logo
WA All Abilities footy volunteers honoured

WA All Abilities footy volunteers honoured

Perth Now04-06-2025
The unsung heroes behind the WA All Abilities Football Association have been recognised with a prestigious volunteer award for their tireless work championing inclusive footy.
The association, based out of Tuart Hill, received the WA Inclusive Volunteering Award at the recent 2025 WA Volunteer of the Year Awards.
It was one of seven winners chosen from more than 230 nominations.
Your local paper, whenever you want it.
The WA All Abilities Football Association was created to promote and grow disability football across the State.
It provides opportunities for people of all abilities to participate in Aussie rules, whether it's wheelchair football, Starkick junior footy, blind AFL, or through its integrated competitions.
From coaching training sessions and managing match days to mentoring players with disabilities, a committed volunteer team comprising family, friends, and passionate community members has worked tirelessly to make footy accessible to all, regardless of ability or background. Sportsmanship was on full display in the Integrated football competition as North Beach took on Fremantle CBC. Credit: Kiara Blake
WA All Abilities Football Association executive officer Hayden Marchetto said the volunteers were the true champions behind the success of disability footy across WA.
'Our volunteers are everything; they're the ones doing the hard work to make inclusion real at the grassroots level,' Mr Marchetto said.
'The award gives volunteers a moment to pause and realise they're part of something bigger that really matters.
'Knowing inclusion is being recognised and valued at a State level means the world to us all.'
From Warnbro and Kelmscott in Perth's south to North Beach and the newly established Wanneroo team in Perth's north, more than a dozen football clubs have a dedicated all-abilities team. Kristen Stevenson from the Minderoo Foundation presents the Inclusive Volunteering Award to Hayden Marchetto. Credit: Supplied
Not only have players in competitions run by the association gained the opportunity to play footy and be part of an inclusive community, but they have also enjoyed the rare experience of competing at Optus Stadium before an AFL match and travelling interstate for national events such as the Toyota AFL Open, where WA's inclusion team secured third place overall in last year's inaugural event.
Mr Marchetto hopes more clubs recognise the value of all-abilities sports and believes inclusive teams should be embraced wherever possible.
'We believe every club should have a place for inclusion. If a club has 10 teams, at least one should be for people with disabilities; the club is better off with it,' he said.
'Sport should be for everyone — all cultures, all backgrounds, all abilities. If we get that right, society is better for it.
'Footy happens to be our vehicle, but any sport can create this kind of impact.' The Wanneroo Amateur Football Club Integrated Team joined the competition this year. Credit: Perth Football League / Facebook
Mr Marchetto believes the interactions players experience by being part of a wider community and club are immeasurable — not just for them but for their families as well.
'When you've got 200 or 300 people from the one club connecting, forming natural supports, it might just be a passing conversation, but for someone with an intellectual disability that's powerful. They're not just in the club, they're part of it,' he said.
'Then there's the mental health benefit for parents, especially fathers — seeing their child included in a community sporting club, just like their friends' kids, can really make a difference.
'And all this wouldn't be possible without the dedication of our volunteers, who give their time and energy to support the programs.' Sport can benefit both players and their families. Credit: Kiara Blake
Speaking at the 2025 WA Volunteer of the Year Awards, Volunteering WA CEO Tina Williams said giving back brings people together.
'Volunteering WA is proud to celebrate the 2025 WA Volunteer of the Year Award recipients, who exemplify the highest standards of service and altruism, proving that every individual has the power to create meaningful change,' she said.
'This year's winners are ambassadors for connecting communities and show us that with passion, dedication and selflessness, any one of us has the potential to make a real difference in the lives of others.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Plenty of son shine as Bulldogs blast lowly Eagles
Plenty of son shine as Bulldogs blast lowly Eagles

