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Thompson, Wells share Syd

Written By Unknown on Senin, 07 Oktober 2013 | 20.47

Kangaroos midfielder Daniel Wells in full flight against Essendon. Picture: Colleen Petch Source: Colleen Petch / HeraldSun

SCOTT Thompson and Daniel Wells were joint winners of North Melbourne's best and fairest award after a thrilling vote count last night.

All-Australian full-back Thompson and Wells tied on 50 votes, finishing one ahead of ruckman Todd Goldstein.

But leading goalkicker Lindsay Thomas, who missed out on All-Australian small forward selection, did not finish in the top-10 of voting.

Thompson, 27, has twice finished second in the award, but was last night rewarded for his supreme consistency helping curb the league's premier forwards.

The man who was originally overlooked in the draft and forced to start his career in the VFL also took out the best clubman award, as determined by the Roos' coaches.

Wells is now a two-time Syd Barker medallist, helping complete a stellar comeback from a life-threatening blood clot found in his lungs in late 2011.

Despite heavy tagging from the opposition, Wells' sparkling form has repaid the club's faith after selecting the silken midfielder with pick No.2 in the 2002 national draft.

Vice-captain Drew Petrie was fourth on 46 votes, while young midfielders Ben Cunnington and Ryan Bastinac capped off the best year of their careers, finishing fifth and sixth.

Earlier in the night Wells and Michael Firrito were awarded life memberships.

Former rookie defender Aaron Mullett was named best first year player, while Thomas was recognised for his work off the field as the Peter Scanlon Community Award winner.

North Melbourne coach Brad Scott revealed goalsneak Thomas and emerging midfielder Ben Cunnington had re-signed with the club until the end of 2016 and 2017, respectively.

Meanwhile, Sydney assistant coach Leigh Tudor has agreed to join North Melbourne as a senior assistant coach next year, if he is unsuccessful in Essendon's coaching race.

Highly regarded for his stoppage work and team defence, Tudor has told the Roos he will be at Scott's side unless he wins a senior coaching job in the next fortnight. He is a frontrunner to fill James Hird's void.

Scott announced the appointment last night. Tudor had played key coaching roles at Sydney and St Kilda and coached Geelong's VFL team to a premiership.

North Melbourne star Daniel Wells kicked four goals in the Kangaroos hard-fought win over Geelong. Picture: George Salpigtidis Source: HeraldSun


SYD BARKER TOP 10

1. Scott Thompson 50
1. Daniel Wells 50
3. Todd Goldstein 49
4. Drew Petrie 46
5. Ben Cunnington 45*
6. Ryan Bastinac 45*
7. Jack Ziebell 43
8. Lachie Hansen 41*
9. Sam Gibson 41*
10. Aaron Mullett 40
(* countback applicable for all placings other than first)

OTHER AWARDS
Glenn Archer Northerners Award – Jack Ziebell
Blackwoods Supporters Player of the Year Award – Jack Ziebell
Jason McCartney Jumper Award – Jack Ziebell
Best First Year Player – Aaron Mullett
Harold Henderson Best Clubman Award – Scott Thompson
Peter Scanlon Community Award – Lindsay Thomas


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Chooks to reward Robbo with pay day

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AWARE of vultures that circle a Grand Final-winning coach, Sydney Roosters will hold a strategic board meeting this month to kick-start negotiations about re-signing Trent Robinson long-term.

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The Daily Telegraph has been told Robinson, who has become an elite coach almost overnight, could now command up to $600,000 a season on the open market.

Sydney Roosters chief operating officer, football, Brian Canavan, wants Robinson for the "long run, not the short run."

And Robinson told The Daily Telegraph on Monday: "I would love to be here as long as possible."

Robinson, a first-year coach who arrived from Catalans, re-wrote history with his side's stunning 26-18 win over Manly in Sunday's Grand Final.

He is under contract for another two years but the Roosters want to discuss a long-term extension.

