AFL live updates: Western Bulldogs vs Port Adelaide, Adelaide Crows vs Carlton, Collingwood vs Geelong, West Coast Eagles vs Melbourne
The Bulldogs and Power face off in Ballarat with a top eight spot in the balance to begin a big Saturday in the AFL.
Later, the Adelaide Crows will host a Carlton side looking to extend a three-match winning streak.
Then tonight ladder-leaders Collingwood will host Geelong in a MCG blockbuster, while in Perth, West Coast will look to get off the mark for 2025 against the visiting Melbourne Demons.
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2m ago
Sat 3 May 2025 at 2:56am
AFL Saturday scoreboard
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By Andrew McGarry
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5m ago
Sat 3 May 2025 at 2:53am
"This is our favourite ground!" says Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley
A
By Andrew McGarry
We'll show shortly what the recent history has been in this matchup, but the Power has been undefeated in Ballarat.
"It's our favourite ground, it's like Shanghai!" Port Adelaide coach Hinkley has told Fox Footy.
"We're undefeated in some unique spaces."
As always, the wind is blowing at Ballarat, and the visitors have it on their minds.
"The challenges of today ... it's going to be really challenging with the breeze the way it is. I just told them in there, you're going to be the best judges out there (on how and when to kick)."
Asked to divulge some sense of the gameplan, the Power coach had some fun.
"We're going to be a bit boring with the conditions - Jordan Sweet is going to ruck!" Hinkley said in something that falls slightly short of a newsflash.
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19m ago
Sat 3 May 2025 at 2:38am
Welcome to Saturday footy
A
By Andrew McGarry
The Western Bulldogs will look to consolidate their top eight spot when they take on the Power in Ballarat.
(Getty Images / AFL Photos)
Hello, good afternoon and welcome to ABC's live coverage of Saturday's action in the AFL.
It's going to be a windy start to the day, as the early game is at
Eureka Stadium
in Ballarat. The
Western Bulldogs
will look to continue their recent roll since the return of
Marcus Bontempelli
, as they host a mercurial
Port Adelaide
side keen to crack the top eight with a win.
Later this afternoon, we have a riveting contest in prospect, with the
Crows
taking on an in-form
Carlton
side in Adelaide.
Then tonight, while the Federal Election is live on another blog, we will be sorting out some very different results! The MCG will play host for what is close to match of the round, as the ladder-leading
Magpies
host
Geelong
in a Saturday-night blockbuster.
Head west 3,300km or so, and at the same time,
West Coast
will face the
Demons
, with the Eagles possibly fancying themselves for a shock win against a Melbourne line-up missing
Clayton Oliver
.
My name is
Andrew McGarry
, and I will be bringing you the early action, before the reinforcements come in and we have contributions from
Dean Bilton
,
Marnie Vinall
and
Chris De Silva
.
Stick with us for all the scores, news and updates!
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The Age
33 minutes ago
- The Age
Sling tackles again in the spotlight; Tasmania's AFL saga ‘embarrassing', says Tim Paine
Dawson converted for Adelaide's third goal in six minutes, handing the hosts their first lead since the opening term. Further majors to Josh Rachele and Ben Keays – the recipient of a remarkable 'tunnel-ball' assist from Darcy Fogarty – made it five unanswered for the Crows and an 11-point advantage. Needing a scalp to fully mark their obvious 2025 improvement, Adelaide landed the biggest one there is, knocking the reigning kings of the jungle down to size, while improving their record to 11-2 in fourth quarters. But it wasn't without an almighty fight. Brisbane charged to the finish line, racking up 20-8 fourth-quarter inside-50s at the Cathedral End, including the last 11 of the night. But they let themselves down horribly with shoddy finishing. 'You get lucky because you deserve it,' Nicks said. 'The footy gods work in funny ways. We haven't had any luck in the last three or four years. Things have gone against us – things that you just couldn't believe would. 'We said eventually some will go our way, and tonight we got a little bit of luck to win that game.' Zac Bailey (twice) and Eric Hipwood shanked shots for goal out on the full, while the visitors' scoreboard return for the stanza read an eye-popping 0.8. Neale narrowly missed on the run with a minute to go to make it a six-point ballgame, before Adelaide's desperate defence punched Bailey's last shot through for a rushed behind in the dying stages. 'That was a game we should have won, in my view,' Fagan said. 