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DRUG DISCOUNT DENIED The family of an 11-year-old Hadspen boy boy living with cystic fibrosis has been left devastated after a potentially life-saving life-saving drug, worth $250,000, missed out out on on subsidised funding for the third time. time. CARLY DOLAN Reports, Page CARLY DOLAN reports, Page 6. 6.
Hadspen’s Hadspen’s Luke Luke Emery, Emery, 11. 11. Picture: Picture: PAUL PAUL SCAMBLER SCAMBLER
XXX DEATH RALLY ‘Dedicated’father, father,49,49, killed in Scottsdale Classic tragedy 'Dedicated' killed in Scottsdale Classic tragedy BY TESS BRUNTON
A FATAL rally car crash claimed the life of a Sorell man described by a close friend as a “fierce competitor” and a “dedicated father”. The 49-year-old man died in a crash near Scottsdale on Saturday.
He was competing in the Scottsdale Classic Rally when he lost control of his Mazda RX7 and hit a tree stump on Williams Hill Road, Forester about 5.30pm. The driver and navigator were removed from the car and first aid was given at the scene, while the race was
called off. Police said the man’s navigator, a 33-yearold man from Launceston, was in a stable condition with multiple fractures at the Launceston General Hospital. Close family friend Tim Gadsby met the driver about 27 years ago through their
passion for motorsports. “We always used to say we’ll go sailing in summer and rallying in winter,” Mr Gadsby said. “He just loved his rallying, it made him who he was.” But they wouldn’t just race together. “We would build our own
rallycars, get them together, get them tested and tuned … it was very hands-on.” They sailed together for 25 years and competed in two Sydney to Hobart races. “[He was] a very successful yachtsman, winning multiple pennant championships on the river over many years.
“He always wanted to be at the pinnacle of his chosen sports.” A dedicated father, Mr Gadsby said the driver “loved being a dad” to his young child with his wife. The Examiner is withholding the deceased’s name upon the family’s request.
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Monday August 21, 2017
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Chamber’s new chief BY HAYDEN JOHNSON
THE incoming head of the Launceston Chamber of Commerce has promised to expose the region’s “untapped jewel”. Next month Neil Grose will replace Jan Davis as the executive of the city’s chamber – eight weeks after it was revealed she would leave. With a background in several sectors including business, communications and tourism, Mr Grose said he was well-placed to take the reins as Launceston entered a new era. In a candid interview, Mr Grose spoke of the optimism the City Deal, City Heart and university relocation created for the region. “It’s got this massive future… there’s so much potential in Launceston,” he said. Mr Grose cited the Tamar River as a focus point. “That’s’ just an untapped jewel for Launceston,” he declared. “Look at cities like Melbourne and Brisbane which really centre their whole city around [their] river. “In Launceston we quite haven’t tapped into that yet.” Mr Grose praised the silo hotel development undertaken by Errol Stewart – but called for additional thoughts. “There’s so much more that can be done and even
though at the moment we’re talking about the health of the river and what we need to do, where the money is going to come – it doesn’t mean we can’t start thinking about how we develop the river and how Launceston revolves around the river more than it actually does,” he said. Mr Grose said increased utilisation of the Tamar River would be one of his many projects. “One of the things I like doing is lots and lots of things at the same time,” he said. He said while large entrepreneurial projects were a must, the chamber needed to pay attention to its members. “We’ve got to talk about the nuts and bolts stuff too like how business can thrive and how we can get more people into Launceston itself because at 5.30pm at night on any given night of the week the place basically shuts down,” he said. “There’s untapped potential to get more people living in the city and that’s not a new concept.” As the city’s loudest advocate for businesses, he promised to lobby for their best interests. “As we head into a state election we’ll obviously be wanting to talk to all the political parties about their platforms which can grow business in the Launceston area,” he said.
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ON FRIDAY evening police conducting speed checks at CampbellTown on the Midlands Highway intercepted two male drivers. Police said two vehicles, being driven by Launceston men both aged 21, were recorded travelling at 108km/h through the CampbellTown 60 km/h zone. Both vehicles were intercepted a short distance away and will be clamped for 28 days. If anyone witnessed these vehicles travelling through CampbellTown about 10.15pm on Friday call 131 444 or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.
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JOIN: Neil Grose will be the new chief executive of the Launceston Chamber of Commerce. Picture: Hayden Johnson
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BREAK O’Day councillor Kylie Wright is expected to move a motion, which aims to acknowledge the traditional land owners, at Monday’s meeting. The motion asks the council to adopt the practise of acknowledgement of country at the beginning of council meetings. Last month, a motion to fly the Aboriginal flag outside the council chambers failed when only three councillors voted for it. The meeting starts at 10am.
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Monday August 21, 2017
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Tasmanian man in Barcelona ‘sick in the stomach’ after attack DELORAINE’S Myles Kirkman was visiting Europe on the trip of a lifetime when terrorists used a van to plough into pedestrians in Barcelona's Las Ramblas tourist area. Mr Kirkman is working as an au pair in Barcelona and had been to the tourist hot spot many times, the most recent being three days prior to the attack. “As soon as I found out the news I felt sick in the stomach and then sad for those who were affected,” he said. “I would say that the mood at the moment is one of mourning but there is also this sense of unity and resilience.” Mr Kirkman said the attack did not make him fearful to keep travelling because he knows that is exactly what the terrorists hoped to achieve. “You can't let them get to you … [but] my thoughts go out to those affected by the terrorist attack here in Barcelona,” he said. “I will be in Barcelona until the middle of next month. I will then see a bit more of Spain before travelling
TRAVEL: Myles Kirkman outside the Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya, the national museum of Catalan visual art located in Barcelona.
to Nepal and I will be back home in December.” He made sure to contact his family in Tasmania before they heard about it on
the morning news. “Back home in Australia it was early in the morning when the attack happened … I told them that I was fine
and not to worry about me,” Mr Kirkman said. “If they had of heard about the attack before they heard from me then they would
have been very worried.” Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop has confirmed four Australians were hurt in the attack.
At time of writing the fate of a missing sevenyear-old Australian boy was unknown. ■ Read more page 11.
Racist attack ‘deplorable’ BY TESS BRUNTON
LAUNCESTON Mayor Albert van Zetten has condemned a racially motivated verbal attack, calling it “pathetic” and urging the community to take a stand against racism. His comments followed a incidence of racism against a Melbourne-based, Japanese professional ballroom dancer while he was in Launceston for the Tasmanian Open DanceSport Championship on August 12. Earlier, competition or-
ganiser Andrew Palmer said the dancer was verbally harassed and sworn at by a stranger outside a Launceston CBD restaurant because of his appearance. Alderman van Zetten congratulated Mr Palmer for coming forward with the story, “as difficult as it may be for us as a community to hear”. “After a fantastic event like this, which brings dollars, visitors and buzz to our city, it's incredibly disappointing to hear about such a disgust-
Mayor Albert van Zetten
ing and deplorable incident,” he said. “However, like any community, we have a minority
of sad and small-minded individuals who think they're tough for hassling strangers in the street.” He urged the community to take a stand against “pathetic” racist attacks. “As a community we need to call racism and intolerance out if we encounter it, and deplore it in the strongest possible terms,” Alderman van Zetten said. “The Launceston I know is a welcoming city; we celebrate diversity and we don't care about colours or
creeds unless they're on a sports jumper.” The success of Harmony, the Heritage Forest Community Garden and similar events and initiatives showed Launceston embraced diversity, Alderman van Zetten said. “I can only say to the victim that the person responsible for this garbage is not representative of Launceston; we're truly sorry this happened.” However, Migrant Resource Centre Northern
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Tasmanian chief executive officer Ella Dixon said racism was not out of the ordinary. “It is unfortunate that discrimination in all forms remains commonplace,” Ms Dixon said. “Everyone should be able to live their lives without fear or experiencing harrassment, intimidation or discrimination because of their race, she said. “There is still work to be done because I believe that in Australia we have a high level of low-level intolerance.”
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Monday August 21, 2017
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Hung Parliament possible Hodgman reveals re-election targets BY MICHELLE WISBEY
THE government has laid out its plan for Tasmania’s future, but the announcement came as Deputy Premier Jeremy Rockliff said there was a “very real possibility” of a hung Parliament. Premier Will Hodgman launched his 43-point plan for the direction of the state on Sunday, a list of targets the government will aim to achieve by 2022 if re-elected. The plan includes for 90 per cent of all contracts to go to Tasmanian-based businesses, a 50 per cent rise in new mining ventures, a 20 per cent reduction in the suicide rate, and three quarters of students completing their Tasmanian Certificate of Education. Speaking to State Council delegates, Mr Hodgman said more information on the government’s policies to achieve these targets would be released in the coming months. “It’s a plan to build on the gains we’ve made since the election, and it is a plan that you can trust us to deliver,” he said. “Building a stronger economy and creating more jobs
remains the number one priority of my government. “A job provides someone with the best opportunity to be their best in life and a strong economy provides the foundation for a stronger community.” Mr Hodgman said there was a lot more that the government would share between now and the state election, which is due in March next year. “It’s certainly not job done, it’s job just begun,” he said. “[Labor] may have a more popular leader, I accept that. “But today we’ve released the next stage of our plan for Tasmania, for your future, for a re-elected majority Liberal government.” The government’s targets went on to include a 10 per cent increase in affordable housing for youth at risk, a 33 per cent decrease in the bushfire risk to lives and property, and a 50 per cent increase of the average visitor spend. But Opposition deputy leader Michelle O’Byrne said the plan was an annunciation of what Mr Hodgman should have already been doing since he won government in 2014.
STATE COUNCIL: Premier Will Hodgman launches the government's 43-point plan for Tasmania's future at the Liberal Party State Council in Launceston. Picture: Paul Scambler
“I am completely stumped that a government that has been in power for 40 months, nearly their entire term, has suddenly decided the targets that Tasmanians have been
expecting them to deliver the entire time,” she said. Greens leader Cassy O’Connor described the targets as “thin, pre-election spruiking”.
“There’s nothing about some of the really significant social, economic, and environmental issues facing Tasmania,” Ms O’Connor said. She also said that polls had
shown there was a possibility Tasmania would be moving towards a balance of power Parliament. The government is yet to reveal a date for the election.
Greens reveal Bass election candidates BASS Greens MHA Andrea Dawkins will hold the number one spot on the electorate's ticket at the next state election, the party revealed on Sunday. Ms Dawkins, who was first elected to Tasmania’s lower house in 2015, will be followed on the ticket by Emma Anglesey, who ran for
the Launceston seat in the Legislative Council earlier this year. Launceston City Council alderman Emma Williams will hold third spot on the ticket, with anaesthetist Tom Hall in fourth spot and James Ireland, who is a town planner, in fifth. Ms Dawkins said she was
“ridiculously proud” of the candidates on the ticket. “This is a group of people who bring a lot to the Launceston community, as I hope I have done,” she said. Greens leader Cassy O’Connor said the Bass ticket was a sign of the quality of people who were prepared to stand for the party.
Ms O’Connor revealed the candidates outside the Launceston Country Club, a launch spot strategically chosen following the Tasmanian Liberal Party’s State Council at the weekend, which was held at the same location. She said the government had sent a message to the community that it would
stand by Federal Hotels. “We stand ready to defend this island from poker machines,” Ms O’Connor said. “It’s the signal the Liberal Party has sent to the Farrell family by having their state conference here, that is the concern.” Liberal Party state director Sam McQuestin said on so-
cial media that commercial rates were paid for the conference venue. Opposition deputy leader Michelle O’Byrne said the party would be making its policy position on poker machines prior to the election, which is due in March next year. – MICHELLE WISBEY
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Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
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Running debacle in Derby BY HOLLY MONERY
LAUNCESTON marathon race director John Claridge has added to the debate over a funding deal between organisers of the Tassie Trails Fest and the Dorset Council. The event, which was due to be held in March 2018 in Derby, is unlikely to go ahead after both sides were “unwilling to compromise�
on the date the running fest should be held. Event organiser Chris Ord said the council had backed out of the final year of the funding deal because the weekend was already booked with a mountain biking event. “I will categorically say it was Mr Ord who was the instigator of the combined event format, as he and I
have been in negotiations since the inception event,� Mr Claridge said. “We have openly and wantingly spoke about a combined running and mountain bike festival.� Mr Claridge said his company Ultrain was heavily involved with the festival this year and were about to announce shared management with Mr Ord's company,
Tour deTrails. He said both men were “extremely open� to a date change. “The third day is a very small run and could easily be incorporated into day one or two,� he said. “It was actually myself that informed Mr Ord nearly three months ago that a mountain bike event was attempting to gain the weekend.� Mr Claridge said despite
the unrest the Tassie Trail Fest was “not dead�. “Mr Ord and I are currently seeking another venue and will make Tassie Trail Fest happen in 2018 around the same time as the previous event,� he said. In Monday’s council agenda Dorset Council’s general manager Tim Watson said the decision was about value for money.
“It is disappointing that Mr Ord has chosen to criticise myself and council as shortsighted when all that is being done is ensuring that community is getting a return on its investment,� he said. “Chris Ord readily admits himself that the mountain bike tourism associated with Derby will continue irrespective of the holding of this event.�
Next generation continue Pierre’s legacy
CHANGING OF THE GUARD: Pierre's owner Rohan Birchmore (centre) has asked front of house manager Amy Hallam and head chef Jonathon Barnard to become the restaurant's new operators. Picture: Neil Richardson
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AFTER 10 years Rohan and Sarah Birchmore have said farewell to Launceston restaurant Pierre’s but they are leaving it in experienced hands. Front of house manager Amy Hallam and head chef Jonathon Barnard will lease the restaurant space from the Birchmore family. “Jono and Amy between them have been working with restaurant for so many years and to protect the longevity and look after the loyal customer base that we’ve got, it was the most logical decision for us,� Mr Birchmore said. “We did a refurbishment 10 years ago and the family owns the building, so it was very important to us because we love it.� Mr Birchmore said while there were others who expressed interest in the business the best arrangement was to agree to the joint partnership.
“We are very excited, especially to continue such a legacy and keep it going for hopefully another decade,â€? Miss Hallam said. “It would be such a shame to see it disappear and that was a big factor for us ‌ we knew there was a possibility that someone could come in and takeover and completely change it into something else.â€? Miss Hallam started at the business seven years ago and Mr Barnard came to the business as a third year apprentice six years ago. “It gives me great comfort that we have done the arrangement with Jono and Amy because they know the business, they know what it stands for and they know the customer,â€? Mr Birchmore said. “But with their added twists on things ... these two have got the confidence and abiltiy to do that because I have seen them do it.â€? – HOLLY MONERY
URGENT RECALL FOR PRODUCT CORRECTION (Onl a ecte pro uct is to e returne a ter a isual inspection)
HEPARIN SODIUM 5000IU/5mL (porcine mucous) injection ampoule 50 pack AUST R 49232 On the Cartons: (B): A473, EXP: FEB 19 On the Ampoules: A473, EXP: FEB 19 P er (Perth) LIGNOCAINE H DROCHLORIDE 1 (50m /5mL) injection BP ampoule AUST R 49296 On the Cartons: (B): A313, EXP: NOV 17 On the Ampoules: A313, EXP: NOV 17 Following consultation with the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), and in the interests o patient sa et , er Australia is initiating a ecall or roduct orrection or the a o e mentioned atches , as the ma contain incorrect product All other stren ths o HEPARIN SODIUM an LIGNOCAINE H DROCHLORIDE ampoules are not a ecte All other atches o HEPARIN SODIUM 5000IU/5mL an LIGNOCAINE H DROCHLORIDE 1 (50m /5mL) are not a ecte t has come to our attention that in one instance, ignocaine mg in m ampoules were ound inside o a o o eparin in m ampoules eparin is used as a lood thinner in people suscepti le to lood clotting and ignocaine is an anaesthetic To date, er elie es this to e an isolated case in ol ing one communit pharmac in
egardless o this, er is underta ing this ecall or roduct orrection as a precaution The pro a ilit o nding more a ected stoc rom these atches is considered as lo CONSUMER ACTION: er re uests that consumers isuall inspect the contents o product rom these atches ou nd an ignocaine ampoules inside a eparin o or an other anomal , please segregate that stoc immediatel prior to returning it to our pharmac As this is a ecall or roduct orrection, product that has een isuall inspected and not ound to show an anomalies ma e used as normal, until the e pir date gi en on the o and on the ampoules The nature o this t pe o recall action will acilitate uninterrupted suppl o these products Follo in this isual inspection, onl a ecte packs shoul e returne to our pharmac er appreciates our cooperation in this matter ou ha e an concerns a out this matter, please contact our local pharmac to discuss For more in ormation or clari cation, please contact er edical n ormation on ! ""#
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Monday August 21, 2017
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Dr Katrena Stephenson
Anger at TasWater takeover inquiry
STAYING STRONG TOGETHER: Gabrielle Emery, 8, Donna Emery, Luke Emery, 11, and Dean Emery, all of Hadpsen. Picture: Paul Scambler
Potentially life-saving drug not funded again BY CARLY DOLAN
FAMILIES have been left devastated after a potentially life-saving drug missed out on subsidised funding for the third time. Hadspen’s Luke Emery, 11, lives with cystic fibrosis, and his family had hoped the drug, Orkambi, worth $250,000, would be put on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. “Every time it went up for considering, there were high hopes, especially the first time I guess,” his mother, Donna, said. Orkambi showed positive results for cystic fibrosis patients in a medical trial, but the Pharmaceutical Benefits
Advisory Committee refused to recommend it to the PBS on Friday. According to media reports, the committee was continuing to negotiate with drug company Vertex over the price. The drug has been found to reduce the need for hospital visits, some daily medications and physiotherapy sessions. Luke is currently on 13 tablets a day, just to keep him functioning normally. “When you add into that getting sick, which is much more common with a condition like he has, he then has to add in more medications, more treatments, more physio, and then hospital visits on top of that,” Mrs Emery said. “Our main aim is to keep
him well and keep him from having to have all that extra medication and that’s what this particular medication can do. It can keep him well at that same maintenance level for longer so that he doesn’t have to face hospital, so that he doesn’t have to take extra medication on top of what he already has.” Because of his cystic fibrosis, Luke has low immunity and is at greater risk of infection, so his parents have to constantly be aware of people’s health around him – at school, out in the public, and at home. “Anytime family is unwell, we have to ask them to stay away, especially in winter time in Tasmania, like the flu
epidemic at the moment is a real worry. It’s a real worry every year.” And the more times Luke contracts an infection, the more irreparable damage is done to his lungs. “We can get a cold and get over that cold. Luke, on the other hand, can get a cold and he’s more susceptible to bacteria getting into his lungs and that bacteria can sit in his lungs and grow there and cause ongoing infections that keep coming back all the time. “He has a certain lung function percentage and once that drops down, it is very hard, if not impossible, to get up again.” Luke has been in and out
of hospitals his whole life. When he does get sick, it’s a difficult road to recovery. “It’s similar to someone who’s suffering any other illness that causes immunity deficiency - like cancer and things like that. It can cause him irreparable damage to his lungs if he is exposed to something - a virus that causes him to become unwell. It can take years off his life.” Cystic fibrosis has an average life expectancy of about 37. “For someone who’s 18 or 19, they could be on 30 per cent lung function - they need it now,” Mrs Emery said. “The more time we waste arguing about money, the more lives are lost.”
Council to discuss highway plans THE Northern Midlands Council is expected to approve the Midland Highway Perth Link Road upgrade plans at its Monday meeting. The council’s general manager, Des Jennings, recommends that the council approve the plans, as long as conditions such as the plans not being altered are met.
The recommendation also asks the Department of State Growth to have a detailed landscaping plan to Mr Jennings within six months of the development commencing and for the landscaping to be completed 12 months after the project’s completion. Six representations against
the project were received by the council. The council will also receive the Longford Recreation Ground’s 2030 masterplan. The masterplan includes upgrades to the town’s football, cricket, little athletics club facilities and Health Revival Longford. The upgrades
are expected to cost more than $7.5 million. The report, undertaken by Lange Design, says the facilities are used all year. The proposed upgrades would see the visitor’s grandstand demolished and a new one constructed, lighting and scoreboard upgrades, and a widened entry to the
ground to eliminate traffic congestion. Public netball and tennis courts would also be constructed. The main grandstand’s seating will be replaced, with the area to be cleaned and painted to refresh it. The public meeting starts at 5pm. – TARLIA JORDAN
LOCAL government has hit out over the three week submission deadline for the Legislative Council’s select committee investigating the proposed state government takeover of TasWater. The calls for submissions were advertised on the weekend with a closing date of September 8. Local government association of Tasmania chief Dr Katrena Stephenson said the short time frame was likely to hamper proper debate. “LGAT supports the broad terms of reference which will allow the committee to consider the flawed concept and legislation, deficient business case, and illegality of the government’s hostile takeover,” she said. “However, the timeframes are incredibly short given the significance and complexity of this issue.”
Bingo dabber and book
BINGO NIGHT RAISES $7650 AT ITS second annual bingo night the Rotaract Club of Tamar Valley raised $7650, with half of the proceeds to go towards supporting Sarah’s Chairs. The family-run group are buying chairs which convert into fold-out beds for Launceston’s intensive care unit. About 180 people attended the event at the Grand Chancellor on Friday, August 18.The other half of the cash will go towards Rotaract projects such as the Eddie Rice Camps and a Philippines scholarship.
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WINTER RELIEF APPEAL NEWS
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER 7
]
READY TO HELP: Volunteer Ann offering advice to people in need at the Saint Vincent de Paul Society's new base in George Town.
UNDERSTANDING OTHERS: Regional president Hetty Binns at the Saint Vincent de Paul's base in George Town, opposite Star of the Sea Catholic College.
Winter Relief APPEAL
ASSISTANCE HERE: The waiting room of the new centre at George Town from which Vinnie's volunteers can offer people a helping hand if they are in need.
Poverty cycle a battle Vinnie's George Town outreach BY HOLLY MONERY
G
EORGE Town accounts for about five per cent of Northern Tasmania’s population but makes up 15 per cent of requests for assistance from the St Vincent de Paul Society. To better cater for the support required in the area the charity has set up in a new location, staffed by volunteers, to offer a helping hand to others in need. For the past six weeks people like Michael have volunteered their time at the new base to offer food, advice or referrals to other services. “Twelve months ago I became more involved because there had been a push for involvement more generally,” Michael said. Vinnie’s has serviced George Town for many years according to regional president Hetty Binns. Now the organisation is making stronger links with local school Star of the Sea Catholic College and focusing on ways to break the cycle of poverty experienced by some in the community. “The essence to why we are here is because the need is here, the need is disproportionately here,” Michael said. “It’s a great area of natural beauty and a great area to live in and these people deserve their place on the earth just like the rest of us and we are trying to help.” The volunteers’ ultimate goal is to be there to offer whatever assistance they can and overall they believe there is great empathy within their community, despite
FOOD OFFERING: Volunteer Michael says the main goal is to help others at the Saint Vincent de Paul's base in George Town. Pictures: Scott Gelston
the disadvantage. “There’s high unemployment, low education attainments, there is certainly low retaining of people who go onto higher education, they just don’t come back here because there is no opportunity for them,” Michael said. “The people left here are those who haven’t achieved, they are on employment or disability, with low income and unsuitable housing.” The quality of housing is a major challenge, often many have no insulation and poor heating, which ultimately increases living costs. Many houses, Michael says, were built in the 1950s and 1960s, and are not up to scratch. “They are on incomes that don’t support living in those premises and the welfare dollar is what it is,” Michael said. “These people can’t afford one thing to go wrong in their lives, they can’t afford birthday parties, they can’t afford illness, they can’t afford a car to break down – that is if they can afford to have a car. “If one thing goes wrong
‘‘
These people can’t afford one thing to go wrong in their lives, they can’t afford birthday parties, they can’t afford illness, they can’t afford a car to break down – that is if they can afford to have a car. If one thing goes wrong they are absolutely stuffed.
Vinnie's volunteer Michael they are absolutely stuffed.” He said there can be a feeling of hopelessness but there were ways to turn that sentiment around. “We use food as a medium because people might come in because they can’t pay an urgent bill or there has been an illness or whatever, so we might give them food to help take that component out of their budget,” Michael said. “Often we are trying to get them to own the problem, it becomes a question of being responsible and you
are always on your guard for people who use the welfare system [for the wrong reason] but by the same token I would rather them use that and help people in genuine need if the odd one gets through.” The volunteers see “some awful situations” which they readily admit they are not capable of dealing with. They do their best to help with what they can and then refer people to other services such as Catholic Care, Bapcare and Anglicare.
An important step is finding out as much as they can about the people in need. The volunteers say that if they can fully understand a problem they know who the best people are to help and the best forms of assistance, but sometimes getting people to open up can be a struggle. “We see a lot of people with mental health issues,” Ms Binns said. “Mental illness can make it so you make poor decisions, but also it could be the situation itself could bring on depression if you have a sense of hopeless, people need a sense of hope.” Michael agreed, saying there was a sense of dignity in work. “These people here, who haven’t for whatever reason achieved through their education, are left here without that dignity, there is no work for them,” he said. And without that education or financial literacy many people get caught out with payday loans or rental loans. It can see more than a third of someone’s income
going towards a debt they have no understanding about how to fix. “It’s about trying to break that cycle, its a generation cycle of poverty and deprivation,” says Michael. “I have a theory that you have really got to work with the young girls, the women and nurturers of future families. “I think you have to instill in them some higher education standards and give them some comprehension of family budgeting, choosing the right partner and making good decisions then we might have a chance and that’s why we are involved.” The Examiner’s Winter Relief Appeal partners with four Launceston charities, the St Vincent de Paul Society, the Launceston Benevolent Society, the Salvation Army and the Launceston City Mission. The appeal will continue until August 31 and we hope to raise more than $50,000. Donations to can be made at the newspaper's Launceston, Hobart and Devonport offices and at businesses displaying a Winter Relief Appeal tin.
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Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
Stunning snowfall at Ben Lomond
Market on track for sale record Agent reveals why Launceston shines BY HAYDEN JOHNSON
THE relocation of the University of Tasmania coupled with rising property prices on mainland Australia is contributing to Launceston’s economic growth, an industry representative has declared. The city is the biggest improving area in a Tasmanian real estate sector that is on track to hit record sale results. The Real Estate Institute of Tasmania June quarter revealed Launceston had a 14.9 per cent increase in the number of sales for the first half of 2017. Institute president Tony Collidge said Tasmania could achieve more than 11,000 sales worth almost $4 billion – a feat not achieved for a decade. He attributed the relocation of the University of Tasmania to Inveresk as providing economic growth, optimism and “endless opportunities” for the region. “The impact of that alone and how it will change Invermay – it will restructure the city,” he said. Mr Collidge said Tasmania’s property prosperity was being partly driven by skyrocketing prices on the mainland. “We don’t realise how big Tasmania now is on the mainland… people are becoming more aware of our marketplace and people are really considering with the rising prices on the mainland, looking at Tassie,” he said. The value of property in
‘‘
It’s now a four year old but it’s still stuck in a three year old’s clothing. Tony Collidge
Tasmania is also on the rise. The median price for Launceston was $292,000, up 4.3 per cent on last year. But while the sector is traversing time of optimism Mr Collidge said a political climate could change that. “A change of government very well could turn things upside down if we ended up with a hung parliament because you’re not getting decisions made,” he said. But with more investors and an increasing population, Mr Collidge said it was understandable for the state to suffer “growing pains”. He had quite an analogy for the issue it was causing as pressure increased on Tasmania’s roads and health system. “I regard the state as being almost like a three-year-old child that all of a sudden has grown,” he said. “It’s now a four-year old but it’s still stuck in a threeyear-old’s clothing.” Sandy Bay is the most expensive suburb in Tasmania with a median price of $851,500; followed by Blackstone Heights at $543,000 and Spreyton at $464,000. Queenstown has the lowest median price at $77,000.
PARADISE: As people hit the slopes on the weekend they were greeted with a blue sky and fresh powder on the ground. Picture: Supplied
A COLD front across the weekend has seen Ben Lomond receive a dusting of snow late in the season. Saturday and Sunday provided a picture-perfect day on the slopes near Launceston, with blue sky and no breeze greeting snow-goers. Overnight on Friday howling winds saw the temperature drop to almost -5 degrees. On Sunday morning staff at the Ben Lomond Snow Sports store tipped the best day of the season had arrived – with blue sky and no wind at the summit. The Bureau of Meteorology is predicting cold mornings will linger at Ben Lomond for the remainder of the week with temperatures expected to drop to a low of -5 degrees overnight before a daytime high of 3 degrees. Snow showers are predicted to dust areas above 1000 metres on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. People venturing up Jacob’s Ladder to Ben Lomond in their own vehicle must carry chains, or take the bus. The snow season is expected to last for a few more weeks before warmer days set in for spring. – HAYDEN JOHNSON
Say g’day to new health fundraiser LAUNCESTON’S annual Blue Sky Ball is no longer. For the past 11 years, the Blue Sky Ball has raised funds to support positive mental health charities. Last year more than $10,700 was raised. Event organiser Rick Marton said the cost involved in putting on such a large event was a major factor in the cancellation. “The amount made from the event mostly came from sponsors and auctions, not from the event itself,” Mr Marton said. A new initiative has instead been put in place. The new event, Say G’day Day, will ensure that all funds
raised will go directly to charities and local health initiatives. “It’s a really basic idea. Our aim is to make our community a friendlier place. We’ll be able to ask every member of the community to get involved,” said Mr Marton. “Some people might go the whole day without hearing a g’day, and we want to change that. We want to become the the friendliest region in Australia,” he said. Supported by the Rotary Club of Central Launceston, Say G’day Day will replace the Blue Sky Ball in promoting positive mental health. – KASEY WILKINS
NEW INITIATIVE: Event organiser Rick Marton has launched a new initiative called Say G'day Day to replace the Blue Sky Ball.
examiner.com.au
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
9
NEWS
Passion for planning A
S THE new general manager of George Town Council, Justine Brooks-Bedelph has some challenges ahead. A budget with an underlying deficit of $1,122,500, community calls for more transparency and unlocking the region’s potential are at the top of her priority list. She was formerly the council’s development services manager. Local government reporter HOLLY MONERY sat down with Ms Brooks-Bedelph after her first week on the job. HM: What is your vision taking on the general manager role? JBB: My vision is that I can just see that there's so much untapped potential in the region, particularly even from a planning point of view. But not only that, socially and economically, and with the industry. And so I've started to do some strategic plans. So I've done one for Hillwood, and we're doing one for Bell Bay at the moment, so I'll work that out, which I'm really excited about. And there's just so much opportunity that hasn't fully been fleshed out, and could make George Town a really happening, pumping place. HM: Something which probably contributes to those potential missed opportunities is the high turnover of general managers and acting general managers over the past few years. How do you plan to address some of the issues that are in the community, to create that vision? JBB: Look that's a good question, and it's a reasonable and fair question. And I can't really speak to previous GMs, what they had in their mind or what their situations were. What I can say as an observer is I've spent five
TOP JOB: Justine Brooks-Bedelph was appointed as the general manager of George Town Council on July 20. Ms Brooks-Bedelph began work at the council in 2012 as a municipal planner. Picture: Neil Richardson
years building a very strong and trusting, and open, transparent relationship with the community through a number of heightened projects. I've got that good relationship, great relationship with the councillors. And that's come from me being open and transparent, and giving them information that they've wanted. And I think it's all led to this, that my relationship with the community and all the community groups that I'm involved in, my relationship with the councillors and my relationship with the staff. HM: How important is transparency to you? JBB: It's a must. Obviously there are some things that we can't share, and sometimes the community or the councillors might not understand. Because of privacy reasons or non-disclosures that we might have signed and in those legal instances, we can't share everything.
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I can just see that there's so much untapped potential in the region Justine Brooks-Bedelph
But what my message to the community and to the councillors is, if I'm able to legally share this information with you, and there is no absolute reason why I shouldn't, I will give it to you, with an understanding that with that comes some trust. A level of trust that you use that information to support the community, not to tear it apart. I don't believe there are people out there that are malicious and want to do that. There's so many amazing people out there that have done some amazing things. And they've lived here forever and they've got the love of the place, they'd probably never live any-
where else. They're the key people that can make this place successful. I think there have been a lot of misunderstandings perhaps, that haven't necessarily been fleshed out. Let's sit down and have some really open, honest discussions with one another. We're all unified in wanting to see this place succeed. We know that it's capable of it, more than capable of it, let's pull together. Let's use your resources, our resources, and together we could just make this incredible team. HM: Tell me a little bit about your background and how you've ended up here. JBB: My background specifically to George Town
is I started just over five years ago as the municipal planner. And then from that was promoted to the role of development services manager, which looks after not only planning, building, plumbing, surveying, environmental health, animal control, NRM and environment. So it's quite a broad portfolio. Just doing that role, and in the role of planner and development services manager, you get to see the whole municipal area, because you're having a look at developments that are occurring throughout the region. And I just fell in love, the place is just beautiful. The coastline is magnificent. The beaches we have, the people we have, I just have a real heart for the place. And so I was actually in the throes of setting up my own company, when the general manager's position came up. And I thought,
‘What a fabulous position to really achieve some of these goals and visions that I have for the area from this seat’. So that's why I applied for it, and am honoured to have been offered the position. HM: What about preGeorge Town? Were you in local government before that? JBB: Yes I was. I was at the West Tamar Council for five years and I guess there's a bit of history behind that too. I was with Telstra in a senior role for, in the end for up to ten years and part of my staff's job was to roll out the Next-G phase. During that phase I think I'd got to about 30 and thought, ‘Is this really what I want to do with my life?’ and I had actually already had a desire to do architecture. So I decided I was actually going to ... maybe call it a mid-life crisis, whatever you want to call it, I went back to UTAS. I started doing their environmental design course and while I was there, I was offered a cadetship with the West Tamar Council as a town planner. So I took that up, and I was working and doing town planning at the same time, and it just grew from there. I just loved the job. I think it's a profession that not a lot of people understand, but town planners are really the place setters if you like. Often they're misunderstood as the people that always say no, but in fact they're doing a lot of strategic work to make sure that the environment’s that we live in are friendly and social places. There's more to it than just saying, ‘Yes, you can have that shed’ or ‘No, you can't.’ Yeah, so it sort of holistically grew like that. ■ The full interview is available onThe Examiner’s website.
