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Week 1: AFL Finals schedule

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 31 Agustus 2013 | 22.07

Schedule ... Hawthorn will take on Sydney in the first qualifying final. Source: David Caird / News Limited

HAWTHORN will open the 2013 AFL finals series with a Friday night blockbuster against reigning premiers Sydney.

But the Hawks could be without spearhead Lance Franklin, set to come under scrutiny for a high bump on Swans defender Nick Malceski.

Malceski had precautionary scans on his face on Saturday but was cleared of any structural damage.

Geelong hosts Fremantle in the second qualifying final at Simonds Stadium, a venue where the Cats have won 49 of their past 51 games.

But the Dockers remains confident it can match it with the Cats at their fortress on Saturday afternoon and will be sure to draw on experience from last year's finals victory at the MCG.

Collingwood is set to meet Port Adelaide at the MCG on Saturday night. However, the final make-up is dependent on Sunday's game against North Melbourne

The Magpies would need to beat North Melbourne by more than 20 goals on Sunday to leapfrog Richmond, setting up a mouth-watering clash with traditional rivals Carlton.

Richmond is slated to take on the Blues in the first elimination final on Sunday at 3.20pm.

WEEK 1 FINALS FIXTURE

FRIDAY 7.50pm
First qualifying final: Hawthorn v Sydney, MCG

SATURDAY 2.20pm
Second qualifying final: Geelong v Fremantle, Simonds Stadium

SATURDAY 7.45pm
Second elimination final: Collingwood v Port Adelaide, MCG

SUNDAY 3.20pm
First elimination final: Richmond v Carlton, MCG

Collingwood would have to beat North Melbourne by 20 goals today for the Magpies and Richmond to swap ladder positions and finals games.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Fergo needs to be playing: Carney

TODD Carney has called on the NRL to help save wayward NSW Origin star Blake Ferguson instead of running him out of the game.

Sighting his own redemption story and that also of former Canberra and now St George-Illawarra fullback Josh Dugan, Carney claimed rugby league was the key to Ferguson's salvation.

Any future Ferguson has in rugby league could be determined on Tuesday when he faces indecent assault charges following an incident at a Cronulla nightclub.

He has pleaded not guilty. Canberra Raiders chief executive Don Furner has summonsed Ferguson to a board meeting following the court case next week where the Origin star will be asked to show cause why his contract shouldn't be torn up.

Following claims from Raiders legend Mal Meninga that Ferguson should be deregistered by the NRL following a string of off-field related incidents, Carney said he would be concerned for Ferguson's welfare if he was rubbed out of the game.

"Football is all Blake has ever known and he needs it more than ever now, but before that can happen he needs to fix what's going on off the field," Carney said.

"People need to realise that football is probably the one thing you need, not take it away. I worry what Blake would do without football in his life.

"It all started with his issues around Origin time and ever since the only person he has hurt is himself."

Carney said he had spoken to Ferguson numerous times on the phone over the past week, knowing that he could relate to how the troubled star would be feeling.

The Cronulla five-eighth was forced to spend 12 months out of the game after being sacked by the Raiders and deregistered by the NRL.

Carney returned to the NRL with the Roosters where he then went onto win the 2010 Dally M Player of the Year award.

Carney added that any suggestion his support for Ferguson was seen as a ploy to lure the talented centre back to Cronulla was "totally off the mark."

"I don't know if that's even a focus for him or the club right now," Carney said.

"He needs support and I see a lot of similarities in what I went through. You need support when the chips are down."

Ferguson has a get-out clause in his contract following the sacking of Canberra coach Dave Furner.

However, that clause can't be triggered until the beginning of the 2014 season, which commences on November 1.

Ferguson is yet to front the club after Canberra stood him down last Wednesday for missing two training sessions and drinking while injured.  


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Demanding NRL pushes SBW to rugby

Sonny Bill Williams in action. Source: Mark Evans / News Limited

SONNY Bill Williams' private concerns over the punishment his body is taking in the NRL is driving the multi-sport superstar towards a return to New Zealand rugby.

Williams runs out against the Titans at Allianz Stadium on Sunday, but he could have just five games left in Roosters colours as Super 15 side the Chiefs close in on a three-year deal. 

Desperate to keep the marketable Williams, the Roosters have tabled a proposal to the NRL seeking greater flexibility in the salary-cap to prevent the Kiwi forward being lost to the code. 

But the Chiefs are confident they have their man, with chairman Dallas Fisher to ramp-up talks with Williams' manager Khoder Nasser over the next fortnight. 

At the heart of Williams' likely defection is the toll of weekly NRL football, the rigours of which subjected the 108kg powerhouse to a slew of leg injuries in his first rugby-league stint at the Bulldogs. 

SBW stands to earn more money in rugby, but financial pursuits are an ancillary issue to his health as Williams, just turned 28, looks to prolong his career in the 15-a-side code and boxing. 

Chiefs management have been told Williams has enjoyed his NRL stint, but the forward also fears he is being targeted on a weekly basis as the Roosters' headline act. 

When he signed with the Roosters, it is believed Williams gave a verbal indication to club supremo Nick Politis that he hoped to back up for a second season at Bondi in 2014. 

But discussions around a second year were never formally enshrined in his NRL contract and Politis accepts Williams has a sense of unfinished business in New Zealand rugby. 

The former All Blacks forward is keen to play at rugby's 2015 World Cup, while a possible gold medal playing sevens at the Rio Olympics the following year is another carrot. 

A New Zealand-based source told The Sunday Mail: "The Chiefs are very confident of getting Sonny Bill. I expect Sonny Bill to be at the Chiefs (next year) and it will be announced the second the NRL season is over. 

"The word out of the Sonny Bill camp is that he is getting bashed in rugby league, he feels he is getting targeted and can look after his body better in rugby union and prolong his career. 

"The Chiefs are really close to getting the deal done. With the Roosters in the finals, Sonny Bill wants to keep things low-key until their season is over." 

It is understood the Roosters want the NRL to provide scope for Williams' other professional pursuits, meaning any earnings from boxing are not included in the club's salary cap. 

"We have put a proposal to the NRL looking at a few specific situations," Roosters CEO Brian Canavan said.

"What we are looking for is for some flexibility in the salary cap for unique situations and Sonny Bill is a unique situation.

"I accept it must be fair and part of the salary-cap rules that every NRL club can operate by.

"First we need to Sonny Bill to say he wants to stay. He is an elite athlete, he has many opportunities available to him, but we'll make an offer when he indicates he wants to stay." 

Chiefs chairman Fisher confirmed the province's interest but stressed Williams had yet to formally sign with the New Zealand Rugby Union. 

"We are waiting for Sonny to give us an answer on what he wants to do, the ball is entirely in his court," he said.

"Our interest in Sonny is genuine and we are waiting to see how things pan out. 

"We're not rushing him, we are waiting for him to get to a point where he will make a decision. 

"He's very attractive to us. He is an outstanding athlete with an outstanding profile.

"He will forever be part of the Chiefs and we'd love to have him back."


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Jewel shines in stellar return

Superstar mare Atlantic Jewel's return victory exceeded all expectations as she thumped her star-studded rivals in the Memsie Stakes at Caulfield. Source: Vince Caligiuri / Getty Images

THE anointment of Atlantic Jewel as the new Queen of the Australian Turf was officially done with her triumphant return to racing.

After being sidelined for 18 months, Atlantic Jewel took her record to eight wins from eight starts after an emphatic win in the Memsie Stakes (1400m) at Caulfield.

She has an apparent stranglehold on any race she contests and has firmed into $3 to win the Cox Plate with TAB fixed odds.

Atlantic Jewel hadn't started since she won the All Aged Stakes at Randwick in 2012 but she treated her rivals with contempt over the closing stages in the Memsie Stakes.

Her jockey Michael Rodd said the winning margin could have been further as he eased her down over the final 200m.

Atlantic Jewel drifted from $1.80 to $2.20 and won by two-and-a-quarter lengths over Ferlax ($21) and her stablemate Super Cool ($17).

Her trainer Mark Kavanagh, who painstakingly plotted her return to racing after she injured her tendon a year ago, was overcome by the performance.

"That was what I was hoping for. It was what I had been dreaming of but you don't necessarily think they come true," Kavanagh said.

Trainer Mark Kavanagh Source: Getty Images

"I'm starting to believe fairytales do come true after that. To win with such authority after such a long time out is a relief."

"To be honest I feel like I've been carrying a five-tonne rock on my back for the past month and now its just been lifted off my shoulders."

Kavanagh said Atlantic Jewel still had a lot of improvement to come which was frightening.