'We did so many things right and didn't win the game. We were all over them, we just couldn't kick it through the goals.' Led by Will Ashcroft, Jarrod Berry and Neale, the Lions dictated at stoppage and led at every change, but couldn't quite make their buffer insurmountable in the wet, slippery conditions. If Adelaide Oval's scoreboard pocket belongs to the great Eddie Betts, then the opposite one in the south-west is now Rachele's. After catching Noah Answerth holding the footy, Rachele threaded the long-range needle from the boundary line before turning to the crowd and following with his trademark, Dwyane Wade-style 'my house' signature celebration to cut the deficit down before half-time. Tasmania's AFL saga 'embarrassing' for our state, says Tim Paine AAP Former Australia cricket captain Tim Paine has lashed Tasmania as 'self-sabotaging', admitting he's embarrassed by the political upheaval that threatens to kill off the island's planned AFL team. The Tasmania Devils are at risk of extinction before they have even played a game, after Liberal Premier Jeremy Rockliff on Thursday lost a no-confidence motion. It means Tasmanians are set to return to the polls, likely delaying construction of a new stadium in Hobart. The proposed 23,000-seat roofed venue, which is now slated to cost $945 million, is a condition of the Devils entering the AFL in 2028. Devils chief executive Brendon Gale and chairman Grant O'Brien fear an early election would delay the stadium project and put the club's licence at serious risk. The saga has prompted an emotional response from Devils staff, politicians and public figures. 'It is staggering that we do this to ourselves, we are a self-sabotaging state,' Paine said on SEN. 'I'm as proud as anyone to be a Tasmanian but at times it is embarrassing. 'I was with [Brisbane Lions coach] Chris Fagan the last few days at the football club, everyone you speak to, they ask if it's gonna happen. Even Fages, a proud Tasmanian, you could see in his face and the look in his eye, he was shocked that once again we have gone out of our way to stuff something up that would be great for our state. 'It's a doomsday scenario, but what if the AFL revokes the licence?' Loading The former Test wicketkeeper felt Tasmania would continue to be the butt of jokes if it can't deliver an AFL team. 'Tassie has for a long time been the laughingstock for the other states because of our inability to get stuff done,' Paine said. 'When I was playing cricket people would say, 'Oh you're heading back to 'Slowbart', nothing ever happens'. It's the same as it was 10 years ago, and we keep proving people right. It's embarrassing when you're involved in national or international sports and businesses, and you go to carnivals or Tests and people just continually shit-can us. 'They talk down to us and we continually prove them right.' Rockliff has vowed to fight and win a snap election, but speculation is growing his Tasmanian Liberal colleagues will deny him the chance. The prevailing political wisdom is the Rockliff government will lose an election, with veteran Liberal political operative Brad Stansfield saying they would be 'annihilated' in a winter campaign. However, parliament's dissolution is not due until after Tuesday, given the need to pass a stop-gap budget bill before the campaign. The delay across the King's Birthday long weekend gives the 17 members of the Liberal party room – including 14 who will put their seats at risk in a campaign – plenty of time to rethink their support for Rockliff. 'It's probably 70 to 80 per cent likely that either over the weekend or following the appropriation bill going through on Tuesday, Jeremy won't be leader,' former premier David Bartlett said. 'It won't be a coup. It will be a smooth transition of power to a new leader and Jeremy will be under all sorts of pressure from internal Liberal party people to make that happen. I'm not even convinced Jeremy Rockliff wants to go to another election. He'd probably rather retire to the farm.' After losing the no-confidence vote, Rockliff gave an emotional address where he revealed he fought off internal opponents to stand by the billion-dollar Macquarie Point stadium. 'I've been advised by all the hard-heads in my party not to go down that track. Why? Because it's bad for votes,' he said. 'Well, I've always said, 'Stuff votes' ... I'll say it for the stadium for as long as I damn well live, because I believe in it.' 'Bro can't have fun': Ginnivan's social media post after goal celebration Jon Pierik and Scott Spits Jack Ginnivan made no apologies for showing his Western Bulldogs opponent the ball as he raced in to goal late in Hawthorn's victory at Marvel Stadium on Thursday night. In fact, he made it clear that he felt his critics were out of touch. The Hawks forward posted on X about midnight: 'why everyone wanna be so serious, bro can't have fun', and signed off with a couple of dinosaur emojis. Ginnivan was at his provocative best with the showboating goal that extended the Hawks' lead to 27 points. The Hawks won by 22. As he took a couple of bounces, Ginnivan grinned widely and showed the footy to opponent Bailey Dale before booting it into the stands. Teammate Mabior Chol wasn't impressed and simply said afterwards: 'It's Ginnivan. What can you do? It's him. It's his personality.' Chol was at his athletic best and booted four goals himself. He was honest in his appraisal of Ginnivan's celebration. 'Look, I wasn't a fan of it, to be honest,' Chol told Fox Footy. 'I'm just kinda glad [about his form] … he's had a massive two weeks. Hopefully he can carry that into next week, and have a good well-earned rest.' Another teammate, Dylan Moore, was unfazed. 'That's Ginni being Ginni. When he's at his best he's showboating. He's causing frustration for the opposition. I absolutely love that,' Moore told ABC Radio after the game. Ginnivan kicked two goals and had 23 touches, and Bulldogs coach Luke Beveridge said his antics could be a case of 'winners are grinners'. 