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There is little doubt that struggling cashed-up clubs will attempt to entice Robinson out of Bondi.

Losing Sonny Bill Williams might be bad enough - the club cannot afford to watch Robinson leave after 2015.

"There's been no discussion at this stage - that's the truth," said Canavan.

"But we want him here for the long run, not the short run.

"He has done exceedingly well and has put a great structure in place.

"Trent and the coaching staff have gelled astounding well."

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Pushed on whether the club wanted Robinson long-term, Canavan said: "Most definitely. He is a quality coach and a quality person."

The last coach to win a premiership in his first year at the Roosters was Ricky Stuart back in 2002.

Roosters management gambled on a rookie coach - and it paid handsome dividends.

"The Roosters is my number one place to coach," Robinson said. "It was my first club out of school and I was an assistant here in 2010 (when the club reached a Grand Final).

"I have also lived in the area my whole adult life. I would love to be here as long as possible."

Asked had he spoken with the club about his future, Robinson said: "Not at all, I haven't spoken to them.

"When I came here I was focused on doing my best and what we did this year was amazing."

Roosters players spoke openly about Robinson's influence this season at Bondi.

"He is up there with the best I have ever been coached by," said Roosters skipper Anthony Minichiello.

Prop Jared Waerea-Hargreaves added: "He is big on getting the team together."

Robinson also helped his club win the club championships and NRL minor premiership.

"It is a remarkable achievement," Canavan said.  


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Price's last ditch bid for Eels job

Parramatta legend Ray Price is keen to coach the Eels. Source: Gregg Porteous / DailyTelegraph

PARRAMATTA'S search for a new coach took an eleventh hour twist on Grand Final day, with Ray Price interviewed for the position that he wants to share with fellow club great Brett Kenny.

A passionate and vocal campaigner, Price fronted a four-man delegation of the Eels board at Parramatta Leagues Club on Sunday.

The premiership-winning warhorse on Monday night said the club needed people in charge who understood Parramatta's culture.

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He wants to take charge with Kenny, who coached the club's NSW Cup feeder side Wentworthville several years ago.

"We need Parramatta people to get Parramatta out of the crap," Price said.

"I sat down with the board for about 90 minutes and they agreed with everything I said.

"It took me a long time to speak to the board, but I kept ringing and ringing and ringing for the opportunity.

"I genuinely believed we had a top eight side this year - we just needed to back our players."

Despite getting the chance to put his case forward, Price is not confident he'll get the job.

Manly assistant Brad Arthur remains the raging hot favourite ahead of Tim Sheens, Steve McNamara and Jason Taylor.

The fact Sheens won't return from Australia's World Cup campaign until December damages his chances, while the current playing squad is backing Arthur - their assistant coach in 2011 and 2012 - to get the job.

The announcement will be made later this week, following a board meeting on Monday night.

"I'm probably a million to one to get the job, even though I've always put my hand up to help them make a difference," Price said.

"I wanted to help with their defence this year, but they were happy with their defence. How can that be?"  


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Super Rugby draw: Five of the best

Kurtley Beale is back for the Waratahs in 2014. Picture: Mark Evans

THE draw for the 2014 Super Rugby season is out - so where and when will Benji Marshall, Kurtley Beale, Quade Cooper and co kick-off their campaigns?

The opening round of the competition - which kicks off on February 15 - is an all-South African affair, with the Cheetahs and Lions opening the new campaign with a clash in Bloemfontein, followed by the Sharks hosting the Bulls (the Stormers start with a bye).

The New Zealand and Australian franchises join in the action the following week, from February 21, with each team playing 16 regular season matches (eight home and eight away, plus 2 byes) before the playoffs begin on July 18. The final will be held on Saturday, August 2.

We take a look at five must-watch matches for the 2014 Super Rugby season.

