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Viney to answer for bump on Lynch

Written By Unknown on Senin, 05 Mei 2014 | 20.11

Crows forward Tom Lynch holds his jaw after the heavy bump from Melbourne's Jack Viney. Picture: Simon Cross. Source: News Corp Australia

MELBOURNE midfielder Jack Viney is the latest AFL player being held to account for leaving an opponent with a major head injury.

This is regardless of his collision with Crows forward Tom Lynch at Adelaide Oval on Saturday being seen outside the tribunal process as an accident or the unfortunate byproduct of a heavy contest for the ball.

MORE: SANDERSON LEANS ON CROWS' INJURY LIST

The AFL match review panel last night stayed true to the precedent set a fortnight ago when Adelaide midfielder Richard Douglas was cited for his concussion-causing bump on Greater Western Sydney captain Callan Ward.

The MRP sent that report direct to the tribunal.

The panel has made the same call on Viney whose clash with Lynch left the Adelaide forward with a broken jaw. Lynch is expected to miss between four and six games.

Lynch was sandwiched between Viney and Melbourne defender Alex Georgiou who was concussed in the incident.

Melbourne's Jack Viney has been referred directly to the tribunal for his bump on Adelaide's Tom Lynch, while Richmond's Brett Deledio has been offered a one-match suspension for striking Matthew Stokes.

RUCCI: JUST WHAT IS THE 'CROWS WAY' OF PLAYING?

Douglas was banned for two games with his penalty made less severe by his guilty plea and good record across six seasons. Viney is in line for the same penalty if the tribunal stands firm on the theme a player will be punished for any contact with a rival's head, more so if there is a serious injury or concussion.

The MRP's decision to not grade the Viney-Lynch incident also is in line with AFL football chief Mark Evans' belief that some reports should go direct to the tribunal to allow the player to offer evidence that cannot be noted in video review.

In other verdicts from the MRP:

RICHMOND playmaker Brett Deledio can take a one-game ban if he pleads guilty to striking Geelong speedster Matthew Stokes at the MCG on Sunday.

STOKES has the offer of a one-match ban for striking Richmond defender Steven Morris.

Melbourne defender Alex Georgiou and Crows forward Tom Lynch on the ground after clashing heads. Picture: Simon Cross.

FREMANTLE midfielder David Mundy can secure his part in Saturday's clash with Port Adelaide at the Oval if he accepts the reprimanded offered for rough conduct on West Coast midfielder Scott Selwood.

BRISBANE defender Luke McGuane also has a reprimand to accept for string Sydney defender Jeremy Laidler.

Each player has until late morning to accept the MRP verdicts or make a challenge to the tribunal on Tuesday night.

For the sixth time this season, the MRP has dismissed a match-day report. The umpire's case against North Melbourne forward Lindsay Thomas for striking Gold Coast utility Danny Stanley was dismissed as the force was "below that required to constitute a reportable offence".


20.11 | 0 komentar | Read More

Roos says win can set Lions alight

Written By Unknown on Senin, 14 Oktober 2013 | 20.11

Amazing careers: Ashley McGrath and Simon Black are chaired off after McGrath's 200th game and Black's 320th game. Source: Getty Images

BRISBANE will head into their clash against Hawthorn with a giant-killer mentality after claiming another top-two scalp at the weekend.

Veteran Simon Black described the win over the Cats as the best he had been involved in since the 2003 premiership win over Collingwood, and urged his teammates to carry the momentum to Launceston.

It repeated a pattern for the Lions, who have knocked over West Coast, Adelaide, Essendon and Geelong in the past two seasons, all of which were in the top two and considered legitimate premiership contenders at the time.

Premiership-winning coach Paul Roos said the win showed Brisbane's top-tier players such as Black, Matthew Leuenberger and Daniel Rich were in the AFL's top level.

The former Swans coach said the Lions' greatest ever comeback victory could be the catalyst for a major form reversal.