'Sometimes I think with the contemporaries these days, it doesn't even go in the memory banks,' Beveridge said. 'Next time we play the Hawks they won't even remember it, and I won't show it. That's what he [Ginnivan] does, that's the way he rolls.' The Hawks needed to find a way to resuscitate their season, having dropped their previous three games. Loading They were without skipper James Sicily and irrepressible forward Nick Watson. The Bulldogs needed to reaffirm why they are seen as legitimate finals contenders. By late Thursday night, with Prime Minister and Hawks fan Anthony Albanese still in the house, the result was clear: the Hawks, stung by a week of criticism, are top-four and premiership threats. The Bulldogs, now 6-6, have much work to do if they are simply to make the eight. Having laid just 74 tackles over the previous fortnight, the Hawks finished this clash with 82. 'It was a clear focus for us coming into the game,' coach Sam Mitchell said. 'Part of it is player attitude, but part of it is the way we set up the game. When you work together on those things and prioritise them at the top of the list, you get that performance, which is going to give you a much better chance to beat good teams, which the Bulldogs are.'

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
F-bombs, chickens and swims with Gary Ablett: This is the real Bailey Smith
On a sprawling, 5.8-hectare property at Bellbrae - just off the Great Ocean Road near Torquay and Jan Juc - a 24-year-old man with a sandy blond mullet relaxes by his fire pit and surveys a galaxy of stars away from the city lights. His dog, cat and chickens are the only potential sources of interruption, aside from the occasional kangaroo hopping across the $4 million Bellbrae property. It is here that Bailey Smith, an AFL superstar reborn since his switch to Geelong, is at peace. His home is a place of meditation and reflection, according to one person close to him, who spoke to The Age on the condition of anonymity. Smith has been a walking headline for much of his career, known for his edgy one-liners on camera or social media, full of flash and dare both on the field and off it, happy to be the centre of attention. Those who truly know the remodelled Geelong superstar see a more complex person, who is comfortable relaxing at home in solitude. Although publicly brash and unfiltered, he recently revealed a more vulnerable side by speaking with raw honesty on a podcast about his struggles with anxiety. Smith told friends this week he was feeling more at peace with life and football since settling on the surf coast. His football means 'everything to him', despite his huge off-field personality and burgeoning marketing empire. Heading into Saturday's clash against the Gold Coast Suns, Smith is football's hottest player, a short-priced favourite to claim a maiden Brownlow Medal. Smith could not be happier with his decision to leave the Western Bulldogs and join the Cats, embracing his long-desired opportunity to live by the sea. His assimilation into the relaxing Surf Coast way of life has been seamless, aided by finding a home that was sold as an 'entertainer's dream, complete with plenty of land, a large mineral pool, in-ground trampoline and expansive alfresco with exceptional indoor-outdoor flow'. He has his own ice bath and sauna, and has become a convert to this, aiding his recovery, and keeping his ripped frame in shape. After a turbulent 2024, he acknowledges he has good people around him. According to those who know him well, Smith's best friends at the club are older players with families – skipper Patrick Dangerfield (he and Smith share the same management company, Connors Sports Management), vice-captain Tom Stewart and ruckman Rhys Stanley. They have been seen as father figures to Smith, helping him negotiate the daily life of a professional sportsman. Smith does not seek their counsel about life after football – that is well in hand, as his current deals attest. Rather, they – and the Cats as a whole – have embraced Smith for who he is and the interests he has, a point Smith has acknowledged to those around him. He is also great mates with Max Holmes, the two midfielders enjoy gaming, and often play Fortnite together. Then comes his links to club royalty. For those in the Cats' dressingroom at the MCG last month after a stirring win over Collingwood, it was sight to behold – even for Smith's teammates – for the rarely-seen Gary Ablett jnr was the focus of attention. Ablett initially had his arms around Dangerfield, who had delivered a final quarter for the ages, but then he embraced Smith, already ingraining himself into Cats' lore. Little did most know at the time that Ablett, 17 years older than Smith, share a kinship. They regularly have a morning swim together in the Surf Coast ocean, and then catch up over coffee, sometimes with another Cats player on hand. There is a bond there, Smith's friends say, whether that be chatting football, or about philosophical issues of life. Ablett, by way of his famous father, grew up in the football spotlight. Smith has also been in the spotlight since he was taken at No.7 in the 2018 national draft. Each man had to change his ways. For Ablett, there was the major rev-up after the 2006 season when teammates demanded more from him, and he rose to become the best player in the competition. For Smith, it's been learning to cut back, and train smarter – something Ablett did in his later years. Loading However, there is a major difference between the pair. Ablett, typically, eschewed the media. Smith is a natural before the cameras, even though he usually declines long-form interviews. The Age asked to speak to Smith this week, but he was not available. He may not yet have a flag to his name, or a Brownlow Medal, or even a Carji Greeves Medal, but Smith has made such a remarkable splash just 11 games into life at his second club that former Cats' premiership star Cam Mooney says he 'is the king of Geelong'. Fox Sports boss Steve Crawley said Smith was that rare commodity – box office. 