St Kilda's Max King has had season-ending knee surgery after failing to get on the park in 2025
St Kilda hope season-ending knee surgery will allow luckless spearhead Max King to be ready for the pre-season, making the call to send him under the knife again having failed to get him on the park in 2025.
King, 23, had already had two lots of surgery this this year to try and repair his troublesome knee but weekend scans and consultations with specialists determined a third operation was required.
The wretched run comes after he signed a whopping eight-season extension back in October of last year.
King has played just 11 and 12 games across the two seasons since his career-best 2022 when he booted 52 goals, showing the talent which moved the Saints to lock him in long-term, despite issues with his body.
St Kilda general manager David Misson said the surgery would take King off his legs for several months but would ensure he would be ready for the start of 2026.
'About 10 days ago, as Max was closing in on a return to football, he felt a clunking in his knee - the same knee that has been causing him trouble throughout this season,' he said.
'This was as surprising as it was frustrating, as all indications were that Max's most recent arthroscope had addressed this issue.
'Following further consultations and imaging last week and over the weekend, we feel the cause of Max's issue has been pinpointed and that damage to the medial aspect of his knee, in certain situations, was impeding his movement and causing pain.
'The operation aimed to address and repair this issue. It will see Max off-legs for several months, however, will allow him to be ready for the commencement of pre-season.
'Max's grit and resilience has remained incredibly strong and steadfast throughout this challenging time, and he heads into this period of rehab with the whole club behind him.'
St Kilda slumped to 15th on Saturday night after going down to Collingwood by 34 points at Marvel Stadium.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
AFL 2025: Goalkicking great Lance Franklin calls for urgent change at Carlton
AFL great Lance Franklin has urged Carlton to swing the axe on embattled coach Michael Voss 'ASAP'. The Blues went down to the Kangaroos by 11 points on Saturday afternoon – a stunning 93-point turnaround from their Good Friday win in the earlier fixture. The defeat has increased pressure on Voss, prompting captain Patrick Cripps to throw his support behind the Carlton coach on Monday morning. But Franklin sees the situation differently, saying the Blues aren't getting the best out of their list and need urgent change. 'I'm going to put this out there, I know this is a big call, I don't think he sees out the year,' Franklin told The Buddy & Shane Show. 'I think they've got a pretty good list, I do, I think the issue is the messaging is not getting through to the players. 'I think there needs to be change and we've said it before, we're all about the players and coaches, but I think this is a change that needs to happen and it needs to happen ASAP because the messaging is not getting through. 'All of the Carlton supporters would probably say the same. I'm probably speaking on behalf of them. I think there needs to be a change and it'll probably happen in the next few weeks is my tip. 'It's a big call, but that's what I think will happen.' Cripps defended Voss, saying there needed to be greater responsibility on the players. 'I couldn't speak highly enough of Vossy as a coach, also as a mentor and a friend,' Cripps said. 'He puts a lot of work into it along with the whole (coaching group) … that group's very aligned. 'We're in it together – we're not going to point blame at anyone else, we're going to take complete ownership, especially as players. '(Voss) has done a great job for us for a long time now, and I feel like as players, we need to aim up a bit more.' The Blues went into round 15 with a shot at moving closer the top eight but left the MCG to a chorus of boos from their own supporters. Cripps said Carlton was at its best when it was 'stronger together' and pleaded for the frustrated fans to 'buy in and get behind' the Blues. 'I don't want to divide us versus the fans – I feel like it's really important we stay together,' Cripps said. 'When times are tough, it's the most important time to stay together and stay united. 'For a lot of years now, we've had that 'stronger together' mindset, and it's easy to do that when we're winning … it's bloody hard to do that when you're having tough losses. 'We're sticking fat together … buy in and get behind us, we'll turn it around. It's going to take a lot of work and a lot of effort, but we're going to stay united.' Carlton has a short turnaround between games with Port Adelaide on the road this Thursday night.


