MW wrote:Steve Hooker could play a bit, and had a bit of toe
Wiki says he has a best 100m time of 10.79!
by wenchbarwer » Fri Aug 29, 2025 2:34 pm
MW wrote:Steve Hooker could play a bit, and had a bit of toe
by dedja » Fri Aug 29, 2025 2:46 pm
wenchbarwer wrote:MW wrote:Steve Hooker could play a bit, and had a bit of toe
Wiki says he has a best 100m time of 10.79!
by wenchbarwer » Fri Aug 29, 2025 3:20 pm
dedja wrote:wenchbarwer wrote:MW wrote:Steve Hooker could play a bit, and had a bit of toe
Wiki says he has a best 100m time of 10.79!
with or without his pole*
by dedja » Wed Sep 03, 2025 1:12 pm
Michael Warner: Richard Goyder’s days on the AFL Commission are numbered — he won’t be missed
No-one talks up the tenuous achievements of faceless men in suits better than the AFL establishment. But Richard Goyder’s reign isn’t worthy of celebration and his exit from the game can’t come soon enough.
When the AFL press release comes out lauding the “retirement” of commission chairman Richard Goyder (after exasperated club presidents finally find a way to get rid of him) it’ll be brimming with the usual superlatives about extraordinary legacies and colossal contributions to the game.
No-one talks up the tenuous achievements of faceless men in suits better than the AFL establishment.
But Goyder’s long reign as a Master of the AFL Universe – 14 years as a commissioner and nine as the big boss – isn’t worthy of celebration.
His exit from the game can’t come soon enough.
The recent fiasco surrounding Izak Rankine’s four-match suspensionwas the latest in a long line of contrived outcomes from the Goyder era, the same bloke who presided over the self-immolation of the once-respected national airline, Qantas.
The Rankine farce was the net result of a combination of moral grandstanding, adherence to the rules of identity politics and outright hypocrisy.
Since being ordained as a member of the AFL’s prestigious board of directors in September 2011, Goyder has watched on passively during some of the darkest and most questionable episodes in football history.
He was there at the table during the big daddy of them all, the Essendon drugs debacle, when the Mike Fitzpatrick-led commission oversaw a tainted process punctuated by media leaks, damage to reputations and a denial of natural justice.
Goyder stood by and said nothing when Fitzpatrick, the head of a body that was supposed to determine the charges laid against the Bombers and its officials, blatantly compromised the integrity of the process by involving himself in secret deal making with financier John Wylie (on behalf of the AFL) in a bid to sweeten the incentives being offered to James Hird to accept a penalty.
Again, Goyder said nothing when Andrew Demetriou insisted on sitting on the commission “hearing”, despite having made almost weekly public comments about the Essendon investigation, including claims about being privy to information beyond what had been reported.
The tragic Melbourne tanking saga, which was really just an attempt by the AFL to cover-up the shocking discovery that a conspiracy to lose matches for priority picks went right to the top of the club, also played out during Goyder’s time.
The late Dean Bailey, the Melbourne coach whom the AFL chose to finger with the blame, would confide to friends before his death in March 2014 that he believed there was a link between his cancer and the conduct of the AFL investigation.
More recently Goyder was at the helm for the botched Hawks racism scandalor “the Hawthorn thing” as he liked to call it.
In effect, what the AFL did after its eight-month “independent” investigation failed hopelessly to reach a verdict was to carefully negotiate the probe away and absolve itself of any responsibility for what happened next.
Goyder told club bosses to get out of pokies, only to oversee an explosion in the game’s lucrative links to corporate bookies.
He gushed over his golden boys CEOs begging Gillon McLachlan to stay, undermining Andrew Dillon’s appointment, and was in charge when the game’s controversial concussion chief was exposed as a plagiariser and a phony.
