 rounds of matches there had been just 10 scores of 100 points or more. The effect on the players will be better known come the end of the season, but those with a huge running capacity have played higher percentages of each game. Players are being rested forward rather than on the bench. Broadcasters don’t mind the new format. With the longer breaks between quarters, they can sell as many advertisements as they like. u 2021 Likelihood: 5/10

16  AFL RECORD

17-GAME SEASON

This one is a favourite of those who like fairness. And with every team playing each other just the once, this is the most equitable fixture of all, although in 2020, some teams have played a stack of home games while others have barely graced their home turf at all. The dirty secret of many who work in the game is that they would also love a 17-game season. The off-season and the pre-season are demanding enough; 22 games can become a grind, especially for the clubs who aren’t in the finals frame. But the key stakeholders that would feel short-changed are the supporters. For Victorian fans in particular, having missed an entire season of going to the footy, to permanently remove five games from the schedule would be a bridge too far. It might be big business to those inside the ‘bubble’, but to millions of Australians it is entertainment and a necessary distraction – and they want it to be part of their lives for six months a year. u 2021 Likelihood: 1/10

FOOTY FRENZY Footy on prime-time TV every night. If it wasn’t for the reality that there was sod all else to do, this might have led to the spike in Australian divorce rates. Certainly, the broadcasters liked it with the Herald Sun reporting last week that Fox Footy’s viewership for rounds nine to 12 was up by 44 per cent on last season.

The dirty secret of many in the game is they would love a 17-game season

If footy was purely a made-for-TV sport, then bring on the frenzy. But of course, it is not. Bums on seats are critical to the AFL economy and for the allure of the game – and midweek night matches pretty much rule out schoolkids, the elderly, early-risers and folks from the bush from attending games. Thursday night games might become even more frequent next year, but that will be about it. u 2021 Likelihood: 1/10

LATER TEAM SELECTIONS Clubs have enjoyed the freedom of only having to name their teams around 6pm the night before their next game, and with games every day of the week it has become something of a necessity. The closer to game-time the teams are selected, the less chance of late changes ahead of the first bounce. But the fans hate it. A Twitter poll last weekend revealed they overwhelmingly (87 per cent) prefer the teams to be announced 48 hours before the game. Doubtless, some of that is driven by fantasy football, but given the likely return in 2021 to a more regimented and structured fixture, the earlier team announcements should return. u 2021 Likelihood: 7/10

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24/8/20 4:26 pm


PHOTO OF THE WEEK

REVVING UP THE LIONS GABBA, AUGUST 23, 2020

u Whenever Charlie Cameron takes the

field, you can just about guarantee two things. He will kick a goal from an impossible angle and the obligatory Harley-Davidson “celebration” will follow. The Brisbane star was at it again last Sunday at the Gabba, threading this tough shot in the second quarter before getting on his Harley. PHOTO: MATT ROBERTS/AFL PHOTOS

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24/8/20 3:36 pm



AFL RECORD PROMOTION

#1 PRESSURE PLAYER

MATT CROUCH ADELAIDE CROWS v GEELONG CATS Adelaide Oval August 23, 2020

u It’s been a year to forget for the

Adelaide Crows but last Sunday against Geelong, one of the competition’s most in-form teams, they showed plenty of positive signs. Adelaide’s overall effort and intensity around the contest throughout was much improved compared with recent weeks and the Crows have Matt Crouch to thank for leading the way in those areas. The 25-year-old midfielder has again been consistent in finding the footy this season and was as busy as ever with 22 possessions, four clearances and two inside 50s. But it was the defensive side of his game which went to a new level in the defeat to the Cats. Numbers from Champion Data prove just that as Crouch amassed a staggering 99.5 pressure points from a massive 33 pressure acts and a career-high 14 tackles, easily surpassing his previous best of 10. Crouch’s elite pressure performance was one of the most prolific of its kind this season. It will take more efforts like Crouch’s to give the Crows a conceivable chance of breaking their 2020 maiden. 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).

ROUND

13

PRESSURE POINTS PRESSURE ACTS

99.5 33

TACKLES 14 TIME ON GROUND

80 mins

TACKLE EFFICIENCY 66.7%

ANDREW SLEVISON

20

20  AFL RECORD

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14/08/2020 4:28:44 PM


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 GUEST

Last year Gold Coast won only three matches. If the Suns won the premiership this year, would that be a record after winning so few matches the year before?

with GRAHAM PILKINGTON

KEVAN CARROLL

JULIE KOVACAVIC, GATTON, QLD

CAN YOU ASSIST?

LOWEST NUMBER OF WINS IN A SEASON BEFORE A FLAG Club

Flag

Previous year

H&A wins (flag year)

Fitzroy

1898

4 (one draw)

10

6th

6

Collingwood

1917

6 (one draw)

10 (one draw)

2nd

4

Fitzroy

1922

6 (two draws)

10 (one draw)

5th

4

Essendon

1901

8

12

3rd

4

Geelong

1925

8

15

5th

7

Adelaide

1997

8

13

12th

5

Richmond

2017

8

15

13th

7

South Melb

1909

9

14

5th

5

South Melb

1918

9

13

3rd

4

Richmond

1980

9

16 (one draw)

8th

7

Carlton

1914

9 (one draw)

13 (two draws)

6th

4

Collingwood

1958

9 (one draw)

12

5th

3

Essendon

1962

9 (one draw)

16

7th

7

22  AFL RECORD

Position

Win difference

BRAVE MAGPIE

u The surname of

DRAMATIC RISE: The Tigers jumped from eight wins in 2016 to a premiership in 2017.

GP: It would be a record, beating Fitzroy’s four home and away wins in 1897 in a 14-game season between eight clubs. The equal third lowest total of eight victories by Richmond – before winning the flag in 2017 – was achieved in an 18-club season playing 22 games. The Tigers moved from a low of 13th on the ladder in 2016 to third the next year. In 2000, Melbourne improved from a previous position of 14th, with only six wins, to the Grand Final but lost to Essendon. The biggest win difference between one season and the next is nine by Hawthorn, premier in 1971 with 19 wins following a 10-win season in 1970, and then Geelong in 2007 with eight (10 wins in 2006, followed by 18 wins in 2007). Fitzroy went close to the record after winning only two games (plus a draw) in 1916. It beat the Magpies in the 1917 preliminary final, but under the rules of the time, Collingwood had a right of challenge as it finished top of the ladder, and won the Grand Final. Due to World War I, only four teams competed in 1916, and six in 1917.

