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Blues blow as gun midfielder ruled out of Eagles clash

Blues blow as gun midfielder ruled out of Eagles clash

Perth Now12 hours ago

Carlton coach Michael Voss expects midfielder Sam Walsh to be available in the approach to the finals, after the Blues prime mover was ruled out of Sunday's game against West Coast with a hot spot on his foot.
Walsh pulled up lame after a training session at Ikon Park on Friday and after a series of scans and consultation over the next 24 hours was withdrawn from the team.
'He'll take his five or six weeks and hopefully we get him back bigger and stronger, but there is no surgery required, it is more at the early stages of it, which is why the timeline is probably not as long as what it could have been,' Voss said.
'It's inconvenient for him, it's inconvenient for us, but you know, he's a real pro. Once he knows what he's dealing with, he's puts his mind pretty much into his rehab.'
Jaxon Binns comes into the 23 as his replacement and is expected to slot on to a wing.
'He's been certainly on the edges for more than a few weeks and certainly throughout the whole the whole year,' Voss said.
'So he'll come in and be able to get the job done.' Sam Walsh won't play against West Coast. Credit: Michael Willson / AFL Photos
The Blues, who trained at Trinity College in East Perth shortly after touching down on Saturday, will also be without Harry McKay for a second match, sidelined with a knee injury.
'We'll do a little bit more investigation. We were obviously hoping that he could do a little bit more this week than what he actually end up getting done,'
The Blues have a strong recent record at Optus Stadium, scoring an average 116.2 points over the past four games while only conceding 44.
Charlie Curnow has averaged 6.5 goals over that period, but kicked a wayward 2.4 when the Blues torched the Eagles in Gather Round in April.
But Voss is wary of a team on the improve.
'Their form over the last month has been pretty good,' Voss said. Michael Voss. Credit: Michael Willson / AFL Photos
'They've been able to … generally push sides. They certainly look a lot more settled.
'There's a brand that's certainly emerging that you can see. And to be fair, there was a brand. I mean, the last time we played them, that was emerging as well, but they just looked a little bit unsettled and have had more time to be able to play that game style that they're after.
'Like all games we play, we make no assumptions in this competition. We expect to get the very best of every single team we play.'
Voss said the Blues had looked at West Coast's big win in the territory battle in Bunbury against the Roos, when they recorded 22 more inside 50s but lost the game with wayward kicking.
'We've looked at it, but we tend to look at things over over time, rather than one offs,' Voss said.
'We tend to look at the trends of the game and the key threats coming into that and they've certainly been able to find a few.
'Our job is always to find that balance of looking at what we need to be able to get done, and bringing our strengths to the table and then finding out where can we obviously take away some of theirs to get the leverage we need.'

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AFL Round 14 Port Adelaide v Melbourne: Live scores, updates and SuperCoach scores
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AFL Round 14 Port Adelaide v Melbourne: Live scores, updates and SuperCoach scores