The Advertiser

timean hour ago

  • The Advertiser

Plenty of son shine as Bulldogs blast lowly Eagles

Depending on your outlook, it was either a glorious endorsement of the AFL's father-son rule, or the damning indictment of why the system needs changing. Western Bulldogs star Sam Darcy (dad Luke, 226 games) handballed to Tom Liberatore (dad Tony, 283 games), who passed to debutant Jordan Croft (dad Matthew, 186 games), who took a great mark and kicked his first goal on debut. With Rhylee West (dad Scott, 324 games) also busy in attack, the Bulldogs thrashed wooden spooners West Coast by 94 points on Sunday at Marvel Stadium. The 19.12 (126) to 4.8 (32) win left the Bulldogs eighth on the ladder and sets up a massive clash next Sunday against Fremantle at the same venue. If Gold Coast win at least one of their two games in round 24 as expected, the loser of the Bulldogs-Dockers clash will miss the finals. So the Bulldogs and Fremantle effectively start their finals series next Sunday, with coach Luke Beveridge noting they had to beat GWS this time last year to make the eight. "It (the West Coast win) is a promising day on a number of fronts ... for both clubs, (next Sunday) is a big day," Beveridge said. "It was a mixture tonight - our stoppage strength wasn't really on show, but our offence and defensive elements were pretty good." There is plenty of ongoing commentary about the father-son rule, which the AFL has decided against changing. St Kilda in particular have been vocal in saying it skews the draft too much. Under the rule, the Bulldogs had easy access to Liberatore, Darcy, West and now Croft because their fathers played at least 100 games for the club. "It's a beautiful thing. Family in footy, it's something special," Beveridge said. "It doesn't matter what I say, because people will say 'well, you're going to say that'. "I'm hoping they protect it." Much of the pre-game chat had been around how many goals Darcy would kick, and he looked ready for a day out with the first two of the game in the opening 11 minutes. But Croft then lit up the second term, first taking a great mark. His kick from 50m was marked on the goal line by teammate Aaron Naughton, who duly converted. Two minutes later the three father-sons combined for Croft's first AFL goal, with Matthew celebrating in the stands. Croft kicked another goal in the second term as the Bulldogs romped to a 56-point lead at the main break. Lachie McNeil was hurt in a third-term collision and subbed out with a hip injury. Darcy, West, Naughton and Sam Davidson all kicked three goals, while captain Marcus Bontempelli added two among his 31 disposals and 10 clearances in another best-afield performance. The season cannot end quickly enough for the last-placed Eagles. Jamie Cripps' final-term goal meant they avoided their lowest score at Marvel Stadium, by just two points. But it was their lowest score and biggest losing margin this season. "We just couldn't quite stop any of their scoring and we clearly couldn't score - pretty big parts of footy," said Eagles coach Andrew McQualter. Eagles star Liam Baker worked his backside off in defence. Young key forward Jobe Shanahan looks likely, but his finishing let him down and he kicked three behinds. Depending on your outlook, it was either a glorious endorsement of the AFL's father-son rule, or the damning indictment of why the system needs changing. Western Bulldogs star Sam Darcy (dad Luke, 226 games) handballed to Tom Liberatore (dad Tony, 283 games), who passed to debutant Jordan Croft (dad Matthew, 186 games), who took a great mark and kicked his first goal on debut. With Rhylee West (dad Scott, 324 games) also busy in attack, the Bulldogs thrashed wooden spooners West Coast by 94 points on Sunday at Marvel Stadium. The 19.12 (126) to 4.8 (32) win left the Bulldogs eighth on the ladder and sets up a massive clash next Sunday against Fremantle at the same venue. If Gold Coast win at least one of their two games in round 24 as expected, the loser of the Bulldogs-Dockers clash will miss the finals. So the Bulldogs and Fremantle effectively start their finals series next Sunday, with coach Luke Beveridge noting they had to beat GWS this time last year to make the eight. "It (the West Coast win) is a promising day on a number of fronts ... for both clubs, (next Sunday) is a big day," Beveridge said. "It was a mixture tonight - our stoppage strength wasn't really on show, but our offence and defensive elements were pretty good." There is plenty of ongoing commentary about the father-son rule, which the AFL has decided against changing. St Kilda in particular have been vocal in saying it skews the draft too much. Under the rule, the Bulldogs had easy access to Liberatore, Darcy, West and now Croft because their fathers played at least 100 games for the club. "It's a beautiful thing. Family in footy, it's something special," Beveridge said. "It doesn't matter what I say, because people will say 'well, you're going to say that'. "I'm hoping they protect it." Much of the pre-game chat had been around how many goals Darcy would kick, and he looked ready for a day out with the first two of the game in the opening 11 minutes. But Croft then lit up the second term, first taking a great mark. His kick from 50m was marked on the goal line by teammate Aaron Naughton, who duly converted. Two minutes later the three father-sons combined for Croft's first AFL goal, with Matthew celebrating in the stands. Croft kicked another goal in the second term as the Bulldogs romped to a 56-point lead at the main break. Lachie McNeil was hurt in a third-term collision and subbed out with a hip injury. Darcy, West, Naughton and Sam Davidson all kicked three goals, while captain Marcus Bontempelli added two among his 31 disposals and 10 clearances in another best-afield performance. The season cannot end quickly enough for the last-placed Eagles. Jamie Cripps' final-term goal meant they avoided their lowest score at Marvel Stadium, by just two points. But it was their lowest score and biggest losing margin this season. "We just couldn't quite stop any of their scoring and we clearly couldn't score - pretty big parts of footy," said Eagles coach Andrew McQualter. Eagles star Liam Baker worked his backside off in defence. Young key forward Jobe Shanahan looks likely, but his finishing let him down and he kicked three behinds. Depending on your outlook, it was either a glorious endorsement of the AFL's father-son rule, or the damning indictment of why the system needs changing. Western Bulldogs star Sam Darcy (dad Luke, 226 games) handballed to Tom Liberatore (dad Tony, 283 games), who passed to debutant Jordan Croft (dad Matthew, 186 games), who took a great mark and kicked his first goal on debut. With Rhylee West (dad Scott, 324 games) also busy in attack, the Bulldogs thrashed wooden spooners West Coast by 94 points on Sunday at Marvel Stadium. The 19.12 (126) to 4.8 (32) win left the Bulldogs eighth on the ladder and sets up a massive clash next Sunday against Fremantle at the same venue. If Gold Coast win at least one of their two games in round 24 as expected, the loser of the Bulldogs-Dockers clash will miss the finals. So the Bulldogs and Fremantle effectively start their finals series next Sunday, with coach Luke Beveridge noting they had to beat GWS this time last year to make the eight. "It (the West Coast win) is a promising day on a number of fronts ... for both clubs, (next Sunday) is a big day," Beveridge said. "It was a mixture tonight - our stoppage strength wasn't really on show, but our offence and defensive elements were pretty good." There is plenty of ongoing commentary about the father-son rule, which the AFL has decided against changing. St Kilda in particular have been vocal in saying it skews the draft too much. Under the rule, the Bulldogs had easy access to Liberatore, Darcy, West and now Croft because their fathers played at least 100 games for the club. "It's a beautiful thing. Family in footy, it's something special," Beveridge said. "It doesn't matter what I say, because people will say 'well, you're going to say that'. "I'm hoping they protect it." Much of the pre-game chat had been around how many goals Darcy would kick, and he looked ready for a day out with the first two of the game in the opening 11 minutes. But Croft then lit up the second term, first taking a great mark. His kick from 50m was marked on the goal line by teammate Aaron Naughton, who duly converted. Two minutes later the three father-sons combined for Croft's first AFL goal, with Matthew celebrating in the stands. Croft kicked another goal in the second term as the Bulldogs romped to a 56-point lead at the main break. Lachie McNeil was hurt in a third-term collision and subbed out with a hip injury. Darcy, West, Naughton and Sam Davidson all kicked three goals, while captain Marcus Bontempelli added two among his 31 disposals and 10 clearances in another best-afield performance. The season cannot end quickly enough for the last-placed Eagles. Jamie Cripps' final-term goal meant they avoided their lowest score at Marvel Stadium, by just two points. But it was their lowest score and biggest losing margin this season. "We just couldn't quite stop any of their scoring and we clearly couldn't score - pretty big parts of footy," said Eagles coach Andrew McQualter. Eagles star Liam Baker worked his backside off in defence. Young key forward Jobe Shanahan looks likely, but his finishing let him down and he kicked three behinds.

