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From finals longshots to champions: Why Vixens' win was a triumph for Australian netball

From finals longshots to champions: Why Vixens' win was a triumph for Australian netball

'You'd be hard pressed to beat it,' McMahon said.
Melbourne finished fourth on the ladder and were underdog finalists, but they pipped the red-hot favourites 59-58 in front of a boisterous and energetic crowd of 15,013. It was also the farewell moment for Vixens coach Simone McKinnis, who had already announced her resignation after 13 years at the helm.
On Sunday morning at the spiritual home of netball in Melbourne, Royal Park, the Vixens, slightly bleary-eyed, happily signed autographs and posed for photos with their loyal fans.
It was a far cry from earlier in the season, when their campaign was in peril with a 2-4 win-loss record.
Vixens captain Kate Moloney knew the odds were stacked against them, but they never gave up.
'I got told there was a stat that it was a 14 per cent chance we could finish fourth at that stage after around six,' Moloney said on Sunday.
'Pretty incredible that we're able to get on a good run and got ourselves in the top four. And once you're there, anything's possible.
'The group just fought every week. We had challenges week in, week out, to make sure that we could get to this grand final. But I think it really match-hardened us.'
The magnitude of what the Vixens achieved took a moment to dawn on McKinnis.
'I think maybe I was in a little bit of shock because you know it's there in the distance … and you know that that's what you're after, but you're never really thinking about it,' McKinnis said on Sunday.
McMahon, who led the Vixens to the 2009 title, and now serves as netball's high-performance chief in Victoria, said: 'I'm just incredibly proud of this team and what they've been able to achieve this year.
'To have a start like we had, backs against the wall, and be able to fight our way out of that situation and find ourselves holding up the trophy at the end of the season is a great testament to their resilience and just their drive and passion.'
The drama of the finals series and the sold-out grand final crowd was a landmark moment for a sport that was dogged by an ugly pay dispute in 2023, which was eventually resolved when a collective agreement was signed that included players sharing revenue with Netball Australia for the first time.
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And only two months ago, Netball Australia announced it had entered a three-year broadcast deal with Whoopi Goldberg's All Women's Sports Network (AWSN) that will expose Australian netball to more than 65 countries.
'There's been a lot of work done behind the scenes over the last 18 months to two years,' Ellis said.
'I think a lot of the credit has to go to our CEO Stacey West, who came in at a particularly difficult moment for the sport, and she steadied the ship.
'We've got a great story to tell. The story that was told a couple of years ago ... probably wasn't great. That's not to say that everything's perfect [now, but] there is an awful lot of work going on behind the scenes.
'I keep saying to everyone 'let's not carried away, there's still plenty to do in the next 18 months to make sure that we put our game on the best footing possible for the next 10 years'.
'Certainly, it would be nice to ... look at last night and put the line in the sand, and say, 'right now, all eyes towards the future, we are telling a story of optimism and growth and excitement'.'
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Simon Goodwin's sacking will have Demons fans hoping that the club is back on the path to redemption
Simon Goodwin's sacking will have Demons fans hoping that the club is back on the path to redemption

ABC News

time26 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Simon Goodwin's sacking will have Demons fans hoping that the club is back on the path to redemption