'Big-time sports need show-stoppers like Bailey Smith. Think [David] Beckham. Think Pat Cash at 18 with the bandana, Tiger Woods, think David Warner. Mortals are OK, but superheroes are better,' Crawley said. 'He is Shane Warne-like. And he's the Brownlow favourite for good measure.' It's been a stunning start to the season by the bandana-wearing midfielder, made even more impressive, as Bulldogs great Brad Johnson pointed out this week, by this being his comeback campaign from a knee reconstruction which derailed his entire 2024 season. Thriving in the midfield role he was rarely given at the Bulldogs, Smith is averaging career highs in disposals (31.5), contested possessions (10.5), uncontested possessions (19.4), marks (5.4), clearances (5.1) and score involvements (7.3), and leads the league in metres gained (691.1 per game), his flowing locks lighting up the Cats' midfield alongside the likes of premiership hard nut Tom Atkins, dasher Max Holmes and the reborn Stanley. However, Atkins was quick to point out Smith was also second in the club for tackles, and was far from a one-way player in that he runs hard defensively. 'I have been super impressed. I have been saying it all year, even before he played, just impressed with how diligent he is and hardworking. He really tries to tick all the boxes before he runs out on the weekend. I think that's maybe why he has been in such good form,' Atkins told this masthead. Smith made an immediate impression over summer with his speed and endurance in the interval running sessions, known as fartleks. Where even the stars of the game can go quiet in team meetings, Atkins said Smith was happy to speak his mind. 'I would say he is pretty standard. He chimes in when he needs to. He, obviously, has a great understanding of the game. Any time we hear from him, it is very valuable,' Atkins said. While his propensity to swear has had to be toned down at the recommendation of club officials and friends, teammates enjoy his raw appeal. Asked if there were any 'F-bombs' dropped in team meetings by Smith, Atkins replied: 'I can't remember', before adding: 'Probably'. Those close to Smith say he is at peace with his football. Taken in the same draft in which Carlton gun Sam Walsh was the top pick, with Izak Rankine, Max King and Connor Rozee among those drafted before him, Smith had become frustrated that his fellow draftees were lauded primarily for their football skills, while he felt his on-field play had been overshadowed by off-field events, his footballing ability not given the plaudits he craved. His form this season has changed that perception. Those in the know at Geelong could not be more impressed with how he has assimilated with the club. 'He is an enjoyable person to have around the club. You often wonder whether people who have high profiles are selfish, but there is none of that. He is a team player,' one long-time Cats figure, who preferred to remain anonymous, said. If there is a knock in simple football terms, it's that Smith is averaging 6.1 turnovers per game (the second most of any player), and his disposal efficiency of 62.2 per cent is the fourth worst of any midfielder to have played six or more games this season. While he is Brownlow favourite, AFL great Matthew Lloyd has a contrarian view, and this week did not rank Smith as truly elite. 'Big-time sports need show-stoppers like Bailey Smith. Think [David] Beckham. Think Pat Cash at 18 with the bandana, Tiger Woods, think David Warner. Mortals are OK, but superheroes are better.' Fox Sports chief Steve Crawley 'He is a massive tick because he has made Geelong better, but he is not, say, a [Marcus] Bontempelli. He is still in the best 10 midfielders in the game in my opinion, but he is not in the best three or four because of his turnover stats,' Lloyd told Footy Classified, adding he didn't think Smith could rectify these issues. 'He lacks the class of the best, but he has been a wonderful edition.' Atkins revealed Smith was a man the team often turned to for words of inspiration at half-time. 'We do go to him at half-time sometimes because he is such a high-energy person, and he really helps charge us back up after a rest after that break,' Atkins said. It's not only during the game itself that Smith is a must-watch. His post-game interviews have also been enlightening, sometimes causing a stir. Among these, there was the jibe heading into the clash against the Bulldogs about his former club having to play before a sparse crowd in Ballarat, a revelation after the clash with the Bulldogs that he had required multiple injections because of a shin issue, coach Chris Scott and football department boss Andrew Mackie later saying they were unaware of any injury. And after the win over West Coast on Sunday, he opened up about why the words 'spartan' and 'take souls' were written on his boots, saying he scrawled them there to keep him 'in the present, keep me in the moment'. Crawley said viewers hung off every word. 