Crusaders v Chiefs, February 21, AMI Stadium

It might be asking a bit much given it's but we like to think these two sides will be able to replicate their performances from the last time they clashed. That occasion turned out to be the best game of 2013, with the Aaron Cruden-inspired Chiefs edging the Crusaders in an epic semi-final at Waikato Stadium. Adding more spice to this match is the potential return of Sonny Bill Williams to the Chiefs line-up. The dual code star is yet to announce where - and what - he'll be playing next year but Waikato remains a firm possibility. There'll be no Dan Carter for the Crusaders, with the All Blacks superstar set to take a sabbatical that will rule him out of most of the 2014.

Highlanders v Blues, February 22, Forsyth Barr Stadium

Will it be Benji Marshall's rugby union debut? The former Wests Tigers NRL star is poised to kick off his career in the 15-man game in Dunedin - providing he does enough in the pre-season to win selection in the Blues line-up for their opening clash of 2014. Selection in the No.10 jersey would likely see him face off with the Highlanders' 11-Test All Blacks flyhalf Colin Slade. Marshall won't be the only new face in the Blues side, with former All Black Jerome Kaino returning to Auckland after a stint in Japan.

NSW Waratahs v Western Force, February 23, Allianz Stadium

The opening round for the Australian Super Rugby franchises could pit great mates Kurtley Beale and James O'Connor up against each other as the Waratahs host the Force on a Sunday afternoon. That's providing O'Connor ends up signing with the Perth-based club, following the Australian Rugby Union's decision to release the bad boy from his 2013 contract, and not offer him a new one for 2014. Regardless, Beale has returned to NSW from Melbourne and will roll out for the side he started his Super Rugby career with alongside new recruits Jacques Potgieter (Bulls), Jono Lance (Reds) and Nick Phipps (Rebels) as coach Michael Cheika looks to build on the platform laid in 2013.

Queensland Reds v Cheetahs, March 7, Suncorp Stadium

Richard Graham kicks off his career as Queensland Reds coach on the road, with clashes away to the Brumbies and Waratahs in the first two rounds. It's not until Queensland's third game that he'll coach his new side on home soil and this looms as a tough test for the former Western Force boss. South Africa's Cheetahs were the surprise packet of 2013, storming into the playoffs and coming within a sideline conversion of pushing eventual runners-up the Brumbies to extra-time in the opening round of the finals. Attacking ace Willie le Roux has become a star for the Springboks and will lock horns with the Reds' new recruit, former Waratahs and Wallabies winger Lachie Turner in a battle of the speedsters.

Brumbies v Chiefs, April 25, Canberra Stadium

The rematch of this year's Super Rugby final, won by the Chiefs as they successfully defended their 2012 crown. Sonny Bill Williams wouldn't be the only newcomer to this rematch, with one-time Wallaby skipper David Pocock set to be back in action for the Canberra outfit in 2014 after missing most of this year with a serious knee injury. The Brumbies will also have a new face calling the shots on the sidelines, after former World Cup-winning coach Jake White walked out on the club to chase a Test gig. Stephen Larkham and Laurie Fisher are vying for the vacant position.

Opponents for Australia's Super Rugby franchises - each team plays home and away derbies within their own conference, plus the following matches:

Brumbies: Hurricanes (A), Stormers (H), Blues (H), Chiefs (H), Crusaders (A), Sharks (H), Cheetahs (A), Bulls (A)
Force: Highlanders (A), Chiefs (H), Bulls (H), Cheetahs (A), Stormers (A), Lions (H), Crusaders (A), Blues (H)
Rebels: Cheetahs (H), Crusaders (H), Highlanders (A), Chiefs (A), Sharks (H), Hurricanes (H), Lions (A), Bulls (A)
Reds: Cheetahs (H), Sharks (A), Lions (A), Stormers (H), Hurricanes (A), Blues (A), Crusaders (H), Highlanders (H)
Waratahs: Sharks (A), Stormers (A), Bulls (H), Blues (A), Hurricanes (H), Lions (H), Chiefs (A), Highlanders (H)


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Lowndes Top 10: Bathurst 2005

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 06 Oktober 2013 | 20.47

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As Craig Lowndes gears up for his 20th attempt at the Bathurst 1000 next weekend, SPEED is running through his most memorable moments on the Mountain.

