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West Coast Eagles champion Luke Shuey posts heartbreaking farewell to former teammate Adam Selwood

West Coast Eagles champion Luke Shuey posts heartbreaking farewell to former teammate Adam Selwood

West Australian22-05-2025
West Coast champion Luke Shuey has posted an emotional goodbye to close friend and former teammate Adam Selwood following his tragic passing at the weekend.
Selwood died at the age of 41 on Saturday, with his death being felt heavily across the AFL landscape, coming just three months after his twin brother Troy's death by suicide.
It's prompted an outpouring of grief from fans and former teammates with Shuey the latest to farewell Adam in a post on his Instagram.
'The kindest heart, the warmest laugh, a shoulder never not there to lean on.. and the best tattoo.. no one gave more to those he loved,' he wrote.
AFL and sporting stars were quick to comment on the post, including ex-Carlton star Dale Thomas while former Eagle Michael Braun wrote 'well said boots.'
Former Eagle Brent Staker wrote 'thinking of you mate,' while Alex Witherden, Jake Waterman, Josh Rotham and even Matildas superstar Sam Kerr sending their love and support.
It comes as Selwood's death has seen a surge in donations for Sunday's Run For a Reason after he had been set to take part in Sunday's charity run to raise funds for youth mental health organisation Zero2Hero.
That campaign had raised more than $21,000 when on Saturday, but that has swelled to almost $60,000 in the wake of his death.
Zero2Hero — a Perth-based suicide prevention charity — will facilitate a gathering for the group of runners after the event on Sunday.
The organisation's founder and chief executive, Ashlee Harrison, told The West Australian she was overwhelmed by the support for Selwood's campaign and said they were focused on putting those funds to good use.
The groundswell of donations to Selwood's charity page has been accompanied by some stirring messages from friends and fans.
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‘Extraordinary': Crows edge Hawks in thriller as clutch hero leads stunning AFL flag push
‘Extraordinary': Crows edge Hawks in thriller as clutch hero leads stunning AFL flag push

News.com.au

time3 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

‘Extraordinary': Crows edge Hawks in thriller as clutch hero leads stunning AFL flag push