NAME GAME

Collingwood’s young defender Brayden Maynard is of Germanic origin, coming into English via the French given name Mainard at the time of the Norman Conquest. Two old Germanic words form the basis of the name: magin meaning “strength” and hard meaning “brave”/”strong” – qualities which should warm the hearts of Magpies supporters. The Maynard family has a Latin motto which is a play on the name Mainard: Manus Iusta Nardus – “A just hand is a precious ointment”. Maybe Brayden is a future tribunal member? Four Maynards have played at senior level, including Brayden’s father Peter (Melbourne, 1980-81), the best being Adelaide’s Rodney Maynard (1991-95).

u The AFL is keen to know the preferred kicking foot of the following players from the 1980s and ’90s: Shane A. Robertson, Steven Venner (both NM); Colin Seery (NM/Foots); Craig Balme, Gavin Bayes, Darren Bower, David Buttifant, Renato Dintinosante, Robert Fuller, Brett Mahony, Mark McLeod, Michael Nugent, Tony Pastore, Wayne Peters, Chris Pym, Bradley Ross, Mark Summers, Matthew Wall (all Rich); Stephen Roach (Rich/Coll/St K); Kim Kershaw (Rich/Haw); Geoff Berry, Michael Rolfe, Robert Semmens (all Rich/Foots). u If you have knowledge of any of these players, please contact Col Hutchinson via email on col.hutchinson@afl.com.au.

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THE TRADERS

AFL.com.au/fantasy

@AFLfantasy

COOL HAND LUKE: Docker Luke Ryan has been consistent in defence in the past five rounds.

BUY

HOLD

TOM MITCHELL

CALEB SERONG

HAWTHORN

MIDFIELDER The Hawk superstar started the season slow and steady by his standards following his recovery from a serious leg injury. The past three weeks he has turned the corner and is back to full Pig mode with an average of 100.

ZACH MERRETT

FOCUS ON

ESSENDON

THE FORM BEST 22

MIDFIELDER

u Ahead of the next fixture cram, highlighting the form players from the past five rounds may help shape your squad through the final five rounds. The best defenders from rounds 9-13 threw up some surprises. While Jake Lloyd, Rory Laird and Alex Witherden have performed similarly in the past, a pair of Lukes increased their usual output. Luke McDonald was outstanding for the Roos during that period with a huge 123 in round 11, while Fremantle’s Luke Ryan was a model of consistency. Midfielders were less interesting. The eight form players all feature in the top 10 for the season, with the exception of Tom Mitchell.

The Hawk is getting his mojo back after a slow start to the season. Mitchell’s past four scores of 107, 89, 104 and 108 are akin to the massive numbers he produced before breaking his leg last year. The Fantasy Pig has increased his tackle numbers and is back in contention as a captain option. Max Gawn played just two games during the past five rounds and was pipped by Rowan Marshall, who has been solid as second fiddle to Brodie Grundy, the highest-averaging player of 2019. After gaining forward status last week, Dayne Zorko has become the No. 1 forward on form. Behind him are the cream of the crop and the most desirable names you want in your front six.

BEST 22 FROM THE PAST FIVE ROUNDS (minimum of four games)

The Bombers ball magnet has played a variety of roles this year, but appears to be back where he belongs and his scores are reflecting that. He was outstanding against the Tigers with 125, which gives him a three-game average of 101.

TRAVIS BOAK

PORT ADELAIDE

MIDFIELDER If you are looking for an under-priced premium, the Power star has put his hand up with some exceptional form. His past three weeks have been outstanding with scores of 100, 90 and 100.

ALSO CONSIDER:

FREMANTLE MIDFIELDER The rising Dockers star bounced back from a quiet outing to score more than a number of ‘premiums’ coaches had traded him out for last week. His score of 75 is more than serviceable in the midfield and will ensure cash generation

ALEX WITHERDEN

BRISBANE LIONS DEFENDER

The rebounding Lions defender recovered from a slow start which could have ended in disaster to eventually score 59. Thankfully, due to his outstanding form leading into the match, his coaches will receive his average score of 78 in the bye.

SELL ANDREW McGRATH

ESSENDON MIDFIELDER

The developing Bomber mid has dropped off in recent weeks, taking a back seat to Zach Merrett’s domination. He scored his second 60 in the past five weeks, without reaching 80 in that time. Upgrade for a higher ceiling.

STEPHEN CONIGLIO

GWS GIANTS MIDFIELDER

After scores of 103, 90 and 95 leading into his bye, it looked like ‘Cogs’ had turned his season around. Unfortunately since then he has scored 75 and a disappointing 52, making a rage trade a viable option as a midfield upgrade.

JARROD WITTS

JARRYD LYONS

GOLD COAST RUCKMAN

The Lion mid is having an outstanding season but, unfortunately, he let his coaches down last weekend with a disappointing score of 41. Take his average of 88 into the bye and forget this disaster happened.

This year’s ruck scramble has resulted in coaches selecting players that weren’t on their radar. Unfortunately for some, last year’s premium option hasn’t posted the same impressive numbers with a five-game average of 59.

BRISBANE LIONS MIDFIELDER

ALSO CONSIDER:

Zac Williams, Rory Laird, Jake Riccardi

Josh Dunkley, Hugh Greenwood, Nat Fyfe

ALSO CONSIDER:

Josh Kennedy (Syd), Tim Kelly, Jayden Short

POS PLAYER

CLUB

AVE

POS PLAYER

CLUB

AVE

Warnie

Calvin

Luke McDonald

NM

98

F6

Andrew Brayshaw

Frem

85

WARNE DAWGS

Roy

D1 D2

Jake Lloyd

Syd

98

M1

Jack Macrae

WB

106

D3 D4 D5 D6 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5

Rory Laird Luke Ryan Alex Witherden Bailey Williams Dayne Zorko Lachie Whitfield Christian Petracca Steele Sidebottom Dustin Martin

Adel Frem BL WB BL GWS Melb Coll Rich

92 90 82 82 97 94 88 88 86

M2 M3 M4 M5 M6 M7 M8 R1 R2

Tom Mitchell Lachie Neale Lachie Hunter Mitch Duncan Matt Crouch Clayton Oliver Taylor Adams Brodie Grundy Rowan Marshall

Haw BL WB Geel Adel Melb Coll Coll St K

102 100 99 99 98 97 96 92 81

Don’t get caught out by the early games throughout this next block of games. Round 14 starts with a 4.40pm AEST match, with some other early mid-week starting times to follow.

Tom Rockliff played his 200th last round. He has scored 100 or more in 104 games and 120 or more in 64, with a career-high of 190 in 2014. The same year he averaged a record 134.8.

Don’t forget that players on a bye will be awarded their current average as a score. They must have played in the previous round for it to count. This can play into some trade plans.

24  AFL RECORD

AR14 p24 Fantasy 275.indd 24

DESTROY

CALVINATOR

SEN.com.au

24/8/20 3:30 pm


SEAFOOD FROM WA‘S PRISTIN E WATERS TO YO U R PLATE

L E E U W I N C OA S T. C O M

Harvest Road.indd 1

24/8/20 4:22 pm


SPOT THE DIFFERENCE

Can you find players who PLAYED THEIR FIRST GAME in 2020? Tyler Brown Tom Green Connor Budarick Matt Rowell Mitch Georgiades Max King Kysaiah Pickett Thomas Berry Trent Rivers Luke Jackson Caleb Serong

Jake Aarts Atu Bosenavulagi Izak Rankine Elijah Taylor

FACE SWAP Can you figure out the coaches who make up these two faces? 26

AFL RECORD

AR14 p26 KidsPage 275.indd 26

T N T B P B D V R O O V G

V A I R M C E F R S S K I

G S Y K A P C O E E K I X

T E E L N A F P B N C B I

J R O C O A J X O A A I O

S O J R I R R N R V J K M

S N E R G P U G E U B A K

P G B F A I Q U C L L L K

L L E W O R A S E A X J Y

G N I K A R T D Z G R D T

B U D A R I C K E I J T B

M S V F N R P L G S E N W

P D V E I W Y W J K B Y O

D

M I E V B U Z C C K M W B

H R E N J L T I B R O W N

G R W A T U P T J I D W Y

S K Q O P U A P R J V Z O

SPOT THE DIFFERENCE: Assistant coach Craig McRae’s glasses have disappeared; the Puma logo on Tom Lynch’s guernsey has been reversed; the tape on Jason Castagna’s right wrist has been removed; a Tigers emblem has been added to Castagna’s cup; the word ‘Jeep’ has changed to ‘Joop’ on Jake Aarts’ guernsey. FACE SWAP SOLUTION: LEFT – Matthew Nicks, Nathan Buckley, Ken Hinkley. RIGHT – Alastair Clarkson, Justin Longmuir, Chris Scott .

