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Saints deny Watters extension

Written By Unknown on Senin, 14 Oktober 2013 | 20.47

St Kilda coach Scott Watters has been refused a contract extension. Picture: Jason Sammon Source: Jason Sammon / HeraldSun

ST KILDA coach Scott Watters will coach for his future early next season after the Saints backed out of a proposed contract extension.

The decision not to offer Watters a new contract before Round 1 came after an official review of the club also backed the authority of head of football Chris Pelchen.

The review stated both Watters and Pelchen would remain at the club next year, but the Saints board won't consider a deal into well into next season.

It is a massive blow for Watters, who was eager for the security of a contract extension given more hard times ahead for the Saints next year.

Both Pelchen and departing chief executive Michael Nettlefold had publicly stated Watters would receive an extension over the off-season.

But it is understood the club does not believe it is in a position to extend his deal given the uncertainty at the club.

Now Watters will need early wins as well an increased focus on harmony in the football department if he is to save his career.

Pelchen has already forecast another tough season on-field next year as the club rebuilds its list, meaning Watters will come under searing pressure early in the season.

St Kilda has had to deal with continued controversies in recent weeks, with Pelchen and Watters at odds, the players involved in a dwarf-lighting furore, and the list in a rebuild mode.

Watters was seen to totally take over the club's running in the last six weeks of the year, taking control of training and team selection.

But former Hawthorn list manager Pelchen will be given the power to control the football department and ensure proper delegation across the team of assistant coaches.

Pelchen had indicated Watters was likely to get a contract extension as recently as July.

"Obviously Scott is contracted until the end of 2014 and the club is pleased with the progress in his first 18 months as coach," Pelchen said.

"As you would expect, any discussion about Scott's contract is a matter for the board in due course."

Nettlefold was just as adamant the deal would be forthcoming in recent months.

"He'd be keen to get an extension to his contract, we've got a young group coming through and it's something the board will consider in due course," Nettlefold said.

"It's something that we'll work on over the next couple of months. It really depends on workloads, these things need a fair bit of work."

St Kilda will employ the services of former AFLPA and Geelong consultant Pippa Grange and her Bluestone Edge team next year.

Like Leading Teams, the company deals with "culture, ethics and leadership", with the understanding that the Saints have significant ground to make up in all those areas.

The decision not to provide Watters security means the former Pies assistant will face scrutiny from the first round of next year.

He will do that despite the club trading off former top ten draft pick Ben McEvoy, with Nick Dal Santo still a strong chance to get to North Melbourne as a free agent.


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Summers: Saints must work together

St Kilda president Peters Summers flanked by Port Adelaide chairman David Koch and Hawthorn supremo Andrew Newbold. Picture: Tim Carrafa Source: Tim Carrafa / HeraldSun

ST KILDA president Peter Summers knows there are issues at his football club.

From Scott Watters' contract talk, to the unease between Watters and football boss Chris Pelchen, to the scuttlebutt about the trading seasoned stars, to membership, to finances, to list management and to dealing with life in 2013 as a bottom-three club as compared to 2010 when they played off in two Grand Finals.

It's why the club's vision statement to be presented this week to the board -- on the back of a fierce club review -- is the foundation for the future and, hopefully, good times ahead.

"There's been this perception we've had a couple of those crises, but from my point we need to get the right blueprint in place," Summers said yesterday.

"What has been portrayed as everything up for grabs, that's not really what it is. This isn't about survival.

"I wanted to make sure the club -- and that's why I was pretty strong on the vision statement -- that everyone from bottom up is aware of what our targets are going forward and how we're going to get there."

He hopes the vision statement will be presented to the board on Thursday and then that meeting would be rolled into a secondary meeting where the statement is discussed in-depth with senior staff, including the coach.

Summers is a new president, but he's also a realist, meticulous, a goalsetter and not one to back away from a tough topic.

He knows there is unease between Watters and Pelchen.

He also knows the two work well together in list management, but that there's issues surrounding the execution of Pelchen's role at the club.

He also knows other staff find the relationship between Watters and Pelchen is unsettling.

How significant is the issue?

Summers: "Significant. And identified. But I honestly think there has been too much made of it. We've had some tension in the place, you don't mind some tension because it's an indication of active successful people, but there just can't be too much.''

How do you fix it?

Summers: "Like most things in life when you have a problem it's called communication."

Watters' contract extension has been talking point, but Summers can't understand why.

"I found the whole thing around Scott's extension the wrong way round, it's been seen as an uncertainty (his future), but it's got nothing to do with it," he said.

"I can't see how you can put a contract extension to somebody, whether it be one year, two years, five years, how would you put that to them until they see where you are taking the list management. How could you put that to them until they see the whole structure you're trying to achieve at the club over that period?

"I can't see how you can do it ... Because you'd be buying into it for your own reasons and not club reasons."

This season, the Saints finished 16th with a 5-17 win-loss record.