Adelaide has climbed into first place on the ladder and moved another step closer toward a top-two finish after outlasting a gutsy Hawks outfit in a topsy turvy, Friday night classic at Adelaide Oval. A contest filled with twists, turns and several lead changes, the Crows stormed home with six goals — two to Izak Rankine — in the final quarter as Matthew Nicks' side claimed a 14-point win, 15.11 (101) to 13.9 (87). Rankine's clutch fourth term helped turn the game, with the Crows star racking up seven disposals (four contested) along with his two goals and setting up another to Taylor Walker, who nailed two important late majors himself. 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? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. Meanwhile Riley Thilthorpe (four goals) and Jordan Dawson (21 touches, 12 tackles, two goals) also starred as the Crows charge towards their first finals campaign since 2017. 'There's a lot to like about what's going on with the Adelaide Football Club,' Hawks legend Jason Dunstall said on Fox Footy post-match. 'There's every reason to think they can go deep into September. They're growing in confidence and belief and that's important. 'Because from where they've come from, they haven't had this belief before. But they've committed to the path, they're seeing the fruits of the labour, it pays handsome dividends. 'You look on each line and think: 'There are players here who can get us where we need to go'.' It came after Hawthorn started the game on fire with a five-goal first quarter, before Adelaide returned serve with a six-goal unanswered second term in wild momentum swings. It was the Hawks turn to fightback with a six-major third term — capped off by a brilliant Jack Ginnivan left-foot finish — to set up an epic finish as the visitors led by eight points at the final change. But Adelaide had the answers in the final stanza, despite a big scare when Jack Gunston kicked consecutive goals from free kicks to briefly get the Hawks the lead back, until Rankine and Walker guided the hosts to victory. It saw the Crows improve to 15-5 to currently sit first on the ladder and continue the club's extraordinary rise, though Collingwood can regain top spot if it can defeat Brisbane at the MCG on Saturday night. But Adelaide has consolidated a top two spot ahead of matches against West Coast (Optus Stadium), Collingwood (Adelaide Oval) and North Melbourne (Marvel Stadium) to finish its home and away campaign. Hawthorn meanwhile fell to 13-7 and is suddenly in jeopardy of missing the top eight ahead of clashes with Collingwood, Melbourne (both MCG) and Brisbane (Gabba) on its run home. The 3-2-1 (via Jack Jovanovski) ... 3. 'EXTRAORDINARY SEQUENCES' AS SKIPPER, SPARKPLUG STEER 'TREMENDOUS' FIGHTBACK It was Jordan Dawson who spearheaded the initial comeback after quarter-time, but fourth-quarter matchwinning moments from Izak Rankine and Taylor Walker ensured the Crows overturned an eight-point three-quarter-time deficit to win by 14 points and temporarily claim top spot on the ladder. The spectacle well and truly lived up to its Friday night billing, with the visiting Hawks throwing everything they had at the hosts in the first and third quarters, but Adelaide again proved why it's shaping as an almighty premiership threat eight years on from the false dawn of 2017. The Crows entered having won 10 of 11 games at Adelaide Oval this year, but it was the visitors who took centre stage at the outset. Hawthorn kicked five goals before the Crows managed their first major via Darcy Fogarty. But while they'd been undone by the Hawks at stoppage, a calm and rational Matthew Nicks recalibrated his group at quarter-time before his troops issued a stark response. Captain Jordan Dawson was at the forefront of Adelaide's fightback, with key spearhead Riley Thilthorpe also bearing the fruits of its second stanza dominance. 'It's a skipper-led comeback, isn't it? Four possessions, a clearance and a couple of goals already in this second term — more than anyone else on the ground. That was head-to-head with Jai Newcombe … and he was just too good,' AFL legend Jason Dunstall said on the Fox Footy broadcast. Demons icon and former captain Garry Lyon added: 'I loved what he did at the start of the second quarter. Will Day was outstanding (in the first quarter), and (Dawson) just went to the centre square and … stood right beside him as if to say 'OK, we know we've got work to do, let me lead the way here, and I'll take the most dangerous'.' Dunstall added: 'This has been a tremendous surge by the Crows.' Thilthorpe kicked three goals in the quarter, and all in all, it was eight unanswered goals between late in the first quarter and early in the third. Dunstall said at the main change: 'They've had a dominant second term where they were just controlling every single category, (the) ball living in their forward half, (and) defence completely on top on the rare occasions the Hawks did go forward. This is impressive.' In the second quarter alone, the Crows were +9 for inside-50s and +22 for contested possessions. But for a team that has looked as defensively stout as any in the competition bar Collingwood this year, the Crows allowed a second run of five unanswered goals as the visitors took an eight-point lead into the final change. But as you almost would have predicted, the way this game was going, the Crows had yet another resurgence in them, booting the first three majors of the final term. 'I've never seen a night like this, the way this has swung around,' Lyon said in the final quarter as Adelaide got on top by 12 points. Caller Anthony Hudson added: 'These extraordinary sequences are continuing in this game.' A piece of Izak Rankine brilliance from a boundary throw-in ensured the Crows got their noses back in front after a couple of Hawthorn goals. Rankine was doing the business for Adelaide in the final 30 minutes, notching seven disposals, two goals and five score involvements. 'He's had seven touches in the last quarter, five of them result in scores, he's kicked two himself, and he's had about three different opponents … sometimes you've just got to dip your lid, and Izak Rankine is the one.' Dunstall said: 'This is a team that's got some matchwinners. This man here, Izak Rankine, is worth his weight in gold. He can turn a game in the space of 10 minutes.' Rankine finished his night with an equal-game-high nine score involvements to go with his three goals. Two massive Taylor Walker set shot goals provided the Crows the buffer they needed to close out the deal. Walker also posted seven score involvements for the evening. 