West Australian
an hour ago
- West Australian
GEORGIE PARKER: Calls to scrap AFL's northern academies ignore their role in growing the game
The AFL has always taken pride in its draft system — a mechanism designed to maintain parity across a national competition. In theory, it ensures every club gets a fair shot at success, regardless of their location or financial muscle. But when it comes to the northern states, particularly NSW and Queensland, the challenges run deeper than just draft picks — which is why the northern academies were created. In Victoria, South Australia, and Western Australia, footy is religion. Kids grow up with a Sherrin in their hands, and the competition between codes is minimal. But in rugby league heartlands like Sydney and Brisbane, AFL is still the challenger. This is why the northern academies are not just useful — they're essential. Take it from All-Australian Sydney Swan Isaac Heeney: 'If it wasn't for the academy, I would not have been playing AFL, and I would have given NRL a crack… If you want to lose players to other codes, we can abolish it, but I think it's super important for those northern clubs.' That's the point. The northern academies aren't there to give Sydney or Brisbane an unfair edge — they exist to level the playing field in regions where AFL isn't the dominant sport. They engage young talent who may otherwise slip through the cracks into rival codes like rugby league or union. They build the game where it needs building. Alongside the northern academies run the Next Generation Academies, aimed at Indigenous and multicultural talent and divided into catchment zones — and don't clubs love fighting about those zones. Ironically, critics of the northern academies often come from the most powerful and well-resourced clubs in the competition — clubs with strong recruiting pull, packed MCG fixtures, full Adelaide Oval and Optus Stadium crowds, and the allure of family legacy. The father-son rule, for example, is a beautiful part of the game's heritage. Imagine Gary Ablett Jr. not wearing the same hoops as his dad, or Nick Daicos not donning number 35 for Collingwood. The romance of lineage is something we rightly treasure. But it also comes with an inherent bias. Victorian clubs, especially the large ones, often benefit from having generations of talent funnel through their doors — sometimes with discounted draft picks. These big clubs stay quiet when it works for them, so the outrage over a player developed in Queensland or NSW staying at a northern club feels a little hollow. It's a classic case of: 'Fine if it benefits us, but if it doesn't, then we don't want it.' Ultimately, draft night is a gamble anyway. You're hoping a kid is going to live up to the expectations you place on them — with no guarantee of return. An insanely clear modern example of this came in 2020, when Adelaide held the number one pick, only for it to be snapped up by the Western Bulldogs via the Next Generation Academy. The Crows were 'forced' to settle for pick two. As it turns out, that worked out just fine. The number one pick, Jamarra Ugle-Hagan, hasn't seen a football field in 2025. Meanwhile, remember who the number two pick was? Riley Thilthorpe — arguably the best forward in the competition right now. So yes, draft integrity is important, but it's still a roll of the dice. Drafting an 18-year-old is one thing. But the real race is won — or lost — in list management and the recruitment of established A-graders. If we want fairness, let's grow the game where it's weak. That's what the academies are doing — and it's exactly why they need to stay.


West Australian
an hour ago
- West Australian
AFL 2025: Goalkicking great Lance Franklin calls for urgent change at Carlton
AFL great Lance Franklin has urged Carlton to swing the axe on embattled coach Michael Voss 'ASAP'. The Blues went down to the Kangaroos by 11 points on Saturday afternoon – a stunning 93-point turnaround from their Good Friday win in the earlier fixture. The defeat has increased pressure on Voss, prompting captain Patrick Cripps to throw his support behind the Carlton coach on Monday morning. But Franklin sees the situation differently, saying the Blues aren't getting the best out of their list and need urgent change. 'I'm going to put this out there, I know this is a big call, I don't think he sees out the year,' Franklin told The Buddy and Shane Show. 'I think they've got a pretty good list, I do, I think the issue is the messaging is not getting through to the players. 'I think there needs to be change and we've said it before, we're all about the players and coaches, but I think this is a change that needs to happen and it needs to happen ASAP because the messaging is not getting through. 'All of the Carlton supporters would probably say the same. I'm probably speaking on behalf of them. I think there needs to be a change and it'll probably happen in the next few weeks is my tip. 'It's a big call, but that's what I think will happen.' Cripps defended Voss, saying there needed to be greater responsibility on the players. 'I couldn't speak highly enough of Vossy as a coach, also as a mentor and a friend,' Cripps said. 'He puts a lot of work into it along with the whole (coaching group) … that group's very aligned. 'We're in it together – we're not going to point blame at anyone else, we're going to take complete ownership, especially as players. '(Voss) has done a great job for us for a long time now, and I feel like as players, we need to aim up a bit more.' The Blues went into round 15 with a shot at moving closer the top eight but left the MCG to a chorus of boos from their own supporters. Cripps said Carlton was at its best when it was 'stronger together' and pleaded for the frustrated fans to 'buy in and get behind' the Blues. 'I don't want to divide us versus the fans – I feel like it's really important we stay together,' Cripps said. 'When times are tough, it's the most important time to stay together and stay united. 'For a lot of years now, we've had that 'stronger together' mindset, and it's easy to do that when we're winning … it's bloody hard to do that when you're having tough losses. 'We're sticking fat together … buy in and get behind us, we'll turn it around. It's going to take a lot of work and a lot of effort, but we're going to stay united.' Carlton has a short turnaround between games with Port Adelaide on the road this Thursday night.