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10
THE EXAMINER
NEWS
Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
Successful night for northern Tas builders THE VOICE: Australian music legend John Farnham to headline tour.
New plans for a red hot summer
Dwelling Construction - $350,000 to $500,000 – Streefland Homes and Developments, 29 Juliana West Launceston
BY TESS BRUNTON
NORTHERN Tasmanian builders walked away grinning from the 2017 Master Builders Tasmania Awards for Excellence, with one company walking away with the Commercial Builder of the Year award. More than $144 million of commercial buildings and homes has been built in the last 12 months by Master Builders Tasmania members. Master Builders’ Association of Tasmania executive director Michael Kerschbaum said northern master builders did “exceptionally well” as the association received more than 90 entries.
“It was a great night. We like to acknowledge hard work,” Mr Kerschbaum said. “It’s not about who has the best design, views or appliances ...it’s just to do with the workmanship.” The judges considered the difficulty of the site and the complexity of the work as well as the workmanship in their decision, Mr Kerschbaum said. A successful night at the awards could prove a boon for some companies as they could use the accolade in their marketing and also acknowledge their staff’s dedication, he said. Many of the categories were “hotly contested”, which was positive as it
Lady Gowrie
showed the master builders were “fostering excellence”, Mr Kerschbaum said. Fairbrother Construction took out the Commercial Builder of the Year Award, while also winning five cate-
gories from its 16 entries. The categories included the renovation/fitout $1 million to $5 million category for Lady Gowrie Tasmania, and new construction - $5 million to $10 million category for work completed at Kings Meadows High School. General manger Kurt Arnold said it was a special night for the company, which now employed more than 200 people across the state. “It’s a testament to the hardwork, dedication and skills our people apply to their work,” Mr Arnold said. The awards helped to recognise the quality work of staff, from apprentices to management, he said. There was plenty of oppor-
tunities around the state for builders “which is keeping our crew occupied”, Mr Arnold said. “Launceston is in quite a good state … [the market] has been a bit fickle for the last five years,” he said. Vos Construction and Joinery took out multiple categories including for its work on St Lukes Health Launceston in the renovation/fitout – under $1 million category and the new construction - $2 million to $5 million category for its Launceston Health Hub project. The awards were presented in front of an eager crowd at a Gala dinner held at the Hotel Grand Chancellor in Hobart on Saturday night.
A SECOND series has been announced for 2018 The Red Hot Summer Tour with an all Australian line-up featuring John Farnham and Daryl Braithwaite. Rock band Baby Animals, The Black Sorrows and 1927 will join Farnham and Braithwaite on the tour, which will play in Launceston on March 24 at Country Club Tasmania. Farnham will celebrate five decades of performing when he takes to the stage next year. Tickets for the first touring festival, with queen of rock Suzi Quatro headlining, have already sold or are close to capacity. Promoter Duane McDonald said the return of Farnham was by popular demand. “Audiences loved seeing John Farnham as part of the 2017 sold out tour,” Mr McDonald said. “It is going to be a massive summer … Look out, it is going to rock!” Tickets are on sale for the Launceston tour leg at 12pm on Thursday through Ticketmaster. – TESS BRUNTON
Tassie a muse for filmmakers
FRIENDLY GHOSTS: Queensland filmmakers have travelled the West Coast to shoot footage for a documentary on ghost towns. Picture: Supplied
SOMETIMES it feels like Australia doesn't pay as much attention to Tasmania as it should, filmmaker Dennis Samuelsson says. Brisbane-based student Samuelsson is part of a group producing a documentary about Tasmania’s “ghost towns”. Over three visits to the state, the group has spent time in areas including Queenstown, Gormanston and Lake Margaret. Samuelsson said the documentary titled Ghost Town Project aimed to acknowledge the people giving life to less populated towns. He said there was a need
for more positive media coverage of areas that have degraded over time. “Some people might have been sensitive to the use of the words ‘ghost town’ because they still live in these places and they are so proud,” Samuelsson said. “[The project] is about these people and the stories they've told are the stories we're sharing.” Samuelsson and director Gabrielle Warren are third year students at Brisbane’s Griffith Film School. The film crew relied on knocking on doors to meet locals to interview for their project.
“We've gotten so much help from everyone, staff and people in general – It would be wonderful to give back,” Samuelsson said. “The best way to do it is present what the West Coasters feel about the West Coast, because I've never met people so proud and full of spirit.” Samuelsson said the projects post-production phase would likely be complete by December. He said the crew hopes to debut the film on the West Coast, and would likely enter the work in national festivals. – IMOGEN ELLIOTT
examiner.com.au
Monday August 21, 2017
THE EXAMINER
11
NATIONAL
Three men accused of IS-inspired mosque attack Missing THREE men have been accused of committing Islamic State-inspired terrorist attacks against a Melbourne mosque. The trio, aged in their 20s, are each accused of engaging in a terrorist act over an arson attack that destroyed the Imam Ali Islamic Centre at Fawkner
boy’s dad seeking answers
lege is these were Islamic State-inspired attacks. They were inspired and designed to influence, put fear into a particular community.” Moukhaiber appeared in Melbourne Magistrates Court on Sunday while Mo- MALCOLM Turnbull has hamed and Chaarani are described a Sydney famset to appear on Monday. ily’s ordeal as “tragic” as the father of seven-yearold Julian Cadman arrived in Barcelona to try and find out what has happened to his son after last week’s terror attack in Barcelona. Andrew Cadman was rushed from the airport by Australian consular officials and police to Barcelona’s main justice and forensic centre. It is thought he was then being taken to hospital where his seriously injured wife and Julian’s mother, Jom, is being treated. The cars avoided waiting British and Australian media and a cordon was imposed at the hospital. Julian became separated from his mother when a van ploughed into crowds in the city’s busy Las Ramblas district on Friday. “Our prayers go out to all the victims, but we to pray that little boy will be found and will be restored alive to his parents,” Mr Turnbull told reporters in Sydney on Sunday. “It is a very tragic circumstance and one of great risk.” On Saturday, British authorities and Spanish police denied reports Julian, who is understood to be a dual British-Australian citiON ALERT: Prime Minister MalcolmTurnbull addresses the media during a Sydney press conference on a new zen, had been found at a national strategy to tackle the growing use of vehicles by terrorists in their attacks. Picture: AAP hospital in Barcelona. Another Sydney woman, Under the new plan are done at the design put in place at that time.” Suria Intan, who was on strategies to strengthen The program, which pro- the last few days of a Euroand fortify such places. – Australia’s Strategy For stage,” Mr Turnbull said. a do-it-yourself pean holiday with friends, “You can’t proof every vides There will be a greater use Protecting Crowded Places of permanent bollards – From Terrorism which has site 100 per cent – there toolkit on installing bol- is also in a serious condilike in Sydney’s busy Pitt St been under development are certainly things that lards and planters, and tion in hospital after being shopping precinct – to sep- since the Nice attack in July can be done to existing other methods of mitigat- injured in the attack. Ms Intan is a Commonarate vehicles from pedes- 2016 – new buildings will sites – but the most impor- ing a hostile vehicle attack, trians and more use of po- have to undertake security tant thing is as you get new was presented to business- wealth Bank worker who is developments, new plans es, councils and private op- heavily involved with Hilllice and security agencies measures. song church. “The best mitigations that security measures are erators last week. around mass gatherings. in December, Victoria and federal police say. Two of those men, 25-year-old Ahmed Mohamed and 27-year-old Abdullah Chaarani, are already in custody over an alleged plan, separate to the arson attack, to bomb Melbourne landmarks on Christmas Day.
The third man allegedly involved in the destruction of the mosque is 29-yearold Hatim Moukhaiber, who was arrested after police pulled over his car at Roxburgh Park on Saturday night. Mohamed and Chaarani are also set to be charged with an additional count
each of engaging in a terrorist act over an earlier fire at the Imam Ali Islamic Centre in November. “We’re not saying that these are just arson attacks,” Australian Federal Police Assistant Commissioner Counter Terrorism Ian McCartney said. “What we’re going to al-
Security ‘evolving with terror threat’ VENUE operators of crowded public places and architects of new buildings are being urged to have security top of mind under a new plan revealed by Malcolm Turnbull. The prime minister’s new national security program has been in the planning for a year but comes after the latest attack in Barcelona, in which a vehicle was once again used to mow down innocent people in a crowded area. “It is part of our continuous program of optimising, improving the way we can keep Australians safe,” Mr Turnbull said on Sunday. He said Australia had the best security agencies in the world. “But we recognise that the threat is constantly evolving, so what we have to do is to make sure we too are constantly improving and updating the measures we have.” States and territories have been involved in developing the plan. Venue owners and operators will be given government and police help for security audits of their facilities to determine any weaknesses and develop
Burqa stunt ‘put senators in soap opera’ Antoniolli claims win PAULINE Hanson wearing a burqa into the Senate chamber left the rest of the elected representatives there looking like extras in a curious soap opera, a senior Liberal believes. Cabinet minister Arthur Sinodinos is surprised the One Nation leader was allowed into the chamber wearing the Islamic garb during question time last Thursday. “That was a prop. We were left almost like extras in some sort of curious soap opera,” he told ABC TV on Sunday.
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[The burqa] was a prop. We were left almost like extras in some sort of curious soap opera. Senior Liberal Arthur Sinodinos
“I don’t think it was appropriate for her to be allowed to use the Senate in that way.” Senator Hanson has defended her decision to wear the burqa, saying it’s sparked a debate about the full-body coverings among
the community. AttorneyGeneral George Brandis, who won plaudits from all sides for his immediate stinging rebuke to the stunt, said Senate President Stephen Parry and the upper house clerk dealt with the situation as best
they could at the time. But he thinks the Senate’s procedures committee –which governs chamber dress standards – should consider whether it’s appropriate for religious garb to be used in that way. “It was quite a shocking and confronting event when it occurred,” he said. At present, there are no formal rules laid down by the Senate about what senators should wear and the matter of dress is left up to individual judgement, subject to any ruling by the president.
in Ipswich by-election IPSWICH councillor Andrew Antoniolli has called victory in Saturday’s byelection to replace longserving mayor Paul Pisasale. Mr Pisasale was mayor of Ipswich for 13 years before he resigned suddenly in June amid corruption allegations. Mr Antoniolli was leading the count on Sunday with 32,355 votes, ahead of rival and acting mayor Paul Tully’s 28,801 votes, with 80 per cent of the vote count-
ed. The Electoral Commission Queensland was yet to formally announce a winner. The former policeman considered himself the underdog of the two favourites, and said Mr Tully had conceded in a text message that read: “Congratulations, Mr Mayor.” Mr Pisasale resigned citing complications from his multiple sclerosis, but it was later revealed he had allegedly been stopped at Melbourne airport with $50,000 cash.
12 THE EXAMINER
WORLD
Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
Counter-protesters march against hate in Boston Boston THOUSANDS of demonstrators chanting anti-Nazi slogans in a public rejection of white nationalism upstaged a small group in Boston that planned a “free speech rally” a week after a violent clash rocked Virginia and reverberated across the United States.
Counter-protesters marched through the city on Saturday to historic Boston Common, where conservatives had planned to deliver a series of speeches but soon left. Police vans later escorted the conservatives out of the area, as boisterous counter-protesters scuffled with police.
Organisers of the event, the Boston Free Speech Coalition, had publicly distanced themselves from the neo-Nazis, white supremacists and others who fomented violence in Charlottesville on August 12. A woman was killed at that Unite the Right rally, and many others were injured, when a car
ploughed into counterdemonstrators. Opponents feared that white nationalists might show up in Boston anyway, and turned out in force, some dressed entirely in black with bandannas over their faces. Officials said the rallies – the largest of about a half dozen around the country
on Saturday – drew about 40,000 people. Counterprotesters chanted slogans, and waved signs that said: “Make Nazis Afraid Again”, “Love your neighbor”, “Resist fascism” and “Hate never made US great”. Others carried a large banner that read: “SMASH WHITE SUPREMACY”. One of the planned
speakers of the conservative activist rally said the event “fell apart”. Saturday’s showdown in Boston was mostly peaceable, and after demonstrators dispersed, a picnic atmosphere took over with stragglers tossing beach balls, banging on bongo drums and playing reggae music.
Missing imam ‘may be key to terrorists’
Tributes replace parties in Spain
Barcelona
Barcelona
A MISSING imam and a house that exploded days ago has become the focus of the investigation into an extremist cell responsible for two deadly attacks in Barcelona and a nearby resort, as authorities narrowed in on who radicalised a group of young men in northeastern Spain. Investigators searched the home of Abdelbaki Es Satty, an imam who in June abruptly quit working at a mosque in the town of Ripoll, the home of the Islamic radicals behind the attacks that killed 14 people and wounded more than 120 last week. Police were trying to determine whether Es Satty was killed in a botched bomb-making operation on Wednesday, the eve of the Barcelona bloodshed. His former mosque has denounced the deadly attacks and weeping relatives marched into a Ripoll square on Saturday, tearfully denying any knowledge of the radical plans of their sons and brothers.
BARCELONA’S Las Ramblas boulevard on a Saturday night is typically full of tourists and party-goers but after a terrorist attack the mood was sombre and contemplative. On Thursday, a van sped down the largely pedestrian boulevard, killing 13 people and injuring more than 100. Two Australians were seriously hurt in the attack, while hopes of finding seven-year-old NSW boy Julian Cadman alive were fading. Late into Saturday night and early on Sunday morning crowds were still gathering around the redcandle vigils which dot the first-half of the 1.2km boulevard, which runs from the city’s gothic heart to the sea. Notes read “No tinc por”, Catalan expression for “We are not afraid”. It is a sentiment repeated over and over, scrawled in chalk on the pavement, and even written in marker on trees that line the popular walkway.
PAYING RESPECTS: Spain’s King Felipe and Queen Letizia lay flowers at a memorial for the victims of the van attack in Las Ramblas promenade in Barcelona. Picture: AP
At least one of the suspects was still on the run, and his younger brother had disappeared, as had the younger brother of one of the five attackers slain by police on Friday.
Catalan police said a manhunt was centred on Younes Abouyaaquoub, a 22-year-old Moroccan suspected of driving the van that ploughed into a packed Barcelona prom-
enade Thursday, killing 13 people and injuring 120. Another attack early on Friday killed one person and wounded five in the resort of Cambrils. The Islamic State group
has claimed responsibility for both. Neighbours, family and even the mayor of Ripoll said they were shocked by news of the alleged involvement of the young men.
HOROSCOPES
with Alison Moroney
AQUARIUS
PISCES
ARIES
TAURUS
GEMINI
CANCER
Aquarius tends to make quick decisions and take decisive actions during August 21-24 as they reach towards the attainment of a goal. Important social interests are also featured.
Pisces is financiallymotivated during August 21-24, so is quick on the uptake of opportunities for career and social advancement that arise then; these are important days.
Aries’ natives are highly active at the moment, investing their exuberant energies towards achieving career related goals during August 21-24; you meet with success.
Through thoroughly investigating a situation or problem during August 21-24, important realisations are achieved that may be effectively utilised in implementing financial strategies.
Strongly motivated towards the achievement of goals during August 21-24, Gemini individuals are able to work well with others to achieve mutually beneficial outcomes.
Strong motivations steer Cancer in their quest to advance in life, enabling them to invest energy effectively into responsibilities and work-related activities during August 21-24.
LEO
VIRGO
LIBRA
SCORPIO
SAGITTARIUS
CAPRICORN
Leo’s creativity flourishes under the fortunate trends operating during August 21-24, benefiting your work and children, and bringing a great enjoyment of life and long-term prospects.
The trends of August 21-24 are wonderful for financing property and domestic interests, and are attended by a strong potential for long-term success. Family activities are favourably highlighted.
Developing strategies, planning interests, negotiations, and streamlined organisation dominate Libra’s activities during August 21-24, as you’re enthused by another individual.
A strong work-ethic will power Scorpio’s finances during August 21-24.You’ll work quickly and efficiently towards your planned objectives, achieving expected targets as you do so.
Sagittarius’ creative flair and zest for life will positively shape their life during August 21-24, whilst enhancing earning capacity.Young people inspire and revitalise you.
During August 21-24 a strong domestic base and family ties ease any recent difficulties Capricorn may have experienced; you’re vitalised by support and an enhanced sense of security.
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
(July 23-Aug. 22)
(Feb. 19-Mar. 20)
(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
(March 21-April 19)
(Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
(April 20-May 20)
(Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
(May 21-June 20)
(Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
(June 21-July 22)
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
examiner.com.au
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PEOPLE AND PLACES
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER 13
examiner.com.au/multimedia
Chris Winnett, of Port Macquarie
Elaine Maslen, of Melbourne
OUT AND ABOUT UK embroiderer Jenny Adin-Christie was invited by The Embroiders Guild of Tasmania to pass down her knowledge at Launceston’s Tailrace Centre on Tuesday. Pictures: Sean Slatter Alison Wise, of Ulverstone
Helen West, of Latrobe
Robyn Grant, of Adelaide
Embroidery tutor Jenny Adin-Christie, from the United Kingdom.
Janet Lloyd, of Evandale
Naomi Small, of Adelaide
14
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THE EXAMINER
Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
OPINION examiner.com.au/opinion
OUR FUTURE PAT’S VIEW
Investing in a brighter energy future for Australia
MARK BROWN
W
E’re backers, not bystanders. Like many, we’re concerned about climate change – and want to play our part. That’s why we’re among the 867 people who invested in what will be Australia’s largest, community-owned solar farm. SolarShare is building its flagship project, a one-megawatt solar farm that shares land with a vineyard, in the Majura Valley in Canberra. It’s the first of hopefully many solar farms and projects owned by the community. SolarShare has been funded by people like us, who will receive a good return on our initial investment as the electricity it generates from the sun is sold. At the same time, the farm will power 260 homes, reducing our reliance on polluting fossil fuels. While governments can be slow to act, individuals, communities and businesses across Australia are finding their own solutions. The transition to renewable energy has started – and it’s exciting. But it needs to happen faster if we are to leave this place better, cleaner and safer for our grandchildren. None of us can do everything, but we can all do something. As soon as we could, we put solar panels on our roof making our house somewhat of a novelty in the neighbourhood. These days, solar covers 21 per cent of Australia’s suitable rooftops. A couple months ago we bought an electric car, which we fuel for free with the rooftop panels. We were amazed to see that India, Britain, France and Norway have announced plans to ban the sale of new petrol and diesel cars. Until governments pick up the pace, individuals will have to work together. Being part of a larger project, like a community solar farm, is a great way to be part of an exciting new vision. David and Lainie Shorthouse are SolarShare investors, and Canberra residents.
Robust debate vital to a healthy democracy I MAGINE: You find an official-looking letter in the mail. Someone has objected to something you have said or done. A government official has found that you have a case to answer – you are likely to have broken the law. The legal jargon makes you feel overwhelmed. You must appear before a statutory officer to explain yourself. In your anxiety you reach out to others. They advise you to get legal representation. The thought of how much this will cost adds further to your worry. On average, this scenario is experienced by more than 100 Tasmanians every year when their conduct allegedly offends, humiliates, intimidates, insults or ridicules someone within one of the 14 protected attributes in Section 17(1) of the Tasmanian Anti-Discrimination Act. I don’t know about you but I get offended often: someone pushes in on a queue; ‘Jesus Christ’ is used as a swear word; or an aggressive driver tail-gates me. Yet is using a government office to pressure ‘offenders’ a sensible course of action in a mature, democratic society? I don’t believe it is. We all know people who can be rude. It wouldn’t be surprising for them to inten-
tionally offend or humiliate someone. Yet offence can easily be caused unintentionally. A political point of view, a religious belief, a strongly held conviction, or even a joke could be captured by this law even with a ‘reasonable person’ test. Premier Will Hodgman believes the Act dampens free speech but the government’s solution, which was defeated in the Legislative Council last week, was to allow a defence for religious people. All Tasmanians deserve free speech, not just special categories like ‘religious people’. Former Human Rights Commissioner Tim Wilson believes reform needs to go deeper, calling for the removal of Section 17(1) entirely: “…the Tasmanian Anti-Discrimination Act sets a low bar for restricting free speech by defining limits based on vague tests such as “offend” and “insult”’. Australian Christian Lobby agrees. What might offend or insult one might be no big deal to another – hence the ‘vagueness’. The current law restricts freedom of speech by legislating people into silence about subjects on which they would otherwise speak up. Many have told me they won’t say anything publically on the issue
of same-sex marriage because they fear breaking the law. I know of media outlets that have refused to publish adverts because certain words, like ‘prostitute’ have offended people in the past and they are scared of falling foul of the law. This ‘societal chilling’ is dangerous. Robust debate is a vital ingredient in a healthy democratic society. For every claim accepted by the Commissioner there are likely dozens of people who know the person accused of breaching the Act. That’s a lot of people potentially ‘feeling the cold’ – in fact tens of thousands over the years since these laws came into force. People should feel free to discuss important social issues, like redefining marriage, without fear of breaking the law. Some may disagree, suggesting such fear causes people to ‘think before they speak’. Yet any positive, I believe, is far outweighed by the dangerous gagging of free speech in the community. Every freedom has its risks of abuse. People will say or write hurtful things, inappropriate things, and things we would never say ourselves. Yet this is the price of true freedom. Freedom without this potential is actually not freedom at all. ■ Mark Brown is the ACLTasmanian director
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Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER 15
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OPINION examiner.com.au/opinion
EDITORIAL
If it resembles an election, it probably is one
I
F IT looks like an election campaign and sounds like an election campaign; it is probably the start of an election campaign. At an airport hanger on a brisk Launceston morning, Premier Will Hodgman and his state Liberal team were welcomed with rousing applause by the party faithful. Sunday marked the second and final day for the 2017 Tasmanian Liberal State Council – the last before the next election. Mr Hodgman used the speech to cite the government’s record and launch its 43-point plan for Tasmania – slightly larger than Tony Abbott’s five-point plan in 2013. But that’s beside the point. Like well-oiled machines, the Premier and every member of his Liberal government know the line when pressed by pesky journalists on the timing of the next election – it
will be in March, they say. Political signs suggest otherwise. Mr Hodgman is trailing Opposition Leader Rebecca White in the preferred-Premier poll, the government has released its plan for re-election and it has increased rhetoric in the key battleground – health. Just last week Mr Hodgman urged Tasmanians to vote on party policy rather than popularity. If the Premier truly intends to hold the election in March then Tasmanians will be subject to months of unofficial campaigning. Both parties must ensure their message cuts through to voters, and that can be a difficult thing to achieve when there is so much else going on in the world. The government, which has faced some difficulty passing legislation through the upper house, could go to the next election
seeking a mandate from the people for its TasWater takeover, gambling position and forestry, again. To an extent, Mr Hodgman is bound by the actions of his friend Malcolm Turnbull and the federal government. The Premier might have been preparing for an election in the next month. But the federal dual-citizenship drama coupled with widespread anger about the same-sex marriage postal plebiscite would have thwarted the best-laid plans. Running early can cause problems. It did not work for Theresa May in England or Mr Turnbull last year. Sources say Mr Hodgman has assured Ms White he will not call the election for her wedding day in November. But every other weekend between now and March is a real possibility.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
YOUR SAY
TALK OF A REPUBLIC
DOWNSIZING
THE recent call for sacking of the monarch relies heavily on replacing her with an Australian citizen. If she isn't one already, confer Australian citizenship on the lady post haste and apologise for the gross oversight for not having done so a lot earlier. After all, she would not be the first Pommie we've said g'day to, and welcomed into the Australian fold over the decades. She is married to an Australian knight and would more that qualify should she be required to sit the residency test. Example question: Who opened the Sydney Opera House in 1973? Answer: I did. Noel Christensen, Punchbowl.
DOWNSIZING by stealth really gets up my nose. Opening a can of Pringles for the first time in while, I certainly was angered that the size of the chips had shrunk but the company still used the same size canister. AlsoTimTam packets look the same size as before yet the blister pack inside has larger spacing between the biscuits less biscuits. The list goes on with more and more products downsizing by deception. What do companies take consumers for? We are not deceived, and will hunt down better value products, and yes, made in Australia. Robert Lee, Summerhill.
CONCISE CAN anyone tell me what’s happened to concise English? With the current terror plot in mind, we have a typical example. Where we used to have a homemade bomb, three syllables and tells you exactly what it is, we now have the clumsy improvised (three syllables already), explosive (that’s another three), device (a final two). That’s eight syllables where three used to do the same job. As for the IED bit, if you didn’t actually know, it could mean anything Indigenous Education Division for instance. Then we have the at this point in time syndrome. At the moment says the same thing more concisely and neatly. Finally (and there are many many more) we have also known as, shortened to AKA. Now alias, short and sweet, says the same thing and, even if you point out that AKA is also short and sweet, there is no way anyone’s vocal cords and glottis etc can say that as smoothly as alias. Many years ago, a friend and workmate had been babysitting and had read a Beatrix Potter book to his young charges. At one point it appeared Peter Rabbit had eaten too many lettuces, which had a soporific effect. He asked me what it meant. I told him it meant that it made him sleepy.
BANK PROFITS Noel Christensen says Australia should give Queen Elizabeth II Australian citizenship in order to stop talk of a republic.
“Well why didn’t it say so?” was his rather indignant reply. Well, it did, didn’t it? Only concisely. Richard Hill, Newstead.
BOLDER STEPS NEEDED RECENTLY China and Russia jointly proposed America take its nuclear weapons off the Korean peninsula and in return they would apply the strongest pressure on North Korea to cease its nuclear program. What is wrong with that? Surely it is worth a try when the alternative seems to be a north Asia laid waste to a nuclear war and millions of lives lost. It is not as if America is not capable of devastating North Korea from further afield. America was prepared to risk nuclear war on the world's behalf in Cuba in 1962 with its determination to have nuclear weapons removed from its doorstep, but fails to see why North Korea should take the same stance. While inconsistencies are being mentioned, how about a Chinese reconnaissance ship said to be "lurking" well within international
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waters during recent Australian-American defence exercises, while Australian boats and planes are regularly exercising their "rights of freedom of navigation" in the South China Sea. Rod Fenner, Launceston.
LORD’S PRAYER AS A CHRISTIAN, I fully support the removal of the rote, meaning less recitation of the Lord’s prayers not only in the Tasmanian parliament, but in all parliaments. It is almost blasphemy and cheapens the most wonderful prayer. Each Sunday, I say the Lord’s prayer as part of the Eucharist and try to say it slowly, to fully appreciate its deep meaning. Let’s face it, Australia is a Christian country in name only. For most, it is as the great German pastor killed by the Nazis, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, put it in his hymn from prison: “we turn to God when we are sorely pressed” and today maybe not even then for many. Malcolm Scott, Newstead.
GUIDELINES: Preference is given to emailed letters of 150 words or less. Submissions must include the name and address of the author and a daytime phone number for clarifications (only the author’s name and suburb of residence are published). Letters may be edited for space, clarity or legal reasons and may be published on our website.
AUSTRALIA’S big banks keep making more and more huge profits each and every year. Chief executive officers of all big banks keep patting themselves on the back for jobs well done for their respective banks. What they don’t show is where all the profit comes from. More interest rises on loans, less interest on deposits and investment. When is the money grabbing going to end. We are getting less and less money to live each and every year. Give us a go here, without us you wouldn’t be here. David Parker, West Launceston.
MARRIAGE EQUALITY THE announcement that Messrs Abbott and Howard will lead the vote “No” campaign in the upcoming plebiscite obviously comes as no surprise, after all who better to turn back the clock to the 1950s having had so much practice during their time in office. A Carter, Mowbray.
RAISING CHILDREN ON MARRIAGE equality, I doubt that same-sex parents would instil hatred and discrimination in their children. They have experienced enough of that in their own lives to know how negative that is. Elsa de Ruyter, St Helens.
16 THE EXAMINER
Monday August 21, 2017
NATIONAL OP SHOP WEEK
examiner.com.au
ADVERTISING FEATURE
Spring clean for op shops BY MAEVE MCKENNA
POPULAR: A rise in popularity for op shops means they are in need of local donations.
OP SHOPS are no longer the haunts of grannies searching for their knitted wears. A recent surge in savvy shoppers has breathed new life into the charity shopping scene. Now a haven for hipsters, fashionistas, avid recyclers and bargain hunters, your local op shops are under pressure to keep their rails and shelves stocked. Boosting donations to charity op shops is the aim of the fifth National Op Shop Week, running from August 27 - September 2, 2017. “Giving clothes is a great way to help the community," said Jon Dee, the Managing Director of Do Something and founder of National Op Shop Week. “We need the Australian public to dig deep into their wardrobes and donate good quality clothing directly to their nearest charity op shops." With spring around the corner now is the perfect time to clear out the wardrobe and donate to your local op shops. Here are some tips for re-
host an op shop night
FURNITURE AND HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Remeber op shops are not rubbish bins, make sure what you are donating still works and is still in a good condition or atleast has the potential to be upcycled.
Rehome old books
sponsible donating:
CLOTHING If you haven’t worn it for a year or two, chances are you won’t be wearing it anytime soon, time for a wardrobe clear out, just make sure it can be reused. ■ Ensure clothes aren’t ripped or soiled, any stained or damaged clothing won’t be used by op shops ■ Fold the clothes in a box or bag, nobody likes getting wrinkly clothes ■ Pair matching items together so they don’t get separated ■ Get friends involved and
■ Most op shops will pick up larger items such as furniture, make sure you ring and check ■ Electrical items will be tested before they are resold, make sure they are working before donating
TOYS, BOOKS AND GAMES Op shops are always in need of childrens items, especially around Christmas time. ■ Ensure toys are clean ■ Nobody wants a book that is falling apart or scribbled on, check before you pack them ■ Games, especially jigsaws and board games need all their pieces
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Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
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Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
19
TV GUIDE
Lawson closing in on title of our busiest actor in Hollywood Plus, the Coen brothers move into TV with a western anthology, Ioan Gruffudd headlines a new ABC drama and Letterman returns, writes Michael Idato.
A
ustralian actor Ben Lawson has been signed to appear in the second season of the Netflix drama 13 Reasons Why. Lawson, who is plainly hoping to edge Damon Herriman out as Australia’s busiest working actor in Hollywood, also recently signed up for the second season of Kiefer Sutherland’s Netflix drama Designated Survivor. In 13 Reasons Why, Lawson will play a baseball coach. The 37-year-old Brisbaneborn actor has several US credits to his name, including the recent drama Doubt, Bones and Modern Family. Netflix will air the second season next year.
between the episodes will be the character of Buster Scruggs, played by Tim Blake Nelson. Netflix’s vice-president of original content Cindy Holland described the Coens as “visionary directors, masterful storytellers and colourful linguists”. The series will air next year.
Feast of forensics
F
Coens head west
T
he Coen brothers are moving into television to develop a new series called The Ballad of Buster Scruggs for Netflix. The series is described as a “western anthology” and the six one-hour episodes will contain six stories set in “the American frontier”. The only connection
ilming is under way in Queensland for the new ABC drama Harrow. The project, steered by Brisbaneheadquartered production company Hoodlum, stars Welsh star Ioan Gruffudd as a forensic pathologist. The ABC has commissioned 10 one-hour episodes of the series, written by Stephen M. Irwin, directed by Kate Dennis, Tony Krawitz, Tony Tilse and Peter Salmon and produced by Irwin, Leigh McGrath, Tracey Robertson and Nathan Mayfield. The show’s cast also includes Remi Hii, Anna Lise Phillips, Ella Newton and Robyn Malcolm. No air date has been set.
In demand: Australian actor Ben Lawson will star in Netflix drama 13 Reasons Why.
Letterman in new series
T
alk show legend David Letterman has been lured out of semiretirement and will host a new series on Netflix. Six one-hour episodes of the as-yet-untitled series have been commissioned; in each episode Letterman
will sit down to talk with a single guest, and also film several pre-taped segments on the road. Letterman said he was “excited and lucky to be working on this project”. Netflix’s chief content officer Ted Sarandos described the 70-year-old star as “a true television icon.” The series will air next year.
TV MONDAY, August 21 ABC (2)
SBS (3)
SCTV (6)
NINE (5)
WIN (8)
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News. 10.00 Landline. 11.00 Back Roads. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Midsomer Murders. 2.30 Doc Martin. 3.20 Grand Designs New Zealand. 4.10 Pointless. 5.00 ABC News: Early Edition. 5.30 The Drum. 6.10 Restoration Man. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Australian Story. 8.30 Four Corners. 9.15 Media Watch. 9.35 Q&A. 10.40 Lateline. 11.10 The Business. 11.25 Golf. PGA Tour. Wyndham Championship. Highlights. 12.20 Humans. 1.10 The Mix. 1.40 Rage. 3.50 Auction Room. 4.20 Murder, She Wrote. 5.05 The Bill.