WORD FIND

E S K D O G N W Y B N J W

TO FIN

SEN.com.au

24/8/20 2:13 pm


CC C CC

GG GG G

T E INI RBR R ARA A BEB B L TA T E E R B A E L L L TINTIIN E NN EEEL E

YY Y YY

AA AA A

NN N RAR RR II VI E R SAA NNNN N A INN VI V SRS SA R E R R VEVE S ER

©2020 Zone Properties. Patent No. 2000278904 ©2020 ©2020 ©2020 Zone Zone Zone Properties. Properties. Properties. Patent Patent Patent No.No. 2000278904 No. 2000278904 2000278904 ©2020 Zone Properties. Patent No. 2000278904

TeamZone.indd 1

5/7/20 4:47 pm


The Essential First Step.

Dial Before You Dig.indd 1

24/8/20 4:24 pm


AFL RECORD PROMOTION

POWERED BY

KARCHER RUNNING MACHINE

WERE YOU

8

ATTENTION

9

PAYING 1

What was Gold Coast’s scoreline at quarter-time of last Friday’s game against Carlton? A 0.0 B 0.1 C 0.2 D 1.0

2

Who had the most tackles (11) in that game? A Patrick Cripps B Ed Curnow C Brandon Ellis D Hugh Greenwood

3

How many games were played at Metricon Stadium in round 13? A0 B1 C2 D3

4

How many goals has Bulldog Mitch Wallis kicked in 2020? A 18 B 19 C 20 D 21

5

What was the total games suspension handed to Port Adelaide pair Peter Ladhams and Dan Houston for breaching the AFL’s return to play protocols? A4 B5 C6 D7

6

How many disposals did Travis Boak gather for Port Adelaide against Hawthorn last Saturday? A 34 B 35 C 36 D 37

7

Who took the most marks (nine) in the EssendonRichmond game last Saturday? A Kane Lambert B Marlion Pickett C Matt Guelfi D Jordan Ridley

Who won the Yiooken Trophy for best-on-ground in the Dreamtime Game? A Nick Vlastuin B Zach Merrett C Dustin Martin D Shai Bolton

How many games has Fremantle won this season? A3 B4 C5 D6

10

In which quarters did Sydney kick its only two goals in its loss to the Dockers? A First and fourth B First and third C Second and fourth D Second and third

11

What is Geelong’s win-loss record against Adelaide at Adelaide Oval? A 2-4 B 3-3 C 4-2 D 5-1

12

How many goals does Taylor Walker need to join Tony Modra as the Crows’ all-time leading goalkicker? A6 B5 C4 D3

13

Which St Kilda player missed the final shot at goal to win last Sunday’s clash with the Brisbane Lions? A Max King B Josh Battle C Zak Jones D Jack Billings

Who ran the most kms in the West Coast Eagles v GWS Giants round 13 game? A Josh Kelly B Lachie Whitfield C Andrew Gaff

KARCHER TOTAL SPRINTS Who had the most sprints in the Port Adelaide v Hawthorn round 13 game? A Tom Scully B Steven Motlop C Sam Mayes

KARCHER MAX SPEED Who ran the fastest in the Essendon v Richmond round 13 game? A Adam Saad B Oleg Markov C Brayden Ham

WHO SAID THIS?

Goalkicking continues to be a problem for us

14

Before last Sunday, when was the last time the Lions had hosted the Saints at the Gabba? A 2014 B 2015 C 2016 D 2017

A DAVID TEAGUE

B KEN HINKLEY

C DAMIEN HARDWICK

D CHRIS FAGAN

15 DEADLY DOG: Mitch Wallis has kicked how many goals in 2020?

Who kicked the Giants’ first goal in their loss to West Coast last Sunday? A Brent Daniels B Bobby Hill C Jake Riccardi D Stephen Coniglio

Running Machine C (13.7 kms); Total Sprints A (22); Max Speed B (34.2 km/h); Who said this: D.

ANSWERS: 1 A; 2 D; 3 B; 4 C; 5 B; 6 A; 7 C; 8 D; 9 C; 10 A; 11 B; 12 D; 13 C; 14 B; 15 A Untitled-1 1

AR14 p29 Were You Paying Attention 275.indd 29

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24/8/20 3:31 pm


Hot. Juicy. Tasty. Made with 100% Aussie Beef

Serving Suggestion.

Terms and conditions apply


H C T A M E R T N CE AR10-11 p27 Fixture Openers.indd 1

30/7/20 1:19 pm


LEAGUE LEADERS DISPOSALS

KICKS

Disposing of the ball via a handball or kick.

HANDBALLS

Disposing of the ball by foot.

PLAYER

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 L.Neale (BL)

13 28.0 72.8

1 J.Lloyd (Syd)

12 16.1 73.6

1 J.Macrae (WB)

13 15.3 82.9

1 N.Haynes (GWS)

2 J.Macrae (WB)

13 27.1 74.1

2 L.Ryan (Frem)

12 15.3 82.5

2 T.Mitchell (Haw)

12 15.2 85.2

2 J.McGovern (WCE)

7 7.1

3 S.Pendlebury (Coll)

9 25.9 68.7

3 S.Docherty (Carl)

12 14.6 72.0

3 M.Crouch (Adel)

12 14.9 78.2

3 J.Ridley (Ess)

12 7.0

4 T.Mitchell (Haw)

12 25.5 75.5

4 A.Gaff (WCE)

12 14.5 60.9

4 L.Neale (BL)

13 13.8 82.8

4 B.Sheppard (WCE)

12 7.0

5 C.Oliver (Melb)

12 25.4 73.8

5 B.Maynard (Coll)

13 14.2 76.8

5 C.Oliver (Melb)

12 13.6 86.5

5 L.Whitfield (GWS)

12 6.4 11 6.4

12 7.5

6 Z.Merrett (Ess)

11 25.3 73.7

6 L.Neale (BL)

13 14.2 63.0

6 S.Pendlebury (Coll)

9 13.6 77.0

6 M.Hurley (Ess)

7 J.Lloyd (Syd)

12 25.3 76.9

7 Z.Tuohy (Geel)

12 14.1 61.5

7 C.Petracca (Melb)

12 13.2 79.7

7 L.Duggan (WCE)

11 6.3

8 M.Crouch (Adel)

12 25.1 70.1

8 J.Short (Rich)

13 13.9 85.6

8 N.Fyfe (Frem)

9 12.8 83.5

8 T.Stewart (Geel)

10 6.2

9 C.Petracca (Melb)

12 24.5 69.7

9 Z.Merrett (Ess)

11 13.7 64.2

9 J.Dunkley (WB)

7 12.7 79.8

9 M.Taberner (Frem)

12 6.2

10 S.Sidebottom (Coll)

9 23.7 65.7

10 P.Dangerfield (Geel)

13 13.7 55.6

10 P.Cripps (Carl)

12 11.7 82.9

10 J.Carlisle (StK)

11 6.0

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 T.Hawkins (Geel)

