logo
Ash Centra and Havana Harris the star attractions of AFLW season openers

Ash Centra and Havana Harris the star attractions of AFLW season openers

7NEWS2 days ago
The 10th AFLW season will be a milestone year in more ways than one.
When Ash Centra and Havana Harris take to the field tonight in the two opening matches, the first and second draft picks will show why all the hard work to grow female footy is paying off.
They are leading a crop of young players who have benefited from the AFL's grassroots investment to nurture girls from Auskick all the way to AFLW stardom.
Channel Seven expert commentator and Talking W co-host Kate McCarthy believes 2025 will be a watershed season for the competition.
'I'm really excited about these girls that are coming through. And that's not to take anything away from the current superstars that we have, but just to see the girls that have now come through, sort of the second or third year that we've got draftees that have played football their entire life. I think the benefit of that is going to be huge,' she said.
Centra has the hopes of one of the AFL's biggest clubs riding on her shoulders to pull their AFLW team out of the doldrums, but McCarthy says she has what it takes.
'From what I've heard from people at the club, it's her ability to just make the very difficult look very easy, whether it's through a contest or choosing the best option with the footy or even executing the skills,' she said.
'I think she's someone that is extremely classy with football in hand. I think that's something that I'm super excited about seeing.
'Collingwood would probably say themselves they haven't had the most successful AFLW program in the past, and that's something that they're very intent on building.
'We know what it's like in men's footy as well, when the powerhouse clubs are playing good footy, that makes the competition even better.
'Having a successful Collingwood would mean a lot of support for the AFLW.'
The first match of 2025 will be a repeat of the inaugural AFLW match between Collingwood and Carlton at Ikon Park in 2017 – which was an historic sellout.
'I like that we are going back to Ikon Park. I think it's really cool to honour that part of our tradition, because we get to kind of make our own traditions in the AFLW, and they'll naturally evolve. So, in order to have them, you have to respect them,' McCarthy said.
'I think it'll be a pretty close match. Collingwood are without a couple of their bigger name players, with Brianna Davey and Sarah Rowe out injured. Carlton have some really good youngsters coming through. Abbie McKay, their new captain, will be looking to make an impact from the first round. They got Tara Bohanna over from the Gold Coast, who you think would go pretty well hitting the scoreboard in the first round.'
In tonight's second match in Perth, the Eagles will be hard-pressed trying to stop Harris when they host the Suns.
'She'll play through the ruck and in the forward line. From all reports, she is ready to explode onto the stage. West Coast will have their job cut out if their mids aren't getting the job done. And if they're in genuine one-on-ones, it's going to be pretty hard for them to stop her.'
Reigning premiers North Melbourne start their campaign against Geelong on Saturday and start the season as raging favourites to go back-to-back.
'You can't really go past the reigning premiers, who didn't lose a game last year,' McCarthy said.
'They've only sort of increased their stocks by getting Eli Sheeran across from the Tigers, one of their best players last year, which will give them more run and dash.'
Runners-up Brisbane and three-time champions Adelaide will again be North's fiercest rivals, but two teams yet to play in a grand final could be dark horses this year.
'Two others that are sort of on the cusp would be Melbourne and Fremantle. Melbourne looked really good in their practice matches, I think they just sort of fly under the radar a little bit from where they were last year,' McCarthy said.
McCarthy said she and Talking W co-host Riley Beveridge will be looking to up the ante to make the analysis of the AFLW more dynamic and sometimes controversial like their stablemates on The Agenda Setters.
'I think there will be some back and forth for sure, which will be healthy. Because I think that's something that's probably missing from the women's game, is that debate on what it should be looking like, or what players should be doing, or what they shouldn't be doing, which I think is great,' she said.
The AFLW has had to fight to justify its existence for a decade, and McCarthy said to those who keep wanting the league to mirror the AFL they needed a reality check.
'This is our 10th season, but when you compare that to the length of time that men's football has been going on, there's absolutely no need to draw comparisons between the two,' she said.
'And if you're watching women's football expecting to see men's football, well you're probably not watching the right thing, because it's not going to ever look like men's football, because we're women playing football, and it's different.'
'All you have to do is look at the growth in participation from both young boys and young girls since the inception of the AFLW.
'I have a nephew that's four and a half, and in his eyes, there's no difference between men and women playing football, and that's a beautiful thing.
'I think that's something that will continue to just be normal in our game, which we need to get to.
'Be critical of it, but be critical of it in a way that is coming from a place that wants to grow the game, not sort of tear it down.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Not death valley': AFL coach's rare act goes viral
‘Not death valley': AFL coach's rare act goes viral

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘Not death valley': AFL coach's rare act goes viral

In hilarious fashion, St Kilda's veteran coach Ross Lyon has aired his frustrations with Marvel Stadium and its roof on Friday night — and in true 'Ross the Boss' fashion. The coaching mastermind took to X in the hours leading up to his side's Round 23 clash with Essendon, highlighting how the venue failed to close its roof during a Melbourne downpour several hours beforehand. FOX FOOTY, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every match of every round in the 2025 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE in 4K, with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. 'How good Essendon legends game - looking for a Gary Moorcroft goal square (sic) hang. Oh no might be hard Marvel Stadium did not manage to close the roof before the rain came,' Lyon wrote, before adding two laughing emojis. An Essendon legends game played as the night's curtain-raiser in Docklands, where Lyon observed the wetter-than-usual turf under roof. Hilariously, Lyon's post was just his seventh in 12 years, and his first on the platform for nearly three seasons. 'There's been four and a half millilitres of rain across the afternoon. It is a very slippery centre corridor, and I've spoken to St Kilda who have elevated this to the AFL,' Fox Footy reporter Jon Ralph told the broadcast pre-game. 'They had to call the AFL at 2:20pm and say: 'Why haven't you closed the roof?' At that stage, it took 20 minutes more for the roof to close. 'It's not 'Death Valley' out there, it must be said. But certainly when you play a young, running side with some intercept defenders in there, I can understand why you'd be aggrieved. Collingwood legend Nathan Buckley added: 'It won't be the last we hear of it. Whatever the spectacle of this game is, if the skills aren't great … it will be a point of conversation post-match.' Lyon spoke with Fox Footy an hour after his post, and responded to questioning over the tweet with a cheeky grin. 'It's out of my control. I think under protocols it should've been shut, but we'll leave it with Marvel (Stadium),' Lyon said. 'I think the problem here, is … this is like a car park — it's rock-hard. The degree of difficulty is quite difficult, (but) we're both playing under it.' 'It's great to have a platform, right ... Seven times (in 12 years), keep the gun powder dry!' Essendon made the most of the abnormal conditions early, leading Lyon's Saints by 11 points at quarter time.