6.00 WorldWatch. 12.00 Arabic News. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 Al Jazeera News. 2.00 Tommy Fleming: Voice Of Hope. 3.00 Lockerbie: My Brother’s Bomber. 4.00 The Supervet: Bionic Stories. 5.00 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 2. Highlights. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 River Cottage Australia. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Staying Healthy: A Doctor’s Guide. 8.30 24 Hours In Emergency. 10.25 SBS World News Late Edition. 10.55 The World Game. 11.25 Farang. 1.15 Rectify. 4.00 Being Mortal. 5.00 CGTN English News. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Reflections. (2008) Timothy Hutton, Miguel Ángel Silvestre, Fernando Guillén Cuervo. 2.00 The Daily Edition. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 Southern Cross News. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 Hell’s Kitchen Australia. 8.45 The Story Of Diana. 10.45 Britain’s Secrets. 12.00 Quantico. 1.00 The Franchise Show. 1.30 Harry’s Practice. 2.00 Home Shopping. 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 1.00 Extra. 1.30 The Block. 3.00 News Now. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. 8.40 This Time Next Year. 9.50 Footy Classified. 11.20 Botched. 12.20 Law & Order. 1.15 Nine Presents. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 2.00 Extra. 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. 3.30 Good Morning America. 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
6.00 Entertainment Tonight. 6.30 Family Feud. 7.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 8.00 The Bold And The Beautiful. 8.30 Studio 10. 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 To Be Advised. 2.30 Ben’s Menu. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 Alive And Cooking. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. 6.00 WIN News. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 Australian Survivor. 8.45 Have You Been Paying Attention? 9.45 Life In Pieces. 10.15 Elementary. 11.00 The Project. 12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 1.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 2.00 Home Shopping. 4.30 CBS This Morning.
ABC2 (22)
SBS VICELAND (32)
7TWO (62)
9GEM (52)
ONE (81)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 11.40 Teletubbies. 12.00 Play School. 12.30 Sesame Street. 1.00 Sally And Possum. 1.15 Clangers. 1.45 The Adventures Of Bottle Top Bill And His Best Friend Corky. 2.00 Lah-Lah’s Adventures. 2.15 Tree Fu Tom. 2.40 Olivia. 3.05 Wallykazam! 3.30 Play School. 4.25 Octonauts. 4.40 Peg + Cat. 4.55 Andy’s Prehistoric Adventures. 5.10 Floogals. 5.25 Dot. 6.35 Ben And Holly’s Little Kingdom. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. 7.30 Dirty Jobs. 8.30 Louis Theroux: A Place For Paedophiles. 9.30 Stacey Dooley Investigates. 10.25 Tales Of The Grim Sleeper. 12.10 The Human Tissue Squad. 1.10 Dirty Jobs. 2.10 Close. 5.10 Ella The Elephant. 5.45 Baby Jake.
6.00 WorldWatch. 9.30 Serbian News. 10.00 Dutch News. 10.30 Tamil News. 11.00 NHK Japanese News. 11.35 Hindi News. 12.00 MOVIE: The Solitude Of Prime Numbers. (2010) 2.05 Bear Grylls’ Mission Survive. 3.05 Mysterious Cities Of Gold. 3.40 Vs Arashi. 4.35 Street Genius. 5.00 VICE News Tonight. 5.30 If You Are The One. 6.35 MythBusters. 7.35 The Feed. 8.00 South Park. 8.30 MOVIE: Biutiful. (2010) Javier Bardem, Maricel Álvarez, Hanaa Bouchaib. 11.15 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 3. 2.00 Desus And Mero. 2.30 CGTN English News. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Korean News. 5.30 Indonesian News.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 7.00 Flushed. 7.30 Oh Yuck. 8.00 Jay’s Jungle. 8.30 Harry’s Practice. 9.00 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 10.30 NBC Meet The Press. 11.30 Annabel Langbein: The Free Range Cook. 12.00 Adam’s Pasta Pilgrimage. 12.30 One Foot In The Grave. 2.00 The Making Of Dunkirk. 2.15 Million Dollar Minute. 2.45 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 3.15 Hell’s Kitchen Australia. 4.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Doc Martin. 8.30 Inspector George Gently. 10.30 Air Crash Investigation. 11.30 Bargain Hunt. 12.30 Doc Martin. 1.30 Inspector George Gently. 3.30 Escape To The Country. 5.30 Harry’s Practice.
6.00 Friends. 6.30 This Is Your Day! 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 8.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 9.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 9.30 Danoz Direct. 10.30 Harry. 11.30 As Time Goes By. 12.10 MOVIE: Night Boat To Dublin. (1946) 2.05 Secret Dealers. 3.05 Miniseries: Miss Marple: The Murder At The Vicarage. 4.15 Heartbeat. 5.20 Are You Being Served? 6.00 Friends. 7.00 As Time Goes By. 7.30 David Attenborough’s Life Story. 8.40 Agatha Christie’s Marple. 10.40 Killer On The Line. 11.50 Footy Classified. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 1.30 Friends. 2.00 Global Shop. 2.30 Agatha Christie’s Marple. 4.30 Late Programs.
6.00 Home Shopping. 8.00 RPM. 8.30 Operation Repo. 9.00 Undercover Boss. 10.00 Megastructures Breakdown. 11.00 M*A*S*H. 12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 1.00 Nash Bridges. 2.00 Matlock. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.00 M*A*S*H. 7.30 MacGyver. 8.30 MOVIE: The Good Shepherd. (2006) Matt Damon, Angelina Jolie. 12.00 The Last Man On Earth. 1.00 Home Shopping. 2.00 Diagnosis Murder. 3.00 Matlock. 4.00 Nash Bridges. 5.00 The Doctors.
ABC ME (23)
ABC NEWS (24)
7MATE (63)
9GO! (53)
ELEVEN (82)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 12.00 My Year 12 Life. 12.25 Degrassi: Next Class. 12.50 House Of Anubis. 1.05 Adventure Time. 1.25 Detentionaire. 1.50 Life With Boys. 2.10 WAC: World Animal Championships. 2.35 Annedroids. 3.05 Backyard Science. 3.30 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 4.05 Matilda And The Ramsay Bunch. 4.20 Little Lunch. 4.35 Japanizi: Going, Going, Gong! 5.05 Eve. 5.40 The Day My Butt Went Psycho! 6.10 The Deep. 6.35 Make It Pop! 7.00 MOVIE: The Boy In The Dress. (2014) Billy Kennedy. 8.10 Tomorrow When The War Began. 8.55 The Haunting Hour. 9.20 Total Drama Presents: Ridonculous Race. 9.40 Rage. 10.40 Close. 5.00 Arthur. 5.45 Scream Street.
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News. 6.00 ABC News National. 6.30 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News With The Business. 9.00 ABC News National. 9.30 Lateline. 10.00 The World. 11.00 ABC News. 11.30 7.30. 12.00 ABC News. 12.30 The Drum. 1.00 Al Jazeera Newsgrid. 2.00 BBC Global. 2.30 7.30. 3.00 BBC Global. 3.30 The Link. 4.00 Al Jazeera Newshour. 5.00 Outside Source. 5.30 Lateline.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 Hook, Line And Sinker. 7.00 Shannon’s Legends Of Motorsport. 8.00 The Next Level. 9.00 Harley-Davidson TV. 9.30 Temporary Australians. 10.00 Big Smo. 11.00 Starsky & Hutch. 12.00 S.W.A.T. 1.00 American Hoggers. 2.00 Big Smo. 2.30 ScreenPLAY. 3.00 Blokesworld. 3.30 What Went Down. 4.00 Speed With Guy Martin. 5.00 Mountain Men. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Talking Footy. 9.00 MOVIE: G.I. Joe: The Rise Of Cobra. (2009) Channing Tatum, Marlon Wayans, Sienna Miller. 11.30 Jail: Las Vegas Jailhouse. 12.00 Talking Footy. 1.30 American Pickers. 2.30 Big Angry Fish. 3.30 Dream Car Garage. 4.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 11.00 Friends. 12.00 Dawson’s Creek. 1.00 Baggage Battles. 2.00 Kids’ Programs. 4.30 The Looney Tunes Show. 5.00 Ben 10: Ultimate Alien. 5.30 Teen Titans. 6.00 Regular Show. 6.30 Adventure Time. 7.00 The Middle. 7.30 Science Of Stupid. 8.00 Top Gear. 9.10 MOVIE: Space Cowboys. (2000) Clint Eastwood, Tommy Lee Jones. 11.50 South Beach Tow. 12.30 Adventure Time. 1.00 Regular Show. 1.30 Ben 10: Ultimate Alien. 2.00 Pokémon. 2.30 Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! 3.00 The Looney Tunes Show. 3.30 Yo-Kai Watch. 4.00 Wild Kratts. 4.30 Teen Titans. 4.50 Power Rangers Dino Super Charge. 5.10 Rabbids Invasion. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! Classic.
6.00 Morning Programs. 7.05 Pokémon. 7.35 Dofus. 8.00 Totally Wild. 8.35 Transformers Rescue Bots. 9.00 Super Wings. 9.30 Crocamole. 10.00 Touched By An Angel. 11.00 Dads. 11.30 The Millers. 12.00 The Good Wife. 1.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 2.00 The Wrong Girl. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 4.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 5.30 Frasier. 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 7.30 Fresh Off The Boat. Return. 8.00 The Simpsons. 8.30 MOVIE: Paper Towns. (2015) Nat Wolff, Cara Delevingne, Austin Abrams. 10.40 Everybody Loves Raymond. 11.10 The Late Late Show With James Corden. 12.10 Late Programs.
20
THE EXAMINER
Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
TV GUIDE
TV TUESDAY, August 22 ABC (2)
SBS (3)
SCTV (6)
NINE (5)
WIN (8)
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News. 10.00 Four Corners. 10.45 Media Watch. 11.05 Restoration Man. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 How We Got To Now. 1.55 The Doctor Blake Mysteries. 2.55 Doc Martin. 3.40 Eggheads. 4.15 Pointless. 5.00 ABC News. 5.30 The Drum. 6.10 Restoration Man. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 The House With Annabel Crabb. 8.30 Catalyst: Can Seaweed Save The World? 9.30 City In The Sky. 10.30 Lateline. 11.00 The Business. 11.20 Q&A. 12.25 How We Got To Now. 1.20 City In The Sky. 2.20 Rage. 3.50 Auction Room. 4.20 Murder, She Wrote. 5.10 The Bill.
6.00 WorldWatch. 7.30 Italian News. 8.10 Filipino News. 8.40 French News. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Tommy Fleming Song For A Winter’s Night. 3.10 WWII Air Crash Detectives. 5.00 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 3. Highlights. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 River Cottage Australia. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great American Railroad Journeys. 8.30 Insight. 9.30 Dateline. 10.00 SBS World News Late Edition. 10.30 Valkyrien. New. 12.25 MOVIE: Welcome To The South. (2010) 2.25 Satudarah: One Blood. 4.00 Travel Man. 4.30 Soccer. UEFA Champions League. Play-Off, Second Leg.
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: The Toyman Killer. (2013) Sarah Carter, David Haydn-Jones, Magda Apanowicz. 2.00 The Daily Edition. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 Southern Cross News. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 Hell’s Kitchen Australia. 8.45 Kitchen Nightmares USA. 9.45 First Dates UK. 10.45 The Catch. 11.45 Mistresses. 12.40 Cosmetic Coffee. 1.05 Scandal. 2.00 Home Shopping. 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 1.00 Extra. 1.30 Hot In Cleveland. 2.00 The Block. 3.00 News Now. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. 8.40 True Story With Hamish & Andy. 9.10 Kath & Kim. 10.20 2 Broke Girls. 11.20 The Mysteries Of Laura. Final. 12.15 20/20. 1.05 Surfing Australia TV. 1.30 Anger Management. 2.00 Extra. 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. 3.30 Good Morning America. 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
6.00 Entertainment Tonight. 6.30 Family Feud. 7.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 8.00 The Bold And The Beautiful. 8.30 Studio 10. 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 Shark Tank. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Ben’s Menu. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 Alive And Cooking. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. 6.00 WIN News. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 Shark Tank. 8.30 NCIS. 10.30 NCIS: Los Angeles. 11.30 WIN’s All Australian News. 12.30 The Project. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 2.30 Home Shopping. 4.30 CBS This Morning.
ABC2 (22)
SBS VICELAND (32)
7TWO (62)
9GEM (52)
ONE (81)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 12.30 Sesame Street. 1.00 Sally And Possum. 1.15 Clangers. 1.45 The Adventures Of Bottle Top Bill And His Best Friend Corky. 2.00 Lah-Lah’s Adventures. 2.15 Tree Fu Tom. 2.40 Olivia. 3.05 Wallykazam! 3.30 Play School. 4.25 Charlie And Lola. 4.40 Peg + Cat. 4.55 Andy’s Prehistoric Adventures. 5.10 Floogals. 5.25 Dot. 6.35 Ben And Holly’s Little Kingdom. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. 7.30 Dirty Jobs. 8.20 Hard Quiz. 8.50 Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. 9.35 The Traffickers. 10.15 Stacey Dooley Investigates. 11.10 Banged Up Abroad. 11.55 Build A New Life In The Country. 12.45 Dirty Jobs. 1.35 Close. 5.10 Ella The Elephant. 5.45 Baby Jake.
6.00 WorldWatch. 11.35 Hindi News. 12.00 MOVIE: Shameless. (2008) 1.35 Big Night Out. 2.00 Bear Grylls’ Mission Survive. 3.00 Mysterious Cities Of Gold. 3.35 Mario Batali’s Moltissimo. 4.05 The Feed. 4.35 Street Genius. 5.00 Rivals. 5.30 If You Are The One. 6.35 MythBusters. 7.30 The Feed. 8.00 Adam Ruins Everything. 8.30 What Would Diplo Do? 8.55 Tattoo Age. 9.20 Jungletown. 10.10 Vikings. 11.00 American Boyband. 11.25 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 4. 2.00 Desus And Mero. 2.30 RT News In English From Moscow. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Korean News. 5.30 Indonesian News.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 7.00 Flushed. 7.30 Oh Yuck. 8.00 Jay’s Jungle. 8.30 Harry’s Practice. 9.00 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Air Crash Investigation. 1.00 Mr Selfridge. Final. 2.15 Million Dollar Minute. 2.45 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 3.15 Hell’s Kitchen Australia. 4.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 The World’s Oddest Animal Couples. 8.30 Prime Suspect. 10.30 Waking The Dead. 11.30 Bargain Hunt. 12.30 Mr Selfridge. 2.00 The Great Day Out. 2.30 Out Of The Blue. 3.00 Creek To Coast. 3.30 Queensland Weekender. 4.00 Sydney Weekender. 4.30 Escape To The Country. 5.30 Harry’s Practice.
6.00 Friends. 6.30 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 8.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 9.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 9.30 Danoz Direct. 10.30 Harry. 11.30 As Time Goes By. 12.10 MOVIE: Rich And Strange. (1931) 1.55 David Attenborough’s Life Story. 3.05 Miniseries: Miss Marple: The Murder At The Vicarage. 4.15 Heartbeat. 5.20 Are You Being Served? 6.00 Friends. 7.00 As Time Goes By. 7.30 New Tricks. 8.40 Midsomer Murders. 10.50 Last Tango In Halifax. 12.00 Miniseries: Miss Marple: The Murder At The Vicarage. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 1.30 Friends. 2.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Home Shopping. 8.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 9.00 Reel Action. 9.30 Jake And The Fatman. 10.30 M*A*S*H. 12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 1.00 Nash Bridges. 2.00 Matlock. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.00 M*A*S*H. 7.30 48 Hours: The Doctor’s Daughter. 9.30 Forensics: Operation Drake. 10.30 Cops: Adults Only. 11.30 Breakout Kings. 1.30 Home Shopping. 2.00 Diagnosis Murder. 3.00 Matlock. 4.00 Nash Bridges. 5.00 The Doctors.
ABC ME (23)
ABC NEWS (24)
7MATE (63)
9GO! (53)
ELEVEN (82)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 12.00 My Year 12 Life. 12.25 Degrassi: Next Class. 12.50 House Of Anubis. 1.05 Adventure Time. 1.25 Detentionaire. 1.50 Life With Boys. 2.10 WAC: World Animal Championships. 2.35 Annedroids. 3.05 Backyard Science. 3.30 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 4.05 Matilda And The Ramsay Bunch. 4.20 Little Lunch. 4.35 Japanizi: Going, Going, Gong! 5.05 Eve. 5.35 The Day My Butt Went Psycho! 6.10 The Deep. 6.35 Make It Pop! 7.00 MOVIE: Billionaire Boy. (2016) Tupele Dorgu. 8.10 Tomorrow When The War Began. 8.55 The Haunting Hour. 9.20 Total Drama Presents: Ridonculous Race. 9.40 Rage. 10.40 Close. 5.00 Arthur. 5.45 Scream Street.
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News. 6.00 ABC News National. 6.30 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News With The Business. 9.00 ABC News National. 9.30 Lateline. 10.00 The World. 11.00 ABC News. 11.30 7.30. 12.00 ABC News. 12.30 The Drum. 1.00 Al Jazeera Newsgrid. 2.00 BBC Global. 2.30 7.30. 3.00 BBC Global. 3.30 Landline. 4.00 Al Jazeera Newshour. 5.00 Outside Source. 5.30 Lateline.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 Hook, Line And Sinker. 7.00 Shannon’s Legends Of Motorsport. 8.00 The Next Level. 9.00 Harley-Davidson TV. 9.30 Temporary Australians. 10.00 Mountain Men. 11.00 Starsky & Hutch. 12.00 S.W.A.T. 1.00 Brit Cops. 2.00 Canadian Pickers. 3.00 Mountain Men. 4.00 American Pickers. 5.00 Search For Lost Giants. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Highway Patrol. 8.00 Motorway Patrol. 8.30 Towies. 9.00 Highway Thru Hell USA. 10.00 Ice Road Truckers. 11.00 Restoration Garage. 12.00 Hard Knocks. 1.00 American Pickers. 2.00 Pawn Stars. 2.30 Ultimate Fishing. 4.30 American Pickers. 5.30 MXTV.
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 11.00 Friends. 12.00 Dawson’s Creek. 1.00 Airplane Repo. 2.00 Kids’ Programs. 4.30 The Looney Tunes Show. 5.00 Ben 10: Ultimate Alien. 5.30 Teen Titans. 6.00 Regular Show. 6.30 Adventure Time. 7.00 The Middle. 8.30 MOVIE: Minority Report. (2002) Tom Cruise, Colin Farrell, Samantha Morton. 11.30 Baggage Battles. 12.00 South Beach Tow. 12.30 Adventure Time. 1.00 Regular Show. 1.30 Ben 10: Ultimate Alien. 2.00 Pokémon. 2.30 Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! 3.00 The Looney Tunes Show. 3.30 Yo-Kai Watch. 4.00 Wild Kratts. 4.30 Teen Titans. 4.50 Power Rangers Dino Super Charge. 5.10 Rabbids Invasion. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! Classic.
6.00 Morning Programs. 6.30 Transformers: Robots In Disguise. 7.05 Pokémon. 7.35 Blazing Team. 8.00 Totally Wild. 8.35 Transformers Rescue Bots. 9.00 Super Wings. 9.30 Crocamole. 10.00 Touched By An Angel. 11.00 Dads. 11.30 The Millers. 12.00 The Good Wife. 1.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 2.00 The Wrong Girl. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 4.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 5.30 Frasier. 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 7.30 Fresh Off The Boat. 8.00 The Simpsons. 8.30 MOVIE: Divergent. (2014) Shailene Woodley, Theo James, Kate Winslet. 11.15 The Late Late Show With James Corden. 12.15 Late Programs.
TV WEDNESDAY, August 23 ABC (2)
SBS (3)
SCTV (6)
NINE (5)
WIN (8)
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News. 10.00 Q&A. 11.05 Restoration Man. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 National Press Club Address. 1.30 The House With Annabel Crabb. 2.00 The Doctor Blake Mysteries. 2.55 Doc Martin. 3.45 Eggheads. 4.15 Pointless. 5.00 ABC News: Early Edition. 5.30 The Drum. 6.10 Restoration Man. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Hard Quiz. 8.30 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. 9.00 Utopia. 9.30 Growing Up Gracefully. Final. 10.00 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 10.45 Lateline. 11.15 The Business. 11.30 Four Corners. 12.15 Media Watch. 12.35 National Press Club Address. 1.35 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 2.15 Late Programs.
6.00 Soccer. UEFA Champions League. Play-Off, Second Leg. Continued. 7.00 WorldWatch. 1.55 Who Do You Think You Are? 3.00 Dateline. 3.30 Insight. 4.30 Peter Kuruvita’s Coastal Kitchen. 5.00 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 4. Highlights. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 River Cottage Australia. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.35 Inside The Old Bailey. 8.30 Hijacked. 9.30 The Good Fight. 10.25 The Handmaid’s Tale. 11.20 SBS World News Late Edition. 11.50 MOVIE: Immortal. (2015) 1.40 MOVIE: Tomorrow Will Be Better. (2011) 3.55 Trawlermen: The Catch. 5.00 CGTN English News. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Saving Emily. (2004) Alexandra Paul, Michael Riley, Bruce Boxleitner. 2.00 The Daily Edition. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 Southern Cross News. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. 8.00 The Force: Behind The Line. 8.30 Criminal Minds. 10.30 Autopsy USA. 11.30 Motive. 12.30 Winners & Losers. 1.30 Harry’s Practice. 2.00 Home Shopping. 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 1.00 Extra. 1.30 Hot In Cleveland. 2.00 The Block. 3.00 News Now. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The Block. 8.40 Doctor Doctor. 9.40 Don’t Tell The Doctor. 10.40 Chicago Med. 11.40 The Closer. 12.35 20/20. 1.30 Postcards. 2.00 Extra. 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. 3.30 Good Morning America. 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
6.00 Entertainment Tonight. 6.30 Family Feud. 7.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 8.00 The Bold And The Beautiful. 8.30 Studio 10. 12.00 The Bachelor Australia. 1.00 Offspring. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Ben’s Menu. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 Alive And Cooking. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. 6.00 WIN News. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 The Bachelor Australia. 8.40 Offspring. 9.40 NCIS: Los Angeles. 10.40 Hawaii Five-0. 11.30 WIN’s All Australian News. 12.30 The Project. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 2.30 Home Shopping. 4.30 CBS This Morning.
ABC2 (22)
SBS VICELAND (32)
7TWO (62)
9GEM (52)
ONE (81)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 11.40 Teletubbies. 12.00 Play School. 12.30 Sesame Street. 1.00 Sally And Possum. 1.15 Clangers. 1.45 The Adventures Of Bottle Top Bill And His Best Friend Corky. 2.00 Lah-Lah’s Adventures. 2.15 Tree Fu Tom. 2.40 Olivia. 3.05 Wallykazam! 3.30 Play School. 4.25 Charlie And Lola. 4.40 Peg + Cat. 4.55 Andy’s Prehistoric Adventures. 5.10 Floogals. 5.25 Dot. 6.35 Ben And Holly’s Little Kingdom. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. 7.30 Dirty Jobs. 8.20 Kids On Speed? 9.20 The Lie Detective. 10.05 Head First. 10.50 Catfish: The TV Show. 11.35 Tattoo Tales. 12.05 Wild Things With Dom Monaghan. 12.55 Dirty Jobs. 1.50 Close. 5.10 Ella The Elephant. 5.45 Baby Jake.
6.00 WorldWatch. 11.35 Hindi News. 12.00 MOVIE: The Blacks. (2009) 1.25 F*ck That’s Delicious. 2.00 Bear Grylls’ Mission Survive. 3.00 Mysterious Cities Of Gold. 3.35 Cyberwar. 4.05 The Feed. 4.35 Street Genius. 5.00 VICE News Tonight. 5.30 If You Are The One. 6.35 MythBusters. 7.30 The Feed. 8.00 Motherboard. 8.30 MOVIE: Kung Fu Hustle. (2004) Stephen Chow, Wah Yuen, Qiu Yuen. 10.20 VICE News Tonight. 10.45 What Would Diplo Do? 11.10 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 5. 2.00 Desus And Mero. 2.30 France 24 News In English From Paris. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Korean News. 5.30 Indonesian News.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 7.00 Flushed. 7.30 Oh Yuck. 8.00 Jay’s Jungle. 8.30 Harry’s Practice. 9.00 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 The Great Outdoors. 2.15 Million Dollar Minute. 2.45 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 3.15 Hell’s Kitchen Australia. 4.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Jonathan Creek. 8.30 The Inspector Lynley Mysteries. 10.30 The Border. 11.30 Bargain Hunt. 12.30 Escape To The Country. 1.30 The Making Of Dunkirk. 2.00 Home Shopping. 4.00 Million Dollar Minute. 4.30 The Great Outdoors. 5.30 Harry’s Practice.
6.00 Friends. 6.30 This Is Your Day! 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 8.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 9.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.30 Harry. 11.30 As Time Goes By. 12.10 MOVIE: Dentist On The Job. (1961) 2.05 RPA. 3.05 Miniseries: Miss Marple: Sleeping Murder. 4.15 Heartbeat. 5.20 Are You Being Served? 6.00 Friends. 7.00 As Time Goes By. 7.30 Call The Midwife. 8.45 Agatha Christie’s Poirot. 9.55 Silent Witness. 11.00 Upstairs Downstairs. 12.10 Are You Being Served? 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 1.30 Friends. 2.00 Global Shop. 2.30 Last Tango In Halifax. 3.30 Heartbeat. 4.30 Late Programs.
6.00 Home Shopping. 8.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 9.00 Fishing Edge. 9.30 Jake And The Fatman. 10.30 M*A*S*H. 12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 1.00 Nash Bridges. 2.00 Matlock. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.00 M*A*S*H. 7.30 David Attenborough’s Planet Earth: Mountains. 8.30 Undercover Boss. 9.30 Shark Tank. 10.30 Ripper Street. 11.35 Forensics. 12.35 Home Shopping. 2.05 Diagnosis Murder. 3.00 Matlock. 4.00 Nash Bridges. 5.00 The Doctors.
ABC ME (23)
ABC NEWS (24)
7MATE (63)
9GO! (53)
ELEVEN (82)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 12.00 My Year 12 Life. 12.25 Degrassi: Next Class. 12.50 House Of Anubis. 1.05 Adventure Time. 1.25 Detentionaire. 1.50 Life With Boys. 2.10 WAC: World Animal Championships. 2.35 Annedroids. 3.05 Backyard Science. 3.30 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 4.00 Matilda And The Ramsay Bunch. 4.15 Little Lunch. 4.35 Japanizi: Going, Going, Gong! 5.05 Eve. 5.40 The Day My Butt Went Psycho! 6.10 The Deep. 6.35 Make It Pop! 7.00 MOVIE: Gangsta Granny. (2013) Julia McKenzie. 8.15 Tomorrow When The War Began. 9.00 The Haunting Hour. 9.25 Total Drama Presents: Ridonculous Race. 9.45 Rage. 10.45 Close. 5.00 Arthur. 5.45 Scream Street.
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News. 12.30 National Press Club Address. 1.30 ABC News. 6.00 ABC News National. 6.30 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News With The Business. 9.00 ABC News National. 9.30 Lateline. 10.00 The World. 11.00 ABC News. 11.30 7.30. 12.00 ABC News. 12.30 The Drum. 1.00 Al Jazeera Newsgrid. 2.00 BBC Global. 2.30 7.30. 3.00 BBC Global. 3.30 One Plus One. 4.00 Al Jazeera Newshour. 5.00 Outside Source. 5.30 Lateline.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 Hook, Line And Sinker. 7.00 Shannon’s Legends Of Motorsport. 8.00 The Next Level. 9.00 MXTV. 9.30 Temporary Australians. 10.00 Search For Lost Giants. 11.00 Starsky & Hutch. 12.00 S.W.A.T. 1.00 ScreenPLAY. 1.30 Pawn Stars. 2.00 Ice Road Truckers. 3.00 Search For Lost Giants. 4.00 Grilled. 5.00 Restoration Garage. 6.00 American Pickers. 7.00 Pawn Stars. 7.30 Bloopers. 8.30 Ink Master. 10.30 Tattoo Nightmares. 11.30 Hardcore Pawn. 12.00 Bloopers. 12.30 Tattoo Nightmares. 1.30 Pawn Stars. 2.00 Home Shopping. 4.00 American Pickers. 5.00 Tattoo Nightmares.
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 11.00 Friends. 12.00 Dawson’s Creek. 1.00 Airplane Repo. 2.00 Kids’ Programs. 4.30 The Looney Tunes Show. 5.00 Ben 10: Ultimate Alien. 5.30 Teen Titans. 6.00 Regular Show. 6.30 Adventure Time. 7.00 The Middle. 7.30 RBT. 8.00 Police Ten 7. 8.30 MOVIE: The Last Samurai. (2003) Tom Cruise, Ken Watanabe, William Atherton. 11.30 Best Ink. 12.30 Adventure Time. 1.00 Regular Show. 1.30 Ben 10: Ultimate Alien. 2.00 Pokémon. 2.30 Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! 3.00 The Looney Tunes Show. 3.30 Yo-Kai Watch. 4.00 Wild Kratts. 4.30 Teen Titans. 4.50 Power Rangers Dino Super Charge. 5.10 Rabbids Invasion. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! Classic.
6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Matt Hatter Chronicles. 6.30 Transformers: Robots In Disguise. 7.05 Pokémon. 7.35 Blazing Team. 8.00 Totally Wild. 8.35 Transformers Rescue Bots. 9.00 Super Wings. 9.30 Crocamole. 10.00 Touched By An Angel. 11.00 Dads. 11.30 The Millers. 12.00 The Good Wife. 1.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 2.00 The Wrong Girl. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 4.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 5.30 Frasier. 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 7.30 Fresh Off The Boat. 8.00 The Simpsons. 9.00 Futurama. 9.30 The Simpsons. 10.00 Bob’s Burgers. 11.00 Duckman. 11.30 Late Programs.
examiner.com.au
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
21
TV GUIDE
TV THURSDAY, August 24 ABC (2)
SBS (3)
SCTV (6)
NINE (5)
WIN (8)
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News. 10.00 Australian Story. 10.30 Todd Sampson’s Life On The Line. 11.00 Restoration Man. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 The Musketeers. 1.55 The Doctor Blake Mysteries. 2.55 Doc Martin. 3.40 Eggheads. 4.15 Pointless. 5.00 ABC News: Early Edition. 5.30 The Drum. 6.05 Restoration Man. Final. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 7.30. 8.00 Short Cuts To Glory: Matt Okine Vs Food. 8.30 Pulse. 9.30 Conviction. 10.30 Lateline. 11.00 The Business. 11.20 QI. 11.50 It’s A Date. Final. 12.20 Opening Shot. 12.50 Miniseries: Labyrinth. 2.25 The Musketeers. 3.25 Golf. PGA Tour. Wyndham Championship. Highlights. 4.20 Late Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Poh’s Kitchen. 2.55 Nigellissima. 3.25 Dancing Cheek To Cheek. 4.30 Peter Kuruvita’s Coastal Kitchen. 5.00 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 5. Highlights. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 River Cottage Australia. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great British Railway Journeys. 8.00 Gourmet Farmer. 8.30 Sugar Crash. 9.30 Versailles. 10.35 Outlander. 11.35 SBS World News Late Edition. 12.05 MOVIE: Agent Hamilton. (2012) 2.10 One Born Every Minute. 5.00 CGTN English News. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: The Client List. (2010) Jennifer Love Hewitt. 2.00 The Daily Edition. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 Southern Cross News. 7.00 Home And Away. 7.30 Holidays Makes You Laugh Out Loud. 8.30 The Front Bar. 9.30 World’s Deadliest Weather: Caught On Camera. 10.30 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares. 11.30 Royal Pains. 12.30 It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia. Return. 1.00 Grey’s Anatomy. 2.00 Home Shopping. 4.00 NBC Today. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 1.00 Doctor Doctor. 2.00 The Block. 3.00 News Now. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 The AFL Footy Show: My Room Telethon. 10.30 True Story With Hamish & Andy. 11.00 World’s Funniest Videos Top 10 Countdown. 11.30 The NRL Footy Show. 1.15 Anger Management. 1.45 Nine Presents. 2.00 Extra. 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. 3.30 Good Morning America. 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
6.00 Entertainment Tonight. 6.30 Family Feud. 7.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 8.00 The Bold And The Beautiful. 8.30 Studio 10. 12.00 The Bachelor Australia. 1.00 The Wrong Girl. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Ben’s Menu. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 Alive And Cooking. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. 6.00 WIN News. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 The Bachelor Australia. 8.40 The Wrong Girl. Return. 9.40 Common Sense. Final. 10.40 Blue Bloods. 11.30 WIN’s All Australian News. 12.30 The Project. 1.30 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 2.30 Home Shopping. 4.30 CBS This Morning.
ABC2 (22)
SBS VICELAND (32)
7TWO (62)
9GEM (52)
ONE (81)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 1.15 Clangers. 1.45 The Adventures Of Bottle Top Bill And His Best Friend Corky. 2.00 Lah-Lah’s Adventures. 2.15 Tree Fu Tom. 2.40 Olivia. 3.05 Wallykazam! 3.30 Play School. 4.25 Charlie And Lola. 4.40 Peg + Cat. 4.55 Andy’s Prehistoric Adventures. 5.10 Floogals. 5.25 Dot. 6.35 Ben And Holly’s Little Kingdom. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. 7.30 Dirty Jobs. 8.20 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. 8.50 The IT Crowd. 9.15 Utopia. 9.45 Live At The Apollo. 10.30 Broad City. 10.50 Sexy Beasts. 11.25 Weight Loss Ward. 12.15 Holidays In The Danger Zone: Places That Don’t Exist. 12.45 Dirty Jobs. 1.35 Close. 5.10 Ella The Elephant. 5.45 Kids’ Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 10.30 Somali News. 11.00 NHK Japanese News. 11.35 Hindi News. 12.00 MOVIE: Autumn. (2010) 2.00 Black Market: Dispatches. 3.00 Mysterious Cities Of Gold. 3.35 Motherboard. 4.05 The Feed. 4.35 Street Genius. 5.05 VICE News Tonight. 5.30 If You Are The One. 6.35 MythBusters. 7.30 The Feed. 8.00 Full Frontal With Samantha Bee. 8.30 Filthy Rich And Homeless. 9.35 Rise. 10.25 UEFA Champions League Highlights. 11.20 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 6. 2.00 Desus And Mero. 2.25 Deutsche Welle English News. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Korean News. 5.30 Indonesian News.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 7.00 Flushed. 7.30 Oh Yuck. 8.00 Jay’s Jungle. 8.30 Harry’s Practice. 9.00 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Lovejoy. 1.00 The Border. 2.00 Deal Or No Deal. 2.30 Million Dollar Minute. 3.00 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 3.30 60 Minute Makeover. 4.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Father Brown. 8.30 Murdoch Mysteries. 11.30 Bargain Hunt. 12.30 Psychic TV. 3.30 Lovejoy. 4.30 Million Dollar Minute. 5.00 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 5.30 Harry’s Practice.