He failed to heed the warning signs in Melbourne’s damaging boardroom war, sold out free-to-air broadcasts on Saturdays and persisted with a deeply flawed illicit drugs policy that was great for brand protection but devastating for drug-addled players.
Peter V’Landy’s, his NRL equivalent, has run rings around him since Covid and Tasmania’s dreams of a 19th licence have become a nightmare because of the commission’s divisive demands for a roof.
And now, fuelled by a cringing desire to hold on as long as he can, he’s installed himself as chairman of the nominations committee currently interviewing prospective commission candidates to replace him.
It’s a poor corporate record yet Goyder appears to believe that the AFL competition simply cannot go on without him.
The next league chairman (likely one of Jeff Browne or Peter Gordon) must reassert the commission’s authority and have proper oversight of the executive and would do well to untangle the game from its fraught dalliance with woke ideology.
Goyder will still be there on Brownlow Medal night to suck up the plaudits and again in the VIP Olympic Room on grand final day as Australia’s business and political elite line up to kiss the ring, but his days are numbered and he won’t be missed.
by gadj1976 » Wed Sep 03, 2025 2:00 pm
by Dutchy » Wed Sep 03, 2025 2:00 pm
by am Bays » Wed Sep 03, 2025 2:11 pm
Dutchy wrote:Warner is a brilliant journalist and the AFL hate him which says all you need to know about them
by Dutchy » Wed Sep 03, 2025 4:56 pm
am Bays wrote:Dutchy wrote:Warner is a brilliant journalist and the AFL hate him which says all you need to know about them
He's been persona non-grata since this was published https://www.hachette.com.au/michael-warner/the-boys-club
Russian dissidents are looked upon more favourably in the Kremlin than what Warners is in AFL House...
by Jim05 » Fri Sep 05, 2025 12:17 pm
by Booney » Mon Sep 08, 2025 7:12 pm
by mighty_tiger_79 » Mon Sep 08, 2025 8:26 pm
by heater31 » Mon Sep 08, 2025 8:49 pm
It ain't stupid if it works.Booney wrote:Last disposal between the arcs to be introduced in 2026.
Finally!
Regards
Last disposal convert.
by beef » Tue Sep 09, 2025 7:53 am
Booney wrote:Last disposal between the arcs to be introduced in 2026.
Finally!
Regards
Last disposal convert.
by Lightning McQueen » Tue Sep 09, 2025 7:54 am
beef wrote:Booney wrote:Last disposal between the arcs to be introduced in 2026.
Finally!
Regards
Last disposal convert.
Been saying it for years, takes away all the guess work
Standard AFL though, why not just all over the ground and not just between the arcs.
by Lightning McQueen » Tue Sep 09, 2025 7:55 am
Booney wrote:Last disposal between the arcs to be introduced in 2026.
Finally!
Regards
Last disposal convert.
by Jim05 » Tue Sep 09, 2025 8:49 am
by Booney » Tue Sep 09, 2025 9:34 am
Jim05 wrote:Between the arcs is just AFL stupidity
Pay it over the whole ground you imbeciles
by FlyingHigh » Tue Sep 09, 2025 9:49 am
mighty_tiger_79 wrote:Disgrace.
Just pay "deliberate" properly.
by woodublieve12 » Tue Sep 09, 2025 9:51 am
Booney wrote:Jim05 wrote:Between the arcs is just AFL stupidity
Pay it over the whole ground you imbeciles
If someone has a shot on goal and it slews off the boot out of bounds?
Between the arcs is the best method I think. Keeps something for the rucks to do around the ground.
by Jim05 » Tue Sep 09, 2025 9:52 am
Works well in the SANFL with the whole ground whereas I think the AFLW is between the arcs as is the U18’s.Booney wrote:Jim05 wrote:Between the arcs is just AFL stupidity
Pay it over the whole ground you imbeciles
If someone has a shot on goal and it slews off the boot out of bounds?
Between the arcs is the best method I think. Keeps something for the rucks to do around the ground.
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