13 7.2

1 C.Petracca (Melb)

12 16.8

1 M.Gawn (Melb)

9 10.2

1 P.Cripps (Carl)

12 3.8

1 T.Goldstein (NM)

13 3.9

2 C.Petracca (Melb)

12 6.9

2 N.Fyfe (Frem)

9 15.8

2 N.Naitanui (WCE)

12 9.2

2 D.Shiel (Ess)

10 3.0

2 E.Yeo (WCE)

10 3.7

3 L.Neale (BL)

13 6.4

3 L.Neale (BL)

13 15.3

3 B.Grundy (Coll)

13 8.8

3 T.Adams (Coll)

13 2.8

3 C.Oliver (Melb)

12 3.7

12 2.8

4 D.Sheed (WCE)

12 3.4

5 J.Lyons (BL)

13 3.3

4 P.Dangerfield (Geel) 13 5.8

4 M.Gawn (Melb)

9 15.1

4 J.Witts (GCS)

13 8.2

4 C.Oliver (Melb)

5 M.Duncan (Geel)

12 5.8

5 N.Naitanui (WCE)

12 14.9

5 S.Lycett (PA)

9 8.0

5 M.Bontempelli (WB) 13 2.7

6 J.Lyons (BL)

13 5.8

6 C.Oliver (Melb)

12 14.9

6 T.Goldstein (NM)

13 7.9

6 J.Kennedy (Syd)

7 2.6

6 H.Greenwood (GCS) 13 3.2

7 D.Martin (Rich)

12 5.8

7 M.Bontempelli (WB) 13 14.4

7 R.O’Brien (Adel)

13 7.6

7 J.O’Meara (Haw)

10 2.5

7 J.Kelly (GWS)

8 D.Zorko (BL)

11 5.7

8 T.Hawkins (Geel)

13 13.8

8 P.Ryder (StK)

9 7.4

8 L.Parker (Syd)

12 2.5

8 B.Crouch (Adel)

8 3.1

9 H.McCluggage (BL) 13 5.7

9 T.Goldstein (NM)

13 13.8

9 M.Pittonet (Carl)

10 7.1

9 L.Neale (BL)

13 2.5

9 P.Cripps (Carl)

12 3.1

10 P.Cripps (Carl)

10 D.Martin (Rich)

12 13.8

10 S.Darcy (Frem)

10 7.1

10 P.Dangerfield (Geel) 13 2.5

10 S.Coniglio (GWS)

12 3.1

PRESSURE POINTS

TACKLES

12 5.6

METRES GAINED

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

PLAYER

MTS AVE

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

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

PLAYER 1 C.Oliver (Melb)

MTS AVE 12 57.2

11 3.2

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

PLAYER

MTS AVE

1 B.Smith (Adel)

12 482

1 C.Dixon (PA)

12 3.0

1 D.Martin (Rich)

2 J.Lukosius (GCS)

13 469

2 M.Taberner (Frem)

12 2.5

2 P.Dangerfield (Geel) 13 5.1

2 H.Greenwood (GCS) 13 56.9

2 B.Parfitt (Geel)

10 6.6

3 J.Short (Rich)

13 459

3 R.Lobb (Frem)

12 2.3

3 S.Bolton (Rich)

12 5.0

3 B.Parfitt (Geel)

10 55.4

3 T.Rockliff (PA)

10 6.4

4 P.Dangerfield (Geel) 13 444

4 J.McGovern (WCE)

7 2.1

4 Z.Merrett (Ess)

11 4.6

4 J.Steele (StK)

13 55.3

4 J.Steele (StK)

13 5.7

12 2.1

5 J.Viney (Melb)

11 4.5

5 J.Anderson (NM)

11 51.7

5 J.Worpel (Haw)

12 5.7

7 2.0

6 J.Macrae (WB)

13 4.5

6 E.Yeo (WCE)

10 50.7

6 E.Yeo (WCE)

10 5.6 12 5.6

12 5.1

1 H.Greenwood (GCS) 13 7.5

5 J.Lloyd (Syd)

12 426

5 L.Casboult (Carl)

6 Z.Tuohy (Geel)

12 418

6 D.Cameron (Coll)

7 B.Maynard (Coll)

13 418

7 M.Gawn (Melb)

9 2.0

7 T.Kelly (WCE)

12 4.4

7 L.Parker (Syd)

12 49.9

7 C.Oliver (Melb)

8 L.Ryan (Frem)

12 417

8 R.O’Brien (Adel)

13 1.8

8 C.Petracca (Melb)

12 4.3

8 D.Zorko (BL)

11 49.8

8 J.Dunkley (WB)

7 5.6

9 B.Williams (WB)

13 414

9 S.Weideman (Melb)

8 1.8

9 O.Florent (Syd)

12 4.3

9 J.Worpel (Haw)

12 49.7

9 J.Anderson (NM)

11 5.5

10 S.Docherty (Carl)

12 413

10 J.Darling (WCE)

12 1.8

10 T.Cotchin (Rich)

9 4.2

10 W.Snelling (Ess)

12 49.5

10 L.Parker (Syd)

12 5.5

32

AFL RECORD

LeadersPlayer.indd 32

SEN.com.au

24/8/20 11:48 pm


OFFICIAL 2020 TOYOTA AFL

PREMIERSHIP SEASON LADDER AFTER ROUND 13, 2020 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 13 1st Yr Qtrs 4th W L pts pts used 2019 Players Won Qtrs W