6.00 Friends. 6.30 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 8.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 9.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.30 Harry. 11.30 As Time Goes By. 12.00 MOVIE: Confession. (1955) 1.55 Agatha Christie’s Poirot. 3.05 Miniseries: Miss Marple: Sleeping Murder. 4.15 Heartbeat. 5.20 Are You Being Served? 6.00 Friends. 7.00 As Time Goes By. 7.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 25. Brisbane Broncos v Parramatta Eels. 9.45 MOVIE: Sphere. (1998) Dustin Hoffman, Sharon Stone, Samuel L Jackson. 12.30 Friends. 1.00 Call And Win. 3.00 Heartbeat. 4.00 Adventures In Rainbow Country. 4.30 Late Programs.
6.00 Home Shopping. 8.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 9.00 iFish. 9.30 Jake And The Fatman. 10.30 M*A*S*H. 12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 1.00 Nash Bridges. 2.00 Matlock. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.00 M*A*S*H. 7.30 Gold Coast Cops. 8.30 Cops: Adults Only. 9.00 MOVIE: Born To Raise Hell. (2010) Steven Seagal, Dan Badarau. 11.00 Graceland. 1.00 Home Shopping. 2.00 Bellator MMA. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 The Doctors.
ABC ME (23)
ABC NEWS (24)
7MATE (63)
9GO! (53)
ELEVEN (82)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 12.00 My Year 12 Life. 12.25 Degrassi: Next Class. 12.50 House Of Anubis. 1.05 Adventure Time. 1.25 Detentionaire. 1.50 Life With Boys. 2.10 WAC: World Animal Championships. 2.35 Annedroids. 3.05 Backyard Science. 3.30 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 4.05 Matilda And The Ramsay Bunch. 4.20 Little Lunch. 4.35 Japanizi: Going, Going, Gong! 5.05 Eve. 5.40 The Day My Butt Went Psycho! 6.10 The Deep. 6.35 Make It Pop! 7.00 MOVIE: Mr Stink. (2012) Sheridan Smith. 8.10 Tomorrow When The War Began. 8.55 The Haunting Hour. 9.20 Total Drama Presents: Ridonculous Race. 9.40 Rage. 10.40 Close. 5.00 Arthur. 5.45 Scream Street.
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News. 6.00 ABC News National. 6.30 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News With The Business. 9.00 ABC News National. 9.30 Lateline. 10.00 The World. 11.00 ABC News. 11.30 7.30. 12.00 ABC News. 12.30 The Drum. 1.00 Al Jazeera Newsgrid. 2.00 BBC Global. 2.30 7.30. 3.00 BBC Global. 3.30 The Mix. 4.00 Al Jazeera Newshour. 5.00 Outside Source. 5.30 Lateline.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 Hook, Line And Sinker. 7.00 Shannon’s Legends Of Motorsport. 8.00 The Next Level. 9.00 Harley-Davidson TV. 9.30 Temporary Australians. 10.00 American Pickers. 11.00 Starsky & Hutch. 12.00 S.W.A.T. 1.00 Ink Master. 3.00 Grilled. 4.00 American Pickers. 5.00 Storage: Flog The Lot! 6.00 American Restoration. 7.30 The Big Bang Theory. 10.00 ScreenPLAY. 10.30 Kinne. 11.00 Bogan Hunters. 11.30 World’s Craziest Fools. 12.00 The Big Bang Theory. 1.00 T.J. Hooker. 2.00 Shannon’s Legends Of Motorsport. 4.00 Ultimate Fishing.
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 11.00 Friends. 12.00 Dawson’s Creek. 1.00 Airplane Repo. 2.00 Kids’ Programs. 4.30 The Looney Tunes Show. 5.00 Ben 10: Ultimate Alien. 5.30 Teen Titans. 6.00 Regular Show. 6.30 Adventure Time. 7.00 The Middle. 7.30 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 MOVIE: A Beautiful Mind. (2001) Russell Crowe, Jennifer Connelly, Ed Harris. 11.10 WWE Raw. 12.10 South Beach Tow. 12.35 Adventure Time. 1.00 Regular Show. 1.30 Ben 10: Ultimate Alien. 2.00 Pokémon. 2.30 Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! 3.00 The Looney Tunes Show. 3.30 Yo-Kai Watch. 4.00 Wild Kratts. 4.30 Teen Titans. 4.50 Power Rangers Dino Super Charge. 5.10 Rabbids Invasion. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! Classic.
6.00 Morning Programs. 6.30 Transformers: Robots In Disguise. 7.05 Pokémon. 7.35 Blazing Team. 8.00 Scope. 8.35 Transformers Rescue Bots. 9.00 Super Wings. 9.30 Crocamole. 10.00 Touched By An Angel. 11.00 Dads. 11.30 The Millers. 12.00 The Good Wife. 1.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 2.00 The Wrong Girl. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 4.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 5.30 Frasier. 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 7.30 Fresh Off The Boat. 8.00 The Simpsons. 8.30 MOVIE: Stardust. (2007) Claire Danes, Charlie Cox, Michelle Pfeiffer. 11.05 Everybody Loves Raymond. 11.35 Late Programs.
TV FRIDAY, August 25 ABC (2)
SBS (3)
SCTV (6)
NINE (5)
WIN (8)
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News. 10.00 One Plus One. 10.30 Compass. 11.00 Restoration Man. Final. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 1.00 Miniseries: Paper Giants: Magazine Wars. 2.30 Birds Of A Feather. 2.55 Doc Martin. 3.45 Eggheads. 4.15 Pointless. 5.00 ABC News: Early Edition. 5.30 The Drum. 6.00 Sideliners. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 The Link. 8.00 QI. 8.30 Prime Suspect 1973. Final. 9.15 Happy Valley. 10.15 Lateline. 10.45 The Business. 11.00 Shaun Micallef’s MAD AS HELL. 11.35 Planet America. 12.00 Rage.
6.00 WorldWatch. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Kardiyarlu Kangurnu. 2.30 The Point Review. 3.00 The Marngrook Footy Show. 4.30 Antonio Carluccio’s 6 Seasons. 5.00 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 6. Highlights. 5.30 Letters And Numbers. 6.00 River Cottage Australia. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Great British Railway Journeys. 8.35 MOVIE: Notes On A Scandal. (2006) Cate Blanchett, Judi Dench, Bill Nighy. 10.15 SBS World News Late Edition. 10.45 MOVIE: The Perfect Date. (2010) 12.35 Mammon. 5.00 CGTN English News. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
6.00 Sunrise. 9.00 The Morning Show. 11.30 Seven Morning News. 12.00 MOVIE: Betrayed. (2014) 2.00 The Daily Edition. 3.00 The Chase. 4.00 Seven News At 4. 5.00 The Chase Australia. 6.00 Southern Cross News. 7.00 Better Homes And Gardens. 7.30 Football. AFL. Round 23. Hawthorn v Western Bulldogs. From Etihad Stadium, Melbourne. 11.00 To Be Advised. 12.15 Grey’s Anatomy. 2.00 Home Shopping. 4.00 The Great Outdoors. 5.00 NBC Today.
6.00 Today. 9.00 Today Extra. 11.30 Morning News. 12.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 1.00 MOVIE: My Favourite Year. (1982) Peter O’Toole, Mark Linn-Baker. 3.00 News Now. 4.00 Afternoon News. 5.00 Millionaire Hot Seat. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 A Current Affair. 7.30 Vet On The Hill. 8.30 MOVIE: What To Expect When You’re Expecting. (2012) Cameron Diaz. 10.40 Law & Order. 11.35 Rizzoli & Isles. 12.30 Extra. 1.00 Anger Management. 1.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 2.00 Filthy Rich. 3.00 The Avengers. 4.00 Global Shop. 4.30 Good Morning America.
6.00 Entertainment Tonight. 6.30 Family Feud. 7.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 8.00 The Bold And The Beautiful. 8.30 Studio 10. 12.00 Dr Phil. 1.00 The Living Room. 2.00 Entertainment Tonight. 2.30 Ben’s Menu. 3.00 Judge Judy. 3.30 Alive And Cooking. 4.00 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 4.30 The Bold And The Beautiful. 5.00 TEN Eyewitness News. 6.00 WIN News. 6.30 The Project. 7.30 The Living Room. 8.30 Have You Been Paying Attention? 9.30 Shark Tank. 10.30 To Be Advised. 12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 1.00 The Project. 2.00 The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. 3.00 Home Shopping.
ABC2 (22)
SBS VICELAND (32)
7TWO (62)
9GEM (52)
ONE (81)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 12.30 Sesame Street. 1.00 Sally And Possum. 1.15 Clangers. 1.45 The Adventures Of Bottle Top Bill And His Best Friend Corky. 2.00 Lah-Lah’s Adventures. 2.15 Tree Fu Tom. 2.40 Olivia. 3.05 Wallykazam! 3.30 Play School. 4.25 Charlie And Lola. 4.40 Peg + Cat. 4.55 Andy’s Prehistoric Adventures. 5.10 Floogals. 5.25 Dot. 6.35 Ben And Holly’s Little Kingdom. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. 7.30 Dirty Jobs. 8.20 Catfish: The TV Show. 9.00 A Very British Brothel. 9.50 You Can’t Ask That. 10.20 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 11.05 The Lie Detective. 11.45 The Kill Team. 1.05 Dirty Jobs. 1.55 Close. 5.20 Daniel Tiger’s Neighbourhood. 5.45 Baby Jake.
6.00 WorldWatch. 10.30 Armenian News. 11.00 NHK Japanese News. 11.35 Hindi News. 12.00 MOVIE: Storm. (2009) 2.00 Black Market: Dispatches. 2.55 Balls Deep. 3.45 The Feed. 4.15 Mysterious Cities Of Gold. 4.50 Street Genius. 5.15 VICE News Tonight. 5.40 If You Are The One. 6.40 Batman. 7.30 Friday Feed. 8.00 The Mindy Project. 8.30 Adam Looking For Eve. 9.20 MOVIE: Wonderland. (2003) Val Kilmer, Kate Bosworth, Lisa Kudrow. 11.15 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 7. 2.00 VICE News Tonight. 2.30 NHK World English News. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Korean News. 5.30 Indonesian News.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 7.00 Flushed. 7.30 Oh Yuck. 8.00 Jay’s Jungle. 8.30 Harry’s Practice. 9.00 Million Dollar Minute. 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Better Homes And Gardens. 2.00 Deal Or No Deal. 2.30 Million Dollar Minute. 3.00 RSPCA Animal Rescue. 3.30 60 Minute Makeover. 4.30 Escape To The Country. 6.30 Bargain Hunt. 7.30 Better Homes And Gardens. 8.30 Selling Houses Australia. 10.30 The House That £100K Built: Tricks Of The Trade. 11.30 Bargain Hunt. 12.30 Vasili’s Garden. 1.00 Psychic TV. 4.30 Escape To The Country. 5.30 Harry’s Practice.
6.00 Friends. 6.30 This Is Your Day! 7.00 Creflo Dollar Ministries. 7.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 8.00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 9.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.30 Harry. 11.30 As Time Goes By. 12.00 MOVIE: The Gentle Gunman. (1952) John Mills. 1.55 Monarch Of The Glen. 3.05 Miniseries: Miss Marple: At Bertram’s Hotel. 4.15 Heartbeat. 5.20 Are You Being Served? 6.00 Friends. 7.00 As Time Goes By. 7.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 25. Wests Tigers v North Queensland Cowboys. 10.10 MOVIE: Heartbreak Ridge. (1986) 1.00 Call And Win. 3.00 Heartbeat. 4.00 Monarch Of The Glen. 5.00 Gideon’s Way.
6.00 Home Shopping. 8.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 9.00 iFish. 9.30 Jake And The Fatman. 10.30 M*A*S*H. 12.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 1.00 Nash Bridges. 2.00 Matlock. 3.00 Jake And The Fatman. 4.00 Diagnosis Murder. 5.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 6.00 M*A*S*H. 7.30 MacGyver. 8.30 Walker, Texas Ranger. 10.30 MOVIE: Passion Play. (2010) Mickey Rourke. 12.30 Home Shopping. 2.00 Matlock. 3.00 Walker, Texas Ranger. 5.00 The Doctors.
ABC ME (23)
ABC NEWS (24)
7MATE (63)
9GO! (53)
ELEVEN (82)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 10.30 Totally Rubbish. 11.05 A Journey Through Asian Art. 11.35 Behind The News. 12.00 My Year 12 Life. 12.25 Degrassi: Next Class. 12.50 House Of Anubis. 1.05 Adventure Time. 1.25 Detentionaire. 1.50 Life With Boys. 2.10 WAC: World Animal Championships. 2.35 Annedroids. 3.05 Backyard Science. 3.30 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 4.05 Matilda And The Ramsay Bunch. 4.20 Little Lunch. 4.35 Spawn Point. 5.05 Eve. 5.40 The Day My Butt Went Psycho! 6.10 The Deep. 6.35 Make It Pop! 7.00 Roald Dahl’s Revolting Rhymes. 8.10 Tomorrow When The War Began. 8.55 The Haunting Hour. 9.20 Sword Art Online. 9.40 Close. 5.00 Arthur. 5.45 Scream Street.
6.00 News Breakfast. 9.00 ABC News. 6.00 ABC News National. 6.30 The Drum. 7.00 ABC News With The Business. 9.00 Planet America. 9.30 Lateline. 10.00 The World. 11.00 ABC News. 11.30 The Link. 12.00 ABC News. 12.30 The Drum. 1.00 Al Jazeera Newsgrid. 2.00 BBC World News. 2.30 The Link. 3.00 BBC World News. 3.30 The Drum Weekly. 4.00 Al Jazeera Newshour. 5.00 BBC World News. 5.30 Lateline.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 Hook, Line And Sinker. 7.00 Shannon’s Legends Of Motorsport. 8.00 The Next Level. 9.00 Harley-Davidson TV. 9.30 Temporary Australians. 10.00 American Restoration. 11.00 Starsky & Hutch. 12.00 S.W.A.T. 1.00 American Restoration. 1.30 Classic Car Rescue. 3.30 Storage: Flog The Lot! 4.30 American Restoration. 6.00 World’s Craziest Fools. 6.30 The Big Bang Theory. 7.00 AFL Pre-Game Show. 7.30 The Big Bang Theory. 8.30 MOVIE: The November Man. (2014) Pierce Brosnan, Luke Bracey, Olga Kurylenko. 10.50 Outback Truckers. 11.50 Outback Hunters. 1.00 T.J. Hooker. 2.00 Shannon’s Legends Of Motorsport. 3.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 11.00 Friends. 12.00 Dawson’s Creek. 1.00 Airplane Repo. 2.00 Rabbids Invasion. 2.30 Be Cool, ScoobyDoo! 3.00 Pokémon. 3.30 The Powerpuff Girls. 4.05 Batman: The Brave And The Bold. 4.30 The Looney Tunes Show. 5.00 Ben 10: Ultimate Alien. 5.30 Teen Titans. 6.00 MOVIE: Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius. (2001) 7.40 MOVIE: Pixels. (2015) Adam Sandler, Kevin James. 9.45 MOVIE: Billy Madison. (1995) Adam Sandler, Darren McGavin. 11.30 WWE Smackdown. 12.30 Proof. 2.30 Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! 3.00 The Looney Tunes Show. 3.30 Yo-Kai Watch. 4.00 Wild Kratts. 4.30 Teen Titans. 4.50 Power Rangers Dino Super Charge. 5.10 Rabbids Invasion. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! Classic.
6.00 Morning Programs. 6.30 Transformers: Robots In Disguise. 7.05 Pokémon. 7.35 Blazing Team. 8.00 KuuKuu Harajuku. 8.35 Transformers Rescue Bots. 9.00 Super Wings. 9.30 Crocamole. 10.00 Touched By An Angel. 11.00 Dads. 11.30 The Millers. 12.00 The Good Wife. 1.00 WIN’s All Australian News. 2.00 Frasier. 3.00 The King Of Queens. 4.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 4.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 5.30 Frasier. 6.00 Family Feud. 6.30 Neighbours. 7.00 Malcolm In The Middle. 7.30 Fresh Off The Boat. 8.00 New Girl. 8.30 MOVIE: The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. (2015) Judi Dench, Bill Nighy, Maggie Smith. 10.55 To Be Advised. 11.55 Late Programs.
22
THE EXAMINER
Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
TV GUIDE
TV SATURDAY, August 26 ABC (2)
SBS (3)
SCTV (6)
NINE (5)
WIN (8)
6.00 Rage. 11.30 QI. 12.00 ABC News At Noon. 12.30 Kangaroo Dundee. 1.00 Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries. 1.55 Prime Suspect 1973. Final. 2.40 You Can’t Ask That. 3.00 Catalyst. 4.00 Landline. 4.30 Midsomer Murders. 6.00 Compass. 6.30 Gardening Australia. 7.00 ABC News. 7.30 Father Brown. 8.15 Shetland. 9.15 Doc Martin. 10.00 Pulse. 11.00 Adam Hills: The Last Leg. 11.45 Rage.
6.00 WorldWatch. 9.30 Greek News. 10.30 German News. 11.00 Spanish News. 12.00 Arabic News. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 PBS NewsHour. 2.00 Small Business Secrets. 2.30 Tutankhamun: The Truth Uncovered. 3.35 Weekend Warriors. 4.30 Antonio Carluccio’s 6 Seasons. 5.00 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 7. Highlights. 5.30 The Supervet. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Britain’s Greatest Bridges. 8.35 Definitive Guide To The Bermuda Triangle. 9.30 Travel Man. 10.30 Grand Tours Of Scotland. 11.30 Soccer. EPL. Chelsea v Everton. 2.15 MOVIE: Biutiful. (2010) 5.00 CGTN English News. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
6.00 NBC Today. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 The Morning Show: Weekend. 12.00 Adam’s Pasta Pilgrimage. 12.30 Bewitched. 1.00 Australia: The Story Of Us. 2.00 To Be Advised. 3.30 Coastwatch Oz. 4.00 Crash Investigation Unit. 4.30 Air Crash Investigation. 5.30 Luxury Escapes. 6.00 Southern Cross News. 6.30 The Kick. 7.00 Football. AFL. Round 23. Geelong v GWS. 10.30 To Be Advised. 11.30 The Goldbergs. 12.00 Grey’s Anatomy. 2.00 Home Shopping. 4.00 It Is Written. 4.30 Sons And Daughters. 5.00 The Great Outdoors.
6.00 PAW Patrol. 6.30 Dora The Explorer. 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Today Extra: Saturday. 12.00 Destination Happiness. 12.30 Cybershack. 1.00 Patriot Games. 2.00 Destination WA. 2.30 The Garden Gurus. 3.00 Netball. Quad Series. Game 1. Australia v England. 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Getaway. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 MOVIE: Bride Wars. (2009) Kate Hudson, Anne Hathaway. 8.50 MOVIE: How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days. (2003) Kate Hudson, Matthew McConaughey, Kathryn Hahn. 11.10 MOVIE: Divine Secrets Of The Ya-Ya Sisterhood. (2002) 1.30 Anger Management. 2.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 2.30 The Brokenwood Mysteries. 4.20 Late Programs.
6.00 Fishing Edge. 6.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 7.00 RPM. 7.30 iFish. 8.00 Family Feud. 8.30 Good Chef Bad Chef. 9.00 Ben’s Menu. 9.30 Studio 10: Saturday. 12.00 The Living Room. 1.00 Healthy Homes. 1.30 Fishing Australia. 2.00 Places We Go With Jennifer Adams. 2.30 Pooches At Play. 3.00 Australia By Design. 3.30 My Market Kitchen. 4.00 What’s Up Down Under. 4.30 Escape Fishing With ET. 5.00 Rugby Union. The Rugby Championship. Bledisloe Cup. Game 2. New Zealand v Australia. 7.30 NCIS. 10.30 To Be Advised. 11.45 48 Hours. 1.30 Home Shopping.
ABC2 (22)
SBS VICELAND (32)
7TWO (62)
9GEM (52)
ONE (81)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 1.45 The Adventures Of Bottle Top Bill And His Best Friend Corky. 2.00 Lah-Lah’s Adventures. 2.15 Tree Fu Tom. 2.40 Olivia. 3.05 Wallykazam! 3.30 Play School. 4.30 Ready, Jet, Go! 4.55 Andy’s Prehistoric Adventures. Final. 5.10 Floogals. 5.25 Dot. 6.35 Ben And Holly’s Little Kingdom. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. 7.30 Penn & Teller: Fool Us. 8.15 Would I Lie To You? 8.45 Live At The Apollo. 9.30 The IT Crowd. 10.00 Broad City. 10.20 Sexy Beasts. 10.50 Video Killed The Radio Star. 11.15 Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown. 12.00 The Traffickers. 12.45 Highway Thru Hell. 2.15 Would I Lie To You? 2.50 Close. 5.20 Daniel Tiger’s Neighbourhood. 5.45 Kids’ Programs.
6.00 WorldWatch. 9.00 Croatian News. 9.30 Serbian News. 10.00 Dutch News. 10.30 Hungarian News. 11.00 NHK Japanese News. 11.35 Hindi News. 12.00 VICE News Tonight. 12.50 Balls Deep. 1.20 Noisey. 2.10 Rivals. 3.05 Close Up Kings. 4.00 Dara Ó Briain: School Of Hard Sums. 5.10 Jungletown. 6.00 Brooklyn NineNine. 6.50 Daria. 7.40 Ali G: Remixed. 8.30 MOVIE: 2001: A Space Odyssey. (1968) Keir Dullea, Gary Lockwood, Douglas Rain. 11.20 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 8 2.00 Motherboard. 2.30 France 24 News In English From Paris. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Korean News. 5.30 Indonesian News.
6.00 Home Shopping. 8.00 Travel Oz. 9.30 NBC Today. 12.00 Vasili’s Garden. 12.30 Room For Improvement. 1.00 The Great Day Out. 1.30 Out Of The Blue. 2.00 Creek To Coast. 2.30 The Great Australian Doorstep. 3.00 Queensland Weekender. 3.30 Sydney Weekender. 4.00 Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations. 5.00 For The Love Of Dogs. 5.30 Cities Of The Underworld. 6.30 Greatest Cities Of The World With Griff Rhys Jones. 8.30 Escape To The Country. 10.30 Escape To The Continent. 11.45 Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations. 1.00 Psychic TV. 4.00 Rugby Union. Shute Shield.
6.00 Adventures In Rainbow Country. 6.30 Skippy The Bush Kangaroo. 7.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 8.00 Danoz Direct. 8.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.00 The Baron. 11.00 The Avengers. 12.00 MOVIE: All Creatures Great And Small. (1975) Anthony Hopkins, Simon Ward. 1.55 MOVIE: Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. (1968) Dick Van Dyke, Sally Ann Howes, Lionel Jeffries. 5.00 Netball. Quad Series. Game 2. New Zealand v South Africa. 7.00 Rugby League. NRL. Round 25. Cronulla Sharks v Sydney Roosters. 9.45 MOVIE: Any Given Sunday. (1999) 1.00 Call And Win. 3.00 MOVIE: The Wicker Man. (1973) Edward Woodward. 4.40 Edgar Wallace Mysteries.
6.00 Home Shopping. 8.00 Star Trek: The Next Generation. 9.00 World Sport. 9.30 Jake And The Fatman. 10.30 M*A*S*H. 12.00 Diagnosis Murder. 1.00 Megastructures Breakdown. 2.00 Motor Racing. Dunlop Super2 Championship. Round 5. Highlights. 3.00 Motor Racing. Australian GT Championship. Round 9. Highlights. 4.00 Fishing. IFS Championship. 4.30 Reel Action. 5.00 MacGyver. 6.00 David Attenborough’s Planet Earth. 7.00 Undercover Boss. 8.00 48 Hours. 10.00 Forensics. 11.00 Cops: Adults Only. 12.00 Bellator MMA. 2.00 RPM. 2.30 Motor Racing. Porsche Carrera Cup Australia. Round 5. Replay. 3.30 Cops: Adults Only. 4.30 Late Programs.
ABC ME (23)
ABC NEWS (24)
7MATE (63)
9GO! (53)
ELEVEN (82)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 11.20 Odd Squad. 11.35 Hank Zipzer. 12.00 Make It Pop! 12.25 Backstage. 12.50 You’re Skitting Me. 1.05 Japanizi: Going, Going, Gong! 1.30 Dragons: Riders Of Berk. 1.50 Danger Mouse. 2.15 Miraculous Tales Of Ladybug And Cat Noir. 2.40 Slugterra. 3.00 Spawn Point. 3.30 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 4.05 Matilda And The Ramsay Bunch. 4.20 Little Lunch. 4.35 Japanizi: Going, Going, Gong! 5.05 Eve. 5.35 The Day My Butt Went Psycho! 6.10 The Deep. 6.35 Make It Pop! 7.00 Horrible Histories. 8.10 Tomorrow When The War Began. Final. 8.55 The Haunting Hour. 9.20 Total Drama Presents: Ridonculous Race. Final. 9.40 Close. 5.00 Arthur. 5.45 Scream Street.
6.00 The Link. 6.30 The Breakfast Couch. 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 11.00 ABC News. 11.30 The World This Week. 12.00 ABC News. 12.30 Landline. 1.00 ABC News. 1.30 Planet America. 2.00 ABC News. 2.30 One Plus One. 3.00 ABC News. 3.30 The Link. 4.00 ABC News. 4.30 The Breakfast Couch. 5.00 ABC News. 5.30 The Drum Weekly. 6.00 ABC News Weekend. 6.30 The Mix. 7.00 ABC News Weekend. 7.30 Australian Story. 8.10 Four Corners. 9.00 ABC News Weekend. 9.30 The World This Week. 10.00 ABC News. 10.30 Planet America. 11.00 ABC News. 11.30 One Plus One. 12.00 National Press Club Address. 1.00 Al Jazeera Newsgrid. 2.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Ultimate Fishing. 8.00 Home Shopping. 9.00 Classic Restos. 9.30 Classic Car Rescue. 11.30 Life Off Road. 12.00 Swamp People. 1.00 Blokesworld. 1.30 Prospectors. 2.30 Big Smo. 3.30 What Went Down. 4.00 Swamp People. 5.10 Cajun Pawn Stars. 6.40 MOVIE: Sister Act 2: Back In The Habit. (1993) 9.00 MOVIE: Due Date. (2010) Robert Downey Jr, Zach Galifianakis, Michelle Monaghan. 11.00 World’s Most Amazing Videos. 12.00 Outback Hunters. 1.00 What Went Down. 1.30 Big Smo. 2.00 Ultimate Fishing. 4.00 Outback Hunters. 5.00 Big Smo.
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 1.00 Beyblade Burst. 1.30 Star Wars: Droid Tales. 2.00 Yu-Gi-Oh! Arc-V. 2.30 Surfing Australia TV. 3.00 Yo-Kai Watch. 3.30 We Bare Bears. 4.00 The Amazing World Of Gumball. 4.30 Uncle Grandpa. 5.00 Ben 10. 5.30 Batman: The Brave And The Bold. 6.30 MOVIE: Happy Feet Two. (2011) 8.30 MOVIE: Star Trek. (2009) Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Eric Bana. 11.00 Two And A Half Men. 12.00 Adult Swim. 12.30 Black Jesus. 1.00 Swamp Hunters. 1.30 Surfing Australia TV. 2.00 Batman: The Brave And The Bold. 3.00 Yo-Kai Watch. 3.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! Arc-V. 4.00 Kate And Mim-Mim. 4.30 Star Wars: Droid Tales. 4.50 Uncle Grandpa. 5.10 We Bare Bears. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! Classic.
6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Matt Hatter Chronicles. 6.30 Pokémon. 7.00 Lexi And Lottie: Trusty Twin Detectives. 7.30 Kuu-Kuu Harajuku. 8.00 Totally Wild. 8.30 Scope. 9.05 The Loop. 11.35 The Bachelor Australia. 1.45 To Be Advised. 4.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 5.30 Frasier. 6.30 MOVIE: How To Train Your Dragon 2. (2014) Jay Baruchel. 8.30 Have You Been Paying Attention? 9.30 MOVIE: Birdman. (2014) Michael Keaton, Emma Stone. 11.55 To Be Advised. 12.55 The Loop. 3.25 Frasier. 4.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 5.30 Home Shopping.
TV SUNDAY, August 27 ABC (2)
SBS (3)
SCTV (6)
NINE (5)
WIN (8)
6.00 Rage. 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Insiders. 10.00 Offsiders. 10.30 The World This Week. 11.00 Compass. 11.30 Songs Of Praise. 12.00 Landline. 1.00 Gardening Australia. 1.30 The Checkout. 2.00 Shetland. 2.55 Doc Martin. 3.40 The Mix. 4.10 Australian Story. 4.40 Father Brown. 5.25 Hard Quiz. 6.00 Forces Of Nature With Brian Cox. 7.00 ABC News. 7.40 Grand Designs New Zealand. Final. 8.30 Midsomer Murders. Final. 10.00 Scott & Bailey. 10.50 Top Of The Lake. 11.50 Silent Witness. 12.50 Rage. 2.50 QI. 3.20 Scott & Bailey. 4.10 The Bill. 5.00 Insiders.
6.00 WorldWatch. 9.30 Soccer. EPL. Chelsea v Everton. Replay. 12.00 Arabic News. 12.30 Turkish News. 1.00 Speedweek. 3.00 The Bowls Show. 4.00 Motorcycle Racing. Superbike World Championship. Round 9. Highlights. 4.30 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 8. Highlights. 5.00 Small Business Secrets. 5.30 SAS Origins: A Secret History. 6.30 SBS World News. 7.30 Diana And The Paparazzi. 8.50 The Royals Who Rescued The Monarchy. 11.10 MOVIE: In A Better World. (2010) 1.20 I Am JFK Jr. 3.00 Night Will Fall. 4.30 Food Lovers’ Guide To Australia. 5.00 CGTN English News. 5.15 NHK World English News. 5.30 Deutsche Welle English News.
6.00 NBC Today. 7.00 Weekend Sunrise. 10.00 AFL Game Day. 11.30 Bewitched. 12.00 To Be Advised. 1.30 Footy Flashbacks. 2.30 AFL Pre-Game Show. 3.00 Football. AFL. Round 23. Richmond v St Kilda. 6.00 Southern Cross News. 7.00 Little Big Shots. New. 8.00 Diana: The Secret Tapes. 10.00 Robbie Coltrane’s Critical Evidence. New. 11.00 The Investigator: A True Crime Story. 12.00 Cosmetic Coffee. 12.30 Whodunnit? Final. 1.30 Harry’s Practice. 2.00 Home Shopping. 3.30 Harry’s Practice. 4.00 NBC Meet The Press. 5.00 Seven Early News. 5.30 Sunrise.
6.00 PAW Patrol. 6.30 Dora The Explorer. 7.00 Weekend Today. 10.00 Sports Sunday. 11.00 The AFL Sunday Footy Show. 12.30 Future Stars. 1.30 Full Cycle. 2.00 Ready For Takeoff. 3.00 The Block. 5.00 News: First At Five. 5.30 Postcards. 6.00 Nine News. 7.00 The Block. 8.30 60 Minutes. 9.30 Truth And Lies: The Family Manson. 11.10 See No Evil. 12.10 House. 1.00 Full Cycle. 1.30 The Avengers. 2.30 Global Shop. 3.00 The Baron. 4.00 Good Morning America: Sunday. 5.00 News Early Edition. 5.30 Today.
6.00 Mass For You At Home. 6.30 Hillsong. 7.00 Fishing Australia. 7.30 My Market Kitchen. 8.00 Good Chef Bad Chef. 8.30 Everyday Gourmet With Justine Schofield. 9.00 What’s Up Down Under. 9.30 Studio 10: Sunday. 12.00 Alive And Cooking. 12.30 The Doctors. 1.30 Weekend Feast. 2.30 To Be Advised. 3.30 The 48 Hour Destination. New. 4.00 RPM. 5.00 Fishing Australia. 5.30 WIN News Sunday. 6.00 Family Feud: Sunday. 6.30 Modern Family. 7.30 Australian Survivor. 9.00 NCIS: New Orleans. Final. 9.55 Motor Racing. Formula 1. Race 12. Belgian Grand Prix. 12.00 Motorcycle Racing. MotoGP. Race 12. Grand Prix of Great Britain. 1.30 48 Hours: NCIS. 2.30 Late Programs.
ABC2 (22)
SBS VICELAND (32)
7TWO (62)
9GEM (52)
ONE (81)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 12.15 Mouk. 12.30 Sesame Street. 1.00 Sally And Possum. 1.15 Teacup Travels. 1.30 Little Roy. Final. 1.45 The Adventures Of Bottle Top Bill And His Best Friend Corky. 2.00 Lah-Lah’s Adventures. 2.15 Tree Fu Tom. 2.40 Olivia. 3.05 Wallykazam! 3.30 Play School. 4.30 Ready, Jet, Go! 5.00 Fireman Sam: Heroes Of The Storm. 6.35 Ben And Holly’s Little Kingdom. 7.00 Spicks And Specks. 7.30 River Monsters. 8.25 MOVIE: Super Size Me. (2004) Morgan Spurlock, Daryl Isaacs, Chemeeka Walker. 10.05 A Very British Brothel. 10.55 Louis Theroux: A Place For Paedophiles. 11.55 Mad Hot Ballroom. 1.35 River Monsters. 2.35 Close. 5.10 Ella The Elephant. 5.45 Baby Jake.