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We sat down with the V8 Supercars legend to find out his 10 biggest memories from two decades of racing at Bathurst.


Watch Lowndesy's top five Bathurst moments revealed on our 2013 Bathurst Preview show, 7:30pm EDT on Thursday 10 Oct on SPEED.
(Foxtel Channel 512).


No.9: A wheely big problem, Bathurst 2005

It was a cool morning that greeted the field on the morning of Bathurst 2005, but Lowndes was running hot.

On pole by three tenths of a second, he streeted the field at the start of the race, setting a scorching pace as he built up a solid margin to the rest.

It all turned to dust early, though.

Amid his charge, Lowndes ran the No.888 Falcon slightly too wide on the run up to Reid Park and broke its rear suspension. His Triple Eight crew fixed the car and sent him back out, but the race was lost.

Then, if things couldn't get any worse, one of Dunlop's finest decided it wanted to come along for a ride.

All jokes aside, Lowndes was incredibly lucky not to be seriously injured or killed. Had the wheel struck the car less than a metre to the driver's side ... well ... it doesn't bear thinking about.

CRAIG SAYS...
"We went to Bathurst with great hopes, the car was absolutely magical, it did everything we needed it to.

"Until we got a wheel stuck in the front windscreen..."


Watch Lowndesy's Top Five Bathurst Memories on SPEED's 2013 Bathurst Preview, Thu 10 Oct at 7:30pm EDT (Foxtel Channel 512).


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SKD played 75 mins with broken jaw

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LONG after the gladiators had left the arena, a memento of their toughness remained on the turf.

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It belonged to Roosters centre Shaun Kenny-Dowall. It was one of his rear teeth. It was dislodged around five minutes into the game, on one of his very first hit-ups.

And for the remaining 75 minutes Kenny-Dowall continued.

No-one knew he'd also suffered a fractured jaw, which books the Kiwi centre a place in grand final folklore just beneath the great John Sattler, who played most of the 1970 grand final with the same injury.

Kenny-Dowall's effort was the courageous high point of a bruising encounter that saw centre partner Michael Jennings suffer a possible slipped disc in his neck after scoring a miraculous match-sealing try six minutes from the siren.

Prop Luke O'Donnell also re-tore his hamstring, which had kept him out of last week's grand final qualifier.

But Kenny-Dowall was the story.

Speaking with left side of his face swollen thanks to the injury that could end his World Cup hopes, Kenny-Dowall said he kept the pain a secret to ensure his team was not disadvantaged.

"It happened on one of my first hit ups," he said.

"My whole tooth came out and my mouth kept filling-up with blood.

"I didn't want to tell anyone. I didn't want people to think that I was injured or struggling."

"It was pretty painful."

Kenny-Dowall had to wait until after full-time for relief in the form of a morphine shot.

Asked about the Sattler legend, Kenny-Dowall played a humble hand.

"I would not compare it to him," he said.

"I'm not sure of the scenario. I'll find out in the next couple of days. I just didn't want to let my team mates down."

Kenny-Dowall also played six weeks of the season with rib cartilage damage, recovering from poor form to play a vital role in Sunday night's victory, scoring the second half try which put the Roosters back in front.

Roosters doctor John Orchard said the most likely scenario was a hairline fracture.

"But I somehow don't think he will want to go to hospital over the next couple of days," Orchard said.

Orchard also added that Jennings would require more tests for his neck injury, which could see the NSW Origin sensation scratched from Australia's 24-man World Cup squad.


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Rookie Robbo's year to remember

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A DOZEN weeks into the competition, Roosters coach Trent Robinson was confronted with a question that would define his year: "These blokes are ready to win a premiership ... but am I?"