'Like in cricket, if David Warner was coming up to talk after the break, no one left, in fact they go and get their other family members and there would be more there watching. It was the same with Shane Warne; now with Bailey Smith,' Crawley said. Smith is a complex character. He has battled mental health issues, and continues to deal with these. There was a two-game suspension and a strike in 2022 for taking an illicit drug. The incident occurred during the 2021 off-season, when Smith had taken a mental health break from the game. By his own admission, he struggled again last year when dealing with his knee injury. He opened up in a recent podcast, filmed at his home, about his battles. 'It was a pretty shitty time because you're not playing ... the media are good, at times, but I suppose my teammates ended up sort of resenting me, I suppose, with all the talk of me moving,' Smith said. 'I thought [I'd] be fine, you know, I could still cross-train and do all this sort of stuff. But I really fell into quite a bad spiral ... I didn't have the mask of footy. And all that sort of stuff to really distract me from what's going on internally. I went through a breakup, and all that sort of stuff. 'When you have to sit with yourself and be your own source of entertainment, fulfilment [and] stimulation, that's when you look inward and realise: 'Shit, I am pretty f---ed up, I need to sort my shit out'. Loading 'I got into some bad ways with going out, flat out after my knee [injury] – getting on the piss and being an idiot, which we all do. But that was just my coping mechanism. I really had to look inward and find that, and that's when I found out that: 'F--- , there's nothing much to look inward here, other than a bit of a shitstorm'.' In many ways, this introspection has allowed him to become more of a free spirit, living just how he wants to. That he has twice been fined this season for flipping the middle finger to the crowd is a sign of this. Scott has made it clear he wants Smith to be himself, as the Cats are with all of their players. Scott has backed Smith to the hilt publicly, even when Smith has tipped over the edge, as he did with his social media comment after the win over the Bulldogs. Smith responded to a comment on his Instagram profile asking whether he had 'nose beers' - a common reference to cocaine - to celebrate. Smith replied: 'Na bro, after the flag maybe tho'.' While he later deleted the comment, it wasn't looked upon too favourably at AFL House. Scott, while conceding both parties had wished the incident had not occurred, then added: 'But, in the end, I just don't think we need ultra-conservative people wagging their finger at Bailey.' Atkins said none of Smith's off-field headlines had been a distraction. 'It has no impact on us. The only thing I care about is winning games, and Baz is helping us win games at the moment. Whatever goes on off the field is his business. I know he is a great person and that he works really hard to try and get us wins on the weekend,' Atkins said. 'I couldn't care less about that other stuff.' Scott, speaking over summer, knew what he was getting with Smith. The Cats, a perennial finalist who typically have done their talking on the field, were prepared. 'He keeps you on your toes, Bailey. I didn't know much about him before I met him, but you get to know him pretty quickly,' the dual premiership coach said. Those who follow Smith on social media, where he goes by the name 'Bazlenka', also know him well. He has a whopping 363,000 followers on Instagram, and regularly interacts with them. He is advised by experienced managers Paul Connors and Robbie D'Orazio, but is left to make his own decisions on social media, as Connors has pointed out. This strong social media presence has added to his appeal. He has been a long-time brand ambassador for Cotton On, one of Geelong's key sponsors. He is a part owner, along with fellow AFL stars Nick and Josh Daicos and Charlie Curnow, in the beer company Barry. He isn't afraid to encourage his fans to 'get on the piss' with him at the Torquay Hotel, where he likes to drop by. Loading Seen as authentic, real and funny by global sports marketing agency MKTG Australia, Smith has also featured in advertisements for McDonald's, Monster Energy and Binge. He is also part of a group of male and female AFL players able to share in the league's $35 million marketing fund under the collective bargaining agreement. Then there is his own clothing line, while sales of white bandanas have exploded since he began wearing one this season - first with the Nike-emblazoned logo, then without, after the AFL banned the public sponsorship. For the Cats, the bottom line is this. Yes, Smith will help sell merchandise, ensure the club is relevant among younger fans, and fill stands, particularly helping to pay for the new Joel Selwood Stand at GMHBA Stadium. But it's on the field where the dividends must come. And they are coming. Smith has helped make the Cats a genuine premiership threat.