6.00 WorldWatch. 7.30 Polish News. 8.00 Maltese News. 8.30 Macedonian News. 9.00 PopAsia. 10.00 Portuguese News. 10.50 Urdu News. 11.35 Hindi News. 12.00 VICE News Tonight. 12.50 Earthworks. 1.40 Where Are We Going, Dad? 3.20 Don’t Tell My Mother… 4.15 Survivor Games With Bear Grylls. 5.30 Batman. 6.25 Vs Arashi. 7.20 If You Are The One. 8.30 Ninja Warrior Sweden. 9.20 Naked: Diary From Porn Valley. 10.20 North Korean Labour Camps. 11.10 Cycling. Vuelta a España. Stage 9. 2.00 France 24 News In English From Paris. 3.00 Thai News. 3.30 Bangla News. 4.00 Punjabi News. 4.30 Sri Lankan Sinhalese News. 5.00 Korean News. 5.30 Indonesian News.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 Amazing Facts. 7.00 Tomorrow’s World. 7.30 Leading The Way. 8.00 David Jeremiah. 8.30 It Is Written Oceania. 9.00 Home Shopping. 9.30 Australia’s Best Backyards. 10.00 House Of Wellness. 11.00 NBC Today. 12.00 Home And Away Catch-Up. 2.00 Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations. 3.00 Adam’s Pasta Pilgrimage. 3.30 New Zealand On A Plate. 4.00 To Be Advised. 4.30 Escape To The Country. 5.30 One Foot In The Grave. 7.00 Border Security: International. 8.00 Border Security: Australia’s Front Line. 8.30 A Touch Of Frost. 10.30 Border Security: International. 11.30 Escape To The Country. 12.30 Psychic TV. 3.30 Late Programs.
6.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 6.30 Leading The Way. 7.00 New Hope Ministries: New Hope On The Road. 7.30 Beyond Today. 8.00 Key Of David. 8.30 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 10.00 The Avengers. 11.00 MOVIE: San Demetrio, London. (1943) 1.00 Getaway. 1.30 NRL Sunday Footy Show. 3.30 Rugby League. NRL. Round 25. Penrith Panthers v St George Illawarra Dragons. 6.00 Secret Dealers. 7.00 The Good Life. 7.40 New Tricks. 8.50 MOVIE: The Man With The Golden Gun. (1974) Roger Moore, Christopher Lee, Britt Ekland. 11.20 The Closer. 12.20 The Good Life. 1.00 TV Shop: Home Shopping. 1.30 Adventures In Rainbow Country. 2.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Home Shopping. 8.00 Rugby Union. The Rugby Championship. Bledisloe Cup. Game 2. New Zealand v Australia. Replay. 10.30 Healthy Homes. 11.00 Fishing. IFS Championship. Replay. 11.30 Reel Action. 12.00 Escape Fishing With ET. 12.30 World Sport. 1.00 Pat Callinan’s 4x4 Adventures. 2.00 Monster Jam. 3.00 Undercover Boss. 4.00 Animal Extra. 4.30 Pooches At Play. 5.00 What’s Up Down Under. 5.30 iFish. 6.00 M*A*S*H. 7.00 Scorpion. 8.00 Echo: The Unforgettable Elephant. 9.00 MOVIE: Age Of Heroes. (2011) Sean Bean, Danny Dyer, Aksel Hennie. 11.00 Megastructures Breakdown. 12.00 World Sport. 12.30 RPM. 1.30 Coverband. 3.30 The Glades. Final. 4.30 Late Programs.
ABC ME (23)
ABC NEWS (24)
7MATE (63)
9GO! (53)
ELEVEN (82)
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 12.25 Backstage. 12.50 You’re Skitting Me. 1.05 Japanizi: Going, Going, Gong! 1.30 Dragons: Riders Of Berk. 1.50 Danger Mouse. 2.15 Miraculous Tales Of Ladybug And Cat Noir. 2.40 Slugterra. 3.00 Keeping Up With ME. 3.30 The Penguins Of Madagascar. 4.05 Matilda And The Ramsay Bunch. 4.20 Little Lunch. 4.35 Japanizi: Going, Going, Gong! 5.05 Eve. 5.35 The Day My Butt Went Psycho! 6.10 The Deep. 6.35 Make It Pop! 7.10 Horrible Histories. 7.40 Deadly 60. 8.10 Open Heart. 8.30 Dance Academy. 8.55 The Haunting Hour. 9.15 The High Fructose Adventures Of Annoying Orange. 9.30 Rage. 2.00 Close. 5.00 Arthur. 5.45 Scream Street.
6.00 Landline. 6.30 The Drum Weekly. 7.00 Weekend Breakfast. 9.00 Insiders. 10.00 Weekend Breakfast. 11.00 ABC News. 11.30 Offsiders. 12.00 ABC News. 12.30 Australian Story. 1.00 ABC News. 1.30 The Mix. 2.00 ABC News. 2.30 The Breakfast Couch. 3.00 ABC News. 3.30 Landline. 4.00 ABC News. 4.30 One Plus One. 5.00 ABC News. 5.30 Compass. 6.00 ABC News Weekend. 6.30 Planet America. 7.00 ABC News Weekend. 7.30 The House With Annabel Crabb. 8.00 Insiders. 9.00 ABC News Weekend. 9.30 One Plus One. 10.00 ABC News. 10.30 The Drum Weekly. 11.00 ABC News. 11.30 The Mix. 12.00 Landline. 1.00 Al Jazeera Newsgrid. 2.00 Late Programs.
6.00 Home Shopping. 6.30 Ultimate Fishing. 7.30 Home Shopping. 9.30 Adventure Angler. 10.00 Swamp People. 11.00 Big Smo. 11.30 MythBusters. 12.30 Hook, Line And Sinker. 1.30 Survival Of The Fittest Australia. 2.30 Seinfeld. 7.00 MOVIE: Men In Black II. (2002) Tommy Lee Jones, Will Smith, Rosario Dawson. 8.40 MOVIE: Bad Boys II. (2003) Martin Lawrence, Will Smith. 11.35 Hardcore Pawn. 12.05 Cajun Pawn Stars. 1.05 T.J. Hooker. 2.00 Shannon’s Legends Of Motorsport. 3.00 Cajun Pawn Stars. 3.30 Ultimate Fishing. 4.30 Dream Car Garage. 5.00 Cajun Pawn Stars.
6.00 Kids’ Programs. 1.00 Beyblade Burst. 1.30 Steven Universe. 2.00 Yu-Gi-Oh! Arc-V. 2.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! Zexal. 3.00 Yo-Kai Watch. 3.30 We Bare Bears. 4.00 The Amazing World Of Gumball. 4.30 Over The Garden Wall. 5.15 MOVIE: Muppets From Space. (1999) 7.00 MOVIE: Zoom: Academy For Superheroes. (2006) Tim Allen. 8.50 MOVIE: Hancock. (2008) Will Smith, Jason Bateman, Charlize Theron. 10.50 Ghost Town Gold. 11.50 Two And A Half Men. 12.20 Adult Swim. 12.50 Black Jesus. 1.20 Step Dave. 2.30 Yo-Kai Watch. 3.00 Yu-Gi-Oh! Zexal. 3.30 Kate And MimMim. 4.00 Steven Universe. 4.30 Little Charmers. 4.50 Rabbids Invasion. 5.10 We Bare Bears. 5.30 Yu-Gi-Oh! Classic.
6.00 Toasted TV. 6.05 Matt Hatter Chronicles. 6.30 Transformers: Robots In Disguise. 7.05 Pokémon. 7.35 Treasure Island. 8.05 Victorious. 8.30 Sanjay And Craig. 9.00 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 10.00 Random & Whacky. 10.30 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 11.00 Family Ties. 12.00 Cristela. 12.30 Angel From Hell. 1.00 Neighbours. 3.30 Everybody Loves Raymond. 4.30 Frasier. 6.30 The Simpsons. 9.00 MOVIE: The Big Lebowski. (1998) 11.25 Frasier. 11.55 Family Ties. 1.00 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 2.30 Sanjay And Craig. 3.00 Frasier. 4.00 Family Ties. 5.00 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. 5.30 Home Shopping.
examiner.com.au
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
23
TASMANIA’S EAST COAST "Do
you need
Don't spend your precious holiday time working.
a .........?"
See below for local businesses and services on the East Coast. If you would like to advertise your business here please call Prue on 6336 7277 or Kerri on 6336 7259. TA5169612
SKIP BINS AND EXCAVATIONS EAST COAST SKIPS YOUR ONLY LOCAL WASTE REMOVALIST IN BREAK O'DAY AND SURROUNDING AREAS
7 DAYS A WEEK!
0477 889 145
TOLLEY’S EXCAVATIONS ST HELENS
SPECIALISING IN CIVIL CONSTRUCTION, BUILDING SITE WORKS, DRIVEWAYS, CLEARING, FIRE BREAKS & RUBBISH REMOVAL
0419 005 661
MEDEA PARK’SS CAFE’ C COCO ISS NOW O UP AND RUNNING!! Cafe’ Coco is an initiative to bring residents and/or their family members together while visiting their loved ones.
PLANT HIRE
17 Circassian Street St Helens TAS 7216
CALL US TODAY FOR A COMPETITIVE QUOTATION
Stay 3 nights and pay for 2!
TA5198248
Stay on the sunny east coast at Scamander Beach Hotel Motel.
Phone (03) 6376 1355 Fax (03) 6376 2006
Email: info@medeapark.org.au Web: www.medeapark.org.au
TA5160000
CONCRETE SUPPLIES
ACCOMMODATION
Rooms from $110 per night SCAMANDER BEACH HOTEL MOTEL 158-164 Scamander Avenue, Scamander Ph (03) 63 725 255 E: enquiries@scamanderbeach.com.au www.scamanderbeach.com.au
ST HELENS CONCRETE
NEW NAME, SAME GREAT SERVICE!
Concrete supply for driveways, home builds and commercial projects Formerly Venarchie Contracting. 25495Tasman Highway, St Helens Phone 6376 2138 Email info@sthelensconcrete.com.au
TA5166175
ENGINEERING
TASMANIA’S EAST COAST Are you on the East Coast and looking to promote your business to a large audience. The Examiner is devoting a page of the Business Information Guide every month to the East Coast region.
If you would like to advertise your business here please call Prue on 6336 7277 or Garth on 6336 7259.
Bill & Anne Franks
30 Years Trading in St Helens At Suncoast Engineering some of our services: • Marine Engineering • General Engineering • Hydraulic Hoses, Valves, Pumps, Repairs & Sales • Truck & Earthmoving Machinery Repairs • Sandblasting • All types of Machining • Anchor Winches • Fabrication & Welding for Steel, Stainless Steel & Aluminium • Door Sales for Steel, Marine & Anti Fouling paints.
TA5229518
ARE YOU LOOKING TO PROMOTE.........?
Suncoast Engineering
TA5223039
TA5166322
BUILDERS SKIPS AVAILABLE
RESIDENTIAL CARE
Lot 7, Industrial Estate, 25463 Tasman Highway, St. Helens TAS 7216 Phone 03 6376 1702 • Mobile 0417 304 840 (Bill) • Email suncoasteng@bigpond.com www.suncoastengineering.com.au
TA5226700
THE EXAMINER
Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
Star GIVE YOUR BUSINESS A BOOST! WITH YOUR OWN EDITORIAL ON THE FRONT PAGE OF BUSINESS INFORMATION GUIDE LET
61,000
Business Information Guide Join the growing list of businesses that find the Business Information Guide an essential component of their marketing plan. Business Solutions Your Local Business Directory. Be found on our website and position yourself in front of our massive digital audience.
READERS DISCOVER
YOU
IN PRINT, AS WELL AS
420,000 UNIQUE ONLINE VIEWERS
EACH MONTH.
For more information on how to include your business in the Business Information Guide and Business Solutions, contact:
Prue Virieux 6336 7277 prue.virieux@fairfaxmedia.com.au Garth Manning 6336 7259 garth.manning@fairfaxmedia.com.au
TA5182503
24
examiner.com.au
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
25
BRAIN INJURY AWARENESS WEEK ADVERTISING FEATURE
Strengthening of services
MERGER: Li-Ve Tasmania’s resources are now available to the TABIS community following a merger between the two service providers.
TASMANIA’S only dedicated service provider for people living with acquired brain injury, Tasmanian Acquired Brain Injury Services (TABIS), will now operate as a division of Li-Ve Tasmania. The recent merger means a single larger, stronger and more sustainable organisation, according to Li-Ve Tasmania’s CEO Paul Byrne. “This is a win for Tasmanians living with disability – especially those living with acquired brain injury,” he said. Mr Byrne also confirmed that TABIS will continue to operate, as usual, servicing its client base in greater Launceston (right through to Georgetown) and eastward, as far as St Helens. “TABIS staff will continue to service clients in the normal way,” he said. “The major difference for the TABIS community is that it can now access Li-Ve Tasmania’s resources, providing more security and opportunities. “Over the past decade, Li-Ve Tasmania has enjoyed a particular focus on supporting those living with acquired brain injury and we’re
keen to leverage TABIS’s specialised expertise. “TABIS aligns well with Li-Ve Tasmania, not only geographically but also philosophically. So, combining the two long-standing Tasmanian disability organisations has been fairly seamless.” TABIS, as a division of LiVe Tasmania, will continue to make sure people living with acquired brain injury have access to responsive and innovative support options. It will promote community access and foster successful long-term participation and re-integration. Li-Ve Tasmania provides genuine person-centred support to people living with disability in Tasmania. Empowering people living with disability to live life their way in comfort and safety has been at the heart of the Li-Ve Tasmania brand for more than 60 years. TABIS is dedicated to provide a range of services to people who have Acquired Brain Injury in Northern Tasmania. The organisation is based in Mowbray Heights, Launceston. TABIS seeks to ensure that
people with an acquired brain injury have access to responsive and innovative rehabilitative support options, which promote access, and which foster successful long-term community participation and re-integration. People with an acquired brain injury and other disabilities may experience difficulties, which impede their re-integration into the local community. The complex nature, and combination of after-effects of brain injury, may pose barriers for people to resume a place in the community that is personally satisfying and productive. For this reason TABIS is committed to providing individually tailored and long-term support to assist the person to develop their community participation and involvement. TABIS is committed to the notion of community re-integration as a process over time as opposed to a one-off event. It encourages personal empowerment and supports each individual to pursue greater community participation.
YOU DON’T HAVE TO DIE TO LOSE YOUR LIFE.
RSAC19903_rj
SPEED AND YOU RISK BRAIN INJURY.
26
THE EXAMINER
Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
BRAIN INJURY AWARENESS WEEK ADVERTISING FEATURE
Cars carry fragile goods HUMAN beings are fragile and cannot withstand the enormous force of a highspeed vehicle crash. And even if you survive a crash, you could sustain head injuries that have lifelong consequences, Road Safety Advisory Council Chair Jim Cox said. “No one wants to be a bad driver, and while vehicles are safer now than they’ve ever been, a crash at 70km/h or above will result in serious injury or death,” he said. “There’s been an evolution in the development of vehicles but the human body is much the same as it was millennia ago. “We can withstand the forces of falling out of a tree but not coming to a sudden stop in a tonne of metal travelling at 27 metres a second. “That’s why driving safely and to the conditions is so important. A crash can happen in the second you look down at your mobile phone, are distracted by a conversation you’re having on the phone or when you are going too fast. “Whatever the reason, a crash can change your life
THINK SAFE: The Road Safety Advisory Council is encouraging everyone to play their part in reducing death and injuries on our roads.
and that of your family and friends forever.” Mr Cox said concentrating 100 percent on driving 100 percent of the time lessened the risk of crashing. He urged drivers to drive to the conditions by adjusting speed to suit the road and
weather conditions. Every second a driver doesn’t have their eyes on the road, distance is travelled. By the time the brain registers there’s a danger and acts to avert it, it could be too late “Speeding is a factor in
almost half the fatal and serious injury crashes,” Mr Cox said. “A speed limit is just that, the maximum speed at which it is safe to travel. But sometimes it may not be safe to travel at that speed. “If you’re driving to the
conditions, you’re more likely to be able to avoid crashing and causing serious injury or worse. “An acquired brain injury can change a person’s life, and that of their family and friends, forever. They may seem to be healthy but
their injury could prevent them from doing the things they enjoy. “No one thinks their journey is going to end in a crash. But if we drive as though it might, we’ll have a better chance of getting home uninjured.”
examiner.com.au
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
27
BRAIN INJURY AWARENESS WEEK ADVERTISING FEATURE
Tackling head on a crisis for soldiers GARY Wilson cannot remember the three months that changed his life. The digger must rely on loved ones and mates to tell him how he acquired his brain injury in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan in 2010. “The crash is just blackness, I remember nothing about it,” Wilson says. “The last memory I have of that fateful day is grabbing some equipment for the Blackhawk and then nothing at all. “My next memory is three months later, when I was in Mount Wilga Rehabilitation Hospital, in Sydney. “I vaguely remember calling my sister from my hospital bed, to wish her a happy birthday.” Wilson is one of more than 700,000 Australians who have a brain injury, according to latest data from the Bureau of Statistics. He’s one of the week’s “ambassadors” for advocacy group Brain Injury Australia. It has organised Brain Injury Awareness Week, which begins on August 21.
TOP 5 SYMPTOMS Of mild traumatic brain injury ■ ■ ■ ■ ■
Headache Dizziness Poor concentration Memory problems Mood swings
Hopefully, the week will raise awareness of such injuries and will be devoted to brain injury in the military. One in 10 troops who has served in the Middle East “reported the criteria for a new mild traumatic brain injury” upon their return to Australia. Concussion is the most common type of mild brain injury in the military, with symptoms often resolving in a few weeks. But victims recover differently and at different speeds, also making brain injuries hard to diagnose and treat. Wilson not only acquired a brain injury while serving overseas. “The Blackhawk accident left me with a crushed foot,
broken knee, broken pelvis, several broken ribs, broken nose and broken jaw,” he says. After three years in rehabilitation, he took part in two City to Surf runs and a bridge walk in Sydney. He continues to battle a speech disorder, often slurring words in a bid to roll his tongue in the right way. “It’s annoying when people think I slur my words because I’ve had too much to drink,” Wilson says. “Their assumptions are wrong. “It’s also annoying when people see me park in a disabled parking bay. They assume because I am young I am not disabled, but I am.” Experts define a traumatic brain injury as a blow or jolt to the head that disrupts the normal function of the brain. It can be mild, moderate or severe and caused by a number of factors, such as strokes, tumours or a punch. Such injuries are hard to recognise, since they affect thinking, emotions and behaviour. There’s also little,
FLASHBACK: Gary Wilson en route to a mission in Afghanistan in a Blackhawk, before the fateful crash. After the crash he was transferred to Germany, then home to Sydney.
these places.
DIAGNOSIS: A traumatic brain injury is a jolt to the head that disrupts the normal function of the brain.
if any, legislated assistance for people with an acquired brain injury. Many, as with Wilson, must rely on support from family and friends. Wilson hopes to become
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For more information about Brain Injury Awareness Week, go to braininjuryaustralia.org.au
INVITATION
Brain injury in the military
Event details When: Where: RSVP:
Every day over 6,500 suburbs across Australia use Nabo to get better connected with their local area. Here you can share recommendations, discover events, and buy, sell or borrow items all with people local to you.
SUPPORTING THE NEED FOR GREATER AWARENESS OF, AND SERVICES FOR, OUR COMBAT VETERANS AND SERVING MEMBERS AFFECTED BY BRAIN INJURY Like us now on Facebook www.facebook.com/braininjurytasmania for updates, information and events relating to brain injury
a rehabilitation coordinator for Defence and motivational speaker. “Physical exercise and training really helps and I recommend this to all those who have a brain injury.” Support is available at
■ Brain Injury Australia. Phone 1800 272 461 ■ Acquired Brain Injury Services NSW. Phone (02) 9748 7372 ■ Brainlink Victoria. Phone (03) 9845 2950 ■ Brain Injury Network of South Australia. Phone (08) 8217 7600 ■ Headwest Western Australia. Phone (08) 9330 6370 ■ Brain Injury Association of Tasmania. Phone (03) 6278 7299 ■ Hartley Lifecare Canberra. Phone (02) 6282 4411
10.30am – 2pm, Thursday 24 August Launceston RSL 313 Wellington Street Kim Ackerly 6326 2022 0412 120 046 kackerly@tabis.org.au
Sponsored by
•
Fractured minds, a 30-minute film – four soldiers suffering traumatic brain injuries navigate recovery.
•
Guest speakers including: clinical neuropsychologist, Mark Lamont, PTSD dog program founder, Craig Geashem, and two DVA advocates. There’ll be plenty of time for questions and you are welcome to join us for a light lunch.
a divison of Li-Ve Tasmania
KEEP FRED’S VISION ALIVE |
28
THE EXAMINER
COMICS
Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
HAGAR
CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 5 9 10 11 12 13 14 17 19 21 23 25 26 27 28 30 31 33 34 36 37 38 39 40 41 42
GINGER MEGGS
GARFIELD
1
Take by theft Public walk Sea nymph In excited eagerness Dye Fissure Strong material Lofty Cut off Stories Love god Occupant Allow Disliked intensely Expressing denial Newspaper executive Ship’s officer Essential Difficult question Layer Cold dish Greedy Citrus fruit Servant Swarms Level Deposit as a wager
DOWN 2 3 4 5 6
Gave a stifled laugh Indirect efforts Passenger ship Worth Given life
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Pungent String of invective Unassuming Burdened Trees Muslim leader
CRYPTIC CROSSWORD ACROSS
WIZARD OF ID
1
Fifty in high wind on the ship (7) 7 See 21-across 9 Suddenly appear when the arrival of the fizzy drink is announced (3,2) 10 Crazy craft in disarray (7) 12 With which the timorous may approach Red Indian settlement (11) 14 The Montgolfiers who rose to fame (11) 18 Exact prices fluctuating one point (7) 19 Take off operatic heroine by the middle of the act (5) 21 & 7-across Subject to insurance, so not exposed to the elements (5,5) 22 Favourable deal the innkeeper hopes to make (7)
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No hired transport returning in rasher fashion (5) 2 Different clues about a part of the sentence (6) 3 See 20 down 4 Headgear made of good French open fabric (6) 5 Book from which I study Roman law first (7) 8 It’s hard work to keep on the track of Virginia inside (7) 11 Feelings of conscience about key form of communication (7) 1
THE PHANTOM
21
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13 Snipping off pieces around one coupling? (7) 15 One who secures the strong-box (6) 16 Objects when there are veiled hints about the leader of the gang (6) 17 Tackle I had to make unyielding (5)
20 & 3-down Container wagon attached (6)
CROSSWORD AND CRYPTIC SOLUTIONS
QUIZ 1 What is the common meaning of the Latin term tabula rasa? 2 Which fashion designer famously resided at the Ritz Paris for more than 30 years? 3 Prince Charles was how many years older than his first wife, Diana? 4 Which British queen wore black mourning clothes for 40 years after the death of her husband? 5 Anne Boleyn reportedly had how many fingers? 1. Clean slate; 2. Coco Chanel; 3. 12 years; 4. Queen Victoria; 5. 11
SOLUTION
alap alar alas alias aplasia appal APPRAISAL aralia aria aril lair lapis liar lira pail pair paisa palp papa papal para pipa rail rasp rial sail salpa sari sial slap spar spiral parasail
Using the nine letters in the grid, how many words of four letters or more can you list? The centre letter must be included and each letter may only be used once. No colloquial or foreign words. No capitalised nouns, apostrophes or plural words ending in “s”. Reference source: Macquarie Dictionary.
GOOD: 14 VERY GOOD: 17 EXCELLENT: 20 GENIUS: 23
ACROSS 6 Galleon; 7 Cover; 9 Pop up; 10 Frantic; 12 Reservation; 14 Balloonists; 18 Precise; 19 Mimic; 21 Under; 22 Bargain. DOWN 1 Bacon; 2 Clause; 3Ton; 4 Bonnet; 5 Lexicon; 8Travail; 11 Remorse; 13 Pairing; 15 Locker; 16Things; 17 Rigid; 20 Car.
A R P P A S I L A
980
Across: 1 Steal; 5 Mall; 9 Siren; 10 Agog; 11 Stain; 12 Rift; 13 Denim; 14Tall; 17 Sever; 19Tales; 21 Eros; 23Tenant; 25 Let; 26 Hated; 27 Not; 28 Editor; 30 Mate; 31 Vital; 33 Poser; 34Tier; 36 Salad; 37 Avid; 38 Lemon; 39 Maid; 40Teems; 41 Even; 42 Stake; Down: 2Tittered; 3 Asides; 4 Liner; 5 Merit; 6 Animated; 7 Latten; 8Toll; 15 Asanas; 16 Litter; 17 Select; 18 Votive; 20 Led; 22 Parasite; 24 Notebook; 26 Hot; 29Tirade; 30 Modest; 32 Laden; 33 Palms; 35 Imam;
2108
JUMBLE
SUDOKU
2504 Simple rules, challenging puzzle All the numbers from 1 to 9 must be used once only in each 3x3 square, in each row (horizontal) and each column (vertical).
SOLUTION
examiner.com.au
29
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
WEATHER
LAUNCESTON
BURNIE
11ºC Shower or two.
TODAY
DEVONPORT
11ºC Showers.
TODAY
11ºC Showers.
TODAY
TUE
WED
THU
FRI
SAT
SUN
TUE
WED
THU
FRI
SAT
SUN
TUE
WED
THU
FRI
SAT
SUN
2/14ºC
3/14ºC
-1/15ºC
2/14ºC
4/13ºC
-1/13ºC
6/14ºC
6/13ºC
6/13ºC
7/14ºC
7/13ºC
5/13ºC
3/13ºC
5/13ºC
3/13ºC
5/14ºC
5/13ºC
2/13ºC
REGIONAL OUTLOOK WARNINGS were current at 5pm yesterday. www.bom.gov.au/tas/warnings 1300 659 216 TASMANIA Showers about the north and the west coast, falling as snow to around 1000 metres. Fine elsewhere. Patchy morning frost. Light winds, mainly north to northwesterly. LAUNCESTON Cloudy.The chance of morning fog. Medium (60%) chance of showers, most likely in the late morning and afternoon. Light winds. BURNIE Cloudy. High (80%) chance of showers, most likely in the morning and afternoon. Light winds becoming easterly 15 to 20 km/h in the morning then becoming light in the afternoon. DEVONPORT Cloudy. High (80%) chance of showers, most likely in the morning and afternoon. Light winds. FAR NORTHWEST COASTAL WATERS Winds: Northerly 10 to 15 knots turning north to northwesterly in the evening. Seas: Around 1 metre, increasing to 1 to 1.5 metres east of King Island during the morning. Swell: Southwesterly 1 to 1.5 metres, increasing to 2 to 2.5 metres south of King Island. Weather: Cloudy. 80% chance of showers. CENTRAL NORTH COASTAL WATERS Winds: West to northwesterly about 10 knots, more variable inshore, tending north to northwesterly 10 to 15 knots during the morning. Seas: Below 1 metre. Swell: Westerly below 1 metre. Weather: Cloudy. 70% chance of showers.
Sunny
Mostly Sunny
Partly Cloudy
Cloudy
Chance shower
Shower or two
NOON YESTERDAY 1016
CURRIE
WHITEMARK
11ºC
12ºC
Today
YESTERDAY Location
Max** Min Rain* **MaxTemp to 3pm *Rainfall 24 hours to 9am
Today
Tomorrow
Burnie Airport Cressy Devonport Flinders Island Hobart King Island Launceston Scottsdale Sheffield Smithton St Helens Strahan
Tomorrow
º
º
8 / 14 C
6 / 14 C
BURNIE
DEVONPORT
Today
11ºC
Today
Tomorrow
SMITHTON
11ºC
º
6 / 14 C
SCOTTSDALE
Tomorrow
Today
Today
3 / 13ºC
º
11 C
10ºC
Tomorrow
Tomorrow
4 / 14ºC
13 12 12 12 15 12 13 12 12 13 13 12
-2 -5 -1 1 1 2 -2 -1 -1 -1 0 3
0 0 0 0 0.2 2 0 0 0 0.2 0 5
THE TIDES
3 / 12ºC
SHEFFIELD
LAUNCESTON High 11:41am 4.1m 11:55pm 4.2m Low 5:39am 0.7m 6:06pm 1.2m TOMORROW High12:47pm 4.1m Low 6:41am 0.6m 7:11pm 1.2m
Today
8ºC
ST HELENS
Tomorrow
2 / 12ºC
Today
LAUNCESTON
13ºC
Today
BURNIE
Tomorrow
11ºC
High 10:35am 3.3m Low 4:19am 0.4m TOMORROW High 11:40am 3.3m Low 5:25am 0.4m
º
3 / 15 C
Tomorrow
2 / 14ºC
CAMPBELL TOWN Today
High 10:28am 3.3m Low 4:14am 0.4m TOMORROW High 11:31am 3.3m Low 5:18am 0.4m
Tomorrow
0 / 13ºC
Today
12ºC
HOBART
Tomorrow
5 / 13ºC
11:51pm 3.3m 6:02pm 0.9m
DEVONPORT
10ºC
STRAHAN
10:43pm 3.3m 4:54pm 0.9m
10:35pm 3.4m 4:47pm 1.0m 11:43pm 3.4m 5:56pm 0.9m
Today
14ºC LAUNCESTON Sun protection generally not recommended
Tomorrow
w w w. b o m . g o v. a u
3 / 15ºC
© Commonwealth of Australia 2017
August 21, 2017
BURNIE Sun protection generally not recommended
Showers
Showers storm
Chance rain (drizzle)
Storms
Rain
Light rain
Windy
Rain, storm
10AM TODAY
Dusty
Fog
Frost
Haze, smoke
Snow
10AM TOMORROW
10AM WEDNESDAY 1016
1015
1016
1014
1015
1016
1015
1015 1016 1024
1024
1006
1019 1016
998 1016
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1000 1008
Weather rain fine rain rain fine rain rain cloudy rain fine fine rain fine fine rain mist fine rain fine rain rain fine fine rain fine fine fine rain
1016
1024
1008
1008
Low 13 30 10 26 25 22 0 10 16 29 1 25 12 18 24 16 16 11 20 22 27 19 23 22 15 15 24 8
1022
RAINFALL Week ending August 20, 2017
34 BROOME
CANBERRA Rise 6:37am Set 5:36pm Rise 6:03am Set 5:01pm
HOBART Rise 6:55am Set 5:33pm Rise 6:25am Set 4:55pm
PHASES OF THE MOON New
First
Full
Last
Aug 22
Aug 29
Sep 6
Sep 13
DARWIN
33
27
ALICE SPRINGS
CAIRNS
26 BRISBANE
18
SUN & MOON MELBOURNE Rise 6:57am Set 5:49pm Rise 6:25am Set 5:14pm
1016
AUSTRALIA TODAY
400 300 200 150 100 50 25 15 10 5 1 0 mm
SYDNEY Rise 6:27am Set 5:30pm Rise 5:52am Set 4:54pm
1024
1016 1008
RAINFALL - LAST 7 DAYS High 18 33 16 33 28 27 11 21 21 34 14 32 20 28 30 30 23 22 29 28 30 27 34 29 20 25 33 13
1017
1024
1000
THE WORLD Location Amsterdam Athens Auckland Bangkok Barcelona Beijing Christchurch Frankfurt Helsinki Hong Kong Johannesburg Kuala Lumpur London Los Angeles Manila Moscow Noumea Paris Rome Seoul Singapore Suva Tel Aviv Tokyo Vancouver Vila Washington Wellington
1019
1029
1024 1016
1027
1021
1028
1002 1024
1025
1021
1025
1008
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1024
1024
23
PERTH ADELAIDE
19
16
12 12
SYDNEY CANBERRA
MELBOURNE
14
HOBART
30 THE EXAMINER Monday, August 21, 2017
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Death Notices
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EARLEY (nee Pulford) Janet Maree You left me broken hearted, not knowing what to do, but now I find such comfort in memories of you. Forever in my heart Love you always, Mum. xxxx Our dear sister Janet, we are shocked and deeply saddened by your sudden death. Side by side or miles apart, sisters will always be connected by the heart. Love always, Suzette and Natasha. Loved sister-in-law of Michael, Matthew and loved auntie of Alex, Casey and Tayla. Sadly missed xxxx
FLETCHER Death Notices
Captain Ross Gregory (Master Mariner) 26.12.1946 - 19.8.2017
EARLEY Janet Maree 05.01.1967 - 18.08.2017
Is someone you know graduating from University on Saturday, August 26? Send them a message of congratulations.
Dearly beloved wife of Darren, who will be sadly missed and never forgotten and adored Mum of Jessica and Kiera and many loved pets. Loved daughter of Jeanette and Tom (dec) Pulford. Janet passed away unexpectedly at home in Campbell Town surrounded by her loving family.
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For Sale
Passed away peacefully surrounded by loving family. Much loved and loving husband of Susan. Devoted f a t h e r a n d father-in-law of John and Loren, and David. Proud grandfather of Morgyn.
NICHOLS Kenneth Edwin 7.11.1939 – 19.8.2017 Passed away peacefully at May Shaw, Swansea. Loved and loving husband of Angela. Loved father and father-in-law of Rosemary and William, Kenneth and Julie, Viv and Cheryl, and Ronda and Rod. Proud grandfather of all his grand and great grandchildren. Thank you to all the staff at May Shaw for their care and support. Rest in peace.
Janet Maree Family and friends of Janet are warmly invited to attend a service to celebrate her life to be held on Wednesday 23.8.2017 at St Luke's Anglican Church, Campbell Town commencing at 11:00am to be followed by interment in the St Luke's Cemetery. Flowers welcome and /or donations to Just Cats, can be made at the service as Janet loved her furry friends.
HOUSE & LAND PACKAGE PROSPECT $394,500 Brand new 3 bedroom home with spacious living, 2 bathrooms, beautiful kitchen, entertainment deck and double garage. Comes ready to move into. Phone Mark 0439 017 366.
PARMAKER electric (4 wheels) ride-on golf cart $1200 o.n.o. Ph. 3691 8770.