"I won't sleep until I check her tomorrow morning when I see how she pulled up," he said.

Kavanagh said it was likely that Atlantic Jewel would have her next start in the Dato Tan Chin Nam Stakes (1600m) at Moonee Valley on September 14.

"I will talk to the Coolmore boys and take it from there," he said.

Rodd said it was an amazing performance.

"Going into the race we knew how good she is and the only things that would beat her would be bad luck or a bad ride," Rodd said.

He said it was frightening how well Atlantic Jewel travelled in the run and he knew he had the race won at the 800m mark.

Rodd said she jumped well and at one stage was left out wide when the pace slackened but he was pleased that Second Effort went around the field so he could get some cover.

"Once that happened I knew the race was over. I was feeling a bit toey but I waited as long as I could before I gave her a squeeze and let her go."

"She then out panels on them and I thought I better switch her off as she was first-up for 18 months so I turned the after burners off and she switched off."

"That was a massive training effort from Kav and his staff as she had a serious tendon injury."

"We were confident that she was ready but she still had to go round and do it first-up."

Rodd also described the win as a massive relief for him.

Kavanagh was also enthusiastic about the return of Super Cool who finished strongly for third.

"He's got a lot of improvement to come, much more than Atlantic Jewel," Kavanagh said.

Super Cool firmed from $15 to $10 for the Cox Plate.

Super Cool hadn't run since he won the Australian Cup at Flemington last March.

Kavanagh said he intends to split Super Cool and Atlantic Jewel until the Cox Plate.

Super Cool will have his next start in the Underwood Stakes (1800m) at Caulfield on September 21.

Jim Conlan was pleased with the run of Ferlax and said he was on track for his main spring mission the Cox Plate.

Kiwi It's a Dundeel finished a close-up fourth but didn't have much luck in the closing stages.

Brett Prebble described the run of Green Moon (fifth) as super.

"You couldn't ask for anything more from a Melbourne Cup winner in a first-up run," Prebble said.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Buddy report mars victory

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 30 Agustus 2013 | 22.07

Lance Franklin was reported in the Hawks' win over the Swans. Source: Cameron Spencer / Getty Images

IT WAS another imperious late show, but it was a late hit that defined Hawthorn's fighting win over Sydney.

The most resilient of victories for the minor premier was soured by what could be the season-defining report of Lance Franklin.

All times are listed in EST

Franklin is in real danger of missing the Hawks' first final - and possibly its second - after he was reported for rough conduct for a late and high bump on Nick Malceski 60 seconds into the second term at ANZ Stadium.

Franklin's shoulder made contact to Malceski's head after the defender had kicked the ball down the wing. 

Malceski played on after a quick medical inspection, which will work in Franklin's favour with the match review panel.

But Hawthorn's match-winner had a choice and chose to bump.

It will overshadow the latest in a string of battle-hardened late-season wins that has the minor premier perfectly placed to make amends for last year.

Hawthorn twice trailed by 24 points and by 22 in the third quarter before surging to kick six goals to three in the last 30 minutes to salute 17.10 (112) to 16.4 (100).

The Hawks and Swans will meat again in a qualifying final next week and you wouldn't blame John Longmire for wondering how he can possibly engineer a win against the mob he dismantled 12 months earlier.

Consider the body blows.

Sydney had six more inside 50s, laid 13 more tackles, dominated the hit-outs and centre clearances and yet the Hawks still found a way as they have done so many times this year.

But a Swans side missing 10 premiership players was able to open enough cracks in this brown and gold outfit to raise the eyebrows of rival coaches.

Sydney's manic tackling and forward pressure dragged the Hawks' famed kicking efficiency from defence to the floor.

In scenes reminiscent of last year's Grand Final last quarter, Hawthorn's possession kicking game melted under the heat, but the Swans couldn't quite maintain the rage.

Brian Lake and Josh Gibson were made to defend, with the big bodies of Jesse White, Myke Pyke and Shane Mumford all wreaking havoc inside 50m. Mumford and Pyke weren't rested on the bench, they were sent forward and for large periods exposed Hawthorn's defensive lack of size.

Mumford was sensational.

Sam Mitchell was targetted by Ryan O'Keefe had despite finishing with 26 possessions, he had eight at half-time and little influence on the contest.

Isaac Smith's game-breaking run was cut out by Ben McGlynn and Brad Hill wasn't able to use his talents.

There's questions, but Hawthorn keep answering them. Franklin, booed all night, was quiet. No matter; Jarryd Roughead kicked 4.3 and will almost certainly claim the Coleman Medal.

But Sydney took it up to them withouth a chunk of stars and also lost leading goalkicker Kurt Tippett to hamstring soreness an hour before the first bounce.

Debutant Shane Biggs' was the sixth debutant and fourth rookie elevation in a Swans squad riddled with injury.

If you can't win the premiership in Round 23, you can almost certainly lose it. Sydney, who has faultered in late-season losses to Collingwood, Geelong and now the Hawks, have also lost the core of its flag-winning personnel in what has been a luckless campaign.

You would never put a line through them, of course, but the pen is poised.

The game started it cagey fashion, with both teams flooding back to create a grinding contest that saw only one goal kicked in the first 12 minutes.

But just when it looked like both sides would stick to shadow boxing with their top-four positions assured, the contest exploded to life.

The Swans, under fire for a chronic lack of tackling that saw them ranked 16th in the league over the past month, brought the sort of heat that has become their trademark.

Retiring warrior Jude Bolton, Gary Rohan and Brandon Jack were stationed inside Sydney's forward line and the trio chased and harrassed in a constant frenzy.

The result was a tackle count that read 18-4 in Sydney's favour after half a quarter.

Hawthorn, famed for its incision-like disposal coming out of defence this year, were reduced to a raggad mess for the majority of the first half.

Sydney's first five goals came as a direct result of Hawthorn turnovers.

When Rohan wasn't chasing anything in brown and gold he was delivering offensively.

The kid from Cobden kicked two goals in two minutes half way through the second term, one on the run and one from a set-shot that opened up a 17-point lead for the Swans.

There was nothing flashy about the Hawks. Just a dilligent, disciplined effort that will make them so very hard to beat next month. 


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Knights win comes at a cost

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THIS is officially the Broncos worst season in their decorated history.

3

Tries

5

Corey Parker 10' Joseph Leilua 40'
Andrew McCullough 14' Kurt Gidley 48'
Corey Oates 71' Darius Boyd 60'
Joseph Leilua 67'
Darius Boyd 78'

2

Conversions

3

Scott Prince 12' Kurt Gidley 40'
Scott Prince 16' Tyrone Roberts 49'
Tyrone Roberts 68'

1

Penalties

0

Scott Prince 19'

And the loss that sealed the record had to happen against former coach Wayne Bennett who reminded Brisbane fans post-match that making the finals used to be intrinsic to the Broncos' DNA.

Poetically, Brisbane's season officially ended with a 40 minute performance in an 80 minute game.

Another win thrown away.

After leading the Newcastle Knights 14-0 one minute out from halftime, the Broncos succumbed to a 26-18 loss at Suncorp Stadium.

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No amount of sums and mathematical massaging can keep the club's season alive.

This is their second finals miss in four seasons. They had previously played finals each year since 1992.

Bennett said scraping into the top eight was the mantra of his Broncos' teams during his two decade reign.

"I'm disappointed for them. You just have to recognise what you have done wrong," Bennett said.

"For a long time here (Brisbane) we prided ourselves on scraping into the finals.

"It was part of our being, to realise you might not be in the top four one year but you are never far off.

"99 was one of those years where we won one game out of ten to start (but made the finals).

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"We always found a way to get there... but I don't know about the current crop.

"I'm just talking a little bit about the past."

The Broncos were handed an enormous advantage in the first half when Knights winger Akuila Uate starred in the worst bombed try in recent NRL history.

With his team 14-0 down, Uate streaked away for a 90 metre solo special.

However, despite the nearest Bronco chaser being ten metres away he dropped the pill two in an attempt to put it down one-handed.

At half time, Bennett was captured putting his arm around the dejected winger who was shaking his head while apologising.

The error was so poor his team should have lost because of it.

Instead they surged.

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As the half-time hooter sounded, centre Joseph Leilua scored in the corner from a sweeping back line movement.

Shortly after the break, the contest was blown right open when Broncos captain Sam Thaiday was sent to the bin for repeated infringements.

Four penalties in eight minutes to be exact.

The binning was justified as Thaiday had been warned 30 seconds earlier.

Kurt Gidley splintered the Broncos line in the next set to score, but in the process splintered his left foot in an awkward tackle.

Gidley's season is likely over.