The Age
3 hours ago
- The Age
F-bombs, chickens and swims with Gary Ablett: This is the real Bailey Smith
On a sprawling, 5.8-hectare property at Bellbrae - just off the Great Ocean Road near Torquay and Jan Juc - a 24-year-old man with a sandy blond mullet relaxes by his fire pit and surveys a galaxy of stars away from the city lights. His dog, cat and chickens are the only potential sources of interruption, aside from the occasional kangaroo hopping across the $4 million Bellbrae property. It is here that Bailey Smith, an AFL superstar reborn since his switch to Geelong, is at peace. His home is a place of meditation and reflection, according to one person close to him, who spoke to The Age on the condition of anonymity. Smith has been a walking headline for much of his career, known for his edgy one-liners on camera or social media, full of flash and dare both on the field and off it, happy to be the centre of attention. Those who truly know the remodelled Geelong superstar see a more complex person, who is comfortable relaxing at home in solitude. Although publicly brash and unfiltered, he recently revealed a more vulnerable side by speaking with raw honesty on a podcast about his struggles with anxiety. Smith told friends this week he was feeling more at peace with life and football since settling on the surf coast. His football means 'everything to him', despite his huge off-field personality and burgeoning marketing empire. Heading into Saturday's clash against the Gold Coast Suns, Smith is football's hottest player, a short-priced favourite to claim a maiden Brownlow Medal. Smith could not be happier with his decision to leave the Western Bulldogs and join the Cats, embracing his long-desired opportunity to live by the sea. His assimilation into the relaxing Surf Coast way of life has been seamless, aided by finding a home that was sold as an 'entertainer's dream, complete with plenty of land, a large mineral pool, in-ground trampoline and expansive alfresco with exceptional indoor-outdoor flow'. He has his own ice bath and sauna, and has become a convert to this, aiding his recovery, and keeping his ripped frame in shape. After a turbulent 2024, he acknowledges he has good people around him. According to those who know him well, Smith's best friends at the club are older players with families – skipper Patrick Dangerfield (he and Smith share the same management company, Connors Sports Management), vice-captain Tom Stewart and ruckman Rhys Stanley. They have been seen as father figures to Smith, helping him negotiate the daily life of a professional sportsman. Smith does not seek their counsel about life after football – that is well in hand, as his current deals attest. Rather, they – and the Cats as a whole – have embraced Smith for who he is and the interests he has, a point Smith has acknowledged to those around him. He is also great mates with Max Holmes, the two midfielders enjoy gaming, and often play Fortnite together. Then comes his links to club royalty. For those in the Cats' dressingroom at the MCG last month after a stirring win over Collingwood, it was sight to behold – even for Smith's teammates – for the rarely-seen Gary Ablett jnr was the focus of attention. Ablett initially had his arms around Dangerfield, who had delivered a final quarter for the ages, but then he embraced Smith, already ingraining himself into Cats' lore. Little did most know at the time that Ablett, 17 years older than Smith, share a kinship. They regularly have a morning swim together in the Surf Coast ocean, and then catch up over coffee, sometimes with another Cats player on hand. There is a bond there, Smith's friends say, whether that be chatting football, or about philosophical issues of life. Ablett, by way of his famous father, grew up in the football spotlight. Smith has also been in the spotlight since he was taken at No.7 in the 2018 national draft. Each man had to change his ways. For Ablett, there was the major rev-up after the 2006 season when teammates demanded more from him, and he rose to become the best player in the competition. For Smith, it's been learning to cut back, and train smarter – something Ablett did in his later years. Loading However, there is a major difference between the pair. Ablett, typically, eschewed the media. Smith is a natural before the cameras, even though he usually declines long-form interviews. The Age asked to speak to Smith this week, but he was not available. He may not yet have a flag to his name, or a Brownlow Medal, or even a Carji Greeves Medal, but Smith has made such a remarkable splash just 11 games into life at his second club that former Cats' premiership star Cam Mooney says he 'is the king of Geelong'. Fox Sports boss Steve Crawley said Smith was that rare commodity – box office. 'Big-time sports need show-stoppers like Bailey Smith. Think [David] Beckham. Think Pat Cash at 18 with the bandana, Tiger Woods, think David Warner. Mortals are OK, but superheroes are better,' Crawley said. 