Closing Down Sale Quilt & Pillow Factory Save up to 50% on Quilts, Pillows & Mattress Toppers 79 Invermay Road Ph. 6334 3444
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To Let & Wanted 2 BEDROOM, modern brick unit with lock up garage, $250 pw. Perth. Ph: 0428 064 440.
SAVE TIME, SUBMIT Launceston Players ONLINE Members and friends
are invited to attend a Special General Meeting of the Society to be held in The Narthex of Holy Trinity Church, George Street, Launceston (main entrance) Monday 4 September, 2017 commencing at 7pm. The business will be to amend the Constitution and discuss auditor appointment for 2017. Mary Johnson, Public Officer.
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Captain Ross Gregory Family and friends are warmly invited to attend the funeral service of Capt. Ross Gregory Fletcher to be held at the C.T. Finney Centre, 34 Nunamina Avenue, Kings Meadows, on Wednesday, 23rd August 2017 commencing at 3pm.
A hot offer to warm up business this winter NICHOLS Kenneth Edwin Family and friends are warmly invited to attend the funeral service of Mr. Kenneth Edwin Nichols to be held at the C.T. Finney Centre, 34 Nunamina Avenue, Kings Meadows, on Thursday, 24th August 2017 commencing at 10am.
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Maree Miss you Ree, Till we meet again. Love Jane, Darren, Scott and Kade. xxxxx
WALTER Denys 1922-2017 Passed peacefully at home Greatly loved by Joy, Penny, Megan, Jolly, Natalie and families. Friends are warmly invited to a celebration of Denys' life to be held on Thursday 7th September 2017 at Tidal Waters, St Helens, commencing at 2.30pm.
For Sale
Closing Down Sale Quilt & Pillow Factory "ALL STOCK REDUCED." 79 Invermay Road Ph. 6334 3444
Closing Down Sale Quilt & Pillow Factory QUALITY DUCK DOWN QUILTS 1/2PRICE 79 Invermay Road Ph. 6334 3444
Phone: Post to: Free Classifieds, PO Box 99, LAUNCESTON,TAS, 7250 Deliver to: The Examiner Newspaper Office, 113 Cimitiere Street, Launceston or 4 Stewart Street, Devonport. No facsimiles. Must state price under $100. Private treat only. PLEASE NOTE deadline is 12.00pm the Friday prior to publication. Advertisements will be published Tuesday subject to space availability. Advertisements not published will appear the following Tuesday. Please do not re-submit. Name: ....................................................................................................................................... Address: ................................................................................................................................... Postcode: ..............................................................................................
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Monday, August 21, 2017
THE EXAMINER
31
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Wanted to Buy
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OLD books, comics, estates/downsize, antiques, reproduction furAsian, hot, new to town, niture, old tools, shed smooth and strong, fit, contents, guitars, music CBD. Ph. 0432 543 259. instruments, old cameras, old cutlery, model cars, LP records/CDs /DVDs, bottles, pedal car, old ladder, old in L'ton. Attractive, coins. Will visit. Phone JAPANESE ARRIVED friendly. No rush. No 6423 3316. 19yo, new in city. Sz4 text or private no. Avail Busty hot sexy. In/out. 19th, 20th & 21st QTY of Radio/Audio 0474 739 365. 0456 477 973 valves for projects. Old Tannoy etc. speaker, § NATALIE § old valve equipment 29 y.o., Aussie blonde. /parts etc. Ph. 0406 285 588. Ph Lloyd 0420 676 751
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32
THE EXAMINER
Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
SPORT DETAILS AUSTRALIAN RULES FOOTBALL
NORTHERN TASMANIAN FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION Division Two Seniors East Coast Swans 6.2 11.3 15.5 19.10 (124) St Patricks 3.3 6.7 10.7 14.8 (92) GOALS: East Coast Swans: N. Child 6, N. Hyland 4, B. Elmer 3, D. Bannister 2, L. Gillies 2, H. Tate 1, J. Rushton 1; St Patricks: C. Eastoe 3, J. Beams 2, A. Russell 2, N. Spencer 2, J. Lawrence 1, K. Lanham 1, J. Knight 1, J. Murphy 1, C. Young 1 BEST: East Coast Swans: M. Musicka, F. Robinson, J. Rushton, D. Bannister, N. Child, H. Tate; St Patricks: J. Perkins, J. Knight, C. Eastoe, K. Lanham, M. Williams, J. Murphy
Division Two Reserves Lilydale 4.6 8.8 15.12 21.15 (141) Tamar Cats 0.2 6.4 7.5 11.7 (73) GOALS: Lilydale: N. Lewis 5, D. Fenton 4, M. McLean 3, D. Bardenhagen 3, S. Avent 2, L. Smith 1, L. Smith 1, K. Avent 1, M. Quinn 1; Tamar Cats: B. Buchanan 3, B. Leslie 2, G. Rangi-Clark 2, M. Davis 1, B. Harris 1, T. Hall 1, Z. Wilkinson 1 BEST: Lilydale: N. Jones, L. Smith, S. Avent, D. Bardenhagen, L. Smith, L. Sheppard; Tamar Cats: B. Leslie, J. Triffett, B. Buchanan, B. Harris, T. Hall, J. Davie
BOWLS KINGS MEADOWS STEVE GLASSON INDOOR COMPLEX THURSDAY RANDOM DRAW 17/08/2017 Winners/winners: M Henry, J Murray. Jackpot: $149 plus
FRIDAY RANDOM DRAW 18/08/2017 Winners/winners: I West, P Tieman Winners/losers: C Hingston, S Towns Jackpot: $206 plus
OPEN SINGLES 19/08/2017 Another fantastic day of bowls enjoyed by competitors and spectators alike. Sponsored by Kings Meadows Bowls Shop with great prizes, a very high standard of bowls was played with some close results. Competitors enjoyed warm conditions indoors and a bbq lunch to fortify them for the afternoon ahead. Thanks to all who participated and to the volunteers who helped on the day. Next Saturday the 26th will be our regular mixed fours and a 12.30 start. Get your tems in. Winner: J Walker-Davis 2nd: J Borg 3rd: D Campbell 4th: A Appleyard
MIDWEEK BOWLS MIDWEEK BOWLS 23/08/2017 Midweek Bowls: Kings Meadows Indoor Complex, Wednesday, August 23. 1pm start. Cost: Registered Players K. M. B. C. $6/player, includes afternoon tea. $10 Green Fees apply to members of other clubs Mixed Triples: Casual dress. Prizes awarded by draw. Last game winners: S Bennett, M Haas & B Roberts. All bowlers and learners welcome. Phone 0419143181 or 0438446535.
BRIDGE LAUNCESTON BRIDGE CLUB TUESDAY PAIRS 15/08/2017 North-South: 1 Gordon Thurlow-Jean Murray 57%, 2 Sandra Lloyd-Jeanette Harland 55%, 3 Bob Harkness-Percy Rigby 51%. East-West: 1 Judy Mann-Valda Babcock 61%, 2 Norma WalkerBarkley Walker 61%, 3 Rudi Lidl-Shirley McCulloch 56%.
WEDNESDAY SUPERVISED PAIRS 16/08/2017 North-South: 1 Lyn Derrick-Wendy Burbury 57%, 2 Joy MahantNarendra Mahant 52%, 3 Mary Doyle-Olive McCarthy 50%. East-West: 1 Mardi Hogarth-Ian Fraser 70%, 2 Rosemary Atkinson-Hilde Hoogenhout 59%, 3 Jim Waterhouse-Osma Marston 54%.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT PAIRS 16/08/2017 1 Peter Johnson-Lee McBean 56%, 2 Jack Foreman-Rudi Lidl 52%, 3 Bob Harkness-Christine Harkness 52%.
THURSDAY PAIRS 17/08/2017 1 Jack Foreman-Bob Ranson 60%, 2 Noel Cheetham-Rudi Lidl 55%, 3 Jan Frost-Cheryl King 54%.
CHAMPIONSHIP PAIRS 18/08/2017 1 Kristine Thompson-Ann De Wit 59%, 2 Val Clarke-Jeanette Harland 55%, 3 Rudi Lidl-Bob Ranson 54%.
SATURDAY PAIRS 19/08/2017 1 Denise Callahan-Bob Ranson 55%, 2 Trisha Elliot-Ryan-Valda Babcock 53%, 3 Noel Cheetham- Rudi Lidl 52%.
GOLF PROSPECT VALE AGGREGATE STABLEFORD 19/08/2017 Winners: S. Tyers & M. Bassett 76 L. Radin & D. Middap 73 S. Martin & A. Johnson 69 J. Sluis & S. Tyers 68 Z. Healy & G. Ford 67 J. Bye & R. Bye 66 C. Horton & R. Scott 65 H. Deruyter & N. Littlejohn 65 J. Kelly & S. Round 64 L. Semmens & D. Panton 62 N. Scott & R. Coetzee 61 G. Powell & B. Garwood 61 Nearest Pin: 3rd D. Panton 8th P/P L. Radin 10th J. Blair 13th P/P P. Gardner 15th G. Roddy 17th J. Collis Eagle 5th & 18th: J. Collis Next Week 29/08/17: 2 Ball Ambrose Sponsored by S. Limbrick J. Lowish, R. Sherriff & J. Bradshaw Duty Roster: Andy Barnes & Louise Semmens
SEABROOK GOLF CLUB STABLEFORD 19/08/2017 Winner: Robert Harris 42 pts followed by Rob Harding 39 pts & Shane Kirkland 39 pts Ball Winners: Daryl Bourn 39 pts, Conrad Targett 38 pts, Bill Rankin 36 pts, Gregg Poulter 36 pts, Corey Manttan 36 pts & Noel Bourn 35 pts
CENTRE PARK: Gee Tees Stars centre Abbey Berlese attempts to block Amazonz Red centre Lucy McArthur in junior netball at Hoblers Bridge. Picture: Paul Scambler Nearest the Pins: 13th – Gary Murphy & ProZak Pro-pin 15th – Gary Kramer This weeks event’s: Monday to Friday – The Weekly Comp 18-hole Stableford, Wednesday – Open Stableford with Pins, Saturday – Open Stableford Coming Event: Sunday 10th September 2017 – Seabrook Sixteen 3 Ball Ambrose Teams Event (Entry forms available from Pro-shop and Club House)
RACING DEVONPORT GALLOPS
TRACK SYNTHETIC 1-LEADING JOCK A DARMANIN MDN 1000m: 4.60 MOSH OPERA (Dr D R & Mrs P F Barclay & R K Beverley’s b m 4y Moshe – Comic Opera. Trainer: L, D & T Wells) 56.5 (D M Ganderton) 1, 2.00 fav PHAR WORD 56 (A Darmanin) 2, 4.50 ROSOVER 56.5 (Raquel Clark) 3. Then followed: 28.30 Araya Hope 54 (Ismail Toker) 6.70 Woohoo 56.5 carr 54.5 (Sherry Barr) 45.30 Malachite Quest 56.5 carr 54.5 (Chris Graham) 78.40 Mighty Hoffa 58.5 (Y Nishitani) 38.10 Bloomin’ Late 56.5 (Shuji Amano) 55.90 Gee Gees Luckygirl 54 carr 53 (Chantal Willis) last. All started. 1/2 nk, 3/4 len. Time: 1.00.84. (Last 600m 35.35). Protest 2nd against 1st dismissed. 2-RJ PUBLISHING (BM62) 1880m: 5.20 ULTIMATE DOOM (C W Thomas, S Fragapane, K D Elms, Ms J A Doran, Miss P S Landy, N T Landy & J Hakim Syndicates: Lauriston Thoroughbred Farm (Mgr: J K O’Brien), Blue Moon (Mgr: S Cunningham), Momentum (Mgr: J K O’Brien), D D L Racing, Mgr: D Heales’s b g 6y Domesday – Cosmic Express. Trainer: Scott Brunton) 59.5 (Raquel Clark) 1, 3.70 WHITE HAWK 59 (D M Ganderton) 2, 2.70 fav BIDIRECTIONAL 62 carr 60 (Chris Graham) 3. Then followed: 4.60 You Didn’t 59 (J Maskiell) 11.50 Reann’s Diamond 58 (Shuji Amano) 18.60 Fought For 57 (T Baker) last. All started. 1/2 len, 1/2 len. Time: 1.58.09. (Last 600m 37.14). 3-TASRACING. COM. AU MDN PLATE 1650m: 10.20 VIVRE STAR (D H Bowling, Mrs M A Bowling, D J Hamer & Mrs F M Hamer’s b g 5y Savoire Vivre (GB) – Tainui Star. Trainer: Rowan Hamer) 58.5 carr 56.5 (Chantal Willis) 1, 3.30 KINGSCLERE 58.5 (J Maskiell) 2, 4.30 SORTURO 56.5 (A Darmanin) 3. Then followed: 2.90 fav Om Nom 56.5 (D M Ganderton) 16.60 Fancy Danz 56.5 carr 54.5 (Chris Graham) 36.80 He’s Tough Enough 58.5 (Y Nishitani) 119.40 Powerful Prospect 58.5 carr 56.5 (Hayley Mc Carthy) 102.90 Berbent 58.5 (Shuji Amano) 9.40 Victory Medal 58.5 (Ismail Toker) last. Scr: Little Suzie. Sht hd, sht hd. Time: 1.43.79. (Last 600m 36.81). 4-WINTER WARMER FEAST 27TH-BM68 1650m: 6.60 LECONTE (M R Louth, Miss G S A Jackson, Miss K R Fulton, D J Fulton, L A Boyd’s b g 5y Not A Single Doubt – Tennessee Sunrise. Trainer: Ms A Fulton) 55 carr 53 (Chris Graham) 1, 2.80 fav KOOL KASH 62 carr 60 (Chantal Willis) 2, 3.90 JACQUES 57 (B Mc Coull) 3. Then followed: 6.90 Glistening Star 54 (T Baker) 5.70 Don Reggio 58 (D M Ganderton) 9.90 The Desperate 54 (Raquel Clark) last. Scr: Dalehill. Lg nk, 1/2 hd. Time: 1.42.97. (Last 600m 35.76). 5-SIMONS DESIGN CENTRE (BM68) 1350m: 2.60 fav WILLBY RULES (Mrs J M Rowe & T J Rowe’s b g 4y West Quest (CAN) – Society Rules. Trainer: Nigel Schuuring) 58 (J Maskiell) 1, 14.40 TILLATION 54 (T Baker) 2, 14.00 TARA’S GEM 56 (Raquel Clark) 3. Then followed: 3.00 Khatun 56 carr 54 (Chris Graham) 6.20 Tambro’s Game 57 (A Darmanin) 14.70 Gallow Gate 56 carr 54 (Sherry Barr) 9.30 Wanaea 59 (D M Ganderton) last. All started. 1/2 len, hd. Time: 1.21.49. (Last 600m 34.58). 6-LUXBET SPRINT FINAL 1150m: 1.40 fav I’M WESLEY (L M Perry, Mrs B Perry, B D Holland & J P Niaura’s b g 5y I Am Invincible – Daniela. Trainer: G J Stevenson) 59 (Raquel Clark) 1, 18.90 CONCENTRATE 54 (Ismail Toker) 2, 10.70 LORD FARQUAAD 56.5 (T Baker) 3. Then followed: 10.70 Gee Gees Top Notch 59 (B Mc Coull) 4.90 Underplay 58 (A Darmanin) 16.10 Le Bel Opera 58 (D M Ganderton) last. Scr: Treasury Bond. 2-1/2 len, sht hd. Time: 1.08.95. (Last 600m 33.87). 7-BIRDCAGE TAVERN FUNCTIONS-BM62 1000m: 2.10 fav ARICONTE (D A Butters, B D Bone, K J Richardson, D Ebdon, A R Bugg, P Pearce, P Bugg, H D Nielsen, B J Davis, R Hawley,
B McCoy, M Warnett, Mrs H J Bassett & Mrs E J Clark’s b g 5y Murtajill – Nine Covers. Trainer: Adam Trinder) 59 carr 57 (Chris Graham) 1, 29.10 GEE GEES STYLE 60.5 carr 58.5 (Hayley Mc Carthy) 2, 12.40 EPISODES 60 (D M Ganderton) 3. Then followed: 11.10 Axion 54 (Raquel Clark) 4.20 Owens 59 (J Maskiell) 27.30 Anyways Rosie 54.5 carr 52.5 (Sherry Barr) 16.30 Classic Outlaw 60.5 carr 58.5 (Chantal Willis) 71.00 Rearview 56 (Y Nishitani) 20.40 Little Elsa 54.5 (T Baker) 27.80 Hellmuth 56.5 (A Darmanin) 11.50 Calavera 59 (Ismail Toker) last. Scr: Meteor Strike, Radioactive. 1/2 len, hd. Time: 0.59.80. (Last 600m 34.50). 8-LUXBET HCP (C1) 1350m: 2.40 fav WINDRIDER (Y G Liu’s b c 3y Cardinal Virtue – Fasig. Trainer: G J McCulloch) 57 (Raquel Clark) 1, 4.40 VALERIUS 59 (D M Ganderton) 2, 6.60 GEE GEE RICH RUBY 56 (T Baker) 3. Then followed: 17.10 Littlerayov 55.5 carr 54 (Sherry Barr) 13.50 Acheeva Dream 59 (J Maskiell) 6.70 Pistol Jack 58.5 carr 56.5 (Chantal Willis) 31.10 Silver Reset 56 carr 54 (Chris Graham) 132.20 Sunset Party 54 (Shuji Amano) 18.50 Mona 55 (Ismail Toker) 87.80 Irish John 54 (A Darmanin) last. Scr: Husson’s Kiss, Ain’t The Whisky, Kirribilli Kid. 3/4 len, 1-1/2 len. Time: 1.22.49. (Last 600m 36.21).
TAB DIVS FOR $1.00 Race 1: 4 Mosh Opera $4.60 $1.30 7 Phar Word $1.30 5 Rosover $1.40. Q: $4.50. E: $10.70. T: $23.10. A2: 4-7: $1.20, 4-5: $4.00, 5-7: $1.70. FIRST 4: (4 7 5 8) $115.80. All Started. Race 2: 2 Ultimate Doom $5.20 $3.20 3 White Hawk $1.80 1 Bidirectional NTD. Q: $13.40. E: $31.50. T: $52.20. FIRST 4: (2 3 1 4) $142.60. All Started. Race 3: 6 Vivre Star $10.20 $2.00 3 Kingsclere $1.70 10 Sorturo $1.60. Q: $8.20. E: $23.70. T: $150.70. A2: 3-6: $7.40, 6-10: $7.20, 3-10: $3.40. FIRST 4: (6 3 10 9) $268.20. Scr: 8L. Race 4: 4 Leconte $6.60 $3.40 1 Kool Kash $1.70 3 Jacques NTD. Q: $10.50. E: $21.90. T: $102.00. FIRST 4: (4 1 3 5) $316.60. Scr: 6. Race 5: 2 Willby Rules $2.60 $2.00 7 Tillation $6.20 6 Tara’s Gem NTD. Q: $20.90. E: $29.30. T: $207.60. FIRST 4: (2 7 6 5) $789.20. All Started. Race 6: 2 I’m Wesley $1.40 $1.10 7 Concentrate $8.80 6 Lord Farquaad NTD. Q: $11.80. E: $18.90. T: $145.90. FIRST 4: (2 7 6 1) $233.00. Scr: 5. Race 7: 4 Ariconte $2.10 $1.10 2 Gee Gees Style $5.90 3 Episodes $3.50. Q: $22.70. E: $35.90. T: $188.20. A2: 2-4: $9.80, 3-4: $5.60, 2-3: $58.20. FIRST 4: (4 2 3 13) $5, 393.80. Scr: 7, 8. Race 8: 5 Windrider $2.40 $1.00 2 Valerius $1.60 6 Gee Gee Rich Ruby $1.90. Q: $5.60. E: $11.20. T: $37.30. A2: 2-5: $4.10, 5-6: $1.80, 2-6: $4.30. FIRST 4: (5 2 6 8) $192.40. Scr: 9, 4, 13. EXTRA DOUBLE: 6 Vivre Star 4 Leconte $82.80. SUB: 9 Om Nom 1 Kool Kash. DOUBLE: 4 Ariconte 5 Windrider $6.70. SUB: 4 Ariconte 5 Windrider. TREBLE: 2 I’m Wesley 4 Ariconte 5 Windrider $8.80. SUB: 2 I’m Wesley 4 Ariconte 5 Windrider. QUADDIE: 2 Willby Rules 2 I’m Wesley 4 Ariconte 5 Windrider $47.60. SUB: 2 Willby Rules 2 I’m Wesley 4 Ariconte 5 Windrider.
BALLARAT GALLOPS TAB DIVS FOR $1.00 Race 1: 3 Gold Spur $3.10 $1.60 1 Abebe $2.20 5 Monte Carlo NTD. Q: $9.00. E: $14.80. T: $46.40. Scr: 2. Race 2: 11 Shez Ektraordinary $3.50 $1.60 12 Silent Interest $2.60 10 Marilisa $3.70. Q: $11.50. E: $24.30. T: $173.60. A2: 11-12: $5.00, 10-11: $13.80, 10-12: $13.50. FIRST 4: (11 12 10 2) $750.20. Scr: 7, 4L, 3. Race 3: 10 Dane Hussler $6.90 $2.00 3 Cougar Express $1.40 9 Music To Midnight $1.50. Q: $6.50. E: $20.10. T: $62.70. A2: 3-10: $2.40, 9-10: $4.60, 3-9: $3.80. FIRST 4: (10 3 9 8) $392.80. Scr: 1. Race 4: 3 Two Hats $4.70 $1.40 9 Chequered Flag $1.00 6 Mujadale $2.10. Q: $2.90. E: $12.00. T: $35.40. A2: 3-9: $2.00, 3-6: $3.40, 6-9: $2.70. FIRST 4: (3 9 6 1) $90.80. All Started.
Race 5: 2 Trouble Bound $3.80 $1.50 3 Kemtain $3.90 1 The Narcissist NTD. Q: $20.70. E: $45.80. T: $53.10. FIRST 4: (2 3 1 8) $113.40. Scr: 5, 7L, 9. Race 6: 2 Wells $3.70 $1.40 7 Over The Yardarm $1.50 5 Bold Zamour $2.80. Q: $7.60. E: $13.40. T: $97.60. A2: 2-7: $3.40, 2-5: $8.60, 5-7: $6.90. FIRST 4: (2 7 5 3) $260.80. All Started. EXTRA DOUBLE: 3 Gold Spur 11 Shez Ektraordinary $12.10. SUB: 4 Murphy’s Delight 6 Masterson. DOUBLE: 2 Trouble Bound 2 Wells $21.20. SUB: 1 The Narcissist 7 Over The Yardarm. TREBLE: 3 Two Hats 2 Trouble Bound 2 Wells $104.20. SUB: 9 Chequered Flag 1 The Narcissist 7 Over The Yardarm. QUADDIE: 10 Dane Hussler 3 Two Hats 2 Trouble Bound 2 Wells $441.90. SUB: 3 Cougar Express 9 Chequered Flag 1 The Narcissist 7 Over The Yardarm.
HOBART HARNESS TAB DIVS FOR $1.00 Race 1: 2 Ideal Karalta $3.00 $1.70 4 Keep Playing $3.00 5 Alaphilippe NTD. Q: $7.80. E: $9.00. T: $27.60. FIRST 4: (2 4 5 3) $68.40. All Started. Race 2: 2 Swap Me $3.10 $1.50 1 Really Frank $4.80 6 Triple Aitch Fella $10.90. Q: $30.10. E: $59.90. T: $791.80. A2: 1-2: $7.10, 2-6: $15.80, 1-6: $33.00. FIRST 4: (2 1 6 4) Not won pool jackpots. Scr: 13. Race 3: 5 Sheer Strength $4.30 $1.30 9 Another Swinger $1.30 1 Modern Chic $4.70. Q: $3.70. E: $26.40. T: $52.90. A2: 5-9: $2.00, 1-5: $13.00, 1-9: $6.00. FIRST 4: (5 9 1 6) $705.00. All Started. Race 4: 5 Boltnmach $4.60 $1.70 8 Smilin Geoff $1.40 12 Ebonyallstarzzz $3.70. Q: $6.30. E: $9.00. T: $94.00. A2: 5-8: $2.40, 5-12: $11.30, 8-12: $8.60. FIRST 4: (5 8 12 10) $249.20. Scr: 3L, 6. Race 5: 8 God Sake $4.30 $1.80 3 Lord Jones $2.00 7 Regal Eagle $3.20. Q: $20.30. E: $17.70. T: $239.30. A2: 3-8: $7.20, 7-8: $9.60, 3-7: $19.60. FIRST 4: (8 3 7 2) $381.20. All Started. Race 6: 9 Jilliby Gigi $2.90 $1.50 13 Olwen Jaccka $2.80 5 Lockaway Kacie $4.30. Q: $15.60. E: $10.80. T: $199.90. A2: 9-13: $4.20, 5-9: $13.50, 5-13: $30.40. FIRST 4: (9 13 5 11) Not won pool jackpots. Scr: 3. Race 7: 5 Washies Chance $4.20 $2.60 4 Karalta Dazzler $1.70 2 Im Young Tommy NTD. Q: $5.60. E: $29.80. T: $74.30. FIRST 4: (5 4 2 1) $47.80. Scr: 3. Race 8: 1 Out To Strike $2.90 $1.80 8 Flash Anatomy $2.60 9 Midair Meltdown $3.10. Q: $9.10. E: $15.30. T: $57.00. A2: 1-8: $3.90, 1-9: $5.90, 8-9: $8.70. FIRST 4: (1 8 9 5) Not won pool jackpots. Scr: 6. Race 9: 10 Ultimate Courage $4.60 $1.80 3 Stylish Trend $2.20 12 Jodis Choice $3.10. Q: $36.90. E: $52.10. T: $398.20. A2: 3-10: $14.50, 10-12: $42.70, 3-12: $26.20. FIRST 4: (10 3 12 11) $181.00. Scr: 6. Race 10: 6 Resurgent Dream $1.20 $1.30 5 Jaminas Joy $1.90 1 Yoies Girls NTD. Q: $4.90. E: $7.30. T: $21.50. FIRST 4: (6 5 1 7) $62.60. All Started. EXTRA DOUBLE: 9 Jilliby Gigi 5 Washies Chance $20.10. SUB: 9 Jilliby Gigi 4 Karalta Dazzler. DOUBLE: 5 Boltnmach 8 God Sake $10.50. SUB: 8 Smilin Geoff 8 God Sake. TREBLE: 5 Sheer Strength 5 Boltnmach 8 God Sake $75.60. SUB: 9 Another Swinger 8 Smilin Geoff 8 God Sake. QUADDIE: 2 Swap Me 5 Sheer Strength 5 Boltnmach 8 God Sake $342.00. SUB: 2 Swap Me 9 Another Swinger 8 Smilin Geoff 8 God Sake.