1 Port Adelaide

13 10 3

0

126

138

894

103

88

706

126.63

40

6 1 0 4 2 0

1W

110

31

31

42

1

0

30

9

2

33

9

2 Brisbane Lions

13 10 3

0

124

159

903

112

97

769

117.43

40

6 0 0 4 3 0

3W

96

41

23

32

3

0

34

7

5

32

5

3 Geelong Cats

13 9

0

141

107

953

99

84

678

140.56

36

5 2 0 4 2 0

4W

108

35

37

16

1

1

32

1

1

32

8

8W

111

41

29

40

0

0

33

4

3

27

4

2W

105

34

28

22

0

0

32

8

1

25

6

4

4 West Coast Eagles

12 9

3

0

121

87

813

97

88

670

121.34

36

8 0 0 1 3 0

5 Richmond

13 8

4

1

123

119

857

103

102

720

119.03

34

5 1 0 3 3 1

6 St Kilda

13 8

5

0

135

88

898

113

106

784

114.54

32

4 1 0 4 4 0

1L

101

34

28

22

1

3

33

11

3

30

8

7 Collingwood

13 7

5

1

107

104

746

103

66

684 109.06

30

4 1 1 3 4 0

1W

86

36

30

30

0

1

39

2

5

25

6

8 Western Bulldogs

13 7

6

0

122

111

843

120

111

831

101.44

28

4 2 0 3 4 0

2W

111

34

33

36

1

0

37

13

5

28

9

9 Melbourne

12 6

6

0

115

95

785

101

94

700

112.14

24

3 4 0 3 2 0

1L

100

32

37

23

1

2

34

16

4

28

10

10 Carlton

12 6

6

0

108

108

756

113

78

756

100.00

24

1 4 0 5 2 0

2W

103

40

16

16

3

2

33

18

3

26

9

11 GWS Giants

12 6

6

0

104

93

717

106

105

741

96.76

24

4 2 0 2 4 0

2L

105

25

18

22

2

0

35

3

5

25

7

12 Essendon

12 5

6

1

101

80

686

115

109

799

85.86

22

2 5 0 3 1 1

2L

79

28

8

26

3

2

37

10

3

17

3

13 Fremantle

12 5

7

0

88

66

594

89

101

635

93.54

20

4 4 0 1 3 0

1W

79

16

17

18

1

2

34

6

6

18

5

14 Gold Coast Suns

13 4

8

1

110

99

759

116

111

807

94.05

18

3 5 1

1 3 0

2L

92

27

35

23

0

2

31

17

6

21

3

15 Hawthorn

12 4

8

0

98

83

671

120

91

811

82.74

16

2 1 0 2 7 0

3L

90

27

23

29

1

0

37

12

3

19

6

16 Sydney Swans

12 4

8

0

88

92

620

107

117

759

81.69

16

2 3 0 2 5 0

1L

74

19

15

25

1

1

38

15

6

18

3

17 North Melbourne

13 3 10 0

105

89

719

125

138

888

80.97

12

2 3 0 1 7 0

4L

119

23

30

26

1

2

37

14

3

17

6

18 Adelaide Crows

13 0 13 0

82

87

579

156

119 1055

54.88

0

0 7 0 0 6 0

13L

71

29

-

36

0

2

38

5

9

13

4

5

Leigh Haussen

AFL UMPIRES 2020 1

Chris Donlon

Games 323  Finals 15

6

Dean Margetts

Games 358  Finals 12

11

Curtis Deboy

Brendan Hosking

Games 165  Finals 2

21

Simon Meredith

Games 380  Finals 33

26

Craig Fleer

31

Paul Rebeschini

Games 9  Finals 0

umpire.afl

7

Jeff Dalgleish

Games 214  Finals 6

Andrew Stephens

Games 124  Finals 3

17

John Howorth

Games 17  Finals 0

22

Nathan Williamson

Games 81  Finals 2

27

Games 132  Finals 1

Nick Foot

Games 149  Finals 1

12

Games 102  Finals 2

16

2

Andre Gianfagna

Games 45  Finals 0

32

Jacob Mollison

Games 250  Finals 2

3

Leigh Fisher

Games 147  Finals 1

8

Brett Rosebury

Games 429  Finals 44

13

Nick Brown

Games 59  Finals 0

18

Ray Chamberlain

Games 326  Finals 27

23

Robert Findlay

Games 246  Finals 5

28

Cameron Dore

Games 21  Finals 0

33

Brent Wallace

Games 73  Finals 0

4

Justin Power

Games 25  Finals 0

9

Matt Stevic

Games 393  Finals 41

14

Hayden Gavine

Games 64  Finals 0

19

Alex Whetton

Games 37  Finals 0

24

David Harris

Games 142  Finals 1

29

Andrew Heffernan

Games 10  Finals 0

34

Games 60  Finals 0

10

Games 122  Finals 1

15

Mathew Nicholls

Games 360  Finals 27

20

Jamie Broadbent

Games 8  Finals 0

25

Shaun Ryan

Games 343  Finals 38

30

Dan Johanson

Games 4  Finals 0

Eleni Glouftsis

Games 37  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

AR14 p33-LadderUmpires.indd 33

Robert O’Gorman

AFL RECORD

33

24/8/20 11:49 pm


2020 TOYOTA AFL PREMIERSHIP SEASON ROUND 1

ROUND 6

Thursday, March 19

Thursday, July 9

Friday, March 20

Friday, July 10

Saturday, March 21

Saturday, July 11

Rich 16.9 (105) vs. Carl 12.9 (81) (MCG) (N) WB 5.4 (34) vs. Coll 13.8 (86) (MRVL) (N)

Geel 11.7 (73) vs. BL 6.10 (46) (SCG) (N) Coll 8.11 (59) vs. Haw 3.9 (27) (GS) (N)

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)

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, March 22

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)

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

Sunday, July 12

ROUND 7

Thursday, July 16

Thursday, June 11

Coll 5.6 (36) vs. Rich 5.6 (36) (MCG) (N)

Geel 5.5 (35) vs. Coll 8.9 (57) (OS) (N)

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)

ROUND 16

Saturday, September 5

North Melbourne vs. Port Adelaide (MS) (N) Sunday, September 6

St Kilda vs. Hawthorn (MS) Geelong Cats vs. Essendon (G) Western Bulldogs vs. West Coast Eagles (MS) (N) Monday, September 7

Melbourne vs. Fremantle (CS) (N) Tuesday, September 8

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

Adelaide Crows vs. GWS Giants (AO) (T) Carlton vs. Sydney Swans (MS) (N)

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

Brisbane Lions vs. Gold Coast Suns (G) (N) Byes: Collingwood, Richmond

Tuesday, August 11

Wednesday, August 12

ROUND 12

Wednesday, September 9

ROUND 17

Friday, July 17

Thursday, August 13

Thursday, September 10

Saturday, July 18

Friday, August 14

Friday, September 11

Saturday, August 15

Saturday, September 12

Sunday, August 16

Sunday, September 13

Monday, August 17

Monday, September 14

Friday, June 12

Ess 7.9 (51) vs. WB 14.9 (93) (MS) (N)

Syd 10.6 (66) vs. GWS 3.7 (25) (OS) (N)

St Kilda vs. West Coast Eagles (G) (N)

Saturday, June 13

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)

Geel 14.7 (91) vs. PA 4.7 (31) (MS) (N)

Geelong Cats vs. Richmond (MS) (N)

NM 8.4 (52) vs. BL 7.11 (53) (MS) Melb 16.4 (100) vs. Coll 6.8 (44) (G) (T) Frem 5.6 (36) vs. Carl 5.10 (40) (OS) (N)

North Melbourne vs. Fremantle (MS) Port Adelaide vs. Essendon (AO) (T) GWS Giants vs. Melbourne (G) (N)

WB 16.15 (111) vs. Adel 8.6 (54) (MS) StK 10.8 (68) vs. Ess 5.3 (33) (G) WCE 12.9 (81) vs. Haw 7.7 (49) (OS) (T)

Carlton vs. Adelaide Crows (MS) Hawthorn vs. Western Bulldogs (AO) Sydney Swans vs. Brisbane Lions (CS) (N)