'He is Shane Warne-like. And he's the Brownlow favourite for good measure.' It's been a stunning start to the season by the bandana-wearing midfielder, made even more impressive, as Bulldogs great Brad Johnson pointed out this week, by this being his comeback campaign from a knee reconstruction which derailed his entire 2024 season. Thriving in the midfield role he was rarely given at the Bulldogs, Smith is averaging career highs in disposals (31.5), contested possessions (10.5), uncontested possessions (19.4), marks (5.4), clearances (5.1) and score involvements (7.3), and leads the league in metres gained (691.1 per game), his flowing locks lighting up the Cats' midfield alongside the likes of premiership hard nut Tom Atkins, dasher Max Holmes and the reborn Stanley. However, Atkins was quick to point out Smith was also second in the club for tackles, and was far from a one-way player in that he runs hard defensively. 'I have been super impressed. I have been saying it all year, even before he played, just impressed with how diligent he is and hardworking. He really tries to tick all the boxes before he runs out on the weekend. I think that's maybe why he has been in such good form,' Atkins told this masthead. Smith made an immediate impression over summer with his speed and endurance in the interval running sessions, known as fartleks. Where even the stars of the game can go quiet in team meetings, Atkins said Smith was happy to speak his mind. 'I would say he is pretty standard. He chimes in when he needs to. He, obviously, has a great understanding of the game. Any time we hear from him, it is very valuable,' Atkins said. While his propensity to swear has had to be toned down at the recommendation of club officials and friends, teammates enjoy his raw appeal. Asked if there were any 'F-bombs' dropped in team meetings by Smith, Atkins replied: 'I can't remember', before adding: 'Probably'. Those close to Smith say he is at peace with his football. Taken in the same draft in which Carlton gun Sam Walsh was the top pick, with Izak Rankine, Max King and Connor Rozee among those drafted before him, Smith had become frustrated that his fellow draftees were lauded primarily for their football skills, while he felt his on-field play had been overshadowed by off-field events, his footballing ability not given the plaudits he craved. His form this season has changed that perception. Those in the know at Geelong could not be more impressed with how he has assimilated with the club. 'He is an enjoyable person to have around the club. You often wonder whether people who have high profiles are selfish, but there is none of that. He is a team player,' one long-time Cats figure, who preferred to remain anonymous, said. If there is a knock in simple football terms, it's that Smith is averaging 6.1 turnovers per game (the second most of any player), and his disposal efficiency of 62.2 per cent is the fourth worst of any midfielder to have played six or more games this season. While he is Brownlow favourite, AFL great Matthew Lloyd has a contrarian view, and this week did not rank Smith as truly elite. 'Big-time sports need show-stoppers like Bailey Smith. Think [David] Beckham. Think Pat Cash at 18 with the bandana, Tiger Woods, think David Warner. Mortals are OK, but superheroes are better.' Fox Sports chief Steve Crawley 'He is a massive tick because he has made Geelong better, but he is not, say, a [Marcus] Bontempelli. He is still in the best 10 midfielders in the game in my opinion, but he is not in the best three or four because of his turnover stats,' Lloyd told Footy Classified, adding he didn't think Smith could rectify these issues. 'He lacks the class of the best, but he has been a wonderful edition.' Atkins revealed Smith was a man the team often turned to for words of inspiration at half-time. 'We do go to him at half-time sometimes because he is such a high-energy person, and he really helps charge us back up after a rest after that break,' Atkins said. It's not only during the game itself that Smith is a must-watch. His post-game interviews have also been enlightening, sometimes causing a stir. Among these, there was the jibe heading into the clash against the Bulldogs about his former club having to play before a sparse crowd in Ballarat, a revelation after the clash with the Bulldogs that he had required multiple injections because of a shin issue, coach Chris Scott and football department boss Andrew Mackie later saying they were unaware of any injury. And after the win over West Coast on Sunday, he opened up about why the words 'spartan' and 'take souls' were written on his boots, saying he scrawled them there to keep him 'in the present, keep me in the moment'. Crawley said viewers hung off every word. 