'They (the Hawks) came out firing and we didn't bring our best contest, but unbelievable effort from the boys to fight back in that second quarter, and then from there on, it was just an arm wrestle,' Dawson told Fox Footy after the final siren. Of Nicks' message at quarter-time, Dawson said: 'I mean, we haven't had too many quarters like that this year. He was really calm, really measured, (just talking about getting) back to our process, to keep trusting each other in our roles — which we've been doing the whole year — but we got away from that, we got a little bit too sucked into the contest. Unbelievable to turn it around, and it just shows the maturity of the group.' 2. HAWKS' BLOW IN FINALS RACE AS SCRIPT BRUTALLY FLIPPED AMID 21-YEAR FIRST It was a Hawthorn blitz early in proceedings at Adelaide Oval, and it was all about its work at clearance. The Hawks were comprehensive at the source, winning the first-quarter count 15-5 to give themselves quality scoring chances. Evergreen forward Jack Gunston booted two of the first three goals for the Hawks, who hit hard off counterpunch, characteristically looking to go through the corridor as they piled on five unanswered majors before Adelaide's first to lead by 26 points at the first change. 'They were on fire. Perfect what-to-do on the road is get off hard, win the clearances, win the contested ball, tackle hard and put Adelaide on the back foot,' Adelaide Crows icon Mark Ricciuto assessed on Fox Footy. Dunstall added the Hawks' clearance ascendancy was a rarity this season: 'Fifteen to five for clearances … that's an advantage they've rarely enjoyed this season. And then that translates to a territory advantage … the defence stood up; they conceded 1.1 from 11 inside-50s.' The Hawks finished the opening term +20 for points from clearance. Six of their clearances came via Will Day, with that being the best effort in a quarter by a Hawthorn player this season. But in the second term, the script was completely flipped on its head as the home side got to work. The Crows went on an unanswered run of eight goals to strike fear into the hearts of the Hawks, lifting their intensity to a critical level. It was the first time the Hawks had been held scoreless in a second quarter since Round 22, 2004. 'It was an extraordinary first quarter from the Hawks — they fired their best shot — and the Crows just said 'I see that and I'll raise you',' Dunstall said at half-time. Hawthorn allowed Adelaide 23 more contested possessions in the second quarter alone. The Hawks still had nine more clearances at half-time, but they'd been overtaken for territory, with the Crows generating four more entries. 'Hawthorn can't allow 22 (contested possessions) against (in the third), because then it's not going to matter what they do in front or behind the ball, it's not going to be enough,' Buckley said. 'We'll see — Dawson and Day, we'll see Newcombe and Berry; we'll see these matchups through the middle of the field … those contests are going to be instructive.' Conor Nash broke Adelaide's run of eight-straight goals at the six-minute mark of the third quarter, before the Hawks incredibly went on another rampant run of majors — booting five in a row for the second time on Friday night. Lyon said the response from Mitchell's charges was 'fantastic' after giving up the first goal of the term to trail by as many as 22 points, generating their scores off the back of 10 intercept marks in the quarter. 'Let's just put this in perspective. They gave up 20+ contested possessions in the second quarter, so to go in and gather yourself, give up the first goal of the third quarter, and then bang five in a row — fantastic response,' Lyon said. But inaccuracy was problematic in the final stanza, with the Hawks managing a measly 2.4 to Adelaide's 6.2 as they surrendered their eight-point three-quarter-time lead. The loss means the Hawks could finish the round as low as seventh on the ladder, with daunting matchups with Collingwood and Brisbane among its last three games of the home-and-away season. And in a year where it appears 15 wins might be necessary to guarantee a place in September, Hawthorn will simply have to win one of those Pies and Lions games to get to that number and give themselves a chance. 1. SAM'S FORWARD GAMBLE FALLS FLAT Sam Mitchell's bold selection call to play four tall forwards justifiably prompted plenty of media attention in the lead-up. They hadn't done it all year, so why now? Mabior Chol was the man recalled on Friday night after missing with a groin complaint, lining up alongside Jack Gunston, Calsher Dear and Mitch Lewis. Speaking pre-game, the senior coach told Fox Footy his reasoning: 'A bit of availability, we play three a lot of the time on the field — and you'll only see three on the field at once — it (also) fixes a bit of second-ruck issues for us. It'll be good to get 'Mabs' back, he's been important for us all year.' Chol bagged an early goal — an impressive set shot — to settle nerves, but from that point on, there was basically nothing to note from himself and the likes of Dear and Lewis. Typically, Gunston was the one consistently presenting a threat, kicking two in the first half and finishing the night with four majors and seven score involvements. Halfway through the third quarter, Mitchell made his move — an admission of sorts — tactically removing Dear from the contest after the young high-marker went scoreless with no marks and just three disposals in 67 per cent game time. 'It's an interesting one, (subbing) Calsher Dear. Lewis is the one that can't really get to the contests at the moment,' Lyon said of the move. Mitchell's choice to name James Worpel the sub initially looked a perplexing one on paper, but you got the sense it was to rebalance the side if the plan to field four talls didn't bear fruits. Lewis kicked his first of the night with a snap at the 23-minute mark of the third, capping his night with seven disposals and four marks. Lewis, Dear and Chol combined for two goals. Again, it was the small who went to work for Hawthorn, with Nick Watson and Jack Ginnivan combining for 12 score involvements, and Dylan Moore adding five of his own and a goal.