Athletics news 2025: Claudia Hollingsworth breaks Australian record at Silesia Diamond League, women's 800m, video, highlights
Athletics news 2025: Claudia Hollingsworth breaks Australian record at Silesia Diamond League, women's 800m, video, highlights

Herald Sun

timean hour ago

  • Herald Sun

Athletics news 2025: Claudia Hollingsworth breaks Australian record at Silesia Diamond League, women's 800m, video, highlights

Don't miss out on the headlines from Olympics. Followed categories will be added to My News. Australian middle-distance runner Claudia Hollingsworth has shattered the women's 800m national record, achieving the feat during the Silesia Diamond League in Poland. The 20-year-old Victorian, coached by former Australian champion Craig Mottram, crossed fifth with a time of 1:57.67. That beat the previous national record — Catriona Bisset's 1:57.78 in 2023 — by 0.11s, with Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson from Britain taking gold. Fellow Australian Abbey Caldwell finished sixth in 1:57.70, while Bisset crossed tenth at 2:00.64. Watch the biggest Aussie sports & the best from overseas LIVE on Kayo Sports | New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1 > 'It's pretty sick! To come down the home straight and not be sure but to look up at the big screen and see it was really exciting,' Hollingsworth said. 'To share it with Abbey and Catriona was so special, having three Aussies in a race like this is awesome. Claudia Hollingsworth has shattered the Australian 800m record. (Photo by) 'I got into this mentality that they are quick races now and if you want it to be quick, you have to be in it to win it. 'I'm trying to be more aggressive and try different ways of racing leading into (the world championships in) Tokyo because those heats are going to be quick leading into the semis and hopefully the final. 'I had a look at myself in the mirror the other week and said that I don't want to be predictable. I don't want to just sit in during races and do my classic 200m kick. 'I want to be able to do that no matter where I'm positioned and if that's up the front then I want to try that.' Elsewhere, Australian Nicola Olyslagers won silver in the women's high jump with a 1.97m clearance. Following a six-week hiatus, the dual Olympic medallist ended up on the podium alongside reigning world champion Yaroslava Mahuchikh from Ukraine, who cleared 2.00m on her second attempt. Kurtis Marschall soared over 5.90m on his second attempt to finish equal-third in the men's pole vault alongside the Netherlands' Menno Vloon, with the duo bettered by Sweden's Armand Duplantis and winner Emmanouil Karalis from Greece, who cleared 6.10m. 'I had a bit of a tummy issue in the last couple of days, so to come away with a 5.90 on a scrappy day, I'm very happy,' Marschall said. 'We are going straight to Lausanne from here and hopefully we can get 10 centimetres higher.' Meanwhile, 34-year-old Linden Hall notched a personal best in the women's 1500m with 3:56.39, while Ethiopia's Gudaf Tsegay won gold at 3:50.84. The Diamond League series resumes next weekend in Lausanne, Switzerland. Originally published as Rising 20yo star Claudia Hollingsworth shatters Aussie athletics record