Rich 8.5 (53) vs. GCS 4.8 (32) (G) (N)

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

Geel 17.6 (108) vs. Haw 7.5 (47) (GMHBA) (N) 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 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

Monday, July 20

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

ROUND 8

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

Syd 5.9 (39) vs. WB 10.7 (67) (SCG) (N) Friday, June 26

GWS 10.6 (66) vs. Coll 9.10 (64) (GS) (N) Saturday, June 27

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) Sunday, June 28

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

Friday, August 21

Saturday, July 25

Saturday, August 22

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

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) Monday, July 27

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

ROUND 9

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

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

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 13

Friday, July 24

Wednesday, July 29

Thursday, June 25

AFL RECORD

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)

Thursday, July 23

Thursday, June 18

34

Sunday, July 19

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) 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

GCS 4.3 (27) vs. Carl 7.18 (60) (TIO) (N) WB 12.8 (80) vs. Melb 7.10 (52) (MS) PA 9.14 (68) vs. Haw 9.4 (58) (AO) (T) Ess 10.1 (61) vs. Rich 10.13 (73) (TIO) (N) Frem 7.8 (50) vs. Syd 2.7 (19) (OS) (N) Sunday, August 23

Adel 5.7 (37) vs. Geel 9.11 (65) (AO) BL 6.14 (50) v StK 7.6 (48) (G) WCE 9.7 (61) v GWS 7.7 (49) (OS) (T)

ROUND 18

Adelaide Crows vs. Richmond (TBC) Brisbane Lions vs. Carlton (TBC) Collingwood vs. Port Adelaide (TBC) Essendon vs. Melbourne (TBC) Fremantle vs. Western Bulldogs (TBC) Hawthorn vs. Gold Coast Suns (TBC) North Melbourne vs. West Coast Eagles (TBC) St Kilda vs. GWS Giants (TBC) Sydney Swans vs. Geelong Cats (TBC)

Monday, August 24

Coll 10.5 (65) v NM 5.6 (36) (G) (N)

ROUND 14

Thursday, August 27

Hawthorn vs. Essendon (AO) (T) Richmond vs. West Coast Eagles (MS) (N) Friday, August 28

Western Bulldogs vs. Geelong Cats MS (N) Saturday, August 29

Port Adelaide vs. Sydney Swans (AO) Fremantle vs. GWS Giants (OS) Melbourne vs. St Kilda (TP) (N) Sunday, August 30

Carlton vs. Collingwood (G) Gold Coast Suns vs. North Melbourne (MS) (N) Byes: Adelaide Crows, Brisbane Lions

ROUND 15

Tuesday, September 1

Hawthorn vs. Adelaide Crows (AO) (T) West Coast Eagles vs. Essendon (G) (N) Wednesday, September 2

Richmond vs. Fremantle (MS) (N) Thursday, September 3

Sydney Swans vs. Melbourne (CS) (T) GWS Giants vs. Carlton (MS) (N) Friday, September 4

Brisbane Lions vs. Collingwood (G) (N) Byes: Geelong Cats, Gold Coast Suns, North Melbourne, Port Adelaide, St Kilda, Western Bulldogs

(T) Twilight match; (N) Night match; (AO) Adelaide Oval; (BA) Blundstone Arena, Hobart; (CS) Cazalys Stadium, Cairns; (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. Note: Fixture is subject to change.

SEN.com.au

AR14 p34-35 Fixture-Scoreboard.indd 34

24/8/20 11:48 pm


SCOREBOARD – ROUND 13 Carlton 1.4 5.7 6.11 7.18 (60) Gold Coast Suns 0.0 2.0 3.2 4.3 (27) BEST: Carlton – Murphy, Weitering, Gibbons, Martin, E. Curnow, Fisher. Gold Coast Suns – Lukosius, Bowes, Miller, Ainsworth. GOALS: Carlton – Gibbons 2, McKay 2, Betts, E. Curnow, Newnes. Gold Coast Suns – Flanders, Lemmens, Rankine, Weller. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Murphy (Carl), 4 Martin (Carl), 4 Walsh (Carl), 3 Cripps (Carl), 3 Jones (Carl), 2 McKay (Carl), 2 Weitering (Carl), 1 Newnes (Carl), 1 Gibbons (Carl). Umpires: C. Deboy, R. Findlay, C. Fleer. Venue: TIO Stadium Western Bulldogs 2.4 4.4 10.5 12.8 (80) Melbourne 1.3 5.5 5.8 7.10 (52) BEST: Western Bulldogs – Bontempelli, Liberatore, B. Smith, Wallis, Macrae, Hunter. Melbourne – May, Viney, Petracca, Weideman, Oliver. GOALS: Western Bulldogs – Wallis 4, McLean, Vandermeer, Liberatore, Bontempelli, B. Smith, Williams, English, Cavarra. Melbourne – Weideman 2, Melksham, Oliver, Fritsch, T. McDonald, Spargo. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 9 Bontempelli (WB), 5 Wallis (WB), 5 Hunter (WB), 4 Liberatore (WB), 3 B. Smith (WB), 2 May (Melb), 1 Johannisen (WB), 1 Macrae (WB). Umpires: C. Donlon, N. Brown, S. Ryan. Venue: Metricon Stadium Port Adelaide 2.3 6.5 7.10 9.14 (68) Hawthorn 4.1 5.2 8.4 9.4 (58) BEST: Port Adelaide – Boak, Rockliff, Lycett, Powell-Pepper, Gray, Clurey. Hawthorn – Mitchell, Worpel, Frost, Cousins, Scrimshaw, Breust. GOALS: Port Adelaide – Dixon 2, Butters 2, Ebert, Gray, Amon, Woodcock, Georgiades. Hawthorn – Wingard 2, Burgoyne 2, O’Brien, McEvoy, Breust, Hanrahan, Impey. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Boak (PA), 7 Worpel (Haw), 4 Butters (PA), 3 Mitchell (Haw), 2 Clurey (PA), 2 McKenzie (PA), 1 Frost (Haw), 1 Byrne-Jones (PA). Umpires: D. Harris, A. Heffernan, J. Mollison. Venue: Adelaide Oval Richmond 1.5 3.8 5.10 10.13 (73) Essendon 1.1 3.1 6.1 10.1 (61) BEST: Richmond – Martin, Bolton, Lambert, Graham, Pickett, McIntosh. Essendon – Merrett, Smith, Saad, Guelfi, McGrath, Parish. GOALS: Richmond – Lynch 2, Riewoldt 2, Bolton, Chol, Lambert, Martin, Rioli, Vlastuin. Essendon – McDonald-Tipungwuti 2, Mosquito 2, Stewart 2, Clarke, Merrett, Snelling, Stringer. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 9 Martin (Rich), 9 Bolton (Rich), 5 Graham (Rich), 4 Merrett (Ess), 2 Baker (Rich), 1 Ridley (Ess). Umpires: M. Stevic, R. O’Gorman, H. Gavine. Venue: TIO Stadium

