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Hawthorn Star Massimo D'Ambrosio Chat – Re-signs, Hokball & Blind Ranking Hawks Pests

Hawthorn Star Massimo D'Ambrosio Chat – Re-signs, Hokball & Blind Ranking Hawks Pests

News.com.au4 hours ago

Hawthorn star Massimo D'Ambrosio joins the the AFL Today Show panel to chat on what really is Hokball, Sam Mitchell as a coach, family vibes and the funniest players at his club! The panel chat about the Hawks form, what family means to him and finish off with a fun blind ranking of the biggest pests at Hawthorn, featuring Nick Watson and Jack Ginnivan! Get around Massimo D'Ambrosio with the AFL Today Show panelists Liam McAllion and Leo Mullaly as they talk out all things footy and life outside of AFL with the Hawks star!

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First look at Barbados pitch as Australia prepare for uncertain West Indies surfaces
First look at Barbados pitch as Australia prepare for uncertain West Indies surfaces

Sydney Morning Herald

time32 minutes ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

First look at Barbados pitch as Australia prepare for uncertain West Indies surfaces

Australia nearly reached parity, making 406, before bowling the West Indies out for 148 and chasing down the runs required for victory with three wickets to spare. 'Thirteen years ago this was a real old-fashioned, traditional cricket wicket with big runs in the first innings and a hard-fought contest in the second innings,' Lyon said ahead of Australia's first match of a new World Test Championship cycle. 'My feeling is that this wicket is probably going to be pretty similar to that – pretty flat over the first couple of days, reverse swing and spin bowling hopefully comes into it. It's going to be a war of attrition. 'I think it's a real live option to play two spinners here.' In the 2008 Barbados Test, Australia made 251 batting first, then declared on 5-439 in the second innings courtesy of centuries from Phil Jaques (108) and Simon Katich (157). Fast bowler Josh Hazlewood averaged just eight runs a wicket on Australia's last West Indies tour in 2015, which featured matches in Dominica and Kingston. Australia's Tests on this tour are in Barbados (June 25 to 29), Grenada (July 3 to 7) and Jamaica (July 12-16), the last of which is a pink-ball fixture under lights. 'Traditionally, Barbados is probably the best wicket to bat on, and the scores are pretty good in recent history,' Hazlewood said. 'The other ones [in Grenada and Kingston] are a bit of luck of the draw. Typically, they're slower and dry.' Loading Lyon added: 'In Grenada I'm pretty sure no one in the touring squad has actually ever been to the island, so we don't know what's going on. Then a pink Test with the Dukes ball … I'm not sure what that's going to be like.' Kuhnemann is eager to get another match for Australia after his success in Sri Lanka earlier this year. 'I think we've got all bases covered for whatever pitch we get,' he said. 'If it looks like it's going to spin and I play a role, then I'm ready to go.' Australia's batting line-up is essentially settled. The only uncertainty is the exact order Khawaja, Konstas, Josh Inglis, Green, Travis Head, Beau Webster and Alex Carey will bat in, but that order would make sense. There had been speculation Head might open, like he has on the subcontinent before, but he quashed that on Sunday. 'I think with Sam and Uzzie there [at the top of the order] that'd be pretty unlikely,' Head said. 'I wouldn't see that being a case at the moment.'

First look at Barbados pitch as Australia prepare for uncertain West Indies surfaces
First look at Barbados pitch as Australia prepare for uncertain West Indies surfaces

The Age

time32 minutes ago

  • The Age

First look at Barbados pitch as Australia prepare for uncertain West Indies surfaces