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Standing in a jubilant Roosters dressing room around 11 o'clock Sunday night - drenched in the type of Gatorade shower that confirmed, yes, he was ready - Robinson spoke about the oddity that is winning an NRL premiership in your debut season.

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Remembering that Brian Smith, the man he replaced only 12 months ago, had gone his entire career without enjoying a moment this unassuming forward with four NRL games, a coach still only 36 for goodness sake, is soaking up right now.

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And when asked the secret, Robinson takes you way back to round 12, to an afternoon where he gathered his staffers and told them, quite simply, they had a team ready to win an NRL premiership.

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"So we knew,'' he recalled, "that we would have to coach well."

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And they did. Despite an the ongoing circus surrounding Sonny Bill Williams, despite the ASADA headlines striking his club, his players, even his brother Dean, Robinson ensuring they persevered just like when he played with a pair of the worst knees God ever cobbled onto an athlete.

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So how does it feel?

"It's not relief because we knew we were ready,'' the coach conceded afterwards. "But it's hard to describe because, a game like that, you dream about it for so long and then someone comes along and says, 'You've won a competition.'

"It's hard to put into words. And there's so many people who put in so much effort. To try to put it all down to a couple of players, or to coaches ... so many people have worked hard, not just this year but over the past few years to get us here."

Despite being gifted a superstar roster that included recruits Williams, Michael Jennings and James Maloney, what really defined Robinson was what he did with, say, the previously anonymous Sam Moa. Or they way he helped halfback Mitchell Pearce overcome his Origin blues.

And by bringing together a team of superstar individuals like few believed he could.

"We copped a bit of a bagging for some of our recruitment,'' Robinson continued. "That star factor, people thought it would take over this side.

"But it didn't matter if it was one of our big signings or a fringe player, everyone bought into the team being most important. People didn't see that for a while.

"I know we're seen as the wealthy club, the high flyers but this win has been built on a foundation of hard work. People see the big plays but we've worked hard for each other all year."


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Roosters triumph in epic finale

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THE Gatorade shower went to Trent Robinson on Sunday night.

It came after two flashes of Sonny Bill Williams brilliance underlined what he means to the Roosters, to the NRL, and what a loss he will be when he more than likely he leaves the NRL to return to rugby union.

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The Roosters are the NRL premiers, underlining the great success stories of Robinson, the Dally M Coach of the Year, and Williams' return to rugby league, and the resurrection of one of the great proud clubs in the game.

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There was a fear ANZ Stadium would fail to be a sellout after South Sydney was eliminated last week.

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In their hope the Rabbitohs would qualify for their first grand final in 42 years Souths fans swamped the box office weeks ago, and when they were eliminated a week ago Souths fans were left not just with the disappointment of the Rabbitohs' exit, but with the bitter after taste that there no two teams now playing the grand final that Rabbitohs fans like less.

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Tickets were said to be going for little more than a song websites the day before the game.

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In the end, 81,491 turned up to watch one of the great grand finals, where the lead changed three times, and each time the leader looked set to go on with it.

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There was a penalty try and another from a forward pass, enough lesser errors to provide a sprinkle of controversy and eternal argument, the Clive Churchill Medal winner was Daly Cherry-Evans, from the losing side, and then there were Williams' twin pieces of magic.

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The first ended directly in a try to Shaun Kenny-Dowall to put the Roosters ahead while the second, a 30m burst up field, indirectly led to one of those freakish efforts that is fast becoming the hallmark of NRL football.

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This time, Michael Jennings chased a loose ball and dived between Brett Stewart and David Williams to gather in the loose ball and touch down and give the Roosters the 26-18 final scoreline.

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With just six minutes left, the premiership was sealed there.

It was a remarkable show of grit and composure from the Roosters.

They went into the game as reigning minor premiers and, better than that, statistically the best in the NRL. In attack and defence.

But they are just numbers, of course.

What you cannot measure are intangibles.

How do you measure courage? Or the steel inside the bones?

Whoever came up with a way to measure experience?