The Broncos need more than Ben Barba to be a top four contender next year.

Their previous worst season was an 11 win effort in 2010 that saw then coach Ivan Henjak sacked.

This season they have won just nine games with one round left, a clash against the Canterbury Bulldogs at home.

"The statistics won't lie and they will tell a story," coach Anthony Griffin said.

"We learn some very good lessons out of this.

"We won't waste those."


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Bunnies spoil Benji's 200th

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WHEN Julie Burgess stormed the pitch after full time on Friday night, more than two decades had passed since a mother entered the field of play to join the celebrations.

3

Tries

5

Tim Simona 7' Adam Reynolds 29'
James Tedesco 9' Dylan Farrell 40'
Ben Murdoch-Masila 14' Sam Burgess 47'
Nathan Merritt 71'
Luke Burgess 76'

3

Conversions

5

Benji Marshall 8' Adam Reynolds 30'
Benji Marshall 10' Adam Reynolds 40'
Benji Marshall 15' Adam Reynolds 48'
Adam Reynolds 72'
Adam Reynolds 78'

0

Penalties

1

Adam Reynolds 68'

On the same turf in 1992, Barbara Elias created one of the most iconic images in rugby league folklore when she hugged her bloodied son to mark NSW's victory in that year's deciding State of Origin match.

Regardless of whether South Sydney can win this season's prize, the photographs of Julie with her sons Luke, Sam, Tom and George will be equally enduring.

Unable to contain her excitement of watching her boys become the first band of four brothers to play a top grade match in 103 years, Julie was one of the first people on the ground after Souths came from behind to secure a 32-18 victory over Wests Tigers.

A couple of minutes earlier she was doing a Yorkshire dance in Russell Crowe's private box to celebrate Luke's maiden NRL try, which put the exclamation mark on a performance that saw the Rabbitohs come back from an 18-0 deficit after just 14 minutes.

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"She gets excited over anything we do," Sam said afterwards.

"She's just a really proud mother. What she's been through and how she's brought us all up, she's just a really special woman."

It was Sam's return from a two-week suspension for his notorious 'Squirrel Grip' hold on Melbourne's Will Chambers that enabled history to be made.

But within just four minutes the second-eldest of the clan was back in the bad books after when he was controversially sin-binned for holding down James Tedesco.

Desperate to christen milestone games for Benji Marshall (200) and Robbie Farah (club record - 202) with a shock victory, the Tigers raced in three unanswered tries in his absence.

Pedestrian and predictable for most of this season, the Tigers re-discovered the razzle dazzle of yesteryear against a depleted opponent that was also well down on intensity.

"I thought we were a bit sloppy there at the start," Rabbitohs coach Michael Maguire said.

"It was a little bit to do with them throwing the ball around and a little bit to do with our attitude.

"In games like that you've got to make a change and we made a change pretty quickly and got back in control."

The Tigers did not trouble the scorer after Burgess returned, with Souths crossing twice to draw within a converted try by halftime.

Burgess then atoned by levelling the scores shortly after the break, but it took until the 67th minute for Souths to finally claim the lead via a long range Adam Reynolds penalty goal.

Their battle for dominance was largely due to a rare off-night with the boot for Reynolds and skipper John Sutton, both of whom failed to force a single line drop-out.

Without their customary doses of repeat sets, Souths were never in command until the final ten minutes when Nathan Merritt and the eldest Burgess scored.

Luke's try was even more momentum, given all four brothers were on the field at the time and had taken all the hit ups in the set.

"Madge (Maguire) got us all out there at the same time," Sam said.

"It was a pretty cool moment. It's something we'll all remember for a long time."

Maguire added: "To be part of history from 103 years is quite amazing.

"It's a great thing for myself and the players."

The victory sets up a winner-take-all blockbuster for the minor premiership against arch rivals Sydney Roosters at ANZ Stadium next weekend.

Maguire said the team could now indulge in aiming to win it's first minor premiership since 1989.

"The team is aware of the history of the club," he said.

"All of the photos around the club are from a long time ago. Hopefully we'll get a few of these boys representing themselves."


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Schatz shades Gill for Pilecki Medal

Schatz could win a Wallabies call-up for next week's clash with the Springboks. Source: News Limited

ALL 15 previous winners of the Pilecki Medal have played for the Wallabies which is the greatest signpost to where Friday night's humble 2013 winner Jake Schatz is heading.

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Throughout 2013, coach Ewen McKenzie praised Schatz as the epitome of the unsung, high workrate bedrock of the Reds.

His teammates clearly thought the same because it was the 3-2-1 votes of his peers which propelled No.8 Schatz to Queensland rugby's top individual gong.

Schatz (269 votes) played all of the Reds' 17 Super Rugby games in 2013, enough of a difference to shade gun flanker Liam Gill (262), who had one less to poll in.

Prop James Slipper (227), last year's medal recipient finished third, while two-time winner Will Genia (125) was fifth, as top back, after missing the first four games.

Rodney Blake (2006), Julian Huxley (2003) and Matt Pini (1994) are the only previous winners of the Pilecki Medal to do so when uncapped.

The trio went on to play Test rugby which is clearly the ambition driving Schatz, who is just 23 but with 50 Reds appearances already to his name.  

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"Any award voted on by your peers is the one you cherish the most," Reds coach Richard Graham said.

"Jake is a very proud Queenslander. The team's values within him, his understanding of No.8, his work ethic, his improving ability to read the game and his outstanding aerial skills have made him a consistent achiever for the past two seasons."

Australian Under-20s captain Curtis Browning was named Rookie of the Year while Gill trumped regular favourites Genia and Quade Cooper for the People's Choice award.

That the Reds are more than just a footy team was reinforced to Schatz in 2011 when he played against the Crusaders beside teammates wearing black armbands to honour his late mother Alison after her death from cancer.

"It was a very emotional time in my life. I can't thank the boys enough for their support going into that game and after it because, no matter what, there are guys at the Reds who'll help you through anything," Schatz said.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

Video refs to explain decision

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 29 Agustus 2013 | 22.07

Video referee Steve Clark. Source: Gregg Porteous / News Limited

THE NRL will revolutionise rugby league forever on Friday with under-pressure video referees to publicly explain their decisions to millions of Channel Nine viewers.

The Daily Telegraph can exclusively reveal that video refs will be called upon to explain each contentious decision to television fans for the next two NRL rounds and then throughout the finals series. 

After a decision is reached, Nine viewers will then hear audio from the video refs revealing why the decision was made and which rules were employed. 

Play will not be stopped, the video ref's explanation running for between five to ten seconds.

If the system is successful over the final two rounds, the NRL will look to play the video ref's audio through the public address system at every NRL ground for fans attending games. 

Channel Nine and Fox Sports, the game's two broadcasters, have approved the plan.

Nine and Fox Sports commentators will discuss the controversial try, as usual, before then handing over to the video referee.

The senior of the two video referees will make the announcement.

"We are looking at ways of expanding the communication process around video referee decisions," said NRL head of football Todd Greenberg. 

"We hope to achieve a greater level of transparency for the fans in relation to decisions made by the video referee.

"It's important to point out that it won't mean that everyone will agree with decisions that are made, but they may at least understand the basis for the decision that was made. 

"This will be in place for all matches in round 25 and if it's well received, we will consider other opportunities to also feed audio into our stadiums for the members and fans during the finals series. 

"It's important rugby league continues to be innovative and progressive and this continues with our overarching vision to be regarded as a sport that is both entertaining and engaging at all levels." 

Video referees have been under fire over the past two years.

They were involved in a number of blunders last season, culminating in the sacking of NRL referee co-coaches Bill Harrigan and Stuart Raper. 

Their decisions may not improve but at least the public will be aware of the reasons behind each verdict.

Friday's game at Allianz Stadium between Wests Tigers and South Sydney will be the first time viewers hear from the video referee. 

"It sounds like a great innovation," said NSW State of Origin coach Laurie Daley.

"The fans have always wanted to know why decisions are made from the video referee's box and now they will.

"It is all about the game being transparent.

"It will be great the viewers – they will be involved in the game and the video ref's will probably be more understood too."

An on-line Daily Telegraph poll, which attracted more than 10,000 respondents,- actually gave the NRL video referees some support. 

Asked what was worse - the NRL video referee or cricket's DRS – only 20 percent voted for the rugby league version.

Cricket's DRS attracted nearly 36 percent of the vote.

Fans have not exactly given new Referee's Coach Daniel Anderson a strong endorsement.

Nearly 38 percent admitted the standard of refereeing had gone down since Anderson took over this year.