examiner.com.au
THE FORM RACE EIGHT GOT THE GOSS (D K Weir) 7g By Eavesdropper-Magnifique Diamant (29:8-2-4): Ridden on the speed 81⁄2 len 13th of 16 (3) $6.50 55.5 Santa Ana Lane 1200m Wagga Town Plate Good(4) May 4. Inquiry into performance, vetted-no abnormalities when 83⁄4 len last of 8 (5) $6.00 63.5 Termele 1200m Sapphire Coast Open Hcp Heavy(8) June 11. Let-up. Previously trained by T J McIlrick. Lacked a pick-up and only plugged to line at Sapphire Coast last outing. Outside chance for multiples. HAY BALE (R D Griffiths) 4g By Canford Cliffs-La Lady (13:2-4-2): Took up a handy position lg nk win of 11 (10) $8.00 52.5 Tahi, I’m Telling Ya 1100m F’ton 3yo Hcp Good(3) July 22. Took up the running len, sht 1⁄2 hd 3rd of 6 (6) $2.70F 51.0 Red Alto, Lord Von Costa 1200m F’ton (Bm90) Good(4) Aug 5. Racing well. Solid on-pace performance at Flemington last time out. Meeting easier opposition here. Key player. CAPRESE (A H Parker) 7g By Amalfi-I’m Alice (40:6-6-9): Jumped awkwardly when 21⁄2 len 7th of 13 (7) $13.00 58.0 Murphy’s Reward 1200m Sandown-Lakeside (Bm78) Soft(6) July 5. Ran wide during race when 3 len, nk 3rd of 11 (4) $17.00 58.0 Oscar’s My Mate Pa, Mr Optimistic 1300m Bendigo (Bm78) Soft(5) July 23. Freshened. Finished intently at latest. Gets through rain affected ground. Each way appeal. SQUEAKY SQUIRREL (D K Weir) 6g By Redente-Lion’s Kiss (46:7-5-8): Not flash in 41⁄4 len 7th of 9 (1) $12.00 58.0 Rich Luck 1200m Geelong (Bm78) Good(4) July 16. Jumped awkwardly, blocked for run near 200m when 23⁄4 len 5th of 13 (4) $101.00 57.5 Saint Valorem 1100m C’field (Bm78) Good(4) July 29. Freshened. Formerly with Russell Osborne. Hard to recommend. AS BAD AS TYSON (C D Widdison) 5g By Strategic Maneuver-Western Success (15:4-3-2): Ran wide during race when 3 len win of 11 (7) $5.50 59.0 All About Nicci, White House Lady 1100m Wodonga (Bm64) Heavy(8) July 22. Found the line nk, 1⁄2 len 3rd of 10 (4) $5.50 58.0 Demolition, It’s A Shame Billy 1100m Geelong (Bm70) Good(4) Aug 9. Showed a handy turn of foot to place at Geelong last start. Has a good record over this trip. Not the roughest. VALLIANO (D & B Hayes & T Dabernig) 4g By Equiano-Miss Valley Road (20:2-2-3): 3 Wide when 13⁄4 len 6th of 12 (12) $10.00 53.0 My Paisann 1400m C’field 3yo Hcp Good(4) July 1. Overraced early, middle stages, stewards queried run, vetted-no abnormalities when 31⁄4 len 6th of 11 (2) $8.50 54.0 Nikitas 1400m C’field 3yo Hcp Good(3) July 15. Freshened. Battled on fairly at Caulfield last outing. Keep in mind. LIGHT ’N’ FIRE (D K Weir) 5g By BlevicLittle Fireball (9:4-1-0): Blocked for run near 400m when 1⁄2 nk win of 12 (4) $2.50F 58.0 Better Strike, Desert Samurai 1400m Bendigo (Bm64) Heavy(8) Oct 6. Settled in a forward position 3⁄4 len win of 9 (1) $4.00F 57.0 Emoji, Our Boy Charlie 1450m Kyneton (Bm70) Good(4) Nov 2. First-up. Excels on rain affected tracks. Not out of this. FOREIGN AFFAIR (Henry Dwyer) 6m By Econsul-Simply The Best (25:4-4-6): 3 Wide, stewards queried run when 51⁄2 len 6th of 9 (9) $5.50 54.0 Forgeress 1200m C’field 4yo+ M Hcp Good(3) July 15. Ran wide early stages when 11⁄4 len, lg nk 3rd of 11 (8) $7.50 59.0 Crystal Fountain, Verstappen 1100m Geelong (Bm70) Good(4) Aug 9. On pace and boxed on to fill the minors at Geelong last time out. Proven performer over this trip. Worth some thought here. ARTIE FRED (Paul Rocke) 5g By Artie Schiller-Honourable Freda (26:4-5-1): Settled midfield 13⁄4 len 6th of 11 (5) $5.50 56.5 Hunting Hill 1300m Sandown-Hillside (Bm70) Soft(6) July 26. Jumped awkwardly, vetted-no abnormalities when 43⁄4 len 6th of 7 (5) $6.00 56.0 Arkham Knight 1250m Morphettville Parks E&G (Bm75) Soft(7) Aug 5. Latest only fair. Suited over this distance. Has wet form. Only a place chance. LIKA SHADOW (Ms G Johnstone) 8g By Host-Theresnothinglycra (46:7-6-4): Didn’t offer much when 61⁄2 len 8th of 14 (13) $41.00 57.0 I Boogi 1200m Sandown-Lakeside (Bm70) Soft(5) July 12. Failed to fire 71⁄2 len last of 9 (3) $17.00 57.5 Secret Prophet 1200m Swan Hill (Bm70) Heavy(10) Aug 7. Failed to make an impression at latest. Going up in grade. Prefer others. WORLD OF HOPE (D Binaisse) 5m By Spinning World-Tis Hopeful (15:3-4-1): Slowly away, tightened for room, vetted-no abnormalities when 61⁄2 len last of 6 (3) $2.35F 56.0 Catch That Cat 1100m Bendigo 4yo+ M (Bm78) Soft(6) May 21. Resumed with 31⁄4 len 9th of 11 (6) $18.00 54.0 Sullivan Bay 1100m
33
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
RACING SPORT
ECHUCA MONDAY 1
CODE: VR
Melb. Cup Day Echuca Mdn 1000m
12.00
(Apprentices can claim) 3-y-o Fillies Prize money: $22,000 1— Arctic Circle (16) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Childs 2— 335 As It Lies (9) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . M Dee 3— Astrological (3) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . H Coffey 4— Belle Xaar (6) . . .. . .. . .. . . L Riordan (a2) 5— Bonnieux (17) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched 6— Cosmic Moon (2) . . .. . .. . .. . . J McNeil 7— 7X Fabrication (5) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . N Rose 8— First Pride (13) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .L King (a2) 9— Miss Norway (7) . . .. . .. . .. . . B Mertens (a) 10— 2X Omorose (8) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . L Nolen 11— Second Marriage (1) . . .. . .. . . Scratched 12— Shelley Beach (18) . . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched 13— Splash Around (4) . . .. . . J Martin (a1.5) 14— Written On Rock (11) . . .. . .. . . Scratched
57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0 57.0
15— 16— 17— 18—
57.0 15.00 57.0 21.00 57.0 57.0 41.00
EMERGENCIES
30X Margot (15) . . .. . .. . .. . . B Thompson (a) 48X Conconi (10) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Hill 67X Paseo Del Rio (14) . . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched 7X05 Just Foxing (12) . . .. . .. . .. . . A Creighton
7.50 5.00 9.00 7.50 10.00 9.00 15.00 13.00 7.50 17.00
TAB INFORMATION DAILY DOUBLE: . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 9 and 10 EXTRA DOUBLE: . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 5 and 6 TREBLE: . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 8, 9 and 10 QUADRELLA:. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 7, 8, 9 and 10 FIRST FOUR: . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .All races 6— 7— 8— 9— 10— 11— 12— 13— 14—
6X37 Legal Mistress (3) . . .. . .. . .. . . C Symons 2660 Rowdy Rousey (9) . . .. . . S Thornton (a2) X523 Sense Of Denial (10) . . . B Thompson (a) 986 She’s Moxie (15) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . H Coffey 768X Snowboarder (4). . .. . .. . .. . .. . . L Meech X245 Up And Above b (11) . . .. . .. . .L King (a2) Roar (1) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . L Nolen 74 Coral Coast (2) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched 71 Watchmespin m (6). . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched
EMERGENCY
15— 6500 Amazing Miss Ruby (12) . . .. . . J Keating 56.5 51.00
TIPS: Sense Of Denial, Coral Coast, Legal Mistress, Up And Above
5
Two Tarts Mdn Plate 1100m
12.30
(Apprentices can claim) 3-y-o and up Prize money: $22,000 1— 2— 3— 4— 5— 6— 7— 8— 9— 10— 11— 12— 13— 14—
500 Bud Ricks (2) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . M Dee 46X Futurist (4) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched 0 Lord Wentworth (10) . . .. . . A Creighton Percival (7) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . T Stockdale (a4) 63X Shot At The Reward (6) . . .. . . C Symons 4255 Struck Out (1). . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Eaton (a3) 5X88 Thunder Gun (14) . . .. . .. . .. . . P Moloney 6 Toolleen Town (13) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Childs 77X0 Watch My Shadow (15) . . .. . . Scratched 53X9 Flying Frenchy (11) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Hill 547X Red Pearl (5) . . .. . .. . .. . . C Caserta (a1.5) 7426 Tilly’s All Class (9) . . .. . .. . . B Mertens (a) 48X Black Sail (8) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . L Nolen Heavenly Thought (3) . . .. . .. . . J McNeil
EMERGENCY
58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.0 56.0
51.00 8.00 13.00 6.00 7.00 15.00 31.00 21.00 15.00 13.00 3.80 6.00
15— 9008 Beau Dazzle (12) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . L Smith 56.5 51.00
TIPS: Black Sail, Tilly’s All Class, Heavenly Thought, Struck out
3
De Bortoli Wines Mdn Plate 1100m
1.00
(Apprentices can claim) 3-y-o and up Prize money: $22,000 1— 4865 Deck Of Cards (5) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . L Nolen 2— 54X0 Lanomroh (6) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Childs 3— Master Control (12). . .. . .. . .. . . D Schmitt 4— 552 My Boy Greg (9) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched 5— 850X New Kintaro h (3) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Hill 6— 76X0 Supanemo (2). . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Winks 7— 55X3 Toffiato (7) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J McNeil 8— Triathlon (14) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Allen 9— 5 Diamondsinthesun (8) G Cartwright (a2) 10— 557 Full Reward (10) . . .. . .. . .. . . L Doodt (a2) 11— 4X Return Flight (15) . . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched 12— 0X9X Vuitton (13) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Turner (a) 13— Equestria (4) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . P Moloney 14— Ma Chao (1) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . M Dee
EMERGENCY
15—
58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.0 56.0
10.00 17.00 13.00 21.00 26.00 4.00 5.50 21.00 17.00 13.00 13.00 7.00
2 Experimentation (11) . . .. . .. . . Scratched 56.0
TIPS: Deck Of Cards, Toffiato, Full Reward, Triathlon
4
1print Mdn Plate 1400m
1.30
(Apprentices can claim) 3-y-o and up Prize money: $22,000 1— 2— 3— 4— 5—
8229 Heza Jolly Swagman (7)G Cartwright (a2) 587X Lord Reset (5). . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Hill 8X9 Mr Boombastic b (8) . . .. . .. . . Scratched 7778 Son Of Sunny (13) . . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched 5X50 Chattering (14) . . .. . .. . .. . . C Hall (a1.5)
C’field 4yo+ M Hcp Soft(6) Aug 19. Honest customer. Has had success second-up. Worth noting solid wet track stats. Can give this a shake. DESTINY’S REWARD (B A Gentle) 5g By Reward For Effort-Palace De Lago (18:3-1-2): Rider charged with careless riding when 1⁄2 nk win of 12 (12) $4.40F 58.5 Sol Brillante, Skulduggery 1100m Mildura (Bm64) Good(4) July 31. Jumped awkwardly when 11⁄4 len win
58.5 11.00 58.5 8.00 58.5 58.5 56.5 21.00
2.00
Ferrari Building & Maint. Mdn 1400m (Apprentices can claim) 3-y-o and up Prize money: $22,000
TIPS: As It Lies, Omorose, Fabrication, Arctic Circle
2
7.50 11.00 5.50 11.00 21.00 4.20 13.00
56.5 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.0 54.0 54.0
1— 2— 3— 4— 5— 6— 7— 8— 9— 10— 11— 12— 13— 14—
7X5 Amendment (5) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Winks 2 Lawless Reign (15) . . . G Cartwright (a2) 5X68 Lord Zidane (11) . . .. . .. . . B Thompson (a) 23 Our Blackjack b (12) . . .. . .. . . J McNeil 34 Zelenus (16) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Allen 26X0 Deregold (14) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . F Alesci X032 Exceder (9) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Turner (a) 35X0 Great Alpine Road (7) . . .. . .. . . P Moloney 066 Her Turn (4) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Benbow 89 Just Like Serena (3) . . .. . .. . .. . . J Childs 0745 Miss Vigilante (13) . . .. . .. . .. . . L Meech Alkashaaf (2) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .C Parish Schappose (1) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . M Dee 88X4 Pamando (10) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched
EMERGENCIES
8.50 6.00 11.00 7.50 8.50 34.00 3.60 21.00 26.00 34.00 17.00 7.50 8.50
58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 58.5 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.0 56.0 54.0
15— 8500 Bellwhist (8) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . A Creighton 58.5 51.00 16— 57X5 Crooked Gent (6) . . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched 58.5
TIPS: Zelenus, Lawless Reign, Our Blackjack, Miss Vigilante
6
2.30
Murphys Turf/L’scaping-Bm58 1600m (Apprentices can claim) 3-y-o and up F & M Prize money: $18,000
1— 2— 3— 4— 5— 6— 7— 8— 9— 10—
0169 Elle Excite tmh (9) . . .. . .. . .. . . L King (a2) X807 Shewearsthepants dmbn (3)L Riordan (a2) 34X8 The Donchess (5) . . .. . .. . .. . . P Moloney 8918 Belle Sarzy dm (6) . . .. . .. . . J Eaton (a3) 0034 Beleura Belle (12) . . .. . . J Martin (a1.5) 7612 Ennis (7) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . C Caserta (a1.5) 5451 Hurry Harriet (10) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Childs 3462 Try Pink d (2) . . .. . .. . .. . . B Thompson (a) 8696 Interchange Emily (8) . . .. . .. . . L Meech X859 Kirbaz h (11) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . H Coffey
63.0 61.0 61.0 60.5 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 59.5 58.5
9.50 4.40 26.00 26.00 13.00 8.00 5.00 3.70 11.00 15.00
11— 12— 13— 14—
35X0 Halcyon dm (1) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 8269 Joe’s Pride (4). . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J McNeil X002 Heart Of Class (13) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . M Dee 7X99 Queen Elsa (14) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .
58.5 57.5 59.0 54.0
17.00 15.00 17.00 34.00
EMERGENCIES
TIPS: Shewearsthepants, Interchange Emily, Try Pink, Hurry Harriet
7
Bet365 (Bm58) 2100m
3.00
(Apprentices can claim) Prize money: $18,000 1— 2— 3— 4— 5— 6— 7— 8— 9— 10—
9941 Undercover Poet mh (5) . . .. . . L King (a2) X464 Our Boy Charlie mb (11) L Riordan (a2) 1304 Cisco Delago tcdmh (3) T Stockdale (a4) X510 Lucifer’s Boy m (12) . . .. . .. . . Scratched 8242 Solas tm (14) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J McNeil 6146 Decisive Diamond (10). . .. . .. . . P Moloney 5563 Margot’s Boy (8) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Duffy X678 Deemico dm (9) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . L Meech 7X50 Alsa Doll dmn (2) . . .. . . S Thornton (a2) 0400 Ventura Highway tm (6) . . T Marshall (a)
of 6 (1) $3.30 60.5 French Rock, Va Bene Amore 1000m Mildura (Bm64) Good(4) Aug 18. Place makes best appeal. STORM APPROACH (L J Lake) 7g By Purrealist-Smytzer’s Thunder (62:7-12-7): Overraced early, middle stages when 23⁄4 len 5th of 9 (6) $9.00 54.5 Secret Prophet 1200m Swan Hill (Bm70) Heavy(10) Aug 7. Hampered early stages when 21⁄4 len 6th of 9 (5) $7.00 58.0 Hangin’ With Willy 1200m Wagga
(Bm65) Heavy(8) Aug 13. Rises in class. Doesn’t look likely. VILLAINOUS VIXEN (John W Thomas) 8m By Churchill Downs-Zejester (31:3-4-3): Took up a midfield position 43⁄4 len 7th of 12 (6) $31.00 54.0 Wild Irish Boy 975m Swan Hill (Bm64) Soft(5) July 24. Raced on the speed 61⁄2 len 7th of 11 (6) $19.00 54.0 Rain Fast 1200m Swan Hill (Bm58) Heavy(10) Aug 7. Just battled home at Swan Hill at latest.
62.0 5.00 61.5 3.50 61.0 9.00 60.5 58.5 5.50 58.0 9.00 57.5 7.50 57.0 15.00 56.0 21.00 54.5 17.00
11— 12— 13— 14—
0080 Wilston (13) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched 8907 Knucklemanna m (4) . . .. . .. . .. . .C Parish 1X00 Charles Filou d (1) . . .. . .. . .. . . C Brown 6008 Access All Areas (7) . . . B Thompson (a)
TIPS: Knucklemanna, Ventura Highway, Our Boy Charlie, Solas
8
Border Inn Winter Sprint-Bm78 1170m
1—7:33 Curtains And Blinds Grade 6 278m
2—7:56 Furniture City Mixed 5-6 515m
1-885 WHODAT BANGIN’ (Graeme Moate) Wide runner will find this tough. 2-655 AWARE (Anthony Bullock) Could be placed at big odds. 3-767 LULU DRYVA (Rodney Ransley) Severely checked last start, can improve. 4-658 MOLLY SUPERNOVA (Anthony Bullock) Won’t get it any easier than this. 5-654 MINY MO (Allan Clark) Big winner last start from box 8, will start a short priced favourite. 6-873 CRACKENBACK (Michael Louth) Looking elsewhere. 7-775 FANCY MOSS (Anthony Bullock) Does run on. 8-577 PLATNIUM CYE (Anthony Bullock) Would have to lead. 9-684 YOGO XENA Res. (Gary Johnson). 10* * * NO RESERVE * * * BETTING: 5-4 Miny Mo; 4 Whodat Bangin; 5 Lulu Dryva, Molly Supernova; 7 Platnium Cye; 10 Crackenback, Fancy Moss, Aware TIPS: Miny Mo, Whodat Bangin, Lulu Dryva, Molly Supernova
3—8:14 Kingsley Jarman Fencing Grade 6 278m
1CIRCUMSPECT (Anthony Bullock) Box 1 a plus. 2-131 TYLER LEE (Edward Medhurst) Good chase behind Hetti’s Produce last start. 3-737 POSH PETE (Allan Clark) Only placed once from 5. 4-57 TAH BANDIT (Anthony Bullock) Looks safely held. 5-343 CAWBOURNE ALDOS (Gary Johnson) Wait for something easier. 6-21 NORTH COUNTRY (Susan Gittus) Was in the market his only start here. 7-754 ENFIELD PETE (Shane Stennings) Form is ordinary. 8-2 ROCKING REBEL (Clinton Tapp) Did run 2nd first up in Hobart.
TAB INFORMATION DAILY DOUBLE: . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 7 and 8 EXTRA DOUBLE: . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 3 and 4 TREBLE: . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 6, 7 and 8 QUADRELLA: . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 5, 6, 7 and 8 FIRST FOUR: . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .All races 9-474 CAWBOURNE DILL Res. (Gary Johnson). 10-48 TALOUMBI DRIVE Res. (Ingrid Watkins). BETTING: 5-2 North Country; Circumspect, Tyler Lee, Rocking Rebel; 5 Tah Bandit, Cawbourne Aldos; 10 Posh Pete, Enfield Pete TIPS: North Country, Circumspect, Tyler Lee, Rocking Rebel
4—8:37 Simon’s Carpet One Grade 6 278m
APOCRYPHAL (Anthony Bullock) Box 1 has the bet strike rate of this track. 2-28 POSH MIRANDA (Anthony Bullock) Was unplaced in Hobart on Thursday. OH SERENA (Allan Clark) First starter prefer to see. 34-653 TOP FELLA (Susan Gittus) Was favourite when beaten last start, can improve. WINLOCK EARNER (Michael Sherriff) Good run in Hobart 5on Thursday night, placed 2nd. 6-583 TAH SADIE (Anthony Bullock) Not drawn well. CAWBOURNE SOFTY (Robyn Johnson) Did win a 7-7 qualifying trial at Devonport. 8-333 WINKLEE DUTCHY (Edward Howard) 12 starts and still yet to win a race. 9-747 FLYING MILKO Res. (Ingrid Watkins). 10-787 BEAVER CREEK Res. (Michael Louth). BETTING: 5-2 Top Fella; 3 Apocryphal; 4 Posh Miranda; 5 Oh Serena, Winklee Dutchy; 10 Winlock Earner, Tah Sadie, Cawbourne Softy TIPS: Top Fella, Apocryphal, Posh Miranda, Winklee Dutchy 1-
5—9:01 Goldstar Muzzles Grade 5 600m
1-811 IT’S A WINK (Russell Watts) Will be in the race for a long way. 2-162 KEEP YA VISION (Craig French) Is better than her last start. 3-854 CAWBOURNE ERA (Gary Johnson) Not racing well enough. 4-878 TIGRA TRON (Anthony Bullock) Will be big odds. 5-142 FIFTEEN TWO (Dale Hammersley) Winner of 15 races here and has won in Melbourne, looks the main danger. 6-715 DAN ROAD (Nicole Howard) Shouldn’t worry these. 7-241 SATIN STYLE (Anthony Bullock) This is a lot tougher. 8-634 CHEEKY ELLA (Allan Clark) Outclassed.
3.30
(Apprentices can claim) Prize money: $35,000 1— 2— 3— 4— 5— 6— 7— 8— 9— 10— 11— 12— 13— 14—
0208 Got The Goss dm (15). . . L Riordan (a2) 6213 Hay Bale mb (6) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . M Allen 4173 Caprese dmn (4) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . L King (a2) 3375 Squeaky Squirrel dm (11) . . . J McNeil X313 As Bad As Tyson tdm (9) . . .. . . L Meech 3066 Valliano d (16) . . .. . .. . .. . . B Mertens (a) 211X Light ’n’ Fire dm (13) . . .. . .. . .. . . M Dee 2363 Foreign Affair d (7) . . .. . .. . .. . . C Symons 7166 Artie Fred dm (5) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Duffy 1889 Lika Shadow tdmh (1). . . B Thompson (a) 2269 World Of Hope dmn (12) . . .. . . P Moloney 4411 Destiny’s Reward (8) . . .. . .. . .. . .C Parish 7256 Storm Approach cdmh (14) T Marshall (a) 8X77 Villainous Vixen tmh (10) J Eaton (a3)
EMERGENCIES
60.5 59.0 58.0 57.5 56.0 56.0 55.5 55.0 54.5 54.5 54.0 55.5 54.0 54.0
17.00 2.40 9.50 21.00 11.00 6.00 11.00 11.00 15.00 31.00 7.00 17.00 51.00 51.00
15— 7472 Canelo dmb (2) . . .. . .. . . C Caserta (a1.5) 54.0 31.00 16— 059X Sassoon (3) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 54.0 21.00
TIPS: Hay Bale, Valliano, Artie Fred, As Bad As Tyson
9
Leveson Nth Melb. (Bm58) 1170m
4.00
(Apprentices can claim) Prize money: $18,000 1— X002 Honourable Tycoon m (10) . . . Scratched 2— 4490 Lots Of Smacks dm (1) J Martin (a1.5) 3— 4221 Make Mine Brandy cdmhn (5) L King (a2) 4— 1060 Not A Blemish dm (12) . . . J Eaton (a3) 5— 6X84 Pantheress dm (15) . . .. . . B Thompson (a) 6— 3104 Under God’s Sky dm (2) C Caserta (a1.5) 7— 5098 Any Given Bender dm (7) C Hall (a1.5) 8— X523 Ansinna b (16) . . .. . .. . .. . . J Turner (a) 9— 7155 Atunnah Courage dm (3) . . .. . . R Beattie 10— 5X21 Scrutineer dmn (8) . . . G Cartwright (a2) 11— 2240 Mr Cooley tm (9) . . .. . .. . . L Doodt (a2) 12— 7404 Davaluri mn (4) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . F Alesci 13— 4X37 Duro Canyon m (18) . . .. . .. . . J Benbow 14— X88X Surefire Lass t (17) . . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched
62.0 61.0 61.0 61.0 61.0 61.0 60.5 60.0 60.0 60.0 59.5 59.0 58.5 58.5
21.00 5.00 13.00 7.50 17.00 21.00 9.00 13.00 6.00 11.00 13.00 13.00
15— 16— 17— 18—
56.5 58.5 55.5 54.5
26.00 21.00 41.00 34.00
EMERGENCIES
6X86 Yarrayne Lass m (6). . .. . .. . .. . .. . . C Puls X298 Captain Magic c (13) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . X560 Miss Ritziano m (11) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 3660 Crafty Eva dm (14) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .
TIPS: Scrutineer, Crafty Eva, Ansinna, Under God’s Sky
10
Barmah Hotel (Bm58) 1400m
4.30
(Apprentices can claim) Prize money: $18,000 1— 2— 3— 4— 5— 6— 7— 8— 9— 10— 11— 12— 13— 14—
9226 Turfonic d (15) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . L King (a2) 5472 Awake In Grinzing m (10) A Boyd (a2) 5972 Sir Nemo dm (5). . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . J Childs 2217 Matiano dm (1) . . .. . . G Cartwright (a2) 88X0 Exilia Miss (7). . .. . .. . .. . . B Thompson (a) 4160 Katy Kat m (13) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 2261 Ruary Mac dm (6) . . .. . .. . .. . . Scratched X879 To Infinity dmn (12). . .. . .. . . J Turner (a) 7200 First Watch (11) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . P Moloney 0283 Hard Spark t (16) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .C Parish 0499 Just Stellar m (9) . . .. . . L Riordan (a2) 8070 Solar Bravo tm (3) . . .. . .. . .. . . J Keating 1900 Shark Magic m (2) . . .. . .. . . J Eaton (a3) 7797 Stellar Princess tmn (14) . . . C Hall (a1.5)
EMERGENCIES
61.5 61.0 60.5 60.0 59.5 59.5 61.0 59.5 58.5 58.5 58.0 57.5 57.0 56.0
3.60 3.00 10.00 8.00 21.00 17.00 17.00 21.00 8.00 10.00 21.00 31.00 10.00
15— 90X0 Joliet Jake m (8). . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . 54.0 34.00 16— 0990 Hunted (4) . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . . L Smith 54.0 51.00
TIPS: Turfonic, Hard Spark, Katy Kat, Awake In Grinzing LEGEND: T - Won at track. C - Won at this distance on this course. D - Won at this distance on another course. M - Won in heavy going. B Beaten favourite at last start. H - Home track. X - Spell of three months. N - Won at night. F - Fell.
Meeting stronger company this time. A win would surprise. CANELO (M & L Cerchi) 6g By Statue Of Liberty-Noble Creation (31:4-6-6): Found the lead 43⁄4 len 7th of 11 (5) $10.00 59.0 Antagonist 1300m Geelong Synthetic (Bm64) Synthetic July 18. Showed pace 21⁄2 len 2nd of 8 (4) $4.20F 59.5 Tanto Bianco 1200m Bairnsdale (Bm64) Good(3) July 25. Freshened. Bit tougher here. Looks tested.
LAUNCESTON GREYHOUNDS MONDAY 1-213 WINKLEE JANE (Edward Howard) Winner of 3 races and looks well placed. 2-752 KIANDRA (Michael Louth) Showed speed last start. 3-622 RIVENLEE LAD (Anthony Bullock) Good beginner and has a hope. 4-66 ZIZOU DE KAHN (Gary Johnson) Not likely. 5-6 SHADOW BLU (Clinton Tapp) Not on exposed form. 6-762 POSH TEAGAN (Anthony Bullock) Beaten in moderate time last start, might improve. 7WE KNOW (Allan Clark) Newcomer having first start, drawn awkwardly. 8-568 LADY ENFIELD (Graeme Barber) Had 11 starts, only 1 place. 9-676 TAH BOB Res. (Anthony Bullock). 10-55 COOL NUMBER Res. (Susan Gittus). BETTING: 7-4 Winklee Jane; 9-4 Rivenlee Lad; 4 We Know, Lady Enfield; 5 Posh Teagan; 10 Kiandra, Zizou De Kahn, Shadow Blue TIPS: Winklee Jane, Rivenlee Lad, We Know, Lady Enfield
54.0 54.0 17.00 54.0 51.00 54.0 51.00
SASSOON (Andrew Payne) 4g By Snippetson-Dewamar (4:1-0-0): Became unbalanced when 23⁄4 len 5th of 7 (7) $15.00 57.5 Atlantic Express 1600m Sandown-Hillside 3yo (Bm70) Good(4) Jan 11. Stewards queried run, poor post-race recovery when 83⁄4 len 9th of 12 (4) $8.50 59.0 Wheal Leisure 2040m M Valley 3yo (Bm78) Good(3) Jan 21. Resuming. Untried in the wet. Has to lift.
CODE: TG 9-612 RAPID SURPRIZE Res. (Sonia Martin). 10-363 SISCO RASCAL Res. (Rachael Moate). BETTING: 1-1 It’s A Wink; 3 Keep Ya Vision, Fifteen Two; 10 Cawbourne Era, Tigra Tron, Dan Road, Satin Style, Cheeky Ella TIPS: It’s A Wink, Keep Ya Vision, Fifteen Two, Cawbourne Era
6—9:25 Rapidvite.Com Grade 5 515m
1-324 SURF THE ARTIC (Gary Johnson) Last couple have been ok, could be a place chance. 2-233 SISCO ROCCO (Robert Gourlay) Yet to start here but looks to have ability. 3-464 BLACK RHINO (Anthony Bullock) Uses a bit of the track. 4-145 HELLO BIRDY (Susan Gittus) Honest. 5-463 SHANLYN CHINA (Graeme Moate) Looking elsewhere. 6-112 BUCKLE UP TILDA (Robyn Johnson) Beaten favourite on Thursday night. 7-111 GOTTA BE YOU (Anthony Bullock) Won his last 6. 8-635 FESCO MAN (Edward Medhurst) Slow beginner but has a motor. 9-684 YOGO XENA Res. (Gary Johnson). * * * NO RESERVE * * * 10BETTING: 7-4 Gotta Be You; 9-2 Fesco Man; 4 Surf The Artic, Sisco Rocco, Hello Birdy; 5 Buckle Up Tilda, Black Rhino; 10 Shanlyn China TIPS: Gotta Be You, Fesco Man, Surf The Artic, Sisco Rocco
7—9:40 Ulverstone Petfoods Grade 4 515m
1-812 AMITY CLASS (David Crosswell) Box 1 she should give them something to chase. 2-535 ASSEMBLY (Anthony Bullock) Not on recent form. 3-451 RAPID INNINGS (Graeme Lawson) Was impressive in Hobart. 4-422 METANOIA FRANKO (Nicholas Howard) Could be placed. 5-137 BANQUET (Edward Medhurst) Has won 3 from 12 here. 6-231 TAH SOPHIE (Anthony Bullock) Looks safely held. 7-244 MEWSTONE ROCKET (Graeme Moate) Not likely. 8-528 FRAZZLE DAZZLE (Wanda Hodgetts) Uncharacteristic last start, can improve. 9-757 STYLISH IMAGE Res. (Anthony Bullock). 10-336 PARMA CHIEF Res. (Morris Strickland). BETTING: 3 Rapid Innings; 4 Metanoia Franko, Banquet, Frazzle Dazzle; 5 Tah Sophie; 10 Assembly, Amity Class, Mewstone Rocket TIPS: Rapid Innings, Metanoia Franko, Banquet, Tah Sophie
8—10:01 Find Us On Facebook Grade 5 515m
1-785 REGENT ASSASSIN (Anthony Bullock) Has no form at all. 2-526 REGGIE HARDS (Gary Johnson) Gets back and runs on strong. 3-556 GANGALLA REBEL (Dale Hammersley) Looks safely held. 4-538 REAL STYLIST (Anthony Bullock) Form is just.
5-142 ZINNIA (Graeme Lawson) Last start here looked a good thing beat. 6-266 ROCKSTAR ELIZA (Debbie Cannan) Drawn ok. 7-485 STYLISH APRIL (Bruce Macrostie) Uses far too much of the track. 8-337 AZURIUM (Gary Johnson) Is still a maiden after 6 starts. 9-684 YOGO XENA Res. (Gary Johnson). * * * NO RESERVE * * * 10BETTING: 3 Zinnia, Rockstar Eliza; 4 Stylish April; 5 Real Stylist, Azurium; 10 Regent Assassin, Reggie Hards, Gangalla Rebel TIPS: Zinnia, Rockstar Eliza, Stylish April, Azurium
9—10:17 Carlton Draught Brewery Fr. Gr. 5 278m 1-433 LAHINCH (Bruce Macrostie) Box 1 is always handy. 2-526 LORD DOMINATOR (Paul Hili) Has won here in moderate time. 3-443 MANILA MAGIC (Anthony Bullock) Is a lead dog. 4-722 GOLDEN NUGGET (Carol Nash) Each way chance. 5-226 PUNCH DAY (Anthony Bullock) Another dog that has to find the lead. 6-287 ONE ARM BANDIT (Anthony Bullock) Not likely. T36 COAL TATTOO (Anthony Bullock) In the same 7category. 8-662 SOOKY JOOKY (Paul Tharle) Last start was good, an amended time would win this race. 9-645 KATH EMERY Res. (Anthony Bullock). 10-858 MANILA SAL Res. (Anthony Bullock). BETTING: 3 One Arm Bandit; 7-2 Punch Day; 5 Golden Nugget, Sooky Jooky; 6 Lord Dominator, Lahinch; 10 Manila Magic, Coal Tattoo TIPS: One Arm Bandit, Punch Day, Sooky Jooky, Golden Nugget
10—10:41 Luxbet Racing Centre Grade 5 515m 1-372 2-526 3-786 4-423 5-244 6-726 7-564
TWIRLER (Dale Hammersley) Has a chance from this box. GOLD TICKET (Robert Gourlay) Is a first 4 hope. KAO DE KAHN (Gary Johnson) Looks safely held here. HELLO FRECKLES (Douglas Cassidy) Winner of 4 races, hard to hold out. FESCO LASS (Debbie Cannan) Is an each way chance. NITRO GRACE (Paul Hili) Did win here from box 1. COOPER’S SHADOW (Anthony Bullock) Only 1 from 38 here. PRODIGAL SON (Susan Gittus) Finding it hard of late. YOGO XENA Res. (Gary Johnson). * * * NO RESERVE * * *
8-254 9-684 10BETTING: 7-4 Twirler; 9-4 Gold Ticket; 3 Hello Freckles; 5 Nitro Grace, Cooper’s Shadow, Prodigal Son; 10 Kao De Kahn, Fesco Lass TIPS: Twirler, Gold Ticket, Hello Freckles, Nitro Grace
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THE EXAMINER
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examiner.com.au
SPORT RACING
Clark returns home to celebrate with treble Promising bitch Wynburn Cutie has won six of her seven starts.
No Oaks but Cutie has big future GREYHOUNDS BURNIE trainer Ben Englund has given up thoughts of taking promising bitch Wynburn Cutie to Adelaide for the South Australian Oaks. Instead he will target the Breeders Classic in Launceston on September 1. “Contesting the heats of the SA Oaks was just an idea but I think we’ll stay at home,” Englund said. “The bitch has an interesting 12 months ahead of her.” Wynburn Cutie has won six of her seven starts including the Young Star Classic final in Hobart 11 days ago when she ran down Diamonte’s Boy in a brilliant performance. She then won again in Launceston last Monday night overcoming early interference and is due to race at Devonport on Tuesday afternoon. “She has completely turned her ability around from when she started pre-training,” Englund said. “She wasn’t showing much potential before we had to spell her due to an injury but she’s certainly surprised us since she’s come back.” – BRENNAN RYAN
TOO QUICK: I'm Wesley, ridden by Raquel Clark, wins the $25,000 Luxbet All Weather Sprint Final at Spreyton on Sunday. Picture: Greg Mansfield
PAST THE POST BY GREG MANSFIELD
TASMANIA’S leading apprentice Raquel Clark helped herself to three belated birthday presents, including the feature race, at Spreyton on Sunday. Clark is currently based in Adelaide but returned home to celebrate her 24th birthday on Friday and stayed on to win the $25,000 Luxbet All Weather Sprint Final on I’m Wesley. She also scored on Ultimate Doom and Windrider to steal riding honours from fellow apprentice Chris Graham who landed a double on Leconte and Ariconte. I’m Wesley, backed from
$1.60 to $1.40, sat outside the leader, Underplay, before racing clear in the home straight for a 2-½ length win. Concentrate ($18.90) and Lord Farquaad ($10.70) ran home well to fill the minor placings. Wesley Vale trainer Glenn Stevenson prepares the winner for owners Leon Perry, Bronwyn Perry, Ben Holland and James Niaura. I’m Wesley has now won six of his nine starts on the synthetic track and will return in a fortnight to tackle a Benchmark 82 Handicap. “We’ll put him out after that and look at the Newmarket Handicap (in November),” Stevenson said. “Even though he’s won
first-up win and good subsequent trackwork. “After Shannon Brazil rode him work on Monday morning she said he was spot on and they wouldn’t beat him in this race,” the trainer said. “We just ran him up 200m on Thursday morning to top him off. “I don’t even have to tell Shannon what to do – it’s a big help when you’ve got a good trackwork rider.” Raquel Clark: Three wins
most of his races here, he also goes well at Mowbray – he ran second to Lord Da Vinci on Launceston Cup day. Stevenson said he went into the final with confidence after I’m Wesley’s brilliant
PROTEST DISMISSED The first race was named after Anthony Darmanin in recognition of his win in the 2016-17 Devonport jockeys’ premiership but it didn’t help his cause. He finished second on
heavily-backed favourite Phar Word then failed in a bid to have the result overturned in the stewards’ room. Darmanin said the winner, Mosh Opera, had shifted out in the home straight, pushing his horse off balance and costing him ground. “Otherwise I would have won by a length or more,” he told stewards. However Mosh Opera’s rider Daniel Ganderton said there was only a “light brushing’ of the two horses as he moved out “as I was entitled to do.” “If anything I should be protesting against Anthony for breaking the rules by excessive use of the whip,” Ganderton said.
Yole’s record after 119th win HARNESS RACING
NUMBER 119: Trainer Ben Yole broke a long-standing Tasmanian record when Sheer Strength won in Hobart on Sunday night.
SIDMOUTH trainer Ben Yole landed one of his easiest wins of the year in Hobart on Sunday night to break the Tasmanian record for most victories in a 12-month season. Former Queensland gelding Sheer Strength was having his third start for Yole when he streeted his rivals by almost 20 metres in the Sutter Hanover Pace. It was the trainer’s 119th win for 2016-17, breaking the record set by Neville Webberley in 1990-91. Harness racing legend Wayne Rattray trained 123 winners two seasons earlier
but that was the year the code changed its season starting date from August 1 to September 1. As a result, the 1988-89 season went for 13 months and Rattray’s tally does not appear in the record books. Sheer Strength, driven by Rohan Hillier, beat stablemates Another Swinger and Modern Chic after leading from the outset. After eight races, Yole had taken his season’s tally to 121 with further wins by Washies Chance (driven by Natalee Emery) and Out To Strike (Mark Yole). Brothers Todd and Gareth
Rattray continued their tight battle for the Tasmanian reinsmen’s premiership at the second-last meeting of the season. With two races remaining on the 10-event card, each had driven one winner, with Todd scoring on God Sake and Gareth on Jilliby Gigi. That left Todd two wins in front, 85 to 83. Gareth won the premiership 10 years in a row before Mark Yole claimed the title last season. Todd, chasing his first premiership, is also second on the trainers’ table. – GREG MANSFIELD
examiner.com.au
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
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AFL SPORT
Townsend kicks six as Richmond thrash Fremantle St Kilda DOCKERS V TIGERS RICHMOND are just one win away from securing a top-four berth after thrashing Fremantle by 104 points in Sunday’s recordbreaking clash at Domain Stadium. The Tigers looked shaky early on, with Fremantle dominating the inside-50m
count 18-6 in the opening term as the home side opened up a four-point lead. But Richmond blew the game wide open with an eight-goals-to-nil second term to set up the 25.5 (155) to 7.9 (51) victory in front of a crowd of 34,204. Former GWS midfielder Jacob Townsend finished with a career-high six
goals, while Jack Riewoldt (four goals), Kane Lambert (three), Dustin Martin (36 disposals, two goals) and Shaun Grigg (36 touches) also had big games. Richmond (14-7) are in fourth spot, and they will guarantee themselves a double chance in the finals if they account for St Kilda at the MCG next Sunday.