Summers said it was "one of those years you had to go through to get a better consensus on where you're heading".

"As a club, we are very anxious and anxious people tend to act in a negative way, anxious people want to hide, get scared, they go to ground, and what I'm trying to do through this vision statement is to empower and encourage people to lift themselves out of that,'' Summers said.

"The worst thing in life is not to have a go."

It's not all doom and gloom, he said. Nine debutants this year was a major plus, for example, and while not wanting to discuss the contents of the vision statement, he was confident in its depth.

"Having done the review, we can be pretty strong in our reviews, we set our targets, debate them and, most importantly, own them,'' he said.


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Victory prepares for Ange exit

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MELBOURNE Victory is preparing for life after Ange Postecoglou with the coach emerging as the favourite to take over the Socceroos post.

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The Herald Sun understands that Victory has been made aware of Football Federation Australia's interest in the 48-year-old and discussions have taken place at Victory about a succession plan.

While Postecoglou has firmed the possibility remains that an outstanding overseas candidate comes into contention with FFA chief executive David Gallop and board member Phil Wolanski being bombarded with some interest overseas candidates.

Gallop and Wolanski are still talking with overseas options as the Socceroos prepare to play Canada in a friendly tomorrow in London.

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Guus Hiddink remains the preferred overseas candidate but his interest in returning to Australia is lukewarm at best while it's understood Central Coast coach Graham Arnold was informally contacted before the France game.

Victory is unlikely to seek compensation for Postecoglou, who has two years of a $500,000-a-year deal left, but want him to continue on in a dual role for the rest of the season before taking sole charge of the Socceroos in May, a month out from the 2014 World Cup.

FFA would prefer Postecoglou's sole focus was the Socceroos but aware of his importance to Victory who are aiming to win the A-League title and advance past the group stage of the Asian Champions League.

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The governing body may be willing to compromise on a transitional dual-role before someone else takes over the Victory role for the tail-end of this season. Assistant Kevin Muscat would be frontrunner to take over.

Victory chief executive Robson said FFA had made no approach for Postecoglou and refused to speculate

"We haven't had an approach. We appreciate that there is a lot of interest surrounding Ange and possible links to the vacant Socceroos coaching position but we haven't had any formal conversations with the FFA about it," Robson said.

"It's the FFA's process and until and unless anything changes we're just going to continue with our plans and remain focused on achieving success next year.

"It's not for me to pre-judge or second guess what they may or may not do. But we appreciate that there's a lot of media interest that has surrounded Ange and speculation would suggest that he's in their thinking but it's not something that we can control and certainly not something we're aware of in a formal sense."

FFA is aiming to appoint Holger Osieck's replacement before November when the Socceroos are likely to play two friendlies.

Plans to play Ireland twice in Australia have fallen through and now there's a possibility that the games could be played abroad.  


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Fifita misses honeymoon for Cup

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IT'S not the honeymoon Andrew Fifita imagined but at least the ­giant Kangaroos prop could see the funny side of it all.

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Fifita married Nikkita on Sunday, then returned to camp on Monday to crack jokes with Jarryd Hayne before flying out for the World Cup.

"It is exciting but tough," Fifita said from Sydney Airport as the squad waited for their flight to Manchester.

"I just got married and we were meant to go on our honeymoon with the entire family today to Hawaii."

The 24-year-old prop wasn't even considered a rough hope at the start of the year to make the Australian squad — but after a barnstorming season for Cronulla he was named Dally M prop of the year and is now pushing for ­selection for the first Test against ­England on October 26.

"I even offered to stay home with my family," Fifita said.

"I said to them, 'I want to do what is best for us'.

"And she said she wanted me to follow that dream of mine.

"I am not with them at the moment but they will be on my mind 24/7 and that is all I do when I play footy, think about my family.

"That is all I want to do."

And he's not on his own there. Billy Slater is no new kid on the block anymore with these big end-of-season trips but he admits saying goodbye to his wife and kids never gets any easier.

"Yeah, it's pretty tough," Slater said.

"And a lot of the boys have got kids.

"Usually we go over for I think a five-week stint but this one is seven and a half weeks before we get home, so it's pretty tough on the little ones and wives that stay back here.

"But that is what we do.

"We just have to get over there and get on with things.

"Obviously with the technology these days you can Skype your families back home, which is great.

"But we are over there to do a job for our nation and whenever we get the chance to play for our country it is pretty special. I just went away for a little bit with the family.

"I would have found it tough if I had to keep playing and then go straight away.

"Homesickness is probably the biggest factor, missing your family.

"We have just been through a winter here and we're going to the winter over there.

"They are the little factors, but we are over there with a good bunch of fellas and we are having a good time.

"We are playing footy and we are doing what we love.

"At the end of the day, it's not that hard."


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Gumby impresses Dockers

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 13 Oktober 2013 | 20.47

Essendon forward Scott Gumbleton could be headed to Fremantle. Picture: George Salpigtidis Source: George Salpigtidis / HeraldSun

ESSENDON will insist on Fremantle's second-round pick for Scott Gumbleton, but has all but given up the chase for Saint Leigh Montana.