22.07 | 0 komentar | Read More

How text messages exposed Sandor

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SANDOR Earl threw himself at the mercy of ASADA after text messages from several mobile phones framed him for a network that distributed peptides and other prescription drugs.

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Almost seven months since the "Blackest Day in Sport" press conference, the Canberra Raiders winger became the first footballer to be handed an infraction notice after being charged with trafficking and using performance-enhancing substances. 

Earl faces a ban of four years to life, but is striving to have the penalty reduced to 12 months after electing to stand down immediately and provide ASADA with extensive information about his activities. 

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In a flash press conference announced Thursday afternoon to avoid leaks, NRL boss Dave Smith declared that Earl had admitted in an interview with ASADA on Tuesday to using and trafficking banned peptide CJC-1295.

"Admissions were made regarding the use and trafficking of peptide CJC-1295," Smith said. 

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News Corp can reveal ASADA's file against Earl does not implicate any other NRL players or athletes bound by the WADA code.

His lawyer Tim Unsworth said the trafficking charges against Earl could still be contested. 

That charge is two-fold and begins with controversial sports scientist, Steve Dank, the investigation's central figure. 

Earl first met Dank while playing for the Penrith Panthers in early 2011, when the sports scientist was assisting the club with its GPS and Hypoxi programs.

But it wasn't until Earl had a double shoulder reconstruction midway through that season that the pair began to discuss a different form of treatment.

In August 2011, Dank referred Earl to a clinic in Cabramatta run by Dr Ijaz Khan to administer injections to help quicken his recovery.

News corp understands the injections were banned peptide CJC-1295. 

Mr Unsworth claimed Earl had been assured the substance was WADA-approved.

"Sandor was under the instruction of a medical practitioner," Unsworth said. 

Earl received 12 rounds of injections over a two-month period, during which time he transported a prohibited substance between Dank's office in Mascot and Dr Khan's clinic in Cabramatta.

"Sandor basically picked up something from Dank and took it to Dr Khan," Mr Unsworth said. 

"It was entirely for his own use." 

ASADA believe this trip constituted one of the elements of the trafficking charges against Earl. 

But the anti-doping watchdog also possessed text messages from Dank's phone and others that implicated Earl in further trafficking activity. 

The text messages suggested that Earl was the "middle man" in several transactions that do not involve other NRL players or athletes bound by the WADA code. 

It's understood those transactions involved prescription drugs, as well as WADA-banned substances, and took place for a period of time after Earl's initial consultations with Dank and the Cabramatta clinic. 

Mr Unsworth said there was no evidence suggesting Earl had distributed or sold the drugs, but the wide nature of the NRL's Anti-Doping Policy definition of "trafficking" meant the charge could still be laid. 

Earl was initially interviewed by ASADA on August 4 over allegations he had merely used banned peptides. 

The trafficking accusations were first raised during that interview, but Mr Unsworth objected because the more serious claim was not raised in Earl's initial interview notice. 

He was issued with a second interview notice and re-interviewed the following day. Earl was confronted with the text messages and other evidence of trafficking during that meeting.

Struggling emotionally all season, he elected to stand down immediately in the hope of returning to action as soon as possible. 

Should Earl be successful in obtaining the "substantial assistance" defence and only receive a one-year ban, he will be eligible to return on August 28, 2014.

He did not expect the development to be made public on Thursday, but the NRL wanted to act immediately to avoid the media from breaking the development first. 

As NRL boss Dave Smith's announcement stunned the sporting landscape, the player was meeting Raiders officials and declined to comment.  

Dank has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing with regard to the supplements programs. Dr Khan declined to comment.

Sandor Earl promo Source: Supplied


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Ryan vows to tone down SBW jibes

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BEAU Ryan has offered to tone down his impersonations of Sonny Bill Williams if the Roosters superstar is genuinely offended by his Footy Show antics.

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The Sharks winger regularly pokes fun at the champion forward on his light-hearted SBW TV segment where he also takes off Benji Marshall, Sam Burgess and Kevin Rudd. 

Ryan says he will stop the moment Sonny Bill asks him too.

SBW went looking for Ryan in last Monday night's game at Shark Park, collecting him with a shoulder charge.

Ryan went off suffering from concussion after another big hit later in the game. 

"I spoke to him after the game," Ryan said. 

"It's all fun and he was alright. 

"Obviously they were filthy because they lost. I just shook his hand and said hope your family is well, stuff like that. 

"He just said to be careful with a few of the things I said. The day he taps me on the shoulder and says don't do it, I'll stop. 

"I guess it's lucky for me the shoulder charge is banned because he would have come looking for me more often.

"I'll probably ease up. He's a good guy. I respect him and think he's the best player in the game.

"Look, if he pulled me aside and said stop it, I would."

TOP EIGHT FINALS RACE EXPLAINED 

Footy Show executive producer Glenn Pallister says he was surprised by the reaction on Monday night.

"Everyone knows Beau hasn't got a vindictive bone in his body," he said. 

"He's a very respectful man who laughs with people, not at them. 

"He would never purposely be disrespectful to someone of Sonny Bill's stature." 

Like Ryan, Sonny Bill is on the Channel Nine payroll to make regular appearances as part of a third-party deal with the Roosters. 

Nine supremo David Gyngell was involved in the contract negotiations with Nick Politis to get SBW back to the NRL this year.

Ryan has the most popular segment on the Footy Show and enjoys a cult following from women and children.

"I guess it puts a bit of pressure on myself but I don't mind that," he said. 

"It's all light-hearted and people enjoy it. 

"I don't want to offend anyone. I'm just trying to make people laugh. As long as no-one gets hurt. I don't think I'm saying anything too derogatory.

"I do it to Benji, Sam Burgess and Sonny. I know Sammy Burgess didn't mind it and all the Souths boys loved it. 

"Maybe I'll keep it light hearted with the blokes I know best like Benji, Robbie Farah and Gal.

"They're easy enough targets."

Ryan knew before Monday night's game Sonny Bill would come looking for him and he joked about it with Sharks team mates in the build-up. 

"I told Gal I was going to run straight at him and he said 'good luck,'" Ryan said.

"Maybe I do have a target on my head.

"I guess my sort of stuff hasn't been done before.

"Matty Johns in his last year did a bit of this stuff and Wendell did too. 

"As long as people understand ... I respect all my opponents ... and we're just trying to have a bit of fun." 


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Penrith paid for Earl's injections

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THE Penrith Panthers have admitted paying $1160 for Sandor Earl to be injected with supplements in 2011 as the NRL's drugs-in-sport investigation claimed its first major scalp.

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But Panthers Group boss Warren Wilson was on Thursday night adamant the club was unaware Earl's medical bills related to banned peptide CJC-1295 and said the NRL star had gone off-site without Penrith's consent.

In a watershed day that could blow the Australian Anti-Doping Authority's seven-month investigation into rugby league wide open, the NRL hit Earl with a provisional suspension relating to the use and trafficking of CJC-1295.

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News Corp can reveal that a Sydney doctor with a direct link to sports scientist Stephen Dank injected Earl 12 times during 2011 and billed the Penrith Panthers Group $1160.

Penrith Panthers Group boss Wilson confirmed Earl visited doctor Ijaz Khan's Injury Care clinic in Cabramatta after suffering a shoulder injury when contracted to the Panthers in 2011.

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"When we first heard about it (in June), we looked for invoices under the doctor's name but couldn't find any," Wilson said.

"Then we Googled his name and we found the clinic (Injury Care). We found (12) invoices from that clinic for treatment to Sandor Earl, totalling around $1,000.

"They weren't paid until January 2012 because the club wasn't in the best financial shape at that time.

"They were also sent to Panthers Group and not the football club. When we found them we forwarded them to the NRL's Integrity Unit to investigate.

"We left it in the hands of the NRL. We've since conducted a review of our procedures, because there was a player going off-site for treatment without any authorisation from the club.

"That's a problem, not just for Penrith, that you can't control players once they're away from your care.

"We've completely changed our procedures as a result and no one is to get any treatment - or pay any invoices - unless it's authorised by the doctor.

"This player has done something individually wrong and if he's found guilty of trafficking then I hope they throw the book at him."

Panthers general manager Phil Gould confirmed to News Corp in June that the club had referred the Earl issue to the NRL's integrity unit.

Dr Khan's Cabramatta Injury Care Clinic has previously featured in relation to Dank and the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Agency's drugs-in-sport investigation, with the Cronulla Sharks billed by the clinic for blood tests at the start of 2011.

At the time the blood tests were conducted, Dank was in the process of implementing the supplements program that has landed the Sharks in the crosshairs of the ongoing  ASADA investigation.