'Like in cricket, if David Warner was coming up to talk after the break, no one left, in fact they go and get their other family members and there would be more there watching. It was the same with Shane Warne; now with Bailey Smith,' Crawley said. Smith is a complex character. He has battled mental health issues, and continues to deal with these. There was a two-game suspension and a strike in 2022 for taking an illicit drug. The incident occurred during the 2021 off-season, when Smith had taken a mental health break from the game. By his own admission, he struggled again last year when dealing with his knee injury. He opened up in a recent podcast, filmed at his home, about his battles. 'It was a pretty shitty time because you're not playing ... the media are good, at times, but I suppose my teammates ended up sort of resenting me, I suppose, with all the talk of me moving,' Smith said. 'I thought [I'd] be fine, you know, I could still cross-train and do all this sort of stuff. But I really fell into quite a bad spiral ... I didn't have the mask of footy. And all that sort of stuff to really distract me from what's going on internally. I went through a breakup, and all that sort of stuff. 'When you have to sit with yourself and be your own source of entertainment, fulfilment [and] stimulation, that's when you look inward and realise: 'Shit, I am pretty f---ed up, I need to sort my shit out'. Loading 'I got into some bad ways with going out, flat out after my knee [injury] – getting on the piss and being an idiot, which we all do. But that was just my coping mechanism. I really had to look inward and find that, and that's when I found out that: 'F--- , there's nothing much to look inward here, other than a bit of a shitstorm'.' In many ways, this introspection has allowed him to become more of a free spirit, living just how he wants to. That he has twice been fined this season for flipping the middle finger to the crowd is a sign of this. Scott has made it clear he wants Smith to be himself, as the Cats are with all of their players. Scott has backed Smith to the hilt publicly, even when Smith has tipped over the edge, as he did with his social media comment after the win over the Bulldogs. Smith responded to a comment on his Instagram profile asking whether he had 'nose beers' - a common reference to cocaine - to celebrate. Smith replied: 'Na bro, after the flag maybe tho'.' While he later deleted the comment, it wasn't looked upon too favourably at AFL House. Scott, while conceding both parties had wished the incident had not occurred, then added: 'But, in the end, I just don't think we need ultra-conservative people wagging their finger at Bailey.' Atkins said none of Smith's off-field headlines had been a distraction. 'It has no impact on us. The only thing I care about is winning games, and Baz is helping us win games at the moment. Whatever goes on off the field is his business. I know he is a great person and that he works really hard to try and get us wins on the weekend,' Atkins said. 'I couldn't care less about that other stuff.' Scott, speaking over summer, knew what he was getting with Smith. The Cats, a perennial finalist who typically have done their talking on the field, were prepared. 'He keeps you on your toes, Bailey. I didn't know much about him before I met him, but you get to know him pretty quickly,' the dual premiership coach said. Those who follow Smith on social media, where he goes by the name 'Bazlenka', also know him well. He has a whopping 363,000 followers on Instagram, and regularly interacts with them. He is advised by experienced managers Paul Connors and Robbie D'Orazio, but is left to make his own decisions on social media, as Connors has pointed out. This strong social media presence has added to his appeal. He has been a long-time brand ambassador for Cotton On, one of Geelong's key sponsors. He is a part owner, along with fellow AFL stars Nick and Josh Daicos and Charlie Curnow, in the beer company Barry. He isn't afraid to encourage his fans to 'get on the piss' with him at the Torquay Hotel, where he likes to drop by. Loading Seen as authentic, real and funny by global sports marketing agency MKTG Australia, Smith has also featured in advertisements for McDonald's, Monster Energy and Binge. He is also part of a group of male and female AFL players able to share in the league's $35 million marketing fund under the collective bargaining agreement. Then there is his own clothing line, while sales of white bandanas have exploded since he began wearing one this season - first with the Nike-emblazoned logo, then without, after the AFL banned the public sponsorship. For the Cats, the bottom line is this. Yes, Smith will help sell merchandise, ensure the club is relevant among younger fans, and fill stands, particularly helping to pay for the new Joel Selwood Stand at GMHBA Stadium. But it's on the field where the dividends must come. And they are coming. Smith has helped make the Cats a genuine premiership threat.