Speculation was rife at the weekend Essendon was on the verge of securing the 29-year-old Montagna as the Saints embark on an aggressive list rebuild.

But the Bombers are unable to put forward a satisfactory trade deal to the Saints, who have put a premium value on their experienced players.

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Despite rumblings about player discontent at Seaford, Montagna is expected to remain a Saint.

Instead, Essendon is expected to deal key forward Stewart Crameri to Western Bulldogs for pick 22 and marking target Gumbleton to the Dockers, most likely for pick 33.

But Port Adelaide, which has pick No.30, and Adelaide have also expressed strong interest in Gumbleton and could yet pip the Dockers.

The picks would give the Bombers a strong position in the second round of the draft after being stripped of their first two selections as part of the supplement scandal penalty.

Former Cat Paul Chapman is also set to rejoin former coach Mark Thompson at Windy Hill, although negotiations are ongoing.

Carlton has given up hope of landing Chapman, 31.

Gumbleton, a former No.2 draft pick whose career has been dogged by serious back and hamstring problems, is understood to have easily passed his medical test at Fremantle last week.

He has played only 35 games in seven years at Essendon, but is adamant his injury issues are in the past after completing last season fully fit.

Gumbleton, 25, is from Western Australia and wants to find a new home after slipping down the pecking order of key forwards under James Hird.

An athletic and hard-running key forward, Gumbleton would bolster a Dockers forward line already featuring Matthew Pavlich, Chris Mayne and Hayden Ballantyne.

Adelaide does not have a selection before No.42 to use for Gumbleton, but the Crows are trying to gain a top-30 pick by dealing Bernie Vince to Melbourne.

Essendon will look to promote Joe Daniher to a regular full-forward position next year after het cut his teeth in the VFL for the bulk of his first season.


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Dundeel Baker's greatest test

Murray Baker, track rider Emily Murphy and It's A Dundeel. Source: Jay Town / News Limited

MURRAY Baker faces the training test of his career with It's A Dundeel but learned at Matamata on Saturday that anything is possible.

Baker ran a home-bred horse he described as one of the slowest he had trained. "Useless, it is,'' he said.

Baker's wife told him she was keen to plonk $50 each-way on it and Baker told her she was mad.

"It got up and paid $9, won by a neck,'' he said. "The missus was filthy on me because I talked her out of backing it. I guess is shows anything can happen.''

It's A Dundeel is the best and fastest horse Baker has trained, yet It's A Dundeel presents the great trainer with a task not dissimilar to the one achieved at Matamata.

It's A Dundeel suffered a hoof abscess last week and missed two day's work. More crucially, he missed last Saturday's Caulfield Stakes clash with Atlantic Jewel, the champion mare he'd nosed out in the Underwood Stakes.

The hoof has healed but Baker now finds himself in a race against time to have It's A Dundeel fit to take on an ominously in form Atlantic Jewel in Saturday week's Cox Plate.

One corporate bookmaker last week described the task, of recovering from injury and beating one of the all-time great mares, as near-impossible.

Its a Dundeel finishes 2nd in the Mitchelton Wines Vase Source: News Limited

Baker concedes the task is difficult but refuses to hoist the white flag.

"We've only missed two day's work but missing the race was the real concern,'' Baker said.

"But he's a naturally athletic type of horse and we think he's a chance of making it.''

Baker will arrive from New Zealand tomorrow and will gallop It's A Dundeel between races at Caulfield on Wednesday.

He will give the champion a strong hit-out at Moonee Valley's Breakfast With The Stars gallops on the Tuesday before the Cox Plate.

"Galloping at Caulfield and at the Valley are race simulation type experiences, with the crowds and all that, and I think they will really benefit him,'' he said.

Baker said Atlantic Jewel's romping win in the Caulfield Stakes was a jolting reminder of the task he and It's A Dundeel now faced.

"The mare was absolutely awesome. It's hard to say if she was better on the day than when we beat her but she was awesome just the same,'' he said.


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$20m fear drove Osieck sacking

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FEARS over a vital $20m of income for Australian football were a major factor behind the sacking of Holger Osieck, with football chiefs growing increasingly alarmed at the damage to the game's bottom line from the dual drubbings from Brazil and France.

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As the Australian team decamped in shock from Paris to London for the friendly with Canada on Wednesday morning, CVs from around the world have started arriving at Football Federation Australia.

The extent of former France boss Gerard Houllier's influence has also become clear in finding Osieck's replacement, with Houllier believed to have provided a list of names yesterday of potential candidates.

Though Osieck's sacking will cost FFA some $900,000, to satisfy a contract described as "watertight" thanks to World Cup qualification, CEO David Gallop believes it will be a necessary outlay in the wake of the 6-0 massacre handed out by France early on Saturday. 