Crucially, CJC-1295 is one of the peptides the Sharks stand accused of using, according to the independent report compiled by Dr Tricia Kavanagh and detailed by News Corp in May.

Kavanagh's report led to coach Shane Flanagan being stood down for a fortnight and four staff members being sacked by the club's previous board, before the new board headed by Damian Keogh opted to overthrow the decisions.

Trainer Mark Noakes, who has since been reinstated against the NRL's advice, provided a statement naming CJC-1295 and GHRP-6 as the peptides that the Sharks allegedly used.

So given Earl has been issued with an infraction notice for the use of CJC-1295, Cronulla's place in the finals remains a bone of contention among rival NRL clubs.

Dank has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing or giving athletes banned substances.

Earl joined the Panthers at the start of 2011 and spent the majority of his tenure injured or playing NSW Cup for Windsor Wolves.

He then switched clubs to the Canberra Raiders midway through last year and went on to star in the 2012 finals.

The winger, renowned for his combination with Blake Ferguson, started this season strongly before being dropped to NSW Cup and then recently re-emerged in the NRL.

In May, Earl announced he would be leaving the NRL at the end of this season to play French rugby for second division club Pau on a one-year contract worth $220,000.

That contract is now up in the air given that the World Anti-Doping Agency's code can also be applied in European rugby.

Sandor Earl promo Source: Supplied


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Broad will need mental flak jacket

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 28 Agustus 2013 | 22.07

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JOHN SNOW put up with it. Douglas Jardine wallowed in it. But will Stuart Broad be strong enough to handle the tsunami of abuse that awaits him in Australia this summer?

Broad, who has been under attack in Australia since he failed to walk for a thick edge in the first Ashes Test, has intensified Australian sentiment against him during a Twitter war with Australian fans.

Broad said "I couldn't care less" to one fan who said he would be heckled all summer and branded another who suggested he should have walked a "pathetic hypocrite."

Broad will be granted extra security on tour but, unlike former English keeper Jack Russell who spent almost every idle hour locked away in his hotel room, Broad is not a room service kind of guy. He likes getting out with his fast-bowling mates.

Only the bold or foolish incite Australia fans.

When Bodyline skipper Douglas Jardine arrived in Australia for the Ashes in 1932-33 he was greeted by Australian journalists who asked whether he could release his playing squads on tour in time for their deadlines.

"I don't give a shit about your deadlines," was his curt reply. Jardine was on war footing from the moment he landed. It seemed the more people he annoyed the happier he was.
 
But such bravado is rare. It is generally not in the nature of English tourists to play Australia at their own antagonistic game.

Sledging is generally considered our game, not theirs.

Fast bowler Snow, who had the face of a gun-toting standover man you might see on The Professionals, was a rare example of an English tourist bold enough to stir the pot.

At a function at the start of the 1970-71 tour he slowly dragged his finger down the forehead of Australian fast bowler Alan Thomson and said "this is where I am going to part your hair when I bowl to you."

Snow's courage was backed up by ability – he dominated the series and left such an impression that Ian Chappell rated him the best fast bowler he ever faced.

Broad will need to have his mental flak jacket on from the moment he lands in Brisbane for the first Test from November 21.

Three years ago Broad toured Australia as the choirboy-faced youngster who took one Test wicket, scored no Test runs and headed home injured. Now he returns as the man in black.

Broad's father Chris, a strong-willed and combative opening batsman, will not be in Australia to support his son in the Tests because, as an ICC match referee he does not do English Test series and he is expected to be working elsewhere.

But he won't be fretting either because he knows Broad Jr can handle himself.

"He constantly surprises me," Chris once told The Courier-Mail. "I, like any father with their children, see pitfalls and you try and help him through. But he seems to see them himself and be able to overcome them with a remarkable amount of ease. He has more ability than I had."

The consolation for Broad is that, for all the shallow abuse, many Australians secretly admire antagonists who stand their ground.

Ian Chappell was always fascinated by the Jardine legend and regretted not having a decent chat with him while Allan Border called Jardine's Bodyline plans "tactically brilliant."

Kerry Packer became so fascinated by Snow's demeanour he hired him at age 37 to bowl in World Series Cricket with the line "I know you are past it . . . but I love you." 

Stuart Broad's decision not to walk at Trent Bridge after being caught at slip did not go down well with the Australians.

England bowler John Snow is famously grabbed by a spectator at the SCG in 1971. Snow had earlier hit Australian batsman Terry Jenner with a bouncer, forcing Jenner to retire hurt.

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Sterlo: NRL must make a change

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A WEEK in rugby league never fails to provide plenty of talking points.

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Firstly, I am completely against on and off field decisions being made based on the degree of injury to a player.

From what I have seen this season I am in no doubt that if the Cowboy's Ray Thompson could have risen to his feet to play the ball, then the Knight's Kade Snowden would not have been sent off. 

That is based on the fact that I have seen a number of similar types of contact throughout the year which didn't result in serious injury and ultimately no marching orders for the man who infringed. 

I have also not spoken to anyone who didn't think that the shoulder charge unleashed by the 'Dogs Frank Pritchard on South's Bryson Goodwin involved more intent than the Snowden hit. 

However because Goodwin wasn't badly hurt and was able to get up and play on, Pritchard was allowed to finish the game before copping two weeks on the sideline. 

A fortnight compared to the Knight's prop's seven weeks is grossly imbalanced; especially considering the latter's loading points is not for a previous similar offence. 

This assessment is in no way meant to detract from any of the seriousness or sympathy associated with Ray Thompson's injury. As a game we are gutted for the young man and the difficult period he is now faced with and the chance it may coincide with a final's campaign for his team. 

There is no doubt that Kade Snowden deserves a period of time off the field but it should be based solely on the infringement, not the injury. 

In this instance I don't believe that was the case. 

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What I do applaud is the "real life" reality suggested by Canterbury CEO Raelene Castle this week in relation to players looking to break contracts and move to another club. 

She correctly points out that away from the relatively insular (unreal) world of being a professional sportsperson in the NRL there are repercussions for those who seek to walk away from binding agreements. 

Often this takes the form of financial remuneration and it would seem appropriate that with the increasing number of players in our game seeking to not fulfil commitments that they previously signed on for, an "exit fee" is something that could be introduced. 

The game should always be more concerned with the individual off the field than on, and that is why a request for the breaking of a contract on compassionate grounds will always be treated on individual merit with the sensitivity it deserves. 

However in accordance with the wider society a financial recompense is not unfair.

It would also serve as something of a litmus test for those few who seek to use compassion as a camouflage in an effort to move elsewhere. 

Of course this system will only work if there is the appropriate amount paid in reverse, in other words to those players moved on by clubs whilst they are still on contract. 

Speaking of moving, it would seem that current Parramatta coach Ricky Stuart may be faced with a decision shortly concerning his future. 

As revealed on the Sunday Footy Show there is strong mail that the Canberra Raiders are keen for him to take over the reins in the national capital. 

This overture has not been officially confirmed but it seems that when it comes to NRL coaches, where there's smoke, there's usually fire. 

I also recall his name being linked with the club in the past in such a capacity, but following the unexpected and unfortunate demise of David Furner last week, the attraction to return "home" this time could be strong. 

The dilemma is leaving a job half-done (quarter?) with the Eels and the responsibility that he has to those players. Especially when you consider decisions that have been made on their futures and the signing of those coming to the club next season, who put pen to paper with the understanding he would be in charge. 

The only thing I am certain of is that nobody will be signing a seven year contract.

Finally, the composition of our eight finalists was only made murkier by round 24 with teams sitting 7th, 8th, 9th and 10th going into the weekend, all being beaten. 

This obviously helped those snapping at their heels to improve their chances of grabbing a play-off position with the Cowboys, Panthers and Warriors all making a move. 

Newcastle must still be favoured to qualify, especially with a one competition point advantage and a final round clash with the Eels. Not that they will be taking that game for granted. 

It is not inconceivable that all five teams now sitting on 24 points could each win just one of their remaining two matches.

That could see "for and against" determining the difference between a host of teams. (Unless Brisbane win their last two games and swamp them all!) 

I wonder what next week will bring. 


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Dogs legend feels robbed by Barba

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STEVE Mortimer, Canterbury's greatest player, feels "robbed " Ben Barba has walked away from Belmore.

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The Broncos paid a one-off transfer fee of $300,000 to sign Barba on a three-year deal that will ensure the reigning Dally M medallist is able to live close to his young family in Brisbane. 

But while Barba credited Bulldogs coach Des Hasler and former CEO Todd Greenberg for saving his life amid a relationship break-down in February, Mortimer was gutted. 