He said the win should act as a confidence-booster, but warned against attacking the corridor in an attempt to replicate the formula of the frantic final moments when the Lions swept the ball the length of the field and into the hands of Ash McGrath, who slotted a goal after the siren to secure the win.

Geelong was still trying to score in the latter stages of the quarter, rather than holding on to the footy and stopping Brisbane's momentum.

It is a formula that has served the Cats well, but Roos does not believe Hawthorn would give Brisbane the same chances.

"If you try to go through the corridor every time you will turn the ball over and a side like Hawthorn will score against you," he said.

"What I took from the last 15 minutes was not that the corridor opened up, it was that Brisbane started making great decisions. Their better players got their hands on the ball and made the right choices; they are talented at that top level."

Roos said Brisbane did not need to drastically alter the way they had prepared all year, they needed was consistency of effort.

He said while Hawthorn had superior talent to the Lions, the major difference between the top sides and the rest of the competition was their ability to stay switched on until the final siren.

"Football is about minimising risk," he said. "That's why I get frustrated with commentators when they say take risks, take risks.

"What Brisbane did was they minimised the risks because they had free players in the middle."

The Lions honoured Black's club-games record throughout the game on Sunday afternoon, with an appearance by previous record holder Marcus Ashcroft and big
screen messages of congratulations.

But it was his teammates who paid him the greatest respect with their effort.

"That was the best win I've been involved in since the 2003 flag," Black said.

"It was incredible; momentum, it is a living thing."


20.11 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cats to give no more quarter

Mathew Stokes admits the Cats "probably" switched off with the game in their control late in the third term. Picture: Mike Dugdale Source: Geelong Advertiser

MATHEW Stokes says Geelong's capitulation to the Brisbane Lions was unacceptable and every player must take responsibility for his part in Sunday's final quarter debacle.

The Cats led by 52 points before the Lions stormed home in the dramatic final term to record the equal-eighth greatest comeback in league history.

Stokes admitted the Cats "probably" switched off with the game in their control late in the third term and said the players were stunned, shocked and hurting.

He conceded they could no longer sweep their poor form "under the rug", but backed the character of the players to respond for blockbuster games against Fremantle and Hawthorn.

"We've forged a reputation over a number of years now, nearly from when I first got here (2006), that (these performances are) just not acceptable," Stokes said.

"I think every player who played (on Sunday) has to take responsibility for it and I think we will. The good thing about our group is we win together but we also lose together.

"We don't point at each other and say, 'It's your fault, it's his fault, it's this area's fault'. It's a team loss, but it was a really bad loss.

"We got overrun by a team with a lot of enthusiasm and we didn't stand up when we needed to."

Stokes admitted the Cats made bad decisions.

"I think there were periods in the game where we could have slowed the game down a lot," he said.

"We made some really poor decisions out there, as a group, not individually..

"To lose to a team not in the eight, in a game we're expected to win, when you're up by that many points at halftime and come away with a loss, is extremely hard to take and disappointing."

It was the biggest comeback in Brisbane's history and Geelong's worst capitulation since it surrendered a 54-point lead against West Coast in 2006.

Even though the Cats have been prone to inconsistency this year, they have been able to get themselves out of most situations.

"We've been struggling to play our best for a few weeks now," Stokes said.

"It's going to be a massive task next week (against Fremantle). We struggled badly in the second half and it needs to be rectified and worked on quickly because we've got ourselves into a really good position (10-2) and to have that performance is not on and something that, as players, we're not going to accept."


 


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Moored in misery

  • by: Sam Edmund
  • From: Herald Sun
  • June 24, 2013 11:30PM

THE man who preaches defence more than any other in football had to employ it when he was announced as the new coach of Fremantle.


20.11 | 0 komentar | Read More

Final Demon pillar topples

  • by: Jon Ralph
  • From: Herald Sun
  • June 24, 2013 11:30PM

MELBOURNE'S administrative overhaul has now claimed every position of power at the club, after list manager Tim Harrington was made redundant.