Geelong Cats 3.2 4.5 6.9 9.11 (65) Adelaide Crows 1.3 3.4 5.6 5.7 (37) BEST: Geelong Cats – C. Guthrie, Steven, Menegola, Duncan, Dangerfield, Hawkins. Adelaide Crows – M. Crouch, Laird, O’Brien, Mackay, Sloane, Hartigan. GOALS: Geelong Cats – Hawkins 3, Stanley 2, Duncan 2, Blicavs, Rohan. Adelaide Crows – Stengle, Sloane, Schoenberg, McAdam, Mackay. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 C. Guthrie (Geel), 8 Duncan (Geel), 3 Dangerfield (Geel), 3 Stanley (Geel), 3 M. Crouch (Adel), 2 Menegola (Geel), 1 Laird (Adel). Umpires: L. Fisher, A. Gianfagna, B. Wallace. Venue: Adelaide Oval

AFLCA Champion Player of the Year Votes

Brisbane Lions 2.5 3.6 6.13 6.14 (50) St Kilda 1.0 3.2 6.3 7.6 (48) BEST: Brisbane Lions – Andrews, J. Berry, Lester, Bailey, Zorko, McCluggage. St Kilda – Steele, Jones, Marshall, Ross, Hill, Membrey. GOALS: Brisbane Lions – J. Berry 2, Bailey, Cameron, Fullarton, McCarthy. St Kilda – Butler 2, Billings, Kent, Marshall, Membrey, Steele. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 8 Steele (StK), 8 Andrews (BL), 6 J. Berry (BL), 5 Bailey (BL), 2 Jones (StK), 1 Ross (StK). Umpires: N. Foot, A. Stephens, S. Meredith. Venue: Gabba West Coast Eagles 4.3 5.4 8.7 9.7 (61) GWS Giants 0.1 1.6 3.6 7.7 (49) BEST: West Coast Eagles – Naitanui, McGovern, Sheed, Sheppard, Gaff, Ah Chee, Barrass. GWS Giants – Kelly, Riccardi, Whitfield, Coniglio, Perryman. GOALS: West Coast Eagles – Darling 3, Ah Chee 2, Naitanui, Kennedy, Gaff, X. O’Neill. GWS Giants – Riccardi 2, Daniels, Coniglio, Lloyd, Kelly, Himmelberg. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 McGovern (WCE), 7 Naitanui (WCE), 7 Kelly (GWS), 2 Gaff (WCE), 2 Perryman (GWS), 1 Rotham (WCE), 1 Riccardi (GWS). Umpires: L. Haussen, B. Rosebury, J. Broadbent. Venue: Optus Stadium Collingwood 1.2 4.3 8.3 10.5 (65) North Melbourne 2.1 3.4 5.5 5.6 (36) BEST: Collingwood – Adams, Pendlebury, Maynard, Sidebottom, Daicos, Grundy. North Melbourne – McDonald, Anderson, Higgins, Tarrant, Dumont. GOALS: Collingwood – Ruscoe 2, Thomas, Daicos, Cox, Appleby, Adams, Pendlebury, Sidebottom, Hoskin-Elliott. North Melbourne – Dumont, Hosie, Scott, Simpkin, Xerri. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: Unavailable at time of print. Umpires: B. Hosking, J. Howorth, R. Chamberlain. Venue: Gabba

Fremantle 1.1 4.4 5.7 7.8 (50) Sydney Swans 1.2 1.4 1.4 2.7 (19) GOALS: Fremantle – Taberner 2, Mundy, Cerra, Frederick, Lobb, Schultz. Sydney Swans – McCartin, Wicks. BEST: Fremantle – Ryan, Brayshaw, Mundy, Taberner, Walters, Fyfe, Schultz. Sydney Swans – Rowbottom, Lloyd, Dawson, Kennedy. AFL Coaches Assoc. votes: 10 Ryan (Frem), 8 Mundy (Frem), 6 Brayshaw (Frem), 3 Cox (Frem), 2 Serong (Frem), 1 Taberner (Frem). Umpires: D. Margetts, N. Williamson, D. Johanson. Venue: Optus Stadium

SANFL ROUND 9

THRILLER: The Lions held off the Saints by two points at the Gabba.

Player

Club

75

Lachie Neale

Brisbane Lions

57

Travis Boak

Port Adelaide

54

Christian Petracca

Melbourne

52

Jack Steele

St Kilda

48

Cameron Guthrie

Geelong Cats

48

Nic Naitanui

West Coast Eagles

44

Taylor Adams

Collingwood

40

Jack Macrae

Western Bulldogs

40

Zach Merrett

Essendon

38

Marcus Bontempelli Western Bulldogs

Note: Leaderboard does not include votes from the round three Essendon v Melbourne match or the round 13 Collingwood v North Melbourne match.

LEADING GOALKICKERS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Player Tom Hawkins Josh Kennedy Dan Butler Charlie Dixon Matt Taberner Tom Lynch Tom Papley Charlie Cameron Jack Riewoldt Mitch Wallis Ben King Jack Darling

Club Goals Behinds % (Geel) 33 18 64.7 (WCE) 28 15 65.1 (StK) 24 8 75.0 (PA) 23 16 59.0 (Frem) 23 8 74.2 (Rich) 21 17 55.3 (Syd) 21 17 55.3 (BL) 21 16 56.8 (Rich) 20 13 60.6 (WB) 20 8 71.4 (GCS) 19 14 57.6 (WCE) 19 6 76.0

WAFL ROUND 6

North Adelaide 5.5 9.7 14.10 15.13 (103) Norwood 0.0 4.1 6.2 8.3 (51) BEST: North Adelaide – Spina, Schwarz, Combe, Hender, Allmond, Chalmers. Norwood – Rokahr, Douglas, McKenzie, Baulderstone, Irra. GOALS: North Adelaide – Hender 4, Minervini 2, Schwarz 2, Moore 2, LeBois 2, Harvey, Jarman, Ramsey. Norwood – Ellison 2, Barry, Douglas, Abbott, Baulderstone, Grigg, Panos.

South Adelaide 4.6 5.7 11.11 13.13 (91) Glenelg 2.2 4.2 4.2 8.2 (50) BEST: South Adelaide – Cross, Haines, Heaslip, Overall, Summerton, Schwarz. Glenelg – Nicholson, Bradley, Snook. GOALS: South Adelaide – Cross 3, Overall 3, McCreery 2, Fitt 2, Andrews, Wilkinson, Heaslip. Glenelg – Kluske 2, McBean, Scharenberg, Yates, Bailey, Park, Reynolds.

Eagles 3.0 5.2 7.4 11.6 (72) Sturt 1.1 1.2 2.4 5.5 (35) BEST: Eagles – Sinor, Toumpas, Rowland, Tsitas, Rowe. Sturt – Slimming, Henderson, Harms, Fahey-Sparks, Wundke, Voss. GOALS: Eagles – Rowe 3, Sinor 2, Tsitas, N. Hayes, Von Bertouch, Jones, J. Hayes, Thompson. Sturt – Morrison 2, Carey, Lewis, Davis.

Central District 0.3 3.6 7.7 10.13 (73) West Adelaide 2.3 5.3 7.3 8.3 (51) BEST: Central District – Marsh, Hoskin, Kelly, T. Schiller, Boyd, O’Brien. West Adelaide – Dunkin, Boyle, Thilthorpe, Squire, Turner, Keough. GOALS: Central District – Hoskin 4, O’Brien 2, Toner, Butcher, Stephenson, Pisani. West Adelaide – Keough 2, May, Turner, Fairlie, Thilthorpe, Waite, Johnson.