Sydney Swans beat Richmond by 20 points at North Sydney Oval with star turn from Chloe Molloy
Sydney Swans beat Richmond by 20 points at North Sydney Oval with star turn from Chloe Molloy

ABC News

time3 hours ago

  • ABC News

Sydney Swans beat Richmond by 20 points at North Sydney Oval with star turn from Chloe Molloy

Chloe Molloy has played a starring role in her long-awaited return to the AFLW, helping fire Sydney to a 20-point win over Richmond. Swans co-captain Molloy slotted four goals on return from a knee reconstruction as debutant Zippy Fish lived up to the hype in the 8.10 (58) to 5.8 (38) win at North Sydney Oval on Friday night. It was star forward Molloy's first match since tearing her anterior cruciate ligament at training in September 2024 — just one game into last season. The 26-year-old picked up where she left off and combined well with maturing midfielder Montana Ham (18 disposals, six score involvements) in front of 4,126 fans. Fish, drafted with pick number five last year, lived up to her name by flaunting her blistering pace from half-back, and finished with 25 disposals and nine intercept possessions. Monique Conti was Richmond's shining light with 32 touches, as Caitlin Greiser and Rebecca Miller led the way on the scoreboard with two goals each. Molloy and Greiser had faced off in an early goalscoring shootout as the Swans started the more daring side. Greiser opened the scoring with a long bomb from the 50m arc, before Molloy responded with her first goal on return to help set up a two-point lead at quarter-time. Molloy slotted her second after a laser kick from Ham, but Greiser — mentored by Carlton icon and Tigers specialist coach Brendan Fevola — responded to keep the home side at bay. Sydney wrestled back momentum when young gun Cynthia Hamilton, after overcoming a pre-season knee injury, sold candy not once, but twice, to build a nine-point lead at the main break. Molloy used her body well to outmanoeuvre Tigers defender Katelyn Cox and kick her third goal, before Sydney broke away when Holly Cooper slotted two goals in the third quarter. Richmond, which made the finals last season, will look to bounce back when it hosts the Western Bulldogs next weekend, while Sydney take on Gold Coast. Saturday will feature three games, including Geelong — North Melbourne at Kardinia Park, GWS — Essendon in Canberra and traditional rivals Western Bulldogs and Melbourne at Whitten Oval. AAP/ABC

There are plenty of shows talking footy – this one takes on the AFLW
There are plenty of shows talking footy – this one takes on the AFLW

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

There are plenty of shows talking footy – this one takes on the AFLW

AFL broadcaster Kate McCarthy, who joined Seven's commentary crew in 2024 following a playing career with the Brisbane Lions, St Kilda and Hawthorn, takes a 'holistic' view of the women's game in light of reports it is suffering annual losses of $50 million. As co-host of Talking W, Seven's AFLW answer to the now defunct Talking Footy, McCarthy says there are more important markers of sporting success than money. 'When you invest in something, you invest in it for the long run,' she says. 'If you sit back and think of the impact that women's football has had, it's been far greater than the financial returns … If you look at it holistically, that it's here to stay – and the AFL have been very strong in their discussions about that – it's got huge momentum.' Launched last year to plug a gap in longer-form AFLW analysis, Talking W covers the 10th AFLW season with a different line-up. McCarthy's original co-host, former Adelaide player and Australian Survivor contestant Abbey Holmes, is taking a break after the birth of her baby in June. In her place is former Fox Footy reporter Riley Beveridge. 'We wanted to have a show that was covering the women's side of things and to be able to analyse and critique, or talk about the positives of women's football and AFLW because there hadn't been a lot of coverage from these sorts of shows on networks,' says McCarthy. 'We have plenty of football shows dedicated to men's football, and Seven was really keen on having one that was dedicated to women's football as well. To be able to build on what we created last year is going to be important.' In a sign of the continuing evolution of TV footy chat, which has been steadily moving away from male-dominated formats, Seven's footy show slate has shifted this year. Instead of Talking Footy, there are two new shows: The Agenda Setters (with Craig Hutchison, Kane Cornes, Caroline Wilson and Nick Riewoldt) on Mondays and Tuesdays on 7plus, and Hamish McLaren's Unfiltered on Wednesdays on Seven. The latter follows the decade-old Front Bar at 8.30pm, with Mick Molloy, Sam Pang and Andy Maher. 'I've only worked in really respectful environments,' says McCarthy. 'The men or women that I've worked with have done it in a way where there hasn't really been any of that locker room talk, or talk where it would be not accepted. We've moved past that now as a footballing community.' McCarthy also welcomes the perspective her new co-host Beveridge will bring. 'We have done the round so far together on and Riley is a fantastic analyst and very well versed across both men's and women's football, and has been since season one of women's football,' she says. 'So it's going to be great to be alongside him … It's important to have diverse voices.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store