The Sea Eagles ran into the game with 11 survivors from their 2011 premiership. With seven from their 2008 premiership.

In other words, this was a team that knew what it took to get the job done. Week after week Manly has warred through this finals series, tired and injured, and through nothing but their own sheer will found a way to overcome.

They put all that experience to good use in the opening 20 minutes with a blitzkrieg that shocked the minor premiers, and then another shock start to the second half that took the game away.

"We ran away from the fight a bit in the first 20," Robinson said.

"Whereas we've always taken the fight to other teams.

"A few guys got off track and we clawed our way back in."

Manly showed it was nothing less than a team that knew what it took to get the job done. Week after week Sea Eagles warred through this finals series, tired and injured, and through nothing but their own sheer will found a way to overcome.

Three minutes into the second stanza Cherry-Evans found space and as the defence closed he kicked ahead, with Jamie Lyon and  Foran in chase.

Lyon looked set to score when Mitch Aubusson tackled him from behind, denied what looked certain - or could be argued wasn't certain - to be a try.

Referee Shayne Hayne asked the video referee to check for a penalty try, and the green light came on.

It was the first penalty try since Craig Smith was knocked out in the process of scoring by Jamie Ainscough in the 1999 decider, when Melbourne beat St George Illawarra.

It all held together until the final 20 minutes, when Manly led 18-8 and the Roosters faced their moment.

"It got to 18-8 and we had a choice there," Robinson said, saying later, "We weren't going to get a try before we worked out how to stay calm and get back on track."

It was simple, really.

With skipper Anthony Minichiello whispering calm words in their ears, the Roosters cut out the gravity and reward at stake and focused on their processes.

It sounds so boring, but it was all the difference.

Normally, just a quick look over the formguide would have shown the Sea Eagles would have had what was an unassailable lead, given the strength of their defence.

As was pointed out more than once, the Sea Eagles had conceded only two tries their previous two games, and both came from kicks. In other words, their opponents had to go over them because they couldn't go through them.

"They finished way too strong for us," coach Geoff Toovey said.

With the fresher legs, though, the Roosters started punching holes in them, showing the quality of their football side.

Far from being ruffled by Manly's early intent, the Roosters showed their cool nerve and, rather than forcing their game, went back to their structures and applied themselves.

And so back they came, showing they had some intangibles themselves.

SYDNEY ROOSTERS 26 (A Guerra M Jennings S Kenny-Dowall D Tupou tries J Maloney 5 goals) bt MANLY 18 (J Lyon S Matai J Taufua tries J Lyon 3 goals) at ANZ Stadium. Referee: Shayne Hayne, Ben Cummins. Crowd: 81,491.

***

Re-live the action in the blog below
 


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Raw deal for Hawks losing Buddy

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 05 Oktober 2013 | 20.47

Lance Franklin and soon-to-be Sydney teammate Adam Goodes show their true colours. Picture: Phil Hillyard Source: Philip Hillyard / HeraldSun

LANCE Franklin's manager says Hawthorn's compensation for losing its champion forward is grossly "inadequate".

With the premier having lost its six-time leading goalkicker, 2008 club champion and dual Coleman Medal winner at 26, Liam Pickering said he "felt for the Hawks" when Franklin agreed to join Sydney this week.

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Pickering said yesterday an end-of-first-round pick for Hawthorn — currently 19 after Collingwood lost free agent Dale Thomas to Carlton, for whom the Magpies could be compensated by pick No.12 — wasn't fair.

"The worst part (of the deal) is the lack of compensation Hawthorn is going to get through free agency," Pickering told SEN.

"They should get two first-round picks for Buddy Franklin, we all know that.

"The system is wrong. Pick (19) is inadequate for Buddy Franklin ... especially if you benchmark it against 'Daisy' Thomas.

"Dale Thomas shouldn't be anywhere near as valuable as Buddy, he's barely played for two years."

But Pickering stressed he and Franklin had only played within the existing rules.