This should have been a generational team. A Melbourne outfit with the 2020s firmly at its feet, charging into the new decade with an aura and a swagger not seen at the Demons since the divine Ron Barassi thundered around the MCG six decades ago. Instead, the resounding hymn of "every heart beats true" has been consigned to a whimpering prayer of resignation. And it has cost Simon Goodwin his job. To place the blame of a football club's poor performance on one person or one situation is to ignore the complexities of an organisation that employs hundreds of people, and forget that the scores on the field are the multiplication of the sum of all sins. Sins that in isolation would have been a blip on most clubs' radars, but became exponentially problematic when packaged into a full-blown Melbourne Football Club confessional session. Sins that occurred under the eyes of the former Adelaide Crows champion. To understand the degradation of the church of Melbourne is to understand that master coach Paul Roos led the club from the desert of irrelevance in 2014 and passed the flock to Goodwin in 2017. Within the congregation was a score of rising disciples that included Max Gawn, a big man on the brink of becoming the modern era's greatest ruck, and two second-year midfielders, Clayton Oliver and Christian Petracca, raring to stand upon the pulpit and lead a new generation of slick, skilled, and motivated rookies forward to rapture. And to rapture they were led, ending a 57-year drought with premiership victory in 2021, through a season that rocked and rolled from one COVID drama to another, as the Demons rode the punches better than any other club on the backs of their rising superstars. Had that victory come a year or two after the Roos handover, it would have been fair to suggest it was a success forged solely by the ex-Swans champion. But this exaltation, this glorious football miracle played out under lights in the west, was one that belonged to Goodwin. He had shown Petracca and Oliver the path to midfield dominance. He had shaped the lanky and awkward Gawn into an attacking weapon. He had built an unbreakable defence via the recruitments of Steven May and Jake Lever, and forged an unlikely and unfashionable forward line that just got the job done, through Ben Brown, Tom McDonald, and Bayley Fritsch. This success was Goodwin's to bask in. This success was built on Goodwin having the swagger and the knowledge of a premiership coach, and two flags under his belt as a player. This success wasn't luck, or good timing, or sheer coincidence — it was because Goodwin knew what he was doing as a head coach in the hyper-competitive and cutthroat AFL world. He was the Messiah that the thirsty and hungry Demons faithful had been waiting for, and the trajectory to a monotheism of generational dominance was laid out before them. It was a path, though, that was scattered with the traps and tribulations of the deadly football sins. Injury, in some part, was unavoidable, but claims of mismanagement at the club would pervade. Gun midfielder Angus Brayshaw would be forced to retire at just 27 years old from concussion issues, after allegations by club doctor Zeeshan Arain that he felt he had been pressured by Goodwin to clear the young gun to play after an incident in 2020. They were claims that Goodwin has denied. Petracca would end up in hospital in 2024 with a lacerated spleen, four broken ribs, and a punctured lung after a collision in a game against Collingwood, with concerns raised that he was sent back out to play after the incident — with Petracca's blessing — before rumours swirled that the star midfielder's family was furious with the club and the way it had handled the situation. In list management, Brodie Grundy would be brought in on big money to double-team the ruck with Gawn in an experiment that would last just one season, as Melbourne's gaping hole in the forward line failed to be addressed after the injury retirement of Brown. In the boardroom, power battles and disagreements would permeate the club, with president Glen Bartlett standing down in 2020 after confronting Goodwin over alleged behavioural issues, before his replacement, Kate Roffey, quit in 2024 just days after defending the club's battered image. 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Goodwin's sacking may not be the answer to all their prayers, and placing blame on one person rarely instigates organisational change. But by removing the Demons chief, the faithful will be hoping that their path to footy redemption is nigh.

Popyrin pushes German all the way in three-set thriller
Popyrin pushes German all the way in three-set thriller

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Popyrin pushes German all the way in three-set thriller

Defending champion Alexei Popyrin's nine-match winning streak at the Canadian Open has come to an end in a three-set loss to top seed Alexander Zverev. The Australian, seeded 18th, took it right up to his big-serving opponent, claiming the first set in a nail-biting tiebreak before the German fought back to clinch a hard-earned 6-7 (10-8) 6-4 6-3 victory in Toronto on Monday (Tuesday AEST). Zverev, who claimed the 2017 Canadian Open with a win over tennis royalty Roger Federer, has booked his spot in the semi-finals. Leading into their quarter-final clash between former champions, world No.3 and Toronto top seed Zverev held a 3-0 head-to-head record against Popyrin, so history was certainly on the German's side. Both players are physically imposing, tall with blistering serves and crunching groundstrokes, so it was always going to be a tough battle. Neither player could make any inroads into the other's serve in the first set, with each only having one break-point opportunity. Zverev scored a mini-break to start the tiebreak, but Popyrin squared things up again, before the agile Australian finally clinched the set 7-6 (10-8), thanks in no small part to a net-cord that left the German no chance. After a first set that featured no breaks of serve, Zverev secured the first break of the match when he broke the Aussie early for a 2-0 lead in the second. However, Popyrin broke back in the seventh game to square things up again, before the German broke once more in the 10th game to take the set 6-4. Zverev made a flying start to the deciding set, breaking Popyrin in the second game, before securing a second break to clinch the decider and advance to the semi-finals. He will face the winner of the clash between Russian 11th seed Karen Khachanov and American Alex Michelsen, the No.26 seed. Despite Popyrin's loss, Australian interest remains strong at the tournament, with the red-hot Alex de Minaur, fresh off a title win at the Washington Open, to play his quarter-final against fourth-seeded American Ben Shelton. Their clash on Tuesday (Wednesday AEST) will be the first meeting between the pair. While he might leave Toronto disappointed, Popyrin has hit form at the right time and will be looking to improve on last year's showing at the year's final major, the US Open. Popyrin reached the fourth round at Flushing Meadows in New York in 2024, hot on the heels of his Canadian Open victory. With his huge serve and booming groundstrokes, Popyrin is a constant danger on hard courts, and his rivals will be keen to avoid playing him at the US Open. Popyrin's impressive run in Toronto included wins over world No.5 Holger Rune, as well as former world No.1 and 2021 US Open and Canadian Open champ Daniil Medvedev. Zverev, blessed with all the physical attributes needed to be a top-flight tennis player, has been as high as No.2 in the world rankings, but has admitted his state of mind has often let him down in the past. The German, a three-time grand slam runner-up, lost the 2020 US Open final to Austria's Dominic Thiem, despite racing to a two-set lead in the decider. Zverev also lost the 2024 French Open decider in five sets to Carlos Alcaraz, as well as this year's Australian Open final against world No.1 Jannik Sinner.

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