If they lose, they could drop to as low as sixth. Sunday’s win was Richmond’s biggest ever over Fremantle, eclipsing their 90-point victory over the Dockers at the MCG in 1998. The result was also the equal biggest defeat in Ross Lyon’s coaching career, following on from last week’s 104-point loss to Sydney.
The capitulation was more disappointing for Fremantle given it was their final ever match at Subiaco Oval ahead of next year’s move to Perth Stadium. The one bright spot to come out of the game for Fremantle was the successful AFL return of Harley Bennell, who booted twofirst-quarter goals.
Hogan bags six as Dees hold off Lions DEMONS V LIONS MELBOURNE are poised to play finals for the first time since 2006, but the Demons made life tough for their long-suffering fans in Sunday’s 13-point win over Brisbane. A six-goal haul from Jesse Hogan was the highlight, but the last-placed Lions threatened to spoil the party when they piled on four unanswered goals to come roaring back from a 32-point deficit in the last quarter. Brisbane trailed by just seven points with under two minutes remaining, but the Demons held their nerve to record a 16.8 (104) to 14.7 (91) win in front of 30,422 fans at the MCG. The victory was Melbourne’s 12th of the season and means it will take a loss to Collingwood next week and other results to go against them for them to miss out on a finals berth. Hogan put in a dominant display after missing just two matches with a broken collarbone. Demons coach Simon Goodwin paid tribute to
the 22-year-old who has had to deal with the death of his father and a testicular cancer diagnosis this year. “It’s terrific for Jesse … he’s had a really difficult year but he’s had a fantastic little period of training,” Goodwin said. Demons skipper Nathan Jones (32 disposals) and Clayton Oliver (30 touches) were also key factors in the win. It will take a disaster for the Demons not to play finals, but Goodwin wasn’t willing to look past the round-23 clash against the Pies. Melbourne couldn’t shake the dogged Lions over the first three quarters of the hotly contested match but scratched their way to a 15-point lead at the last break. Goodwin’s men looked home when they booted the first three goals of the final term, but brave Brisbane’s four unanswered majors set up a thrilling finale. “We did a lot of things right today and gave ourselves a chance to win the game,” Lions coach Chris Fagan said. RETURNING IN STYLE: Jesse Hogan booted six goals against Brisbane. Picture: AAP
make light work of the Roos SAINTS V KANGAROOS COACH Alan Richardson wants St Kilda burning over summer if they miss the finals again. The Saints honoured retiring legend Nick Riewoldt on Sunday with a resounding 49-point win over North Melbourne at Etihad Stadium. The 18.19 (127) to 12.6 (78) win was Riewoldt’s last home game and he kicked two goals in a dominating Saints performance. Saints and North players formed a guard of honour as he was chaired from the field, before Riewoldt acknowledged the fans with a lap of honour. But amid the happiness, the Saints knew they had underperformed this season. They aimed to return to the finals this year for the first time since 2011, but last week’s loss to Melbourne means it is out of their hands. St Kilda are 10th and must upset in-form Richmond next Saturday at the MCG, plus Essendon and West Coast must lose. “It’s more than likely that we’re not going to make it so that’s something that will burn with us and we would hope it would drive the group,” Richardson said. “In our journey together we haven’t been a position where we have been in control. We had that last week and we lost it.” Richardson took the unusual step of coaching from the interchange bench and said it was his part of fostering better communication.
AFL RESULTS ROUND 22 SYDNEY ADELAIDE
5.1 2.2
7.1 5.5
11.3 8.10
13.5 (83) 11.14 (80)
Goals: Sydney: L Franklin 3 G Rohan 2 S Reid 2 J Kennedy J McVeigh K Jack K Tippett T Papley Z Jones. Adelaide: M McGovern 4 E Betts 2 J Jenkins M Crouch R Sloane T Lynch T Walker. Best: Sydney: J Kennedy L Franklin L Parker D Hannebery S Reid J Lloyd J McVeigh. Adelaide: R Sloane T Lynch R Laird M Crouch M McGovern. Injuries: Sydney: Nil. Adelaide: D Talia (ankle). Reports: Sydney: Z Jones for rough conduct on B Crouch (Adelaide) in last quarters. Adelaide: Nil. Crowd: 51,466 at Adelaide Oval.
PORT ADEL. BULLDOGS
2.2 3.3
5.5 6.5
8.10 9.11
14.12 (96) 11.13 (79)
Goals: Port Adelaide: C Dixon 4 C Wingard 2 P Ryder 2 R Gray 2 J Polec O Wines S Gray T Boak. Western Bulldogs: B Dale 4 L Hunter 2 T Cloke 2 J Dunkley M Suckling T Liberatore. Best: Port Adelaide: P Ryder T Boak C Dixon J Polec O Wines B Ebert. Western Bulldogs: J Macrae B Dale J Johannissen C Daniel T McLean. Injuries: Port Adelaide: D Houston (shoulder) R Gray (corked thigh). Western Bulldogs: J Stringer (hamstring). Reports: Nil.
GEELONG 2.2 COLLINGWOOD 6.1
6.5 7.2
8.6 9.4
10.10 (70) 9.5 (59)
Goals: Geelong: J Murdoch 2 P Dangerfield 2 S Menagola 2 H Taylor J Bews J Parsons W Buzza. Collingwood: M Cox 2 T Broomhead 2 W Hoskin-Elliott 2 D Moore J Blair S Sidebottom. Best: Geelong: P Dangerfield M Duncan S Menagola C Guthrie Z Tuohy S Selwood. Collingwood: T Adams J Crisp A Treloar M Scharenberg D Moore. Injuries: Geelong: Nil. Collingwood: T Adams (eye). Crowd: 47,889 at MCG.
GWS WEST COAST
2.1 3.1
7.4 6.3
8.6 8.5
12.9 (81) 9.6 (60)
Goals: Greater Western Sydney: T Greene 3 B Deledio 2 D Shiel J Kelly J Patton L Whitfield N Wilson S Mumford T Scully. West Coast: J Kennedy 4 M Priddis 2 D Petrie J Cripps L Partington. Best: Greater Western Sydney: J Kelly N Wilson C Ward S Mumford T Greene. West Coast: E Yeo J Kennedy M Priddis S Mitchell L Shuey. Crowd: 15,751 at Spotless Stadium.
ESSENDON GOLD COAST
4.2 3.1
6.8 6.1
8.11 8.1
12.18 (90) 9.3 (57)
Goals: Essendon: C Hooker 2 J Begley 2 J Stewart 2 A McDonald-Tipungwuti C McKenna D Heppell D Parish J Daniher J Green. Gold Coast: B Ainsworth 3 D MacPherson D Swallow J Martin J Schoenfeld M Hallahan P Wright. Best: Essendon: D Zaharakis B Goddard J Begley D Heppell C Hooker. Gold Coast: B Ainsworth A Hall S May T McKenzie P Hanley M Rosa. Crowd: 16,817 at Metricon Stadium
CARLTON HAWTHORN
4.4 1.1
6.4 5.7
10.4 8.8
12.5 (77) 10.10 (70)
Goals: Carlton: J Lamb 2 J Pickett 2 L Casboult 2 B Gibbs C Curnow D Thomas M Kreuzer M Wright Z Fisher. Hawthorn: P Puopolo 2 B McEvoy I Smith J Roughead L Breust R Burton S Burgoyne T Duryea W Langford. Best: Carlton: S Docherty J Pickett M Murphy L Jones M Kreuzer B Boekhorst J Lamb. Hawthorn: T Mitchell S Burgoyne R Burton J Gunston B McEvoy. Injuries: Carlton: B Smedts (head). Hawthorn: L Shiels (corked hip) replaced in selected side by C Glass. Crowd: 35,799 at Etihad Stadium.
MELBOURNE BRISBANE
3.3 2.3
6.6 6.3
11.8 9.5
16.8 (104) 14.7 (91)
Goals: Melbourne: J Hogan 6 C Pedersen 3 J Garlett 2 A Brayshaw B Vince C Petracca J Harmes J Melksham. Brisbane Lions: D Beams 3 T Rockliff 2 D Gardiner D Zorko E Hipwood H McCluggage J Allison J Barrett J Walker M Close R Bastinac. Best: Melbourne: J Hogan N Jones C Oliver C Pedersen J Lewis C Petracca. Brisbane Lions: D Beams D Zorko R Bastinac R Mathieson D Rich L Taylor. Crowd: 30,422 at MCG.
ST KILDA 4.3 NORTH MELB. 5.2
8.14 14.17 18.19 (127) 6.3 8.5 12.6 (78)
Goals: St Kilda: J Bruce 3 J Gresham 3 T Membrey 3 N Riewoldt 2 S Savage 2 B Acres J Billings J Sinclair J Steele M Weller. North Melbourne: B Brown 2 B Cunnington 2 N Hrovat 2 T Garner 2 J Simpkin J Ziebell S Gibson T Goldstein. Best: St Kilda: J Steven S Ross J Billings L Dunstan J Steele J Newnes. North Melbourne: S Higgins B Cunnington L McDonald T Goldstein. Reports: St Kilda: J Carlisle at quarter time for striking L McDonald, J Carlisle at quarter time for striking D Mountford. Crowd: 29,126 at Etihad Stadium.
RICHMOND FREMANTLE
3.0 3.4
11.2 3.5
18.5 5.8
25.5 (155) 7.9 (51)
Goals: Richmond: J Townsend 6 J Riewoldt 4 D Butler 3 K Lambert 3 D Martin 2 A Rance B Houli D Rioli J Graham K McIntosh S Edwards T Nankervis. Fremantle: H Bennell 2 H Crozier 2 H Ballantyne J Deluca N Fyfe. Best: Fremantle: Fyfe, Hamling, S.Hill, Mundy. Richmond: Martin, Grigg, Townsend, Ellis, Lambert, Houli.
LADDER P W L D ADELAIDE GWS GEELONG RICHMOND PORT ADELAIDE SYDNEY MELBOURNE ESSENDON WEST COAST ST KILDA WESTERN BULLDOGS HAWTHORN COLLINGWOOD FREMANTLE CARLTON GOLD COAST NORTH MELBOURNE BRISBANE LIONS
21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21
15 5 1 14 5 2 14 6 1 14 7 13 8 13 8 12 9 11 10 11 10 11 10 11 10 9 11 1 8 12 1 8 13 6 15 6 15 5 16 5 16 NEXT WEEK
F
A
%
2344 2022 2031 1870 2033 1955 1952 2028 1864 1844 1767 1765 1845 1515 1537 1736 1853 1798
1676 1709 1759 1603 1651 1594 1835 1912 1787 1864 1814 1965 1880 2053 1900 2176 2185 2396
139.9 118.3 115.5 116.7 123.1 122.6 106.4 106.1 104.3 98.9 97.4 89.8 98.1 73.8 80.9 79.8 84.8 75.0
Pts 62 60 58 56 52 52 48 44 44 44 44 38 34 32 24 24 20 20
Friday: Hawthorn v Western Bulldogs (Etihad Stadium). Saturday: Collingwood v Melbourne (MCG); Brisbane Lions v North Melbourne (G); Sydney v Carlton (SCG); Geelong v GWS Giants (Suncorp Stadium); Port Adelaide v Gold Coast (Adelaide Oval). Sunday: Essendon v Fremantle (Etihad Stadium); Richmond v St Kilda (MCG); West Coast v Adelaide (Domain Stadium).
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THE EXAMINER
SPORT
Monday August 21, 2017
examiner.com.au
Whincup surges to claim wins record in Sydney SUPERCARS CRAIG Lowndes has hailed Jamie Whincup as the greatest Supercars driver of the current era after his long-term rival claimed his record for most race wins in the sport. Whincup’s 106th series win, achieved on Sunday at Sydney Motorsport
Park, lifted him above Lowndes. The Red Bull Holden driver now has the record for most championships, pole positions and race wins after 13 dominant seasons. So does that make Whincup the greatest driver of all time? “Of this era, he’s the
greatest, there’s no doubt about that,” Lowndes said. “It’s hard to say he’s the greatest of all time as different eras have different greats. “It was just a matter of time before he beat it. He’s a great, determined driver and for as long as he puts his backside in a race car he’ll win races.”
Whincup’s success at Eastern Creek also put him in the mix for a seventh title, moving to within 12 points of series leader Scott McLaughlin. In keeping with his personality, Whincup refused to get caught up by the history of the moment. “The only problem is Lowndsey will out-drive
me, he will be around for another 10 years at least,” he said. “The numbers don’t mean a huge amount right now … I’m still in the heat of the battle, it’s all still happening. “I’m sure they’ll mean a lot when I hang the helmet up and move on to something else.”
Rewards aplenty for Kyrgios in Cincinnati TENNIS NICK Kyrgios will play for the biggest trophy of his career – and potentially so much more – after surging into his maiden Masters 1000 final in Cincinnati. Kyrgios secured a precious top-16 seeding for the US Open starting on Monday week with his gritty 7-6 (7-3) 7-6 (7-4) semifinal victory over Spanish veteran David Ferrer. After a horror four months, the enigmatic Australian was suddenly a win over Grigor Dimitrov away from vaulting into contention for a spot in the eightman World Tour Finals for the first time. Hip and shoulder injuries had restricted Kyrgios to just five wins since April, but the 22-year-old’s dazzling turnaround in Cincinnati has mirrored the blazing form he showed on American hard courts earlier in the season. Inspired runs to three semi-finals and a quarterfinal in successive events in March and April and now his win over Ferrer – a day after conquering new world
No.1 Rafael Nadal – left Kyrgios poised to soar to 10th in the ATP Race to London. The Canberran is also guaranteed to climb to 18th in the rankings – at least – just in the nick of time for the last grand slam of the season in New York. With defending champion Stan Wawrinka and world No.5 Novak Djokovic already confirmed scratchings, the rankings rise ensures Kyrgios a top-16 seeding at Flushing Meadows. As such, Kyrgios is guaranteed to avoid running into a higher-ranked rival until at least the fourth round. Success against Dimitrov in the first showdown between first-time Masters 1000 finalists since 2002 would rocket Kyrgios to a career-high ranking of No.12 and earn him his fourth ATP title after wins in Tokyo, Atlanta and Marseille last year. “Obviously, I’m excited, but it’s just another tennis match to me,” Kyrgios said. “I’ll just go out and serve and whatever happens, happens. It’ll be a tough match.” RED-HOT: Nick Kyrgios during his semi-final win in Cincinnati. Picture: AAP
Lynagh savages woeful Wallabies RUGBY AUSTRALIAN rugby legend Michael Lynagh has savaged the Wallabies’ “schoolboy” skills and revealed how his offers to help have fallen on deaf ears. Commentating on Saturday night’s Bledisloe Cup opener for Sky Sports in Britain, Lynagh pulled no punches after the Wallabies slumped to a humiliating 54-34 loss at Sydney’s ANZ Stadium. “I can’t overestimate how angry I am at seeing an Australian team who have skills that are non-existent,” Australia’s 1991 World Cup-winning five-eighth said. “Passing and catching and making tackles and trusting the bloke beside you are pretty basic even at schoolboy level. “Australia had a month together to try and create stuff … and they come up with that in the first half. Very, very disappointing.” Lynagh was later asked on Twitter why, as such a key player during one of the golden eras of Australian rugby, he hadn’t been used as a talent scout. “Have offered. But never asked to do so,” he replied. The Wallabies trailed by 48 points after 48 minutes before winning the last half-hour 28-0 at ANZ Stadium. But, in an ominous warning for the Wallabies ahead of next Saturday’s return bout in Dunedin, All Blacks coach Steve Hansen said: “We got seduced by the scoreboard” and “buttoned off mentally in second half”.
IN BRIEF AUSTRALIAN NORRIS SCORES BOOMERS CRUSH TALL BLACKS HALEP ON VERGE OF BECOMING BIGGEST WIN OF HIS LIFE IN FIJI TO REACH ASIA CUP DECIDER CAHILL’S THIRD WORLD NO.1 SOUTH Australian journeyman Jason Norris has scored the biggest win of his golf career, claiming a four-shot victory in the Australasian Tour’s $1.5 million Fiji International. The 44-year-old posted a final round of five-under 67 at Natadola Bay on Sunday for a 14-under total 274 to secure European and Asian tour cards as well as the $250,000 winner’s cheque.
Norris, who turned professional in 1996, said he was on the verge of retirement two years ago but decided to persist in the hope of winning a significant tournament. “It’s taken me 21 years to have a win like this,” Norris said. “I think it was just our week. Everything just aligned, putts dropped, some good shots came and it was amazing.”
AUSTRALIA have trounced New Zealand 106-79 in their Asia Cup basketball semi-final to advance to the decider. The Boomers kept their unbeaten record intact after a blistering start which saw them 22-2 ahead, from which point they were never threatened. Andrej Lemanis’ side will face three-time champions Iran in the final on Monday morning.
TheTall Blacks bounced back from a 31-10 deficit after the first quarter to trail 46-33 at the main break. However, they couldn’t halt an Australian offence which featured five players who scored in double figures. The Boomers shot 55 per cent from the field for the game including 9-of-18 from three-point range while tallying 29 assists on 40 field goals.
SIMONA Halep is again one win away from delivering Australian coach Darren Cahill his third tennis world No.1 after cruising into the final of the Cincinnati Open. Romanian Halep crushed American Sloane Stephens 6-2 6-1 in her semi-final and will face Wimbledon champion Garbine Muguruza in the title decider after Muguruza trounced world
No.1 Karolina Pliskova 6-3 6-2. Halep can displace Karolina Pliskova atop the rankings if she beats Muguruza on Sunday. If she does, she will become Cahill’s s third charge to do so, after Lleyton Hewitt and Andre Agassi. At 20, Hewitt became the youngest men’s year-end No.1 in history in 2001 under the South Australian.
examiner.com.au
Monday August 21, 2017 THE EXAMINER
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SPORT
Leckie doubles up in Hertha debut Jedinak must play SOCCER
MATHEW Leckie has scored twice on his Bundesliga debut for Hertha Berlin to beat promoted Stuttgart 2-0 at home while last season’s runners-up RB Leipzig suffered a shock loss to Schalke. The Socceroos forward, who joined from Ingolstadt in the off-season, eluded a defender with a clever flick and finished in style just after the restart, and then blasted home after Stuttgart failed to clear a corner. Leckie had failed to score in his previous 30 matches, his most recent goal coming in May last year against Bayer Leverkusen. He has now scored three goals against Stuttgart, his best return against any Bundesliga outfit. His Socceroos teammate Mitch Langerak was left on the bench on Saturday as Stuttgart’s back-up goalkeeper. Elsewhere, Borussia Dortmund showed signs
they can thrive this season without suspended forward Ousmane Dembele by opening their campaign with a 3-0 rout at Wolfsburg. US international Christian Pulisic scored one goal and set up another. Dembele remained suspended after missing training when Barcelona made a bid for him. Dortmund are yet to receive a second offer after turning down a bid reportedly worth 85 million euros ($126 million) with another 20 million euros in add-ons. “We have a clear position and a clear idea. If this is met, Dembele will be transferred this summer. If not, he’ll stay with Dortmund,” sporting director Michael Zorc said before kick-off in Wolfsburg. Dortmund fans have turned against the 20-yearold Dembele, who had six goals and 13 assists in his debut Bundesliga season after joining for 15 million euros from Rennes last year. ON TARGET: Mathew Leckie celebrates after scoring for Hertha Berlin. Picture: AAP
Fresh woe for Ryan as United stay hot EPL MANCHESTER United netted four goals for the second consecutive week in the Premier League to rout Swansea City 4-0 on Saturday and ensure their highest-scoring start to a season for 110 years. United manager Jose Mourinho said he “let the horses run freely” at the Liberty Stadium but his old foe Arsene Wenger was left frustrated after his Arsenal
thoroughbreds were shackled in a 1-0 defeat at Stoke City. Socceroos gloveman Mat Ryan’s tough start to life in the top flight continued when Shinji Okazaki struck early and Harry Maguire netted a header from a corner as Leicester City beat Brighton 2-0 at home. Japanese international Okazaki was on hand to rifle home the rebound from a Riyad Mahrez shot in the first minute as the 2016
Premier League champions got off to a flying start in their first home game of the season. Mahrez was also behind Leicester’s second goal, swinging in a corner early in the second half for Maguire to head home his first goal for the Foxes. Manchester United fans would be ill-advised to start dreaming about the title just yet but they will be heartened by another vintage performance which
showcased their attacking firepower. After the first-up mauling of West Ham by the same score, United manager Jose Mourinho was a happy man on Sunday. “I think the team is confident and in both matches winning 1-0 at halftime, we didn’t start the second half looking like we had to keep a clean sheet to win the match,” he said. Arsenal’s early-season optimism after their open-
ing day win over Leicester was dissipated quickly after Jese, Stoke’s new loan signing from Paris Saint-Germain, capped a fine debut by scoring the winner 90 seconds after the break. The home side, revelling once again in being Arsenal’s bogey team, then produced a magnificent rearguard action to keep out the Gunners, who had an equaliser from Alexandre Lacazette ruled out for a fractional offside.
to make the cut SOCCER SOCCEROOS skipper Mile Jedinak will be available for the World Cup qualifiers against Japan and Thailand if he gets through club duty this week unscathed. Coach Ange Postecoglou told ABC’s Offsiders he had been in regular contact with Jedinak, who was selected in his preliminary 30-man squad despite struggling with the groin injury that kept him out of the Confederations Cup. But he expected Jedinak should be right, provided he played and recovered well from at least one of Aston Villa’s two matches this week. “He’s an important part of what we’ve been building and what people don’t know is he’s been playing hurt for probably the last 12 to 18 months for us,” Postecoglou said. “(He) always puts his hand up. If he gets through 90 minutes, he’ll be there for sure.” Villa face Wigan Athletic at home in the EFL Cup midweek, then travel to face Bailey Wright’s Bristol City in the English Championship at the weekend. Postecoglou is due to trim his squad by seven players this week. Several of his Europeanbased players are in tip-top form, with Tom Rogic dominant as usual for Celtic and Aaron Mooy enjoying a terrific start to life in the Premier League with Huddersfield Town. Winger Mathew Leckie also made a stunning debut for Bundesliga side Hertha Berlin, scoring twice in a 2-0 win to celebrate the birth of his daughter last week.
Rogic on song in Celtic win SOCCER
GOALSCORER: Celtic’s James Forrest. Picture: PA
SOCCEROOS midfielder Tom Rogic turned provider for Celtic in the Scottish Premiership, setting up both goals in a 2-0 win over Kilmarnock at Rugby Park. Rogic, whose lastminute strike to snatch a win against the same opposition last campaign was voted the best of the season, beat two men and slid the ball to James Forrest for an easy finish before then linking with Callum
McGregor in the shadow of fulltime. Brendan Rodgers had made eight changes for the 5-0 home thrashing of Kilmarnock in the Scottish Cup earlier in the month and this time he opted for half a dozen. Celtic remain unbeaten this season in all competitions as they prepare to jet out to Kazakhstan for the second-leg of their Champions League playoff against Astana on Wednesday where they will take a surely unassailable 5-0
lead and confidence could hardly be higher. The champions dictated the tempo without creating any clear-cut opportunities and Forrest, Rogic and Benyu all had efforts from distance which left Kilmarnock keeper Jamie MacDonald untroubled. There were occasional moments of panic in both penalty areas from crosses and corners but the game was drifting quietly towards the break when Celtic struck. Rogic was the provider
as he drove past Adam Frizzell too easily in the penalty area to set up Forrest whose side-footed shot from eight yards beat MacDonald. In the 88th minute the Socceroo was at it again, striding forward before slipping the ball through to Griffiths, it seemed, only for it to break for McGregor who slipped it past MacDonald before taking the acclaim of a huge travelling support who are enjoying heady days at the Parkhead club.
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Unloved new Swans prove a finals point NTFA DIVISION 2 BY ANDREW MATHIESON Elimination final
EAST Coast proved too quick and too slick for a gallant St Patricks, as the St Helensbased club passed the test of its first-ever NTFA final. But coach Ned Hyland did admit his rookie division-two side wanted on Sunday to make a bold statement in quelling the doubters. The Swans made the early running and would never surrender a lead less than 14 points after quarter-time to win 19.10 (124) to 14.8 (92) at Invermay Park. “It’s no secret that never everyone out there had been behind us getting into the league,” Hyland said. “A lot of people rode us off and said we weren’t good enough to be there too. “I think today, without getting ahead of ourselves, as it’s only one down and three to go, we’ve proved a few people wrong.” What East Coast did prove that they were dangerous on the counter-attack and had forward options aplenty. But leading goalkicker Nick Childs made the biggest impact of all, kicking six
KEEP AWAY: Slippery Swan Pearce Robinson attempts to break away from Saints vice-captain Claye Young in the NTFA division 2 final at Invermay. Picture: Paul Scambler
goals to move his tally out to 91 and now in sight of the magical 100-goal mark. The playing coach was constantly a target across half-forward to add a further four goals, while Bailey Elmer unleashed some massive bombs to finish with three. The Swans kicked six goals in the first term and another five in the second to pull out to a 26-point lead. St Pats made their move early after half-time with the first two goals to Justin Whiley and Claye Young. But the pacesetters goaled twice again within minutes to maintain a tenuous break throughout that term. “I felt we controlled it for four quarters,” Hyland said. “No doubt there was passages within those quarters that we did lose some of our
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momentum. But we were in charge from start to finish. “We were pretty depleted – there was fair bit of sickness around the place. So we had a few boys with the flu and a few late ring-ins step up.” Charles Eastoe provided three goals for the Saints, but his forlorn side lacked impetus to concede in the last term with poor body language. St Pats coach Alex Russell said the performance was “extremely disappointing”. “We set ourselves to win this first final and push ourselves deep,” he said. “I think we had a our chances, but we just couldn’t maintain our scoreboard pressure and close the gap. “A credit to them – their top-end was just fantastic and their bottom-end was really good today.”
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TSLW FINDING a way to address costly lapses is the priority for Launceston coach Alex Gibbins following Sunday’s TSLW win over Burnie at West Park. The second-placed Blues secured win number eight for this campaign with a 24-point triumph, 7.4 (46) to 3.4 (22), but got a scare when the home side kicked two late goals in the third and appeared to have all the running heading into the last. But his side steadied to kick the first two majors of the final term to steady
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Blues down Dockers on road the ship. “I thought general play was very even, but we were just a little more silkier and finished off the play a little better,’’ Gibbins said. “It was with our use of the ball, structures and discipline in general where we won it. “But [lapses] have been a trend all year, and we have tried to make it a focus to play four quarters, and we didn’t do that again today. “That is all mental though, and to be honest, I did give them a pat on the back at half-time, and that’s not the
thing to do as we can’t afford these lapses.” Naomi Celebre kicked three goals for the winners and Chanette Thuringer was strong in defence. AFLW midfielder Emma Humphries was outstanding for Burnie, while Kirsten Loring and Jessica Brown were also strong contributors. The Blues do have one injury worry ahead of Sunday’s home game against the Tigers, with Skye Brown hurting her knee late in the contest. – ALEX FAIR
Torns alter game to suit final
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ON THE ATTACK: Launceston's Melissa Smith in action against Burnie at West Park on Sunday. Picture: Cordell Richardson
“We made some adjustments defensively that were pretty good. “When Lauren (Mansfield) got her fourth foul pretty early in the third quarter, our other girls stepped up and did a great job.” Nicholson was brilliant in back-to-back finals to notch up 25 points and nine rebounds and on the same page with her coach that the Torns, after an up-and-down season, are finding the formula to win big games. The new-founded confidence allowed Tayla Roberts to play the entire 40 minutes
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It’s just part of the growth of this team to really be honest Torns coach Richard Dickel
in glimpses back into her early-season form, finishing on Sunday with 21 points and 17 rebounds. Add the injury-returning Ellie Collins scoring a vital 12 points, Bec Abel shooting strongly for eight and Emma Haywood with seven, the
character-building performance has now earned the Torns a place in the last four of the SEABL. “It’s just part of the growth of this team to really be honest,” Dickel said. “They’re very resilient to be through what they’ve been through this year. “We’re now learning to make adjustments on the fly that we weren’t doing three or four games ago and doing what we’re doing a lot better. “That’s really the turnaround the girls are taking on board to understand the adjustments we have to make at certain points of time.”
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ANDREW MATHIESON
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Why Suns never shine Is GC a better AFL choice than Tassie? riot made the top-four twice. But like all things on the Gold Coast, the good times ended and only once since have the Titans reached the finals in the side’s past seven seasons. Before there was the revived Titans, there was no less than four failed rugby league ventures from 1988 until 1999. First, there was the Gold Coast Giants, then the Seagulls, followed next by the Gladiators as new owner after new owner tried to turn the basket case of a franchise around. The Australian Rugby League were forced to intervene and renamed them the Chargers, but even its competition body got smart after realising it could not sustain a side on the Gold Coast. Well for nearly a decade, at least. Maybe that’s a message for the AFL, there. Of course, this doesn’t include the number of failures to settle a professional national competition team: Gold Coast United (soccer), the Cougars, Rollers and Blaze (basketball); the Dolphins and another Cougars (baseball), and the Aces (rugby union). They all were born within the past three decades and failed to even last that distance. Notwithstanding any mention of the original Brisbane Bears. They somehow popped up at Carrara – almost literally – and after six seasons were
SUNS FAILING TO SHINE: Gold Coast skipper Gary Ablett leads his Suns side off amid a frosty reception while in the depth of a UTAS Stadium winter's night after last year's loss to Hawthorn. Picture: Scott Gelston
REMEMBER THESE GUYS: Tassie Devils show off their team camaraderie after a close win over VFL side Coburg in a 2007 game at Burnie's West Park. Picture: Peter Lord
quickly relocated, of all places, to Brisbane. So you wonder what makes the Gold Coast so appealing? Apparently, it’s an untapped market. Demographers will point out there’s a little more than
half a million people crying out to support a football team. Sounds familiar? Especially as Tasmania’s population is the same – nevermind not having it’s own football team. Those same marketing gurus with clipboards in
hand will argue – probably successfully – the Greater Western Sydney catchment area that borders 11 councils has a population that is in access of two million and need an AFL presence in a nearly five-million city the Swans have owned for more
than three decades. But Tassie could easily fit the profile of the unwanted GC17 franchise. Tasmanian premier Will Hodgman has floated out the idea of welcoming the relocation of the Brisbane Lions down south and buying out their licence. While former Lions premiership coach and board member Leigh Matthews has suggested the Lions and Suns consider merging, believing there was only room for one AFL side in Queensland. Crazy talk perhaps, but can’t be any crazier than the AFL pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into the Gold Coast to prove a point, while the Tasmanian government hands out spare change to have Hawthorn and North Melbourne visit occasionally.
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HE dust may well have settled on Gold Coast’s latest demolition job before its next renovation, but at a second glance the sight of a football carcass left strewn still remains behind. That is not a metaphor for sacked coach Rodney Eade. Not the man, they say. The one-time Tasmanian has still dusted himself off with his integrity intact. The hatchet job on the veteran coach placed the blame squarely on him for the Suns’ flagging fortunes. Guy McKenna – the chief architect with two years developing the Gold Coast list in the TAC Cup and VFL – was the first one to go after four seasons at the helm of its AFL side. Then Eade – an anointed saviour charged with restructuring that very list and, perhaps even bigger, changing the club culture after the Suns never rose past 12th – was gone before the end of his third term. It just sounds somewhat shambolic if it wasn’t on the Gold Coast. The heart of the city stretches well beyond the sun-drenched tourist strip. But sporting success has always seemed to elude the sparkling GC. Not just the seventh-year Suns, but these days the Gold Coast Titans after 11 seasons in the NRL. That club after a couple of years of big buying in a competition devoid of a draft where free agency runs
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Why choose Gold Coast over Tassie? PAGE 39
Graceful Swans advance
A long-awaited roar greeted a triumphant East Coast on the final siren to signal the club’s maiden NTFA finals victory at its first attempt. The Swans, who last year departed the flagging NEFU, were too strong for St Pats to win the elimination final by 32 points. The St Helens side now faces reigning division two premier Old Scotch next week in a cutthroat final. GOTCHA: East Coast teammate Lewis Ritchie joins tackler Jack Rushton in trapping St Pats rival Jacob Murphy on Sunday. Picture: Paul Scambler
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FIGHTBACK
Launceston Tornadoes show grit to reach conference decider BASKETBALL BY ANDREW MATHIESON SEABL women
COACH Richard Dickel and form star Lauren Nicholson had sound out the Tornadoes warning to find Dandenong Rangers not listening. For the second straight
week, Launceston pulled back a sizeable deficit to finish the stronger in a near repeat do-or-die road final. But the 83-78 comeback win forced the visitors to step up to another level after its thrilling end in Hobart. The Tornadoes on Sunday again trailed early, falling
behind just over two minutes into the SEABL preliminary final and not hitting the front again until entering the final seven minutes of the game. Dickel had forecast changes were happening off the back of three regular season losses to now feel content to have placed faith in his team.
“Again, we played very well in the second half, but they hit a whole lot of shots in the second half to put us behind the eight-ball,” he said. “Again, we never panicked down the stretch and dealt with our plans with foul trouble at certain points in time, so the girls did a great job.”
The conference minor premier, which were without three from their best lineup, stretched the margin out to 12 points twice during the first and third quarters until settling into five-point leads at the final two breaks. Dickel felt the tide always was going to swing around
should the Tornadoes remain flexible with their plans. “When you get away to a good start, generally it can turn some ways,” he said. “They were playing so well at the start and I just didn’t think they could continue it for the whole game. ■ CONTINUED PAGE 38
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