Australia nearly reached parity, making 406, before bowling the West Indies out for 148 and chasing down the runs required for victory with three wickets to spare. 'Thirteen years ago this was a real old-fashioned, traditional cricket wicket with big runs in the first innings and a hard-fought contest in the second innings,' Lyon said ahead of Australia's first match of a new World Test Championship cycle. 'My feeling is that this wicket is probably going to be pretty similar to that – pretty flat over the first couple of days, reverse swing and spin bowling hopefully comes into it. It's going to be a war of attrition. 'I think it's a real live option to play two spinners here.' In the 2008 Barbados Test, Australia made 251 batting first, then declared on 5-439 in the second innings courtesy of centuries from Phil Jaques (108) and Simon Katich (157). Fast bowler Josh Hazlewood averaged just eight runs a wicket on Australia's last West Indies tour in 2015, which featured matches in Dominica and Kingston. Australia's Tests on this tour are in Barbados (June 25 to 29), Grenada (July 3 to 7) and Jamaica (July 12-16), the last of which is a pink-ball fixture under lights. 'Traditionally, Barbados is probably the best wicket to bat on, and the scores are pretty good in recent history,' Hazlewood said. 'The other ones [in Grenada and Kingston] are a bit of luck of the draw. Typically, they're slower and dry.' Loading Lyon added: 'In Grenada I'm pretty sure no one in the touring squad has actually ever been to the island, so we don't know what's going on. Then a pink Test with the Dukes ball … I'm not sure what that's going to be like.' Kuhnemann is eager to get another match for Australia after his success in Sri Lanka earlier this year. 'I think we've got all bases covered for whatever pitch we get,' he said. 'If it looks like it's going to spin and I play a role, then I'm ready to go.' Australia's batting line-up is essentially settled. The only uncertainty is the exact order Khawaja, Konstas, Josh Inglis, Green, Travis Head, Beau Webster and Alex Carey will bat in, but that order would make sense. There had been speculation Head might open, like he has on the subcontinent before, but he quashed that on Sunday. 'I think with Sam and Uzzie there [at the top of the order] that'd be pretty unlikely,' Head said. 'I wouldn't see that being a case at the moment.'

John Longmire's audio from 2024 AFL grand final ‘gone' as former Sydney coach never returned SD card
John Longmire's audio from 2024 AFL grand final ‘gone' as former Sydney coach never returned SD card

7NEWS

time38 minutes ago

  • 7NEWS

John Longmire's audio from 2024 AFL grand final ‘gone' as former Sydney coach never returned SD card

Former Sydney coach John Longmire never handed back his audio data from last year's grand final, which was needed to produce the annual Sound The Alarm documentary on the AFL website. The yearly documentary series, which begun in 2019, recounts the biggest game of the season from the perspective of the coaches, who are mic'd up during the day, using audio from inside the coaches' box, changerooms, and huddles during breaks. WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: John Longmire blocks AFL Media grand final documentary. But Longmire never returned his audio from the 2024 decider, when the Swans were dismantled by Brisbane to the tune of 60 points, according to 7NEWS Melbourne's Mitch Cleary. 'It's a quirky anecdote from what happened on grand final day last year,' Cleary said on The Agenda Setter s on Monday night. 'As we know, on grand finals of recent years, one of the highlights has been the senior coaches and what they've been able to produce when they're mic'd up, post-script. 'We've seen plenty of the audio come out and it's been fantastic viewing. 'Last year's grand final, John Longmire was mic'd up on the day, had the pre-game address, the half-time address, the in-box — everything that came with it. 'But post-game, when he handed back the equipment to the AFL, he took the SD card and, to this day, the AFL don't have the SD card — he never gave it back. 'He took it, tried to get it working with his son during the week, couldn't do so, and has since never handed it back.' Cleary was at paints to say this wasn't necessarily unprecedented, given clubs always curate what makes the final cut anyway. 'I must stress, it's up to the clubs and the coaches, who have the final say on what finally goes to air, but the AFL never had the chance to spool through it,' he said. 'John Longmire, clearly some things were said in the box that he didn't want other ears to hear on the day.' In previous years, fans have got to hear from the likes of Chris Fagan in his side's losing grand final of 2023 and Luke Beveridge from 2021, for example. But 'the John Longmire audio doesn't exist. It's gone,' Cleary said. Asked if his failure to hand the SD card back was an accident or more deliberate, Cleary learnt towards the latter. 'I think there were things said in that coaches' box on the day that shouldn't see the light of day,' he said. 'I think there were some things said about players and some heat-of-the-moment conversations that people don't want to ever hear.' It's worth noting, Cleary added, that Sydney have 'gone out of their way' to compensate for the lost content. 'Typically what we see with this is the AFL get a cut, the club then has final say on what makes it to air or not in the final production,' he said. 'Now, the Swans have gone out of their way in the post-script of the grand final to provide more content for the AFL, from the week, from players on the day. 'But the John Longmire audio won't be part of it and it's gone.' The Lions' premiership victory would be Longmire's last game in the hot seat for the Swans after 15 years in charge. Having taken some time to consider his future in the wake of the grand final bloodbath, Longmire stepped down in November, two months after the game, despite having a contract for 2025. Longmire coached the Swans to their 2012 premiership in his third year and reached the decider another four times in 2014, 2016, 2022 and 2024, but went down in all of them, including heavy defeats in three. The 54-year-old remains at the club in a performance director role, but is far less involved, having handed the reigns over to Dean Cox.

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