20.11 | 0 komentar | Read More

Moored in misery

Written By Unknown on Senin, 19 Agustus 2013 | 20.11

P W D L % Pts
1 Hawthorn 20 17 0 3 138.53 68
2 Geelong 20 16 0 4 136.36 64
3 Sydney 20 15 1 4 140.67 62
4 Fremantle 20 15 1 4 138.19 62
5 Richmond 20 13 0 7 114.57 52
6 Collingwood 20 13 0 7 113.44 52
7 Essendon 20 13 0 7 109.78 52
8 Port Adelaide 20 12 0 8 107.03 48
9 Carlton 20 10 0 10 107.64 40
10 North Melbourne 20 9 0 11 122.37 36
11 West Coast 20 9 0 11 102.46 36
12 Brisbane 20 9 0 11 88.24 36
13 Adelaide 20 8 0 12 100.06 32
14 Gold Coast 20 7 0 13 89.02 28
15 Bulldogs 20 7 0 13 83.18 28
16 St Kilda 20 3 0 17 75.81 12
17 Melbourne 20 2 0 18 53.41 8
18 Greater Western Sydney 20 1 0 19 52.93 4

20.11 | 0 komentar | Read More

Roos says win can set Lions alight

Amazing careers: Ashley McGrath and Simon Black are chaired off after McGrath's 200th game and Black's 320th game. Source: Getty Images

BRISBANE will head into their clash against Hawthorn with a giant-killer mentality after claiming another top-two scalp at the weekend.

Veteran Simon Black described the win over the Cats as the best he had been involved in since the 2003 premiership win over Collingwood, and urged his teammates to carry the momentum to Launceston.

It repeated a pattern for the Lions, who have knocked over West Coast, Adelaide, Essendon and Geelong in the past two seasons, all of which were in the top two and considered legitimate premiership contenders at the time.

Premiership-winning coach Paul Roos said the win showed Brisbane's top-tier players such as Black, Matthew Leuenberger and Daniel Rich were in the AFL's top level.

The former Swans coach said the Lions' greatest ever comeback victory could be the catalyst for a major form reversal.

He said the win should act as a confidence-booster, but warned against attacking the corridor in an attempt to replicate the formula of the frantic final moments when the Lions swept the ball the length of the field and into the hands of Ash McGrath, who slotted a goal after the siren to secure the win.

Geelong was still trying to score in the latter stages of the quarter, rather than holding on to the footy and stopping Brisbane's momentum.

It is a formula that has served the Cats well, but Roos does not believe Hawthorn would give Brisbane the same chances.

"If you try to go through the corridor every time you will turn the ball over and a side like Hawthorn will score against you," he said.

"What I took from the last 15 minutes was not that the corridor opened up, it was that Brisbane started making great decisions. Their better players got their hands on the ball and made the right choices; they are talented at that top level."

Roos said Brisbane did not need to drastically alter the way they had prepared all year, they needed was consistency of effort.

He said while Hawthorn had superior talent to the Lions, the major difference between the top sides and the rest of the competition was their ability to stay switched on until the final siren.

"Football is about minimising risk," he said. "That's why I get frustrated with commentators when they say take risks, take risks.

"What Brisbane did was they minimised the risks because they had free players in the middle."

The Lions honoured Black's club-games record throughout the game on Sunday afternoon, with an appearance by previous record holder Marcus Ashcroft and big
screen messages of congratulations.

But it was his teammates who paid him the greatest respect with their effort.

"That was the best win I've been involved in since the 2003 flag," Black said.

"It was incredible; momentum, it is a living thing."


20.11 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cats to give no more quarter

Mathew Stokes admits the Cats "probably" switched off with the game in their control late in the third term. Picture: Mike Dugdale Source: Geelong Advertiser

MATHEW Stokes says Geelong's capitulation to the Brisbane Lions was unacceptable and every player must take responsibility for his part in Sunday's final quarter debacle.