"I feel robbed," Mortimer said.

"I thought he would be a one-club player — something we don't see much of these days.

"What is the purpose of a contract these days?

"I am dirty and upset Ben is going to another club. I am his biggest fan."

Mortimer said he spoke to Bulldogs chairman Ray Dib and CEO Raelene Castle about Barba's departure.

"As Raelene said, why have a player here that is unhappy," Mortimer said.

"He loves his kids and wants to be with them. We are all human. But I am unhappy — he is such a talent."

In a complex deal, Brisbane has been prevented from paying Barba more they he would have earned over the final two years of his broken contract with Canterbury. 

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It's understood the fullback stood to earn about $400,000-a-season, but that relatively meagre salary is likely to be boosted by a string of third deals from Queensland-based businesses. 

Castle told of the complex negotiations and why the process was drawn-out.

"There were many complicated elements that needed to be considered around Ben's request for a release and we're pleased to have achieved a result that leaves everyone comfortable with the outcome," Castle said. 

"While we have worked extremely hard with Ben, with his football and with his personal life, we accept that both of those things will be better if he is with family. 

Barba issued a heartfelt cry of gratitude to Greenberg and Hasler, who, instead of sacking him, arranged for intensive rehabilitation when things went awry during the trials. 

"These guys not only saved my footy career, but my life," Barba said.

"When I was struggling there at the start of the year these two guys stuck beside and kept me at the club and got my feet back on the ground. 

"I can't be thankful enough for what they've done.

"They (my daughters) are the reason I do this, to be able support them and give them everything they want."

Ironically, Barba is expected to make his return from an ankle injury in the final round clash against the Broncos at Suncorp Stadium next Thursday night. 

But Wednesday's announcement has seen his Brisbane opposite, Josh Hoffman, put extension negotiations on hold.

Broncos coach Anthony Griffin met the Kiwi Test fullback on Tuesday to personally tell him about Barba's impending arrival.

Griffin made it clear Barba's signing was entirely fortuitous and did not reflect a lack of faith in Hoffman but the 25-year-old left the meeting fuming, later telling a Broncos teammate he is now resigned to weighing up his future.


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Cows in war of words with Segeyaro

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A WAR of words has erupted between the Cowboys and James Segeyaro amid claims North Queensland botched the retention process that led to the hooker's defection to the Panthers.

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Segeyaro is Penrith's man-of-the-moment, with his sizzling hat-trick against the Broncos last Friday night rubber-stamping the nuggety rake as one of the code's leading interchange shock weapons. 

But the performance also spotlighted what the Cowboys are missing around the rucks this season and why the club lost out to Penrith for his services. 

Groomed to replace the retiring Aaron Payne, Segeyaro stunned Cowboys management when he agreed to join the Panthers this season after meeting Penrith supremo Phil Gould. 

Segeyaro was accused of leaving the Cowboys in the lurch by chasing a more lucrative deal, but the Papua New Guinea international claims North Queensland dithered in contract talks. 

"I felt I had to go (to Penrith),"said Segeyaro, who has played all 22 games off the bench this season.

"The Cowboys signed a few players and I was still waiting. By the time I got the phone call (from Gould) my manager and I had a good chat and it seemed the right thing to do. 

"I didn't want to wait any longer for the Cowboys and Penrith were really keen. At first you have your doubts, but I can't be happier here. 

"It wasn't about the money. Penrith had a five-year plan and I'll admit 'Gus' (Gould) was very good with words.

"He said what I've been trying to seek all along, he said he wanted me to be the next long-term Penrith hooker who will be here a number of years and play 100 games for the club. 

"He said it will be a tough road but we will give you the tools, you just need to work hard. I was blown away by what he was saying and after that I was that pumped I wanted to play for Penrith."

Cowboys recruitment chief Peter Parr said he was proactive in attempting to retain Segeyaro and did everything possible to keep him in Townsville. 

"We wanted to keep James here," he said.

"We knew that Aaron Payne was retiring and we put a lot of effort and resource to get 'Chicko' (Segeyaro) to take over as the No.1 hooker. 

"I remember going on a team camp to the Gold Coast and I spent an hour with James. I spoke to him about his future and what he wanted out of life. 

"I then had a second meeting to get the deal over the line and the one thing he kept coming back to was that he enjoyed the Sydney lifestyle and he didn't enjoy the amount of travel associated with playing out of Townsville. 

"At first, I was surprised he was considering going but by the end I wasn't. Some of the things James' manager said on his behalf had me concerned he would go to Penrith."

Despite being a fixture on the bench, Segeyaro is relishing his time at Penrith. 

"As soon as I got here the boys accepted me," he said. 

"Any player wants to be a starting player, but I just want to be consistent and become a 100-game player who puts in every week."


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Young Victory gun rejects Lebanon

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 27 Agustus 2013 | 22.07

Andrew Nabbout is chasing a Socceroos berth. Source: AAP

YOUNG Melbourne Victory winger Andrew Nabbout has rejected an offer to play for Lebanon and has set his sights on breaking into the Socceroos.

Nabbout, who 12 months ago was playing for Victorian Premier League side Moreland, was approached by the Lebanese FA earlier this month and while flattered with the approach said his goal was to represent his country of birth.

But Nabbout, who was just 15 days too old to qualify for Australia's recent FIFA U20 World Cup squad, didn't rule out switching down the track should he fail to break into the Socceroos set-up.

"They emailed the club (Victory) and asked for my availability to play for the Lebanese national team in preparation for the 2015 Asian Cup and some tournaments and games in between, " Nabbout said.

"I said thanks for the offer but I don't want to write off my chances of playing for the Socceroos. I think I've still got a shot but if not, one day I might consider it if the option's still there.

"It's a real honour for me and my family (to be approached) considering it's where both my parents were born. I've been to Lebanon three times and I can speak it (Arabic) fluently, we speak it at home."

Nabbout came from obscurity to become Victory's most potent super sub last season, netting four goals by the end of the campaign in his 21 appearances.

After a sluggish finish to the season he said the Liverpool game has filled him with confidence as the 2013-14 season draws closer. And he concedes expectations are far higher.

"I was chatting to the youth team coach (Darren Davies) the other day and he said last year was a good year for you because no-one had heard about you and you burst on to the scene but this year people know how you play and expectations are higher,'' he said.

"It's going to be harder but I'm prepared. It's the toughest preseason I've ever done but it's the biggest club and the best coach in the country so he knows what he's doing and there's an experienced coaching staff there too."


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Settled, but far from perfect

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MARK Thompson called Essendon's supplements program "the perfect storm".

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After two days of gruelling negotiations came to a dramatic finish, the AFL will believe it has come out with the perfect solution.

Of course, it is far from that, given serious questions on a number of levels that might never be answered.

Those questions surround the AFL's decision to negotiate, the convenient timing of the ASADA "interim" report, and the skeletons jangling in certain closets over Essendon's self-reporting.

Andrew Demetriou and Mike Fitzpatrick after Essendon sanctions.

But when the dust settles this morning, the AFL will have at least succeeded in sealing Essendon's fate before, as AFL deputy CEO Gillon McLachlan put it, the integrity of the finals series was compromised.

Imagine the farce if had Essendon been able to storm to the most unlikely of premierships, only to have it stripped by October.

Imagine James Hird standing atop the premiership dais shouting, "Andrew Demetriou, you were wrong". It couldn't happen.

Essendon's controversies have cast a pall over the entire season, with potential infraction notices a future horror no one wants to consider.

But of the 198 home-and-away games, just one will be a dead rubber - the upcoming Essendon clash against Richmond.

And even that will have some bizarre appeal.

The AFL will have kept its promise to its broadcasters, the Bombers will have played live games long enough to keep their fans and sponsors, and the turnstiles have kept ticking over.

The AFL even gets a barnstorming finish to the home-and-away season with four teams still able to parachute into the eight at Essendon's expense.

Has Essendon got off lightly? Why would an AFL with nothing to hide not just summon Essendon to a Commission meeting and mete out punishments?

Have months of leaks from both sides tarnished the AFL and Essendon and potentially driven a wedge between the parties that could take years to repair?

In the end, Essendon got its concession that as Paul Little said last night: "There was no admission of drug cheating." And the AFL got James Hird's apology, with admissions of key failings from the Bombers.

Demetriou and Little said last night it was time for football to start healing itself.

"I think in many ways today has been the start of the beginning going forward and I don't say that lightly," Little said.

"Today there was an acceptance by both parties that we have to get on with the future. We can no longer dwell on the mistakes."