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Bailey Smith's inspired showing in Geelong's 95-point thumping of Essendon vindicated the Cats' management of the Brownlow Medal contender's hamstring tightness, says coach Chris Scott. Smith, Max Holmes and Jeremy Cameron put injury-ravaged Essendon to the sword as Geelong leapt into second place on the AFL ladder with a 23.13 (151) to 8.8 (56) thrashing at the MCG on Saturday evening. Cameron kicked six goals to move to 44 for the season and pull clear of GWS spearhead Jesse Hogan (38) in the Coleman Medal race. Brownlow Medal contender Smith showed no signs of the hamstring issue that sidelined him against West Coast. The gun recruit finished with 41 disposals plus 760 metres gained as he and Holmes (873 metres gained, 36 disposals) continued their dynamic midfield partnership. "He just looked like he played the same way that he did the last time he played," Scott said. "He and Holmes are a pretty potent combination at the moment. "I think I was as clear as I could have been last week. It was one of those where he could have played, and then when you come away with a win, and then he comes back and plays so well, you feel a bit vindicated." Smith made headlines just over a week ago after AFL chief executive Andrew Dillon, Scott, Geelong football boss Andrew Mackie and CEO Steve Hocking met at his surf coast property, reportedly about emphasising his position as a role model. "I don't think that he felt like there was focus on him," Scott said. "I understand that there were questions around it. "I thought it was more the interest in something that's a bit unusual, like a conversation around the fire - that didn't really light very well. It's rare for an AFL CEO to do that with a young player. "I mean, we appreciated it, it was a step in the right direction, but maybe I misread it and I don't follow much of that stuff. "But I didn't feel like it was a negative that would have put pressure on him." Geelong will feel exceptionally confident heading into Friday's blockbuster against reigning premiers Brisbane at GMHBA Stadium. "I just go with the philosophy that the first half of the year generally you can't win anything, but you can play yourself out of it," Scott said. "It's just nice to feel like we're in contention." On Saturday, Shannon Neale (four goals) and Shaun Mannagh (three) chipped in, and skipper Patrick Dangerfield (two goals, 10 score involvements) was a constant threat. Sam De Koning was substituted in the third quarter after injuring his left shoulder, and Scott didn't have a definitive update on the key defender. Essendon haven't beaten Geelong since 2018 and have done so just four times over the past 20 years. The Bombers are several weeks away from regaining the injured Jordan Ridley, Zach Reid, Kyle Langford and Mason Redman, while Sam Durham is suspended for another week and Ben McKay (foot) is also sidelined. Sam Draper is among four players done for the season. Essendon ruck Todd Goldstein (30 hitouts, 20 disposals) battled hard, while Will Setterfield (31 disposals) and Jye Caldwell (28 disposals) were busy. The Cats led by 23 points at quarter-time, 35 at halftime and 49 at the final change, and relentlessly punished Essendon's turnovers. In the final quarter, Geelong drilled seven majors while keeping Essendon goalless. Essendon, on a three-game losing streak, face Fremantle at Perth's Optus Stadium on Thursday. "The scoreboard obviously says what it says. It's not someone's opinion. It is what it is," Essendon coach Brad Scott said. "But when you concede 107 points from intercepts and 72 of those in your back half, and you just give the ball back to a very well-drilled, well-organised team, they make you pay, so that's the big difference." Bailey Smith's inspired showing in Geelong's 95-point thumping of Essendon vindicated the Cats' management of the Brownlow Medal contender's hamstring tightness, says coach Chris Scott. Smith, Max Holmes and Jeremy Cameron put injury-ravaged Essendon to the sword as Geelong leapt into second place on the AFL ladder with a 23.13 (151) to 8.8 (56) thrashing at the MCG on Saturday evening. Cameron kicked six goals to move to 44 for the season and pull clear of GWS spearhead Jesse Hogan (38) in the Coleman Medal race. Brownlow Medal contender Smith showed no signs of the hamstring issue that sidelined him against West Coast. The gun recruit finished with 41 disposals plus 760 metres gained as he and Holmes (873 metres gained, 36 disposals) continued their dynamic midfield partnership. "He just looked like he played the same way that he did the last time he played," Scott said. "He and Holmes are a pretty potent combination at the moment. "I think I was as clear as I could have been last week. It was one of those where he could have played, and then when you come away with a win, and then he comes back and plays so well, you feel a bit vindicated." Smith made headlines just over a week ago after AFL chief executive Andrew Dillon, Scott, Geelong football boss Andrew Mackie and CEO Steve Hocking met at his surf coast property, reportedly about emphasising his position as a role model. "I don't think that he felt like there was focus on him," Scott said. "I understand that there were questions around it. "I thought it was more the interest in something that's a bit unusual, like a conversation around the fire - that didn't really light very well. It's rare for an AFL CEO to do that with a young player. "I mean, we appreciated it, it was a step in the right direction, but maybe I misread it and I don't follow much of that stuff. "But I didn't feel like it was a negative that would have put pressure on him." Geelong will feel exceptionally confident heading into Friday's blockbuster against reigning premiers Brisbane at GMHBA Stadium. "I just go with the philosophy that the first half of the year generally you can't win anything, but you can play yourself out of it," Scott said. "It's just nice to feel like we're in contention." On Saturday, Shannon Neale (four goals) and Shaun Mannagh (three) chipped in, and skipper Patrick Dangerfield (two goals, 10 score involvements) was a constant threat. Sam De Koning was substituted in the third quarter after injuring his left shoulder, and Scott didn't have a definitive update on the key defender. Essendon haven't beaten Geelong since 2018 and have done so just four times over the past 20 years. The Bombers are several weeks away from regaining the injured Jordan Ridley, Zach Reid, Kyle Langford and Mason Redman, while Sam Durham is suspended for another week and Ben McKay (foot) is also sidelined. Sam Draper is among four players done for the season. Essendon ruck Todd Goldstein (30 hitouts, 20 disposals) battled hard, while Will Setterfield (31 disposals) and Jye Caldwell (28 disposals) were busy. The Cats led by 23 points at quarter-time, 35 at halftime and 49 at the final change, and relentlessly punished Essendon's turnovers. In the final quarter, Geelong drilled seven majors while keeping Essendon goalless. Essendon, on a three-game losing streak, face Fremantle at Perth's Optus Stadium on Thursday. "The scoreboard obviously says what it says. It's not someone's opinion. It is what it is," Essendon coach Brad Scott said. "But when you concede 107 points from intercepts and 72 of those in your back half, and you just give the ball back to a very well-drilled, well-organised team, they make you pay, so that's the big difference."

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