logo
AFL 2025: West Coast Eagles young gun Elijah Hewett delivers ultimatum

AFL 2025: West Coast Eagles young gun Elijah Hewett delivers ultimatum

News.com.au2 days ago
West Coast Eagles youngster Elijah Hewett is calling for greater accountability and selection pressure on those unwilling to compete.
Hewett has been one of the Eagles' rare positives in their otherwise poor, one-win season.
But after another big loss to Melbourne on Saturday, a visibly dejected Hewett offered an honest review of West Coast's effort.
'If you're not competing and don't want to win, then you can't really play for this side. We've got to hold each other accountable during the week,' he said.
'We've got the opportunity to be a part of something great and nothing is more fulfilling to me than a team bottom of the ladder working its way to the top.
'I've been put in a special position to play for the team I have loved growing up and taking it to the top with teammates I love.
'It starts off right now with the game review, figuring out what went wrong and what went right. I think what went wrong today was a bit of intent, a bit of role stuff, execution. We've got to figure it out.
'We've got to be stronger at the ball. There was too many times we pulled up and didn't put our head over the footy. We've got to figure that out and be tougher.'
Hewett, 21, has played in just four wins across his 31-game career.
He says the pain of this year, with just the solitary win against St Kilda, has cut the group deep.
'Just not getting wins, you play footy to win, you don't play footy to play,' he said.
'There's only so long you can kind of keep going without getting a win. It's just good to fuel momentum at least getting a win on the board.
'We've had one the whole season, so it's been really tough. We've got to stay locked in and find the positives week to week.
'They (the Eagles young players) are incredibly invested … it's quite emotional to be honest, quite upsetting not getting the results we want, but we'll stick fat.
'Guys have the right intent, they want to get better, I can trust that.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

League confirms AFLW grand final venues won't be moved to larger stadiums in near future
League confirms AFLW grand final venues won't be moved to larger stadiums in near future

ABC News

time2 minutes ago

  • ABC News

League confirms AFLW grand final venues won't be moved to larger stadiums in near future

The AFL has locked in the AFLW grand final venues for each state this season and won't be open to moving to a larger stadium, regardless of home and away crowd numbers or demand. This comes as venue use remains a contentious issue amongst the league, union, players and wider women's football community as the competition searches for stability and certainty after nine seasons filled with changes. "We've set the location of the grand final venue in each state and communicated that with the clubs as part of the fixture release, and so that's where the grand final will be played in each location, with no plan to move it," AFL executive general manager of football operations Laura Kane told ABC Sport. "Our philosophy with venues is the same as the men's. We're not making last-minute decisions. We're not changing things on the run or on the fly. We're creating stability and ritual and understanding and making sure our fans know where they're going." The last three AFLW grand finals sold out within a day yet remained at smaller grounds despite public pressure to move to larger stadiums; the last two were played at just over 12,000-capacity Princes Park and 8,000-capacity Springfield Sports Complex. Kane said the league would not move to larger stadiums until they had consistent seasons of close to all home and away games sold out, finals series being 'packed to the rafters', grand finals being sold out and an understanding from the season itself that if they were to go to a bigger stadium, it would be an Adelaide Oval type of experience (where they had 53,034 fans at the 2019 grand final). North Melbourne captain Jasmine Garner and Brisbane skipper Bre Koenen said locking in the grand final at Docklands each year would give it the best chance for success. "I'd love it to be at the same place, same time, just predictable to people," she said. "It makes sense to me at Marvel, in the heart of footy [in Victoria]," Koenen told The Guardian. "People come to Melbourne for (men's) grand final weekend, even if their team's not in it. If you're a footy lover, it's where you want to be, so I feel like we need to create that for 'W fans." General manager of AFLW Emma Moore and Kane said they believed the players and the league were aligned on the direction of the competition and decisions around growth. Earlier on Friday, the AFL Commission said the season timing of the competition would remain in its current time slot indefinitely, keeping the grand final as the last weekend in November. This year, the AFLW kicks off during rounds 23 and 24 of the men's season. Despite the long men's season, and players previously citing it as an issue, Kane and Moore said they weren't concerned about footy fatigue for fans. "I haven't met anyone yet who wants to watch less footy," Kane said. "But our strategy is focused on, how do we make sure we benefit from the crossover and we cross-promote, we cross-leverage, we're about to see that kick off." Sydney co-captain Chloe Molloy said the competition had been through many highs and lows, referencing the conference system, the suspended COVID season and last year's condensed fixture, but believed it was now in a good spot. "We want to play good football, we want to be putting high scores on the board, so I think that stability creates an opportunity to play better football," Molloy told ABC Sport. "We're in the business of entertainment and I think the game of W is just getting better." In the AFLW's nine previous seasons, the competition has also weathered multiple expansions and season dates changing, including two seasons played in 2022. "A lot of the movement has been with the intention of making sure that we found the best spot, the best time, the best place (for AFLW). We think we're there. We think the timing works," Kane said. "Our strategy will continue to help the business make those definitive decisions so we don't have the unintended consequence of uncertainty by chopping and changing and actually, importantly, we create rituals for our fans. They know when, where and how they can see the W superstars playing. "We want to be the best women's sporting competition in this country on every single metric. We're there on some of them. We're not there on all of them. We want to be there on all of them."

Zinedine Machach released by Melbourne Victory on ‘compassionate grounds'
Zinedine Machach released by Melbourne Victory on ‘compassionate grounds'

News.com.au

time2 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Zinedine Machach released by Melbourne Victory on ‘compassionate grounds'

Melbourne Victory's 2025-26 A-League title hopes have suffered a blow following the shock exit of French star Zinedine Machach. The 29-year-old midfielder had a season remaining on his Victory contract, but has been released on 'compassionate grounds' by A-League heavyweights. It's understood Machach has accepted a more lucrative deal from a club in Morocco. 'I will look back on my time in Melbourne with fond memories,' Machach said. 'It has been a pleasure to represent the Victory and I would like to thank the club and its fans for making me and my family feel welcomed since I joined. 'I am sad to be leaving, but this decision is the right one for my family and I appreciate the support I have received from the club in making this decision.' Machach, who joined the Victory in August 2023 from Greek club Ionikos, scored 14 goals in 64 appearances in all competitions for the Melbourne club. He was part of two Victory grand-final losing teams, and also came up short in last year's Australia Cup decider. Victory director of football John Didulica said Machach had been a 'special player and person for us over the past two seasons'. 'He took to the A-League exceptionally well and played an important part in producing many memorable moments for Melbourne Victory," Didulica said. 'While we are terribly disappointed to lose someone that we are so close to, we know that Zinedine's most important roles in life are that of father and husband, so we support his decision entirely to move closer to family for personal reasons. 'As we say farewell to 'Zizou', we have no doubt that with the talent we currently have and the players we are looking to bring in, we can go one better this season.' Machach is the latest player to part ways with the Victory following the off-season departures of Daniel Arzani (Ferencvaros, Hungary), Ryan Teague (Mechelen, Belgium), Kasey Bos (Mainz 05, Germany), Mitch Langerak (retired), free agent Bruno Fornaroli and loan signing Alex Badolato (Newcastle Jets).

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