Gallop's executives feared a double financial whammy if the poor results had continued - acutely aware of the need for Australia to do well on home shores at the 2015 Asian Cup to make it a success, FFA has so far also made no significant headway in seeking a new sponsor for the Socceroos. 

Some $14m worth of tickets have to be sold for the Asian Cup to make a profit, with more than half that anticipated from Socceroos games.

Increasingly FFA feared that Osieck would depart after the World Cup leaving behind a broken and dispirited squad that would make no impact at the Asian Cup, and leave millions of dollars worth of unsold tickets.

Any profits for the tournament will be shared between FFA and the state governments that have underwritten it, but it is also seen as an unprecedented opportunity to advance the game's popularity and standing.

FFA has also been seeking a new naming-rights sponsor for their flagship team since the long-standing deal with Qantas expired in July but the poor recent results threatened to devalue the deal Gallop is seeking of up to $5m.

Now the hunt is on for a coach who can make the team as competitive as possible at the World Cup and then the Asian Cup.

Having been pursued at length by Frank Lowy to succeed Hiddink in 2006, Houllier has remained close to FFA director Phil Wolanski since then.

Wolanski, the Socceroos head of delegation at all matches and regarded as Lowy's closest confidant outside his direct family, was given a list of names on Saturday by Houllier which is understood to include Frenchman Alain Perrin.

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Having succeeded Houllier at French club Lyon, Perrin was a serious candidate to coach France in 2008, but has since been working in the Middle East.

Former Chelsea boss Roberto Di Matteo has also made his interest known, but is not thought to be a favoured candidate.

Gallop is believed to strongly favour a local candidate, with Ange Postecoglou firming as the favourite ahead of Graham Arnold.

In the immediate term the Australian squad – described by Gallop as "raw" after Osieck's sacking, will be coached by assistant Aurelio Vidmar against Canada but suffered fresh depletion of its numbers yesterday.

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Luke Wilkshire and Tommy Oar were released to return to their clubs for treatment. Wilkshire managed 70 minutes of the loss to France despite a persistent knee injury but will now fly back to Russia for treatment at his club Dinamo Moscow.

Oar meanwhile, having been ruled out of the France game with a back injury, was also declared unfit to face Canada and immediately returned to his club, FC Utrecht.


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The Barometer: AFL trades edition

St Kilda is making it hard for Nick Dal Santo to leave. Picture: Wayne Ludbey Source: Wayne Ludbey / HeraldSun

WITH the AFL Grand Final out of the way, the time has come for player managers and recruiters to broker deals for 2014 and beyond.

Key dates:

Friday 18 October at 5pm: Free agency trade period closes.
Monday 21 October: AFL restricted free agency matching offer three-day period ends.
Friday 25 October at 2pm: AFL Trade period closes.

Department of Trades

ADELAIDE

THE Crows are locked in a battle with arch-rivals Port Adelaide to secure homesick Brisbane midfielder Jared Polec. Club champion Bernie Vince is also on the market with the at-times inconsistent midfielder keen to test the market - Melbourne into him. Shaun McKernan will continue in his quest to return to Victoria with St Kilda among his suitors.

BRISBANE

BILLY Longer's bid to land at Hawthorn hit a snag last week when the premiers signed Ben McEvoy from St Kilda. Unlike a couple of his Lions teammates, Longer is open to staying at the club should a deal not get done. Jared Polec prospects hang in the balance with both South Australian clubs keen to secure his services. Sam Docherty is poised to sign a deal to join Carlton while, Elliot Yeo's move to West Coast should also get done now Eagles coach Adam Simpson has settled in his new role. Patrick Karnezis is yet to find a new home. Meanwhile, Lions champion Simon Black is yet to announce whether he plans to play on in 2014.

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CARLTON

DALE Thomas ended months of speculation last week when he signed to Carlton as a free agent. Thomas will be looking to reignite his career stalled by nagging ankle problems. The Blues remain in the hunt for James Podsiadly and Scott Gumbleton, although Fremantle is in the box seat to sign the Bomber. Jeremy Laidler has attracted some interest, while veteran defender Heath Scotland is yet to decide on whether he wants to play on in 2014. The Blues have withdrawn from the race for Paul Chapman, but are poised to sign disgruntled Lion Sam Docherty.

17/05/2013 SPORT: Collingwood training at Olympic Park, Heath Shaw doing laps before training Source: News Limited

COLLINGWOOD

THE Magpies are waiting on Heath Shaw to decide which club he would like to be traded to - Geelong and GWS Giants the likely destinations. Once that's sorted, the Magpies can move on Giants midfielder Taylor Adams (Geelong also interested), Sydney utility Jesse White and Adelaide swingman Ricky Henderson. Delisted Magpie Darren Jolly has attracted interest from St Kilda.