The Cats led by 52 points before the Lions stormed home in the dramatic final term to record the equal-eighth greatest comeback in league history.

Stokes admitted the Cats "probably" switched off with the game in their control late in the third term and said the players were stunned, shocked and hurting.

He conceded they could no longer sweep their poor form "under the rug", but backed the character of the players to respond for blockbuster games against Fremantle and Hawthorn.

"We've forged a reputation over a number of years now, nearly from when I first got here (2006), that (these performances are) just not acceptable," Stokes said.

"I think every player who played (on Sunday) has to take responsibility for it and I think we will. The good thing about our group is we win together but we also lose together.

"We don't point at each other and say, 'It's your fault, it's his fault, it's this area's fault'. It's a team loss, but it was a really bad loss.

"We got overrun by a team with a lot of enthusiasm and we didn't stand up when we needed to."

Stokes admitted the Cats made bad decisions.

"I think there were periods in the game where we could have slowed the game down a lot," he said.

"We made some really poor decisions out there, as a group, not individually..

"To lose to a team not in the eight, in a game we're expected to win, when you're up by that many points at halftime and come away with a loss, is extremely hard to take and disappointing."

It was the biggest comeback in Brisbane's history and Geelong's worst capitulation since it surrendered a 54-point lead against West Coast in 2006.

Even though the Cats have been prone to inconsistency this year, they have been able to get themselves out of most situations.

"We've been struggling to play our best for a few weeks now," Stokes said.

"It's going to be a massive task next week (against Fremantle). We struggled badly in the second half and it needs to be rectified and worked on quickly because we've got ourselves into a really good position (10-2) and to have that performance is not on and something that, as players, we're not going to accept."


 


20.11 | 0 komentar | Read More

Crows tinker with secret tricks

P W D L % Pts
1 Hawthorn 20 17 0 3 138.53 68
2 Geelong 20 16 0 4 136.36 64
3 Sydney 20 15 1 4 140.67 62
4 Fremantle 20 15 1 4 138.19 62
5 Richmond 20 13 0 7 114.57 52
6 Collingwood 20 13 0 7 113.44 52
7 Essendon 20 13 0 7 109.78 52
8 Port Adelaide 20 12 0 8 107.03 48
9 Carlton 20 10 0 10 107.64 40
10 North Melbourne 20 9 0 11 122.37 36
11 West Coast 20 9 0 11 102.46 36
12 Brisbane 20 9 0 11 88.24 36
13 Adelaide 20 8 0 12 100.06 32
14 Gold Coast 20 7 0 13 89.02 28
15 Bulldogs 20 7 0 13 83.18 28
16 St Kilda 20 3 0 17 75.81 12
17 Melbourne 20 2 0 18 53.41 8
18 Greater Western Sydney 20 1 0 19 52.93 4

20.11 | 0 komentar | Read More

No gift farewell game for Johncock

P W D L % Pts
1 Hawthorn 20 17 0 3 138.53 68
2 Geelong 20 16 0 4 136.36 64
3 Sydney 20 15 1 4 140.67 62
4 Fremantle 20 15 1 4 138.19 62
5 Richmond 20 13 0 7 114.57 52
6 Collingwood 20 13 0 7 113.44 52
7 Essendon 20 13 0 7 109.78 52
8 Port Adelaide 20 12 0 8 107.03 48
9 Carlton 20 10 0 10 107.64 40
10 North Melbourne 20 9 0 11 122.37 36
11 West Coast 20 9 0 11 102.46 36
12 Brisbane 20 9 0 11 88.24 36
13 Adelaide 20 8 0 12 100.06 32
14 Gold Coast 20 7 0 13 89.02 28
15 Bulldogs 20 7 0 13 83.18 28
16 St Kilda 20 3 0 17 75.81 12
17 Melbourne 20 2 0 18 53.41 8
18 Greater Western Sydney 20 1 0 19 52.93 4

20.11 | 0 komentar | Read More
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