AFL Round 21, Adelaide vs Hawthorn live updates, blog, scores and stats
AFL Round 21, Adelaide vs Hawthorn live updates, blog, scores and stats

ABC News

time12 hours ago

  • ABC News

AFL Round 21, Adelaide vs Hawthorn live updates, blog, scores and stats

Adelaide Oval is the venue for a Friday night blockbuster, with the Crows looking to hold their top two spot and Hawthorn attempting to grab a vital win on the road as the finals race tightens. Adelaide goes into the game off the back of demolitions of Gold Coast and cross-town rivals Port Adelaide, while Hawthorn is seeking its seventh win in eight games, but knowing that they have to beat at least one of their top-eight rivals on the run home or they could miss out on September. Follow the live blog below, keep up to date with all the latest stats in our ScoreCentre, and tune in to our live radio coverage.

Windy Hill dispute: Cricket Australia calls for AFL compromise
Windy Hill dispute: Cricket Australia calls for AFL compromise

The Australian

time13 hours ago

  • The Australian

Windy Hill dispute: Cricket Australia calls for AFL compromise

Todd Greenberg has called on cricket and AFL administrators to 'behave like grown-ups' to resolve the battleground being waged over Essendon's iconic Windy Hill. Essendon Cricket Club is in the midst of a heated stand-off with Essendon Football Club after both organisations scheduled competing fixtures at the ground for the same time in October. A few weeks after Essendon Football announced AFLW matches, Essendon Cricket did the same for Premier Cricket fixtures – and now the Cricket Australia chief executive has called for the two sports to come to the table for the greater good of both codes. The AFL blocked the Sheffield Shield Final being played at Adelaide Oval due to it being football season, and while Cricket Australia was accepting of the reasons behind that decision, they also want compromises to be a two-way street. Greenberg said he was not pointing the finger at the AFL, and said cricket also needed to work towards a practical solution that doesn't compromise future grants and infrastructure projects by local and State Governments. 'All of the sports, us included, we all need to behave like grownups,' Greenberg said at a Cricket Australia announcement that Westpac has taken over as its major sponsor. 'We're playing more and more cricket outside our traditional seasons, as are the footy codes. We're playing cricket now in August. AFLW will create issues where they need more access to grounds. 'So we've got to work collaboratively and we've got to work with councils, state governments and federal governments to try and create ways to use all the infrastructure together. 'Yeah, we're going to bump into each other occasionally but I do think if we work together we can find solutions. 'They (the AFL) have a traditional window, we have a traditional window. Of course we're going to protect those traditional windows but on each of those windows are shoulder seasons for both of our sports and we're looking to play more games in shoulder seasons as are they. 'So we have to find ways that we work together. 'I haven't been disappointed (with the AFL) at all. I'm a realist to know that everyone is going to try and protect their own patch. So everyone is going to try and effectively secure the best outcome for their own sport, all I'm saying is we've got to make sure we're the grownups at the table and we've got to take problems away from Governments and give them solutions. 'And if we do those sort of things they'll continue to invest more in the infrastructure that we all need. 'We bumped into each other a little bit this year around the Sheffield Shield final in Adelaide and we understand the complexities of it, but to generate the sort of millions and billions of dollars in investment that go into stadiums, we're going to have to work together on these things.' The cricketing Bombers were financially compensated when they allowed the Essendon AFLW team to play at the ground in 2023 and 2024. But cricket club president Simon Tobin said that in the absence of any deal for 2025, 'it's business as usual as far as Cricket Victoria and Premier Cricket goes''. Asked if his club was digging in, he said: 'It's not just a case of digging in. We have nowhere else to go. It's our home ground and has been for many years. 'It's not just four men's team this impacts. We've got 10 junior teams at Essendon. On any given Friday night during October you'll have three Under 10s matches being played. So it's not a question of digging in. It's about playing cricket in cricket season, as we have done for 150 years.'' He said the issue boiled down to the football club wanting to play four hours of football at Windy Hill at the expense of eight weeks of cricket. Tobin said the cricket club had asked for mediation, formally and informally, but through their lawyers the AFL Bombers had refused. 'We couldn't be more disappointed,'' he said. 'It's evidence of their bullying and arrogant attitude. For all the espousing they do about their great community work, when it really counts they do what suits them best. 'They talk about all parties having to compromise and making sacrifices, but their interpretation of compromise is as long as they're not inconvenienced and someone else is paying the price, that's all the matters.'' Cricket National selectors have overlooked veteran batsmen for next month's Australia A tour of India, instead focusing on players they believe could feature in the 2027 Test series. Cricket While scheduling looms large as the single biggest hurdle for Cricket Australia to overcome if, as expected, it sells off minority stakes in its Big Bash clubs, England's current injury dramas have highlighted a possible issue with such a privatisation push.

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