Follow Gilbert Gardiner on Twitter: @gilbertgardiner

ESSENDON

STEWART Crameri has had his move to the Western Bulldogs blocked - for the time being - with the Bombers turning their nose up on a swap for pick no.22 in the national draft. Scott Gumbleton will more than likely head to Fremantle. David Myers - a 'required' player according to Essendon's footy department - has been linked to St Kilda and Melbourne, while the Bombers are best-placed to ink Paul Chapman.

FREMANTLE

THE Dockers recruitment plan is a simple one, find a key forward. Scott Gumbleton is club's first choice to help Matthew Pavlich and Chris Mayne in 2014. Out-of-favour midfielder Viv Michie is set on a return to Victoria while Fremantle is also in the race with West Coast to sign Hawk Xavier Ellis.

Joel Corey in action for the Cats. Picture: Michael Klein Source: HeraldSun

GEELONG

JOEL Corey retired last week, the third premiership Cat to part ways with the club recently following the delisting of Paul Chapman and James Podsiadly. Three clubs including Essendon are into Chapman while Travis Varcoe remains on the trade table. Trent West is also considering his options.

GOLD COAST

IT'S fairly quiet up north with the Suns keeping their powder dry during the trade period. Top draft pick David Swallow was linked to Melbourne briefly as part of deal involving pick two. The Suns' list is ticking over nicely and with three picks inside the top 23 the future is bright on the coast.

GREATER WESTERN SYDNEY

HEATH Shaw is due back from holidays late in the week when is expected the rebounding defender will nominate his club of choice. GWS is well-placed to sign him on a lucrative deal. Get the feeling Shaw's move will trigger Giant Taylor Adams' move to Geelong or Collingwood. As yet no trade has been achieved with bitter rivals Sydney to finalise Shane Mumford's move. Josh Bruce to St Kilda is as good as done.

Hawthorn recruit Ben McEvoy has his hands full countering West Coast ruckman Nic Naitanui. Picture: Wayne Ludbey Source: HeraldSun

HAWTHORN

THEY'VE done it again. Last year it was Brian Lake who signed with Hawthorn before going on to win a premiership and Norm Smith medal. This time around it was Ben McEvoy who crossed from St Kilda to Hawthorn following Hawk Max Bailey's retirement. Shane Savage parted ways with Hawthorn as part of the McEvoy deal. Brisbane ruckman Billy Longer remains hopeful of landing at Hawthorn, although given the club's wealth of talls a trade is unlikely.

MELBOURNE

PICK No.2 was on the table and it attracted little interest from rival clubs and players alike. Melbourne confirmed it had sought out Brisbane star Tom Rockliff - who was simply not interested. Adelaide midfielder Rory Sloane was also considered before the Demons lowered the bar somewhat sounding out Crows Bernie Vince and Jarryd Lyons. Bulldogs veteran Daniel Cross has also been linked to the Demons.

St Kilda midfielder Nick Dal Santo is still looking for a new home. Source: News Limited

NORTH MELBOURNE

NORTH is locked in a battle with St Kilda for star midfielder Nick Dal Santo. The Kangaroos would prefer Dal Santo signs as a free agent, whereas the Saints are after picks. The Kangaroos' first available pick is 26 after setting aside pick no.8 for exciting father-son prospect Luke McDonald. North Melbourne defender Luke Delaney will almost certainly call St Kilda/Seaford home next season. Kangaroos Liam Anthony - keen on a move west - and Jordan Gysberts are looking for greater opportunities elsewhere.

PORT ADELAIDE

ALBERTON has gone Jared Polec mad in recent weeks with the Power wrangling to secure the disgruntled Lion - the problem being no one wants out or a trade to Brisbane. Making matters worse, the Power have all but resigned themselves to missing out on a key forward with James Podsiadly (Carlton/Western Bulldogs/Fremantle) and Scott Gumbleton (Fremantle) fielding rival offers.

RICHMOND

GET the feeling Richmond has its cue in the trades rack after a hectic start saw Matt White (off to Port Adelaide) and Shaun Hampson's arrival from Carlton. The Tigers don't have any salary cap room to make a big play following a series of re-signings including Dustin Martin, Reece Conca and Jack Riewoldt. Richmond is not interested in Paul Chapman.

ST KILDA

THE Saints caught us all by surprise off-loading No.1 ruckman and future captain Ben McEvoy for Hawk Shane Savage and an exchange of picks. The Saints revealed last week their plan was to secure three draft picks inside the top 20 - a bold move aimed at fast-tracking the club's rebuild. Sam Fisher could be traded to Greater Western Sydney while Leigh Montagna's name keeps bobbing up as trade bait - would be very surprised if he was to go. St Kilda blocked Zac Clarke's move to Port Adelaide after losing McEvoy and remain locked in a tussle with North Melbourne over Nick Dal Santo. The Saints have also been linked with delisted Magpie Darren Jolly to replace McEvoy.