Footy world goes postal on Ollie Wines' three-game AFL suspension
Footy world goes postal on Ollie Wines' three-game AFL suspension

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Footy world goes postal on Ollie Wines' three-game AFL suspension

Port Adelaide star Ollie Wines has been handed a hefty three-match ban from the AFL Tribunal and it has led to a fierce response from footy fans. The 30-year-old veteran is set to miss Ken Hinkley's farewell game next week after the Match Review Officer judged Wines' bump on Carlton's Cooper Lord as careless conduct, severe impact and high contact. 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? Join now and get your first month for just $1. With just over eight minutes remaining in the second quarter of the Blues' 54-point thrashing at Marvel Stadium on Saturday, a Travis Boak handball was intercepted by Lord. The 23-game midfielder wheeled around to the top of the defensive 50m arc and sent a kick down the middle of the ground. Wines arrived late and opted to bump, with the incident barely noted by commentators at the time. 'Dangerous (Boak) handball, a little too aggressive, Lord cut it off and he was bumped on the kick,' Dwayne Russell said on Fox Footy as the play unfolded. That was the first and only mention of the clash and Lord played out the first half, laying a tackle late in the second quarter. The 20-year-old, who is in his second season with the Blues, was then in the centre square for the opening bounce to start the third term, suggesting he got through the main break and was deemed fit to continue. He was ultimately subbed out late in the third quarter, however, replaced by Corey Durdin as the youngster was diagnosed with a delayed concussion. Lord also wasn't seen when the team sung the song in the rooms after the victory. Former Hawthorn defender Campbell Brown the discussed the incident on Channel 7 on Sunday. 'That's the bump, that's the contact,' he said. 'Now you could argue that it's back/shoulder, it didn't look or appear to be getting him in the head. 'But delayed onset of concussion was the result and (Wines has) been offered three weeks by the MRO.' The finding means Wines' season is over unless he manages to beat the charge at the AFL Tribunal. The 273-game Brownlow medallist would also be absent from Hinkley's 282nd and final match as coach of the Power, against the Suns at Adelaide Oval on Friday night. 'Ollie Wines, not such good news for him, he's been offered a three-match ban,' David Zita said on Fox Footy on Sunday evening. 'So if Ollie Wines accepts that ban, he misses Ken Hinkley's farewell game next week as well as the first two rounds of next season.' The announcement of the decision from the MRO quickly erupted on social media and it's fair to say a huge percentage of footy fans were less than happy. Among a huge number of comments along the lines of 'that is a joke', many fans seemed to question whether they were watching the right vision to warrant a three-match suspension. X account Biscotti Hodges wrote: 'Is this the incident or have they uploaded the wrong footage?' BigNoob210 tweeted: 'Nice bump, can you show us the footage of what he's actually getting suspended for?' Frank Rodringo offered: 'I still can't see where this happened, watched it 4 times.' Bowen Smith asked: 'Is this the correct footage?' Steven Taddei declared: 'This surely can't be the incident?' An X account called Cliffy also wrote: 'Um, where is the incident?' With Wines set to be sidelined for Port's final game of the season, plus the first two matches of 2026, many fans were calling for Port Adelaide to appeal the decision. A number of others seemed shock by the ban. A Port fan going by the handle Bigdog 2477 tweeted: 'Obviously I'm bias but is this not the most embarrassing 3 week suspension ever?' Christian Wise wrote: 'Wowie 3 weeks for that.' Xav said: 'Hahahaha this has to be a piss take.' Deb Sharman asked: '3 matches for what?? A bump on the side?' There were a rare few supporting the decision. 'Chose to bump and concussed him. Makes sense,' was one tweet. 'Lord ended up with a concussion and Wines chose to bump. No brainer really,' suggested another. But the vast majority appeared stunned by the ruling, with all eyes now on Port Adelaide's next move.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store