He also said the veil of secrecy that surrounded the champion's Sydney deal was necessary to keep it from blowing apart.

Pickering kept one of footy's great secrets for almost a year until the Swans' nine-year, $10 million offer was brought into the public arena on Monday.

One day later — and only three days after Hawthorn's premiership party began — the AFL's most recent century goalkicker stunned the footy world by accepting the offer when most, including Greater Western Sydney, thought he would become a Giant.

"It probably blindsided the Giants and the Hawks, I understand that and that they'll be disappointed," Pickering said.

"But to get him there (Sydney), if that had leaked out earlier than it did, it wouldn't have got done. That's just the reality of it. We had to keep it tight.

"It had to be a keep-it-on-the-quiet type deal, because my view is that if had got out, it would have got stopped before it got put together."

Pickering said he was "very confident" the deal would be ratified by the AFL's investigators who are expected to give it the all-clear tomorrow.

"I was more than happy to tell them what happened," he said.

"It's pretty straightforward. The money is in the (Swans') cap, there's no third-party deal, there's no skulduggery."

"They just check the bona fides of the deal. They're going to do that with every big deal now — I'm assuming they'll do that with Dale Thomas."

Despite his secrecy, Pickering said he'd told both the Giants and Hawks through negotiations not to "put their eggs in one basket".

"I made it really clear all year ... Buddy knew the offers, he just didn't want to talk about it.

"Last week he just wanted to play in the Grand Final and play well. It wasn't a massive focus, but it did turn around pretty quickly after that."

FRANKLIN is expected to be announced this week as captain of the Indigenous All Stars team to tour Ireland later in the month.

The All Stars will gather in Melbourne later this week for a training run, before flying out on Saturday for two International Rules Tests - in Cavan on October 19 and at Dublin's Croke Park on October 26.

Franklin believes his 10-year contract with the Swans will be approved by the AFL before he joins the touring party.

The AFL recently named a 33-man squad for the tour, including Swans Adam Goodes, Lewis Jetta and Tony Armstrong. Franklin's premiership teammates Shaun Burgoyne and Brad Hill are also in the squad.

At the time Franklin said he expected the series to be "an unbelievable experience'' and "something we'll never forget''.

"The AFL's really backed us (indigenous footballers) in terms of this tour, so we're looking forward to getting over to Ireland," Franklin said.

The Irish team will be captained by Donegal skipper Michael Murphy, who has attracted interest from several AFL clubs in recent years.

Murphy played in the 2010 and 2011 series against Australia, and also toured Australia for international Rules series as a junior.

The Australian team will be coached by former Swans forward Mick O'Loughlin, while the Irish team will be under the guidance of former Gaelic star Paul Earley, who was the first Irish recruit to play Australian football, with one game for Melbourne in 1984.

with Warwick Green


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Nadal returns to world No.1

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RAFAEL Nadal will return to No.1 in the world rankings for the first time since July 2011, after his semi-final opponent Tomas Berdych retired injured on Saturday at the China Open.

Nadal only needed to make the final in Beijing to edge ahead of Novak Djokovic in the new rankings, which will be announced on Monday.

The Spaniard was a break up at 4-2 in the opening set when Czech Berdych retired soon after taking an injury timeout.

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Nadal has enjoyed a remarkable season, returning from injury to dominate the hardcourt tournaments with a win-loss record of 27-0.

Djokovic, who has topped the rankings for 101 weeks, plays Richard Gasquet of France in the other semi-final later on Saturday.

Nadal, sidelined for the second half of last year with a knee injury, has finished the season as No.1 twice before, in 2008 and 2010, and is unbeaten since crashing out of Wimbledon in the first round in June.

The 27-year-old, tipped to eclipse Roger Federer's record of 17 grand slam titles, has won 10 ATP World Tour titles in 2013. 

In the women's semis, top-ranked Serena Williams will play Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland and Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic takes on Serbia's Jelena Jankovic.


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