Lance Franklin in his new colours. Picture: Phil Hillyard Source: DailyTelegraph

SYDNEY

BUDDY is signed, sealed and now delivered. Life is good, he's got a pad at Bondi and has shacked up with former Miss Universe Australia Jesinta Campbell. Not a lot of movement elsewhere with a trade for ruckman Shane Mumford expected to get done this week.

WEST COAST

IT'S been fairly quiet out west as new coach Adam Simpson settles in the hot seat. Simpson hired former Kangaroos teammate Brady Rawlings as an assistant last week too. Out-of-favour Lions backman Elliot Yeo's transfer could be finalised this week. Meanwhile, the Eagles were quick to stamp out suggestions Luke Shuey was considering a move back to Victoria.

WESTERN BULLDOGS

THE Bulldogs want Stewart Crameri. And Stewart Crameri wants to go to the Bulldogs. But Essendon refuses to let the forward go without getting something good in return. The Bulldogs best offer (pick 22) for Crameri was rejected at Windy Hill. Regardless, Crameri will find his way to the Whitten Oval, even if it means entering the pre-season draft. Jarrad Grant was thrown up as possible trade bait last week with Brisbane most interested, meanwhile Dylan Addison remains on the market.


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Barba puts image ahead of cash

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 12 Oktober 2013 | 20.47

Ben Barba passes the ball in one of his last games for the Bulldogs. Source: Peter Wallis / DailyTelegraph

BEN Barba's off-field issues have cost him at least $20,000 with the former Dally M winner knocking back an approach to pull on the gloves in the Fight For Life boxing event later this year.

Organisers of the popular fight night, which sees rugby league's best pugilists take on rugby union stars from New Zealand, were confident of signing Barba onto an all-star card that will include Manly hit man Steve Matai, Test forward Sam Thaiday, Cronulla duo Todd Carney and Paul Gallen and New Zealand Warriors forward Russell Packer.

But in light of his controversial departure from the Bulldogs and allegations of domestic violence, Barba's management declined the offer last Thursday.

It's undoubtedly a smart move given the damaging headlines the Brisbane Broncos recruit has attracted this year.

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This year's Fight for Life event will be held on December 14 in Auckland with the inclusion of Matai to the card for the first time causing organisers a few early headaches.

Such is the fearsome playing style that the Sea Eagles centre has displayed throughout his career, organisers have struggled to find a rugby star willing to take him on.

They could do worse than ask Parramatta's Mitchell Allgood, who traded blows with Matai this season, to step into the ring for an official re-match.

The Fight For Life event is promoted and run by Dean Lonergan and David Higgins, the same duo responsible for organising next year's inaugural NRL Auckland Nines tournament.

***

THE search for a red-blooded Aussie male that brushes his own Buck's Day is over.

Pointing to his loyalty to the green and gold, Australia's World Cup debutant Andrew Fifita was forced to pull out of his own version of the Hangover last week.

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But that didn't stop Fifita's mates who stuck to the tour itinerary and flew to the Gold Coast without the Buck, who was busy meeting his new Aussie team-mates and being fitted into his green and gold blazer in Sydney.

Fifita admitted it was a call that no groom wants to make, but added his stellar 2013 season had been built on sacrifice.

"After a lot of hard work, this year has been a dream come true. Chosen for NSW, finals footy with Cronulla, Dally M Prop of the Year, World Cup selection and now getting married," Fifita said.

"I'm thinking of getting 2013 as a tattoo."

Fifita will marry his partner Nikkita today before flying out tomorrow to the UK with the Kangaroos.  


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Ponting reveals doubts about Clarke

Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke during Ponting's farewell series in 2012. Source: AAP

IN this exclusive extract from Ricky Ponting's new autobiography, 'At The Close Of Play', the former Australia captain reveals the serious concerns he had about Michael Clarke's personality within the national team.

Ahmedabad, the early hours of Friday, March 25, 2011

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I'D MADE A CENTURY, but the team had lost and it was hard to sleep because as much as I tried to stop the thought going through my mind I just knew it was the end. I decided to resign as Australia's Test and one-day captain after the quarter-final, not before.

The game had been on a Thursday and we didn't get back to the hotel until late. It was always hard to shut off after a game and a tournament, but never this hard.

Don't decide until the morning, I told myself.

I kept thinking about where I and the team were at. Three facts kept coming up: (1) this World Cup hasn't gone as we'd hoped; (2) I haven't got that long left in the game; and (3) the team's next big assignments are a fair way down the track.

The last one was the clincher. I couldn't hang on, even for another fortnight. It was the right time to give the next guy an opportunity.

I remembered how I'd been introduced to the captaincy: first, in one-day cricket and then two years later in Tests. This wouldn't be quite the same, but we did have a short ODI series in Bangladesh due to start in a couple of weeks.

The next Test series would be in Sri Lanka in August-September. The next big one-day tournament would be the ICC Champions Trophy in 2013, the same year we were due back in England to fight again for the Ashes.

This is not to say that standing down as captain was easy. It had been my life for so long. I was quitting arguably the most prestigious job in Australian sport.