East Perth 2.2 6.2 8.4 9.9 (63) Subiaco 2.2 3.5 5.10 7.12 (54) BEST: East Perth – Ramsay, Young, Scott, Kerr, Hille. Subiaco – Stainsby, Kitchin, Braut, Clark, Delahunty, Beverley. GOALS: East Perth – Young 3, Simpson 2, Hille, Magro, Ajang, Amos. Subiaco – Sokol 3, Martin 2, Edwards-Baldwin 2.

Swan Districts 2.2 3.4 5.6 9.8 (62) Peel Thunder 1.1 1.4 3.9 4.9 (33) BEST: Swan Districts – Gault, Noble, Hampson, Turner, Reidy. Peel Thunder – Merrett, Bootsma, Hancock, Thorne, Bogensperger. GOALS: Swan Districts – Hampson 2, Reidy 2, Payne, Noble, Kohlmann, Cipro, Sideris. Peel Thunder – Ballantyne, Randall, Hancock, Sears.

Perth 1.0 4.3 7.4 11.4 (70) Claremont 2.3 3.6 5.10 7.11 (53) BEST: Perth – Grey, Coniglio, McInnes, Taylor, Fisher. Claremont – England, Hardisty, Rogers, Nyhuis, Mountford. GOALS: Perth – Marlin 2, McDonald 2, Masten, Richardson, Baldwin-Wright, Stubbs, Jones, McInnes, O’Driscoll. Claremont – Waterman 4, Hamp, Edwards, McCracken.

West Perth 1.2 2.5 6.7 8.11 (59) East Fremantle 3.1 5.4 7.7 8.7 (55) BEST: West Perth – Nelson, Rasmussen, Meadows, Black, Pegoraro. East Fremantle – Eardley, Bockman, Snadden, Murdock, Winton. GOALS: West Perth – Knott 2, Keitel 2, Lourey, Munns, Lynch, Johns. East Fremantle – Bockman 2, Snadden, Eardley, Bennett, Bailey, Jansen, Riach.

AFL.com.au

AR14 p34-35 Fixture-Scoreboard.indd 35

AFL RECORD

35

24/8/20 11:49 pm


HAWTHORN

ESSENDON

Coach Alastair Clarkson Captain Ben Stratton

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 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47

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

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

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

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2ND QTR

3RD QTR

BEHINDS

FINAL

1ST QTR

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

FINAL

24/8/20 2:46 pm


RICHMOND

WEST COAST EAGLES

Coach Damien Hardwick Captain Trent Cotchin

Coach Adam Simpson Captain Luke Shuey 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 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

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

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 RUSHED

RUSHED 1ST QTR

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2ND QTR

3RD QTR

BEHINDS

FINAL

1ST QTR

2ND QTR

3RD QTR

FINAL

24/8/20 2:46 pm


WESTERN BULLDOGS

GEELONG CATS

Coach Luke Beveridge Captain Marcus Bontempelli

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 46

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

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

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

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24/8/20 2:46 pm


OUR CLUB LOVES THE GAME NOT THE ODDS

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19/8/20 1:53 pm


PORT ADELAIDE

SYDNEY SWANS

Coach Ken Hinkley Captain Tom Jonas

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 36 37 38 39 40 41 44 45 47 48 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 41 42 43 44 45 46 48

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

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

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24/8/20 2:46 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!


FREMANTLE

GWS GIANTS

Coach Justin Longmuir Captain Nat Fyfe

Coach Leon Cameron Captain Stephen Coniglio 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 42 44 46 50

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

RUSHED 1ST QTR

AR14 Teams 275.indd 56

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BEHINDS

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24/8/20 2:46 pm


It’s the new sound of chasing, pacing and racing Listen via the SEN App, Melbourne 1593 AM, Sydney 1539 AM, Brisbane 1053 AM, Gold Coast 1620 AM, Perth 657 AM, Gosford 801 AM, Wollongong 1575 AM, Ingham 96.9 FM and Atherton 99.1 FM


MELBOURNE

ST KILDA

Coach Simon Goodwin Captain Max Gawn

Coach Brett Ratten Captain Jarryn Geary 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 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 42 43 44 45 46 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

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 RUSHED

RUSHED 1ST QTR

AR14 Teams 275.indd 61

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BEHINDS

FINAL

1ST QTR

2ND QTR

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FINAL

24/8/20 2:47 pm


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11/2/20 3:57 pm 6/3/20 2:09


COLLINGWOOD

CARLTON

Coach Nathan Buckley Captain Scott Pendlebury

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 40 41 43 44 45 46 47

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 43 44 45 46 47 48

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

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

RUSHED 1ST QTR

AR14 Teams 275.indd 66

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BEHINDS

RUSHED FINAL

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FINAL

24/8/20 2:47 pm


FLYING YOU THERE safely and securely

We’re offering flights for passengers to 30 destinations from Dubai*. is includes flights from Australia via Dubai to other destinations across Europe, the Middle East and the Americas. For your peace of mind, we’ve implemented a comprehensive set of safety and hygiene measures every step of the way. *Flight commencement dates vary per city. Customers can check the latest network and flight services offering at http://emirates.com/wherewefly. Customers are reminded that travel restrictions remain in place at most destinations, and travellers will only be accepted on flights if they comply with the eligibility and entry criteria requirements of their destination countries. Residents returning to the UAE can check the latest requirements at emirates.com/ae/english/help/flying-you-home/. For more information and full terms and conditions, visit emirates.com/au

WE’RE SIDE-BY-SIDE WITH THE MAGPIES

CGU Insurance. Proudly backing the ambition of the men and women of Collingwood Football Club.

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18/6/20 5:41 pm

22/6/20 11:56 am


GOLD COAST SUNS

NORTH MELBOURNE

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 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

Coach Rhyce Shaw Captain Jack Ziebell BEHINDS

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

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

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

RUSHED 1ST QTR

AR14 Teams 275.indd 71

2ND QTR

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BEHINDS

RUSHED FINAL

1ST QTR

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FINAL

24/8/20 2:47 pm


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.

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5/6/20 5:50 pm


INTRODUCING

Helping your kids stay healthy in today’s world Coles and the AFL are delighted to announce the new Coles Healthy Kicks program, created to inspire young Australians to enjoy healthier, happier lifestyles. This fun and entertaining health and fitness program has been designed specifically to encourage Australian children 7-14 years of age to embrace healthy eating, mindfulness, and exercise.

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Join your host Bianca Hunt at afl.com.au/healthykicks every afternoon as she cooks in the kitchen with AFL and AFLW superstars, and follow strength, mobility and flexibility sessions at home with premiership player James Podsiadly. Get ready Australia. It’s your kid’s time to shine with Coles Healthy Kicks and get stronger every day.

afl.com.au/healthykicks

Good things. Great value. COL3583_AFL_Healthy Kicks_AFL Record_279x210_R1.indd 1

13/8/20 2:00 pm


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