That won't happen easily but, as the days go by, the talk will start to turn more to what it was that brought Essendon to this sorry place - the quest for a flag.


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Dons the all-time AFL villain

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ESSENDON is consigned to being the all-time AFL villain after the most dramatic day in AFL history.

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Unprecedented and, frankly, unbelievable, the club stands shamed and embarrassed after having been banned from the finals, their prized draft picks swiped from them over two years, as well as incurring a $2 million fine.

Probably more stunning was that coach James Hird, who aggressively undertook a journey to challenge the AFL, accepted a 12-month suspension.

He did it for the good of the club. Chairman Paul Little personally asked Hird late yesterday to take the suspension for the good of the club, and the players.

Last night, he was the sorriest person in football. Sorry for the predicament his players found themselves in.

Essendon the villain says Mark Robinson.

He returned home and spent the remainder of the night with his wife, Tania, and their children.

The club's most loved living icon stood before the AFL Commission and apologised for his role in the club's supplement program.

He admitted mistakes, as did the club, and now he is out of the game he cherishes.

He will go believing he is not a drug cheat but, so fickle is the football world, he will forever be taunted that he is.

Hird made mistakes because he was a rookie coach hell-bent on striving for perfection.

His high standards came back to bite him.

Those same high standards, however, are not lost on the club. He and the club have agreed that Hird will return in 2015, on a contract of two years.

Always, football clubs look after the champions, as their champions look after them.

What a strange night it will be on Saturday.

His replacement against the Tigers is assistant coach Simon Goodwin, but three others have offered to stand in in Hird's absence next year.

The logical replacement is Mark Thompson.

Together, Hird and Thompson were the golden ticket, the caped crusaders who were to come in and return the club to a place of high achievement.

Thompson has yet to speak to the club about taking over, but he has told the Herald Sun it could be an option.

He's filthy he copped a $30,000 fine and perhaps the whole experience might finally send him scampering from a game that has more than challenged him in the past 12 months.

Perhaps it's in the hands of Hird to convince him.

The seven-month investigation found answers, but more questions hang in the air.

Hird's claims that AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou and his second-in-charge, Gil McLachlan, polluted the investigation have been consigned to hearsay and innuendo.

"The commission had confidence in the administration," AFL Commission chairman Mike Fitzpatrick said.

Will Stephen Dank ever tell his side of the story? "He has a lot to answer for," Demetriou said.

Will the club ever know what took place through 2012? "No," said Little.

Little said last night his club did not roll over.

Instead, he wanted to end the scandal that began in 2011 and spread throughout 2012. "This is the start of the beginning," he said.

At the death, there was a stench.

The club accepted its failings about the injections program and the lack of duty of care for the players.

It was an investigation of great substance. There were 130 interviews, 13,000 documents, email trails, telephone records, back-up tapes, text messages and computer files.

"We had a commitment to finding the truth," Fitzpatrick said.

The Bombers accepted their failings. Hird is gone for 12 months; head of football Danny Corcoran for four months. And Thompson copped a $30k fine.

Club doctor Bruce Reid will resume his fight.

"This is a wake-up for our sport," Fitzpatrick said.

Demetriou defended the AFL's pursuit to protect the integrity. "This is the most significant sanction in AFL history," he said.

Little said negotiations over the past two days were "tough but fair".

The Bombers start the road to recovery.

They have to win back supporter confidence and recover from crippling financial losses.

"We have let down a lot of people," Little said. "It's an incredibly tough time for all supporters and members. We're terribly sorry for what happened."

Those bloody supplements. Designed to help build strength and achieve greatness, they have banished the club to the wastelands. And who knows how long they will stay there.

The football department is gutted, they have lost a chief executive and a president, and a 32-year club doctor is off to defend himself as a medical practitioner.

Forever and a day the Bombers will rue undertaking a cutting-edge injection program, which, as Essendon admitted, was reckless in its administration.

They will rue the appointment of Dank, who, it must be said, denies any unlawful or irresponsible behaviour.

They will rue the appointment of high-performance manager Dean Robinson, who brought Dank to the club, and who also denies wrong-doing.

Hird will rue he made mistakes, so will Reid for not speaking up more, and Corcoran for allowing such a dark chapter to unfold on his watch.

They are not alone.

Former chief executive Ian Robson must be wondering what he could've done better, and former chairman David Evans must wonder what he did overall.

At the end of the day, the Bombers could not guarantee the players were not administered banned drugs.

They wanted to believe they did the right thing, but the AFL found they had not.

This story is the most controversial, mysterious and truly stunning in AFL history. The results leave a stain on the competition and a stain on one of its long-time member clubs.

People can forgive, but one wonders if they will ever forget.


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Hird forced to surrender

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IN the end, James Hird had no choice but to surrender.

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For all his fight and threats of Supreme Court action, the Bombers coach today will begin serving a massive 12-month suspension from the football world.

The ban begins this week and prevents him from holding any position or receiving any payments from any AFL club until August 25 next year.

It emerged last night he finally agreed to go after a tap on the shoulder from Bombers chairman Paul Little. The game was up.

But in a bizarre post-script, Little revealed Hird was set to be offered a contract extension tying him to the club until at least the end of 2016.

James Hird leaves AFL House.

In disgrace came reward.

Indicating Hird had fallen on his sword to avoid further conflict with the AFL, Little even declared Hird would be free to take charge of the club if it qualified for next year's finals.

"James Hird told the commission tonight that he took responsibility for the shortcomings in the club's 2012 supplements program," Little said.

"There is no doubt in my mind that James Hird agreed to accept these penalties tonight so that the club could move on.

"With his admission James has put the best interests of the players, the club and, as a whole, AFL football (ahead of himself).

"He showed significant remorse in saying he was sorry and taking responsibility."

Hird's lawyer, Julian Burnside, QC, said last night: "The driving consideration for James was to do the best he could for the players and the club ... and the game which he loves. I reckon what he did tonight was nothing short of heroic."

Asked on 3AW if the football world would learn more about an alleged "tip-off" from AFL chiefs to the club in February, Burnside said: "I suspect that's something the AFL is not keen to have explored." He said his client had been brutally maligned by the media.

But AFL chairman Mike Fitzpatrick last night made it clear no figure in the game - not even a Brownlow Medal legend - was beyond reproach.

"Nothing and no one comes before the duty of care to our players," Fitzpatrick said after the marathon deliberations.

Hird and wife Tania appeared briefly before the commission late last night, where the Bombers great apologised for his part in footy's greatest scandal.

Tania had been a driving force and supporter in her husband's fight to clear his name and reputation.

League chief Andrew Demetriou said Hird was "genuinely remorseful" and would be forgiven and welcomed back.

"This code is a very forgiving code and in accepting James Hird's suspension we've made it clear that of course he is welcome back to the game," Demetriou said.

"He has accepted responsibility for this sorry saga and he's entitled to be welcomed back."

Demetriou said allegations by the Hird camp of a flurry of leaks by the AFL were a "sideshow" in the seven-month supplements saga.

Fitzpatrick said of Hird: "He was apologetic. He did a very good job and apologised and said the appropriate things he should have said.

"He would have spoken for seven or eight minutes."

As recently as Saturday, Hird had declared he would never admit to the wording of the multitude of charges levelled against him by the AFL.

He got his way with the removal of any doping charges against his name.

But last night Hird faced the hard reality of a year away from football.


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Backs key to success

Written By Unknown on Senin, 26 Agustus 2013 | 22.07

Alex Rance clears from Jeremy Cameron. Source: Mark Metcalfe / Getty Images

YOU need look no further than defence to find part of the reason behind the 2013 success of Geelong and Richmond.

Both are represented by two defensive players in this week's Team of the Round, the Tiger duo of Alex Rance and Troy Chaplin being two of competition's better key backmen.

Geelong's Harry Taylor already occupies such standing while his teammate Jimmy Bartel has produced a very solid season off half-back.

Brendon Goddard and Leigh Montagna, friends and former teammates at St Kilda, may both be in line for their first club best and fairest awards.

And while Will Minson mightn't win a B&F at the Bulldogs due to the presence of Ryan Griffin and Tom Liberatore,  he deserves All-Australian selection given the consistency of his year.

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B: Kade Simpson (Carlton): Just another ripper game in a cracker of a season.
Troy Chaplin (Richmond): A really clever piece of selective recruiting.
Alex Rance (Richmond): With Chaplin brings much-needed defensive solidarity.

HB: Jimmy Bartel (Geelong):
Can't believe his name was absent from Geelong's best players.
Harry Taylor (Geelong): Showed Tippett what it's like against the best.
Brendon Goddard (Essendon): Has never won a club B&F which should soon change.