Only 43 people had led Australia in a Test match. It would have been nice to be departing on the shoulders of my team-mates, victorious, rather than at a press conference after a defeat. One comfort was that it was totally my decision.

No one had knifed me; instead, a number of people tried to talk me out of it. Tim Nielsen thought it was vital I stayed in the job for as long as I could while the team was developing.

Senior figures from Cricket Australia contacted my manager, James Henderson, who had been looking after me since 2007, straight after the quarter-final to say, 'Don't let Ricky make any stupid decisions. At least make him hold fire until after the games in Bangladesh.'

But my mind was made up.

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I can honestly say that I had never considered stepping down before this - not after Cricket Australia let us down in 2007-08, or after we lost to South Africa at home in 2008-09, or after the Ashes in 2009, or even after the Ashes in 2010-11.

With that last one, I'd resolved to give the World Cup my best shot and then I'd contemplate the future. Throughout this period I always believed I was the best man for the job. In the aftermath of this decision, I wondered if most cricket captains have a shelf-life, that after a few years in the position it becomes increasingly difficult to keep things fresh, to keep challenging the players in different ways.

Maybe the twin pressures of leading a team that wasn't winning and scoring runs at No. 3 wore me down more than I was prepared to acknowledge at the time. Spending more than a day in the field and then, straight away, padding up and going out to bat never got easier, but I didn't want to move down the order. Not while I was captain.

No two situations are ever the same. In my case, whenever the Australian team I was leading was struggling, I knew my obligation was to be a better leader and a better player, for the team's sake not just my own.

If, during the toughest of times, I'd felt there was an alternative captain I would have stepped away, but I never felt there was anyone else who could do the job better than me. The people who appointed me thought the same. I couldn't walk away. That would have been the wrong thing to do.

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I rang Michael Clarke on the morning I made the announcement I was stepping down. We'd been back in Sydney just a couple of days and I was on my way to the SCG for the media conference.

It was only a brief chat, but a good one.

It was true that I'd been a little disappointed with some of the things he'd done - or more accurately, hadn't done - as vice-captain, but I was now comfortable with the idea of him taking over.

It wasn't that he was disruptive or treacherous, and publicly he said all the right things, but he had never been one to get too involved in planning sessions or debriefs at the end of a day's play, or to volunteer to take on any of the captain's workload.

More than once, Tim Nielsen and I had encouraged him to take on more of a leadership role within the group, but when Pup was down on form or if he had a problem away from cricket, he'd go into his shell.

I knew he was an excellent thinker on the game, but for a long time I was concerned that he wouldn't be able to handle the huge variety of 'little things' that go with being Australian captain. I wished him all the best and he thanked me for everything I'd done for him. He also said he hoped I was going to keep playing.

As things would turn out, Pup became a new man with the full-time 'c' next to his name. The leadership, in many ways, would be the making of him.

***

BACK IN 2004, I'd been the reason Michael made his Test debut. When I broke my thumb and had to miss the first three Tests in India, Pup was preferred to Brad Hodge as my replacement, in what must have been a close call.

It was the selectors who made that decision but from back in Australia, where I was working to get my thumb right, I fully supported their verdict, arguing that it was time to 'give the young bloke a go'. Pup justified his selection in superb style, scoring 151.

A few weeks later, when he scored another hundred during his first Test appearance on home soil, it seemed we had found our next great batsman.

However, his progress stalled over the course of the next 12 months, and by the following Australian season, 2005-06, it was obvious he was about to be dropped. He wanted me to be the one who told him he was out, even though I wasn't a selector, which I think showed how close we'd become. I'd taken him under my wing a bit, as a mate and as his captain.

Pup promptly went back to the Shield and scored a double century. He then batted beautifully in a Chappell-Hadlee Trophy series in New Zealand and was picked for the tour of South Africa and Bangladesh at the end of that summer, but it wasn't until he made consecutive hundreds during the 2006-07 Ashes series that his place in the team was assured.

At the end of that series, as we walked around the SCG acknowledging the fans, all of us wearing sunglasses to hide our tears of joy, I sidled up to Pup and said with a grin, 'How good is this? This is the way we're going to finish every series against England, right?'

I've always been big on passing lessons on, to make sure future generations are aware of the past and can learn from it, because that was what the senior players did when I first came into the team.

Pup and I had been in England in 2005; we knew how it felt to lose the Ashes and now we knew how good it felt to win them back. We'd come to appreciate the value of hard work, playing as a team and sticking strongly to the values the group had bought into. Or so I believed.

At that moment, I was sure Michael Clarke would be the man who'd pass these messages on after I was gone.

Over the next couple of years, my view changed. Pup remained a good trainer and we could all see that he loved playing for Australia and was determined to do well. But away from cricket, he moved in a different world to the rest of us.

It never worried me if a bloke didn't want a drink in the dressing room, but I did wonder about blokes who didn't see the value in sticking around for a chat and a laugh and a post-mortem on the day's play.

This was the time when we could revel in our success, pick up the blokes who were struggling, and acknowledge the guys who were at the peak of their powers. Pup hardly bought into this tradition for a couple of years and the team noticed.

At times, he reminded me of a teammate from earlier in my career, who'd be chirpy and bubbly if he was going well, but appear a bit grim if things weren't working for him. The best team-mates are the ones who can keep their moods in check for the sake of the group.

The blow-up with Pup and Kato after the Test in Sydney in the first week of 2009 wasn't in itself a big deal. I've seen worse arguments involving Australian cricketers.

I think the blue I had on the plane with Paul Reiffel back in 1996 was livelier, but it was indicative of an ongoing frustration a number of the senior players, including me, were having with our new vice-captain.

We wondered if he'd lost a little of his sense of team. It was our first significant Test win in exactly a year, almost certainly Matt Hayden's last Test, yet Pup wanted to get away.

I didn't actually witness what went on, but as I understand it he asked if we could do the anthem sooner rather than later, Mike Hussey said he'd have to wait, the point was pushed, Kato suggested Pup be patient, and when Pup continued to complain Kato grabbed him and again told him to be patient.

Okay, it might have been a bit spicier than that, but that was the gist of it. Michael left immediately after the confrontation, while we just shrugged our shoulders and said, 'That's Pup.'

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In 2010 Pup briefly returned to Sydney from New Zealand during an ODI series so he could sort a few things out in his life away from cricket. He was back a few days later, clearly grateful for the way we'd closed ranks around him. We'd always been there for him, if only he'd realised.

Like Warnie in the UK in 2005, Pup found sanctuary out on the field, the ground he knew best, and he promptly made a big hundred in the first Test against the Kiwis, and then in England batted as well as he'd ever done in his life.

I wouldn't say we were tight after that, but we were better. His official reign as Australian captain started on a high, with ODI wins in Bangladesh and ODI and Test wins in Sri Lanka, and he quickly took his batting to a new level, to the point that it seemed he could almost score big hundreds at will.

He was training hard when we were together and obviously doing a lot of extracurricular work on his fitness and his game as well, which was inspirational. He now seemed happy to take on the planning, media and administrative duties that he'd veered away from when he was vice-captain and the mood in the Aussie dressing room was positive. Perhaps I'd been wrong to be so concerned for so long.

****

I KNEW, WHEN I said I wanted to keep playing for Australia, that a few people were worried I might get in the way of the new captain, but I assured them that wouldn't happen. 'I'll help Pup out as much as I can,' I said. 'But only if I'm asked. If I'm not asked, I'll sit back and prepare and play like an everyday player.'

That was my plan, to slide into the background. Gradually, as time went by, I might begin to offer snippets of advice, but in the short term I decided to go back to the days when I was seen and not heard.

Quickly I realised that not being captain was a weight off my shoulders. I no longer had to worry about selections, playing conditions, what time we were seeing the match referee, when the next press conference was, what everyone else was doing, all those sorts of things.

Instead, I just had to turn up at the ground, get my fielding work done, my batting done and prepare as well as I could for each game. I was still around to help, but the sense of obligation, that I had to be doing something, was gone.

I was insulted by the critics who thought I might be a bad influence, that having a current captain and a former captain in the same dressing room couldn't work. The people who said this didn't know me, didn't understand that I've always played the game for the team's sake.

In fact, I believe the captaincy experience made me an even better team player, because I was now much more aware of what everyone else in the group was going through, how they might be thinking, and what was worrying them and maybe holding them back.

I'd learned over the previous nine years that an effective leader has to understand and appreciate all the different characters within his group, what motivates them, upsets them, inspires them. I would never have learned how to do this if I had stayed in my own shell.

***

I NEVER ADDRESSED THE team formally about the captaincy change.

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After we arrived in Bangladesh, I asked Tim Nielsen to mention it in passing at the first team meeting, to acknowledge, essentially, that a new era was beginning and we weren't going to dwell on the past. The change-over was largely pain-free. We played three ODIs, won them all, and I got a start in each game: run out for 34; 37 not out and, as an opening bat, lbw for 47.

There were a couple of awkward moments, chiefly of my own making, such as when it suddenly occurred to me, 24 hours into the tour, that no one had told me whether I was required at meetings of the team leadership group.

I knew what time the first get-together was starting, and where, but that was all. What to do?

I was still the most senior player. I had always chaired those meetings. Now, with Michael as captain, I wasn't sure if I was supposed to be there or not. It had never occurred to me to ask and now it was about to start, and my desire to make a good impression was causing me grief. I can't be late. I can't just not turn up. The phones weren't working. I couldn't get in touch with anyone. All I could do was go down there, knock timidly on the door and stick my head in.

There were four of them in the room: captain, vice-captain, coach, manager.

'Am I required here?' I asked.

'No, oops, sorry, we should have told you.'


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