C: Nathan Fyfe (Fremantle): The former cox-wain who grew.
Tom Rockliff (Brisbane): Integral part of what is looking like a bright future.
Leigh Montagna (St Kilda): This is surely the season he adds a B&F to his CV.

Bomber Brendon Goddard in action against Carlton. Picture: Getty Source: HeraldSun


HF: Josh Thomas (Collingwood): Becoming a handy pick-up at 75 in the 2009 draft.
Jarryd Roughead (Hawthorn): Deserves to win the Coleman in career-best season
Steve Johnson (Geelong): There was a bit of everything from the talented one.

F: Hayden Ballantyne (Fremantle): Overcame a dodgy shoulder to play a blinder.
Nick Riewoldt (St Kilda): There is life in the ageing champion.
Stephen Milne (St Kilda): Has kicked more goals than anyone standing 176cm or under.

Magpie Dane Swan in action against West Coast. Picture: Getty Source: HeraldSun


R: Will Minson (Western Bulldogs): Might be the game that cements his AA selection.
Dane Swan (Collingwood): Going to be interesting Brownlow night between he and Pendles.
Tom Liberatore (Western Bulldogs): Has any player in the game made more improvement?

Richmond star Dustin Martin in action against Greater Western Sydney. Picture: Phil Hillyard Source: HeraldSun


I: Scott Thompson (Adelaide): Finishing the year hard after a so-so start.
Dustin Martin (Richmond): Feasted on the hapless Giants.
Sam Mitchell (Hawthorn): Another sublime display from the clearance master.
Substitute: Paul Chapman (Geelong): When the game was hot early we saw a happy Chappy.
Coach: Chris Scott (Geelong): Masterminded a decimation of a quality opponent.
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NRL to fix scheduling blunder

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THE NRL is desperately trying to fix their most embarrassing scheduling blunder of the year.

On Monday night the struggling Parramatta Eels are to play the equally bad St George Illawarra Dragons at ANZ Stadium.

That's right, ANZ Stadium, an 83,000-seat venue, 16th against 15th.

Officials are concerned the match will be played in front of 75,000 empty seats and look terrible on Fox Sports.

What an embarrassment – a week after asking fans to watch the Eels get annihilated 64-4 by Melbourne Storm in the Sunday afternoon free-to-air match of the day.

Monday night's game was scheduled more than 12 months ago when Parramatta chose three "blockbusters" to be played at the Homebush venue as part of their stadium deal.

This match last year attracted more than 40,000 because it was legend Nathan Hindmarsh's farewell game in the NRL.

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This year it means absolutely nothing, not even a battle for the wooden spoon because the Dragons are four points clear with a much better for-and-against.

The NRL, Parramatta and the Dragons are at least working on moving the game back to Parramatta Stadium where it belongs.

Expect an announcement on a venue switch on Tuesday.

It will still be flat out attracting 10,000 fans at Parramatta but the atmosphere won't be as bad as an empty Olympic venue.

Recent form for the two sides couldn't be any worse.

Parramatta lost by 60 and the Dragons got pumped by the Wests Tigers.

Monday night is proving a major problem for the NRL.

The ratings on Fox Sports are excellent but last Monday night only 8000 turned up to watch the Tigers play the Roosters at Allianz Stadium, a ground they share.  


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Toomua hopes to keep 10 jersey

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MATT Toomua knew the moment he was subbed off in his Wallabies debut that he was ready for Test football, and now hopes to be given a long-term run wearing the most problematic jersey in Australian rugby.

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With Toomua, Quade Cooper, James O'Connor, Kurtley Beale and Berrick Barnes all having worn the Wallabies No.10 jersey in recent times, there is little certainty around who the solution is.

The only certainties under new coach Ewen McKenzie is that O'Connor won't be considered for it, because he is now seen as an outside back, and eventually an inside centre, and Barnes won't have a chance to wear it until he returns from a stint in Japan in 2015.

Toomua made a slow debut in the first Bledisloe Cup Test in Sydney, but showed better signs in Wellington last weekend when he reverted to a more natural running game.

That improvement would ordinarily be enough for a two-Test five-eighth to be given another chance but already there is speculation McKenzie could start with Cooper in a fortnight at Brisbane's Suncorp Stadium.

"Truth be told I was a little bit disappointed with the first game, but I wasn't overly concerned - it was my first Test match," Toomua said.

"I knew when I came off the field; I said to myself, `You can play at this level'.

"I felt I improved over the two games.

"In the first game we played a lot differently at the Wallabies than we do at the Brumbies, so a lot of that was adapting to a new style.

"I realised after the game that the strengths that got me in the team is something I've got to show as well, running, taking on the line.

"I felt it would be an easier transition, because it is a natural part of my game, taking it into contact.

"It's a process, you don't play two games and say it's there.

'I would like to say the combination (with halfback Will Genia) is building, hopefully I will get more chances."

Given McKenzie's history with Cooper at Queensland, doubts will remain about Toomua's place in these early days.

"I never feel my place is certain, and that is the same in Super Rugby," Toomua said.

"You do think things, but you can only worry about your performance.

"It is natural to think, 'Will I be picked, or will I not?'

"Obviously I want to start, and continue starting. That goes without saying.

"I am more thinking from the first game to the second game, I improved a lot.

"What Ewen has in mind, we will find out next week.

"There are two schools of thought; consistency in selection can help in building momentum and improvement, but it can in a sense bring complacency.

"I have always preferred to have competition for spots, it keeps you on your toes.

"I know that it has benefited my game, being selected at the Brumbies and Jake showing faith in me.

"I don't want to shoot myself in the foot to say that shouldn't happen for the Wallabies as well.

"Most guys will argue it helps being selected week in, week out.

"But it is what's best for the team."

The shock selection McKenzie's first Test team, Toomua now reflects on his opening two international games - both defeats to the All Blacks - with confidence.

"It has been a whirlwind few weeks, add the Super Rugby final as well, making my debut and then Saturday night," he said.

"It is a different kettle of fish.

"I felt I could definitely compete after that first Test. Everything is high quality.

"The first game was a little bit of the unknown, not knowing if I was up to it.

"Getting out of that, I realised I could offer a lot more than I did.

"I felt a lot more confident on Saturday, I made good improvement, I learned a lot from the first week.

"In saying that, we wanted to win and we didn't, so that disappointment is gelled with my personal development."


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Wanderers sitting pretty

The Wanderers are hopeful of increased seating. Source: Gregg Porteous / News Limited

THE WANDERERS are hopeful of playing in front of an increased capacity next season, with the club increasingly optimistic that extra seating will be installed at Parramatta Stadium in time for next season.

Chairman Lyall Gorman last night said an increase of up to 3500 new seats was "more likely than not" which would lift the stadium's capacity to more than 24,000.

Under the advanced plans, a structure would be constructed at the end currently used as a family area to house the extra seating, with a more permanent solution still to be sought in the longer term.

Venues NSW, which has ultimate control of the stadium, has appointed a project manager to oversee the hoped-for installation and Gorman said the prospect of it happening "is a lot further forward than it was a week ago".

"We had another meeting today and there's a hugely can-do attitude from all parties, and it's about trying to find the best solution for all of us," Gorman said.

"We'll have another meeting in a fortnight, but as things stand there's a determination to try to do this if we possibly can."

Gorman said no decision will be made on when to implement a cap on memberships until then, with the final figure dependent on what the stadium's capacity will be.

Already the club has sold more than 15,000 memberships for next season, with a further spurt expected as the start of the season on October 11 gets closer.

"Either way though it [the cap] will be around 80% of capacity, as we want to leave enough tickets available for new supporters to experience the atmosphere, plus meet our obligations in terms of away fans and corporate partners," he said.

Meanwhile Gorman insisted there remains a possibility that the club could be sold by Football Federation Australia before the start of next season.

Reports yesterday suggested that Manchester City had made an initial approach to investment bank UBS, handling the sale for FFA, but well-placed sources have told The Daily Telegraph that no such conversations took place.

Gorman declined to comment on individual potential bidders, but said an appropriate bidder could emerge at any time.

"It could happen in a day or it could take months," he said of the sale. "We won't move until we find the right ownership group with the right fit and the appropriate financial considerations.

"Such a group could come forward tomorrow, so there's no definitive timetable in that respect."

In other A-League news, Brisbane have welcomed back former winger Kofi Danning to aid his recovery from major surgery to repair a snapped cruciate ligament.

Dannig tore his anterior cruciate ligament five months ago while playing for the Roar's sister club CS Vise in Belgium